New Testament

1 Corinthians

Paul confronts a church that has claimed wisdom and spiritual power while remaining shaped by worldly values, and He recenters the Corinthians on the crucified Christ, whose cross destroys boasting, redefines strength as weakness, establishes apostolic authority through suffering rather than status, and demands that love become the governing reality of all spiritual gifts and community life.

Why this book matters

1 Corinthians is the New Testament's most direct attack on cultural Christianity: it exposes how a gifted, confident congregation can drift from the cross while maintaining the appearance of orthodoxy. Paul's corrections on division, sexual ethics, lawsuits, food offered to idols, and spiritual gifts all flow from a single diagnosis, making this letter essential for any church tempted to baptize the values of its surrounding world. The letter also establishes that apostolic authority operates through weakness and sacrifice, not dominance, and that the gifts of the Spirit find their true purpose only when animated by love, a framework that shapes how the church understands leadership, worship, and community for all subsequent generations. Without 1 Corinthians, the church loses its most sustained reflection on how the cross of Christ judges every form of human boasting and reshapes what maturity, power, and faithfulness actually mean.

How to read it
  1. Read 1 Corinthians as Paul's address to a church that has wisdom without the cross , gifted and confident, but structuring its life by the values of its surrounding culture rather than the pattern of Christ crucified.
  2. Follow the unifying thread: every problem Paul addresses (divisions, sexual ethics, lawsuits, food offered to idols, spiritual gifts, the resurrection) is ultimately a problem of failing to let the cross shape identity and community.
  3. Notice that the famous love chapter (13) is not a standalone meditation but the center of Paul's argument about spiritual gifts , love is the context without which gifts become performances.
  4. Read chapter 15 carefully: the resurrection of Christ is not one doctrine among many for Paul, but the foundation on which the entire Christian life stands.
  5. Let the book's occasional nature shape your reading: Paul is not writing a systematic theology but addressing specific crises in a specific community , the principles are universal but the application is targeted.