1 Corinthians 3:9 - James Nisbet's Church Pulpit Commentary

Bible Comments

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‘We are labourers together with God: ye are God’s husbandry, ye are God’s building.’

1 Corinthians 3:9

Your soul is God’s seed-field, God’s building; we are labourers together with God. Such a description of each individual life is very significant everywhere.

I. To us who are here as teachers they are just a parable of our own life; setting forth to each of us what should be his estimate of his own work and aim and purpose, exhibiting to him his field of work with the Divine light on it, and interpreting to him his own endeavours as a fellow-labourer with God, hoping to contribute in some degree towards the filling in and completing that Divine plan, that ideal picture of the life of every one of you which is in the heavens, and which in imagination he sees as a thing some day to be realised, and the realisation of which, or its failure, may largely depend on his own share in our life and work. It is this feeling that every heart contains the germ of some perfection that makes our life so profoundly interesting, and, it may be added, our responsibilities for the cultivation or neglect of any such germ or capacity so serious and engrossing.

II. But to you, too, these apostolic suggestions about the Divine influences at work in each heart, and the value of each life in God’s sight, and the Divine voices claiming to be heard in it, should be quite as stimulative as they are to us. They have in them the germ of all striving after purity and goodness, and of all hatred of sin, and enthusiasm for the uplifting of social life. The words of St. Paul to his Corinthian converts may furnish you with new interpretations of your own daily life and duty.

(a) If they were God’s husbandry, or God’s building, are not you? If the Spirit of God dwelt in them, how does He not dwell likewise in you? striving for your growth in holiness and good purpose, and for your salvation from sin and its defilements, as he strove for theirs?

(b) And if it was good for every man in that Corinthian community to be warned how he built upon the foundation of life that had been laid in Christ; if it was good for them to be reminded that every man’s work would be made manifest, and that the fire would try it, of what sort it was; it is good also for us to remember that we are living under the same law, and that we should take care lest haply we be found to be working against God.

III. That Epistle of St. Paul’s was written in pain and anguish of heart.—The seeds of Christian life which he had sown among them, the purifying influences of the Holy Spirit which were working among them through him and his fellow-labourers, all these ought to have produced fruits easily described, such as peace and love, and purity, and good works; but instead of these, and threatening their destruction, there had sprung up dissension and strife, party spirit, self-conceit, and gross sins which I need not name. In all this there was grief, disappointment, bitterness; for did they not prove that his work was threatened with failure? Yet in all that storm of feeling his chief exhortation is this reminder of the dignity of their calling. In the midst of all their sin and failure, though he does not spare rebuke and warning, he always aims at inspiring them by uplifting. And we know that this is the true method, because there is nothing which exercises an influence so strong to uplift and purify as the feeling of our kinship with the life above us, and that we are degrading our life when we forget this or ignore it. And herein is the value of this word of his that God is dwelling and working in us.

Bishop Percival.

1 Corinthians 3:9

9 For we are labourers together with God: ye are God's husbandry,b ye are God's building.