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1 Corinthians 6

Judge Righteously, Flee Sexual Immorality, and Glorify God in Your Body

Because believers belong to Christ, are destined for the kingdom, and are indwelt by the Holy Spirit, they must reject unrighteousness, resolve disputes in a holy manner, flee sexual immorality, and glorify God in their bodies.

Chapter Summary

Because believers belong to Christ, are destined for the kingdom, and are indwelt by the Holy Spirit, they must reject unrighteousness, resolve disputes in a holy manner, flee sexual immorality, and glorify God in their bodies.

Overview

Paul addresses two visible manifestations of Corinthian worldliness: lawsuits among believers and sexual immorality. He begins by exposing the shame of Christians taking one another before unbelieving courts, a practice that reveals both ecclesial immaturity and failure to grasp the saints’ eschatological dignity. If believers are destined to judge the world and even angels, then they should be capable of settling ordinary disputes among themselves.

Their willingness to sue one another is already a spiritual defeat, and the deeper issue is not merely legal process but the fact that they are willing to wrong and defraud fellow believers. Paul then broadens the matter by warning that the unrighteous will not inherit the kingdom of God. He lists representative forms of unrighteousness and reminds the Corinthians that this was once their identity, but no longer.

In Christ they have been washed, sanctified, and justified. The chapter then turns to the body. Paul confronts slogans that detach bodily conduct from moral significance. He argues that Christian freedom is bounded by what is beneficial and by refusal to be mastered by anything. The body is not a disposable shell for appetite; it belongs to the Lord and is destined for resurrection.

Paul then drives the point home by teaching that believers’ bodies are members of Christ. To unite such a body to sexual immorality is to violate union with Christ and to deny the covenant meaning of bodily union. In contrast, the believer is one spirit with the Lord. Sexual sin is uniquely devastating because it is committed against one’s own body, which is the temple of the Holy Spirit.

Since believers were bought with a price, the only fitting conclusion is embodied holiness: glorify God in Your body.

Context
Setting

Paul continues addressing the church in Corinth, a city marked by litigation culture, social competition, honor-shame dynamics, economic inequality, and normalized sexual immorality.

The Biblical World

Chapter At A Glance

Covenant Significance

The chapter presents the church as a holy people who must handle internal matters in a way fitting for those destined to reign and judge with Christ. It also frames the body in covenantal terms. Believers do not own themselves, but belong to God by redemption, indwelling, and union with Christ. Therefore bodily conduct is covenantally significant.

Gospel Clarity

The chapter explicitly roots transformation in the gospel. Believers who once lived in unrighteousness have been washed, sanctified, and justified in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ and by the Spirit of God. The call to flee sexual immorality and glorify God in the body is grounded in redemption, union with Christ, the indwelling Spirit, and the price paid to purchase God’s people.

Focus Points

  • The church’s responsibility to judge matters among believers
  • The future dignity of the saints in relation to judgment
  • The shame of lawsuits among Christians before unbelievers
  • The kingdom-inheritance warning against unrighteousness
  • The transforming identity of washed, sanctified, and justified believers
  • Christian liberty rightly bounded by usefulness and mastery
  • The body’s belonging to the Lord
  • The resurrection dignity of the body
  • Union with Christ and bodily ethics
  • Sexual immorality as a profound violation of covenant identity
  • The body as temple of the Holy Spirit
  • Redemption as the ground of embodied glorification of God
  • Sanctification
  • Ecclesiology
  • Kingdom theology
  • Christology
  • Pneumatology
  • Resurrection
  • Union with Christ

Cross References

Genesis 2:24
Therefore a man will leave His father and His mother, and will join with His wife, and they will be one flesh.
Old Testament foundation
Daniel 7:22
Until the ancient of days came, and judgment was given to the saints of the Most High, and the time came that the saints possessed the kingdom.
Old Testament foundation
Exodus 19:5-6
Now therefore, if You will indeed obey my voice, and keep my covenant, then You shall be my own possession from among all peoples; for all the earth is mine; and You shall be to me a kingdom of priests, and a holy nation.’ These are the words which You shall speak to the children of Israel.”
Old Testament foundation
1 Corinthians 6:11
Some of You were such, but You were washed. But You were sanctified. But You were justified in the name of the Lord Jesus, and in the Spirit of our God.
Gospel resolution
1 Corinthians 6:19-20
Or don’t You know that Your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit who is in You, whom You have from God? You are not Your own, for You were bought with a price. Therefore glorify God in Your body and in Your spirit, which are God’s.
Gospel resolution
Romans 6:12-13
Therefore don’t let sin reign in Your mortal body, that You should obey it in its lusts. Also, do not present Your members to sin as instruments of unrighteousness, but present Yourselves to God as alive from the dead, and Your members as instruments of righteousness to God.
Thematic parallel
Romans 12:1
Therefore I urge You, brothers, by the mercies of God, to present Your bodies a living sacrifice, holy, acceptable to God, which is Your spiritual service.
Thematic parallel
1 Thessalonians 4:3-8
For this is the will of God: Your sanctification, that You abstain from sexual immorality, that each one of You know how to control His own body in sanctification and honor, not in the passion of lust, even as the Gentiles who don’t know God,
Thematic parallel
Ephesians 5:3-8
But sexual immorality, and all uncleanness or covetousness, let it not even be mentioned among You, as becomes saints; nor filthiness, nor foolish talking, nor jesting, which are not appropriate, but rather giving of thanks. Know this for sure, that no sexually immoral person, nor unclean person, nor covetous man, who is an idolater, has any inheritance in...
Thematic parallel
2 Corinthians 6:16
What agreement does a temple of God have with idols? For You are a temple of the living God. Even as God said, “I will dwell in them and walk in them. I will be their God and they will be my people.”
Thematic parallel

Passages

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