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以史为鉴

10 弟兄们,我不愿意你们不知道,我们的祖宗都曾经在云下,都曾经从海中经过, 都曾经在云里在海里受洗归于摩西。 他们都吃了一样的灵粮, 都喝了一样的灵水;他们所喝的,是从那随着他们的灵盘石那里来的,这盘石就是基督。 但他们大多数的人,都得不到 神的喜悦,因此他们都死在旷野。 这些事都是我们的鉴戒,叫我们不要贪恋恶事,像他们那样。 你们也不可拜偶像,像他们有些人那样;正如经上所记:“人民坐下吃喝,起来玩乐。” 我们也不可淫乱,像他们有些人那样,一天就死了二万三千人。 我们也不可试探主,像他们有些人那样,结果就被蛇咬死了。 10 你们也不可发怨言,像他们有些人那样,就被那毁灭者所灭。 11 这些事发生在他们身上,作为鉴戒,并且记下来,为了要警戒我们这些末世的人。 12 所以,那自以为站得稳的,应当谨慎,免得跌倒。 13 你们所受的试探,无非是人受得起的; 神是信实的,他必不容许你们受试探过于你们承受得起的,而且在受试探的时候,必定给你们开一条出路,使你们能忍受得住。

不可喝主的杯又喝鬼的杯

14 所以,我所亲爱的,你们要远避拜偶像的事。 15 我是对明白事理的人说的,我所说的你们要自己判断。 16 我们为福杯祝祷的时候,难道不是共享基督的血吗?我们擘饼的时候,难道不是共享基督的身体吗? 17 因为事实上只有一个饼,我们人数虽多,还是一个身体,因为我们都是分享同一个饼。 18 你们看看按肉身是以色列人,那些吃祭物的不就是与祭坛有分吗? 19 我说的是甚么意思呢?偶像算得甚么,还是祭过偶像的食物算得甚么? 20 我是说,教外人所祭的是鬼,不是献给 神;我却不愿意你们与鬼来往。 21 你们不能喝主的杯又喝鬼的杯,你们不能参加主的筵席又参加鬼的筵席。 22 难道我们要激起主的忿怒吗?我们比他更强吗?

凡事都要荣耀 神

23 甚么事情都可以作,但不是都有益处。甚么事情都可以作,但不是都能造就人。 24 人不要求自己的好处,却要求别人的好处。 25 肉食市场所卖的一切,你们只管吃,不要为了良心的缘故问甚么, 26 因为地和地上所充满的都是属于主的。 27 如果有不信的人邀请你们吃饭,你们也愿意去,凡摆在你们面前的,都可以吃,不要为了良心的缘故问甚么。 28 但是如果有人告诉你们:“这是献过祭的食物。”那么,为了那告诉你们的人,也为了良心的缘故,就不要吃。 29 我说的良心,不是你的,而是他的。为甚么我的自由要受别人的良心论断呢? 30 我若存着感恩的心吃了,为甚么我因着我所感恩的食物被人毁谤呢? 31 所以,你们或吃喝,或作甚么,一切都要为 神的荣耀而行。 32 无论是犹太人,是希腊人,是 神的教会,你们总不可使他们跌倒; 33 就好象我所作的一切,都是要使大家喜悦,不是要求自己的好处,而是要求别人的好处,为了要使他们得救。

Chapter 10

Warning Against Overconfidence. [a]I do not want you to be unaware, brothers, that our ancestors were all under the cloud and all passed through the sea,(A) and all of them were baptized into Moses in the cloud and in the sea.(B) All ate the same spiritual food, and all drank the same spiritual drink, for they drank from a spiritual rock that followed them,[b] and the rock was the Christ.(C) Yet God was not pleased with most of them, for they were struck down in the desert.(D)

[c]These things happened as examples for us, so that we might not desire evil things, as they did.(E) And do not become idolaters, as some of them did, as it is written, “The people sat down to eat and drink, and rose up to revel.”(F) Let us not indulge in immorality as some of them did, and twenty-three thousand fell within a single day.(G) Let us not test Christ[d] as some of them did, and suffered death by serpents.(H) 10 Do not grumble as some of them did, and suffered death by the destroyer.(I) 11 These things happened to them as an example, and they have been written down as a warning to us, upon whom the end of the ages has come.[e] 12 Therefore, whoever thinks he is standing secure should take care not to fall.[f] 13 No trial has come to you but what is human. God is faithful and will not let you be tried beyond your strength; but with the trial he will also provide a way out, so that you may be able to bear it.(J)

Warning Against Idolatry.[g] 14 Therefore, my beloved, avoid idolatry.(K) 15 I am speaking as to sensible people; judge for yourselves what I am saying. 16 The cup of blessing that we bless, is it not a participation in the blood of Christ? The bread that we break, is it not a participation in the body of Christ?(L) 17 Because the loaf of bread is one, we, though many, are one body, for we all partake of the one loaf.(M)

18 Look at Israel according to the flesh; are not those who eat the sacrifices participants in the altar?(N) 19 So what am I saying? That meat sacrificed to idols is anything? Or that an idol is anything? 20 No, I mean that what they sacrifice, [they sacrifice] to demons,[h] not to God, and I do not want you to become participants with demons.(O) 21 You cannot drink the cup of the Lord and also the cup of demons. You cannot partake of the table of the Lord and of the table of demons.(P) 22 Or are we provoking the Lord to jealous anger? Are we stronger than he?(Q)

Seek the Good of Others.[i] 23 “Everything is lawful,” but not everything is beneficial.[j] “Everything is lawful,” but not everything builds up.(R) 24 No one should seek his own advantage, but that of his neighbor.(S) 25 [k]Eat anything sold in the market, without raising questions on grounds of conscience, 26 for “the earth and its fullness are the Lord’s.”(T) 27 If an unbeliever invites you and you want to go, eat whatever is placed before you, without raising questions on grounds of conscience. 28 But if someone says to you, “This was offered in sacrifice,” do not eat it on account of the one who called attention to it and on account of conscience; 29 I mean not your own conscience, but the other’s. For why should my freedom be determined by someone else’s conscience? 30 If I partake thankfully, why am I reviled for that over which I give thanks?(U)

31 So whether you eat or drink, or whatever you do, do everything for the glory of God. 32 [l]Avoid giving offense, whether to Jews or Greeks or the church of God, 33 just as I try to please everyone in every way, not seeking my own benefit but that of the many, that they may be saved.(V)

Footnotes

  1. 10:1–5 Paul embarks unexpectedly upon a panoramic survey of the events of the Exodus period. The privileges of Israel in the wilderness are described in terms that apply strictly only to the realities of the new covenant (“baptism,” “spiritual food and drink”); interpreted in this way they point forward to the Christian experience (1 Cor 10:1–4). But those privileges did not guarantee God’s permanent pleasure (1 Cor 10:5).
  2. 10:4 A spiritual rock that followed them: the Torah speaks only about a rock from which water issued, but rabbinic legend amplified this into a spring that followed the Israelites throughout their migration. Paul uses this legend as a literary type: he makes the rock itself accompany the Israelites, and he gives it a spiritual sense. The rock was the Christ: in the Old Testament, Yahweh is the Rock of his people (cf. Dt 32, Moses’ song to Yahweh the Rock). Paul now applies this image to the Christ, the source of the living water, the true Rock that accompanied Israel, guiding their experiences in the desert.
  3. 10:6–13 This section explicitates the typological value of these Old Testament events: the desert experiences of the Israelites are examples, meant as warnings, to deter us from similar sins (idolatry, immorality, etc.) and from a similar fate.
  4. 10:9 Christ: to avoid Paul’s concept of Christ present in the wilderness events, some manuscripts read “the Lord.”
  5. 10:11 Upon whom the end of the ages has come: it is our period in time toward which past ages have been moving and in which they arrive at their goal.
  6. 10:12–13 Take care not to fall: the point of the whole comparison with Israel is to caution against overconfidence, a sense of complete security (1 Cor 10:12). This warning is immediately balanced by a reassurance, based, however, on God (1 Cor 10:13).
  7. 10:14–22 The warning against idolatry from 1 Cor 10:7 is now repeated (1 Cor 10:14) and explained in terms of the effect of sacrifices: all sacrifices, Christian (1 Cor 10:16–17), Jewish (1 Cor 10:18), or pagan (1 Cor 10:20), establish communion. But communion with Christ is exclusive, incompatible with any other such communion (1 Cor 10:21). Compare the line of reasoning at 1 Cor 6:15.
  8. 10:20 To demons: although Jews denied divinity to pagan gods, they often believed that there was some nondivine reality behind the idols, such as the dead, or angels, or demons. The explanation Paul offers in 1 Cor 10:20 is drawn from Dt 32:17: the power behind the idols, with which the pagans commune, consists of demonic powers hostile to God.
  9. 10:23–11:1 By way of peroration Paul returns to the opening situation (1 Cor 8) and draws conclusions based on the intervening considerations (1 Cor 9–10).
  10. 10:23–24 He repeats in the context of this new problem the slogans of liberty from 1 Cor 6:12, with similar qualifications. Liberty is not merely an individual perfection, nor an end in itself, but is to be used for the common good. The language of 1 Cor 10:24 recalls the descriptions of Jesus’ self-emptying in Phil 2.
  11. 10:25–30 A summary of specific situations in which the eating of meat sacrificed to idols could present problems of conscience. Three cases are considered. In the first (the marketplace, 1 Cor 10:25–26) and the second (at table, 1 Cor 10:27), there is no need to be concerned with whether food has passed through a pagan sacrifice or not, for the principle of 1 Cor 8:4–6 still stands, and the whole creation belongs to the one God. But in the third case (1 Cor 10:28), the situation changes if someone present explicitly raises the question of the sacrificial origin of the food; eating in such circumstances may be subject to various interpretations, some of which could be harmful to individuals. Paul is at pains to insist that the enlightened Christian conscience need not change its judgment about the neutrality, even the goodness, of the food in itself (1 Cor 10:29–30); yet the total situation is altered to the extent that others are potentially endangered, and this calls for a different response, for the sake of others.
  12. 10:32–11:1 In summary, the general rule of mutually responsible use of their Christian freedom is enjoined first negatively (1 Cor 10:32), then positively, as exemplified in Paul (1 Cor 10:33), and finally grounded in Christ, the pattern for Paul’s behavior and theirs (1 Cor 11:1; cf. Rom 15:1–3).