First Corinthians 12-20 Analysis

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Introduction

The letters within First Corinthians depicts a church with struggles ones that we struggle with today. In chapter six versus 12-20 Paul corrects and instruct the young church on how they should deal with sexuality and marriage from a Christian stand point. Through this paper I will faithfully exegete 1st Corinthians 6:12-20 in the end finding truths that apply to the modern reader.

The great city of Corinth was located on the isthmus between Attica and the Greek Peloponnesus (Varughese 232). Its site gave it control over both seas—the Aegean to the east and the Ionian to the west. On the Sardonic Gulf there was a part at Cenchrea and on the Corinthian Gulf (Varughese 232). Its proximity to the seas and Athens, about 45 miles to the Northeast; this gave them a great military defense position and great commercial trade (Mare 175).

“Corinth was called the ‘bridge of the sea and the gate of the Peloponnesus. (Mare 175)’” They received a lot of trade and shipping between Italy, Sicily, Spain, Asia Minor, Syria, Phoenicia and Egypt. Merchants often avoided “going around the Horne” of Cape Malea at the South end of
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6:13). To be set apart for God’s purpose is the very root definition of holiness. For the first century Corinthian church and even for us today we often separate our soul and body, treating them separately (New Interpreter’s Bible 866). However, according Paul this is not the case; what we do to our flesh can have a lasting impression on our spirit and regardless we will have to give an account for everything once we die. Therefore it is all the more important to live a life pleasing to God (Bray 58). If not for that reason but because of the sacrifice Christ made on the cross. In spite of God’s unconditional love and redemptive grace one cannot continue sinning. Paul reminds his followers that the response to salvation is in living a holy and just life (Mare