         
• Key
Chapter 7
- A solution of several difficult cases concerning
marriage and married persons, 1-6.
- God has given
every man his proper gift, 7.
- Directions to the
unmarried and widows, 8,9.
- Directions to the
married, 10,11.
- Directions to men married to heathen
women, and to women married to heathen men, 12-16.
- Every man should abide in his vocation, 17-24.
- Directions concerning virgins, and single persons in
general, 25-28.
- How all should behave themselves in the
things of this life, in reference to eternity,
29-31.
- The trials of the married state, 39-35.
- Directions concerning the state of virginity or
celibacy, 36-38.
- How the wife is bound to her husband
during his life, and her liberty to marry another after
his death, 39,40.
Notes on Chapter 7
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Verse 1. The things whereof ye wrote
unto me It is sufficiently evident that the
principal part of this epistle was written in answer to some
questions which had been sent to the apostle in a letter from
the Corinthian Church; and the first question seems to be
this: "Is it proper for a man to marry in the
present circumstances of the Church?"
The question concerning the expediency or inexpediency of
marriage was often agitated among the ancient philosophers;
and many, though inclined to decide against it, because
of the troubles and cares connected with it, tolerated it in
their opinions; because, though an evil, it was judged
to be a necessary evil. The words of Menander
are full to this effect: "If a man
consider marriage in a proper point of view, it is an evil;
but then it is a necessary evil." Metellus Numidicus
spoke of it nearly in the same way. Si sine uxore possemus,
Quirites, esse, omnes ea molestia careremus; sed
quoniam ita natura tradidit, ut nec CUM ILLIS
salis commode, nec SINE ILLIS ullo modo vivi
possit, saluti perpetus potius quam brevi voluptati
consulendum. "If, O ye Romans, we could live unmarried, we
should be saved from a great deal of trouble; but, seeing that
nature has so ordered it that we cannot live very comfortably
with wives, and without them cannot live at all, marriage
should be adopted, not for the sake of the short-lived
pleasure, but rather for perpetual safety." But this was not
the common opinion; the Jews absolutely required that every
man should marry, and reputed those as murderers who
did not.-See Clarke on 1 Corinthians
7:6. By the laws of Lycurgus unmarried persons were
prohibited from seeing the public games. By the laws of the
Spartans bachelors were punished. And Plato
declares all such unworthy of any honour. And to this the
commentator says, Amen.
Not to touch a
woman οτοις ,
. The learned
reader need not be informed in what sense απτομαι is used
among the Greeks, and langere among the Latins. For
examples Wetstein may be consulted.
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Verse 2. To avoid
fornication οτοις ,
, verto,
propter exercendam libidinem, vel ut libidinem
licite exercere liceat. Probo hanc notionem ex
Hebraeo, ibi zanah, est libidinem exercere, Hosea
4:10: For they shall eat and not have enough; they
shall commit whoredom, libidinem exercebunt, and
shall not increase. Here the prophet certainly does not
speak of whoredom in our sense of the word; for the
persons he mentions expected to have children,
which cannot be said of those who are addicted to improper
connections: the prophet speaks concerning married
persons, whom he threatens with a privation of children,
notwithstanding libidinem exercebant in order to have
numerous families. See Schoettgen. The following verse
shows that this is the apostle's meaning.
Let every man have his own
wife Let every man have one woman,
his own; and every woman one man, her
own. Here, plurality of wives and husbands is most
strictly forbidden; and they are commanded to marry for the
purpose of procreating children.
In the Jewish constitutions there are some things not only
curious, but useful, respecting marriage. "There are
four causes which induce men to marry: 1. Impure
desire; 2. To get riches; 3. To become
honourable; 4. For the glory of God. Those who
marry through the first motive beget wicked and
rebellious children. Those who marry for the sake of
riches have the curse of leaving them to
others. Those who marry for the sake of
aggrandizing their family, their families shall be
diminished. Those who marry to promote the glory of
God, their children shall be holy, and by them
shall the true Church be increased."
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Verse 3. Let the husband render unto
the wife due benevolence
οτοις ,
. Though our version is no
translation of the original, yet few persons are at a loss for
the meaning, and the context is sufficiently plain. Some have
rendered the words, not unaptly, the matrimonial debt,
or conjugal duty-that which a wife owes to her husband,
and the husband to his wife; and which they must take care
mutually to render, else alienation of affection will
be the infallible consequence, and this in numberless
instances has led to adulterous connections. In such cases the
wife has to blame herself for the infidelity of her
husband, and the husband for that of his wife. What
miserable work has been made in the peace of families by a
wife or a husband pretending to be wiser than the apostle, and
too holy and spiritual to keep the commandments of God!
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Verse 4. The
wife hath not power, her husband; her husband's person
belongs to her: neither of them has any authority to refuse
what the other has a matrimonial right to demand. The woman
that would act so is either a knave or a fool. It would be
trifling to attribute her conduct to any other cause than
weakness or folly. She does not love her
husband; or she loves some one else better than her husband;
or she makes pretensions to a fancied sanctity unsupported by
Scripture or common sense.
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Verse 5. Defraud ye not one the
other What ye owe thus to each other never
refuse paying, unless by mutual consent; and let that be only
for a certain time, when prudence dictates the
temporary separation, or when some extraordinary spiritual
occasion may render it mutually agreeable, in order that ye
may fast and pray, and derive the greatest
possible benefit from these duties by being enabled to wait on
the Lord without distraction.
That Satan tempt you not for your
incontinency. It is most evident that the
separations permitted by the Apostle, for he
enjoins none, are only for a season, on
extraordinary occasions; and that the persons may come
together again, lest Satan, taking advantage of their
matrimonial abstinence, might tempt either party to illicit
commerce.
There are a multitude of rules prescribed in such cases by
the rabbins, and indeed even by heathen writers;
for this was a matter in which common sense could always
judge; and under the direction of experience, heathens,
as well as those favoured with Divine revelation, could see
what was proper in all such cases.
Incontinence, οτοις ,
, want of strength to
regulate one's desires or appetites; from α, negative,
and κρατος, strength. It is remarkable that the apostle
supposes that even this temporary continence might
produce incontinence; and universal observation
confirms the supposition.
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Verse 6. I
speak this by permission, custom of the more conscientious
rabbins, to make a difference between the things which they
enjoined on their own judgment, and those which they
built on the authority of the law. Thus Rabbi
Tancum: "The washing of hands before meat is
in our own power; washing after meat is
commanded." In relation to this point Dr. Lightfoot
produces some examples from the Jewish writers: "The man is
commanded concerning begetting and multiplying, but not the
woman. And when does the man come under this command? From the
age of sixteen or seventeen years; but, if he
exceeds twenty years without marrying, behold he
violates and renders an affirmative precept vain. The
Gemara says: It is forbidden a man to be without a
wife; because it is written, It is not good for man
to be alone. And whosoever gives not himself to generation
and multiplying is all one with a murderer: he is as though he
diminished from the image of God, apostle here as saying that
the directions already given were from his own
judgment, and not from any Divine inspiration; and we may
take it for granted that where he does not make this
observation he is writing under the immediate afflatus of the
Holy Spirit.
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Verse 7. For
I would that all men, that were then in the Church were,
like him self, unmarried; but this was in reference to
the necessities of the Church, or what he calls, 1 Corinthians
7:26, the present distress: for it never could be
his wish that marriage should cease among men, and that human
beings should no longer be propagated upon earth; nor could he
wish that the Church of Christ should always be composed of
single persons; this would have been equally absurd;
but as the Church was then in straits and
difficulties, it was much better for its single members
not to encumber themselves with domestic embarrassments.
Every man hath his proper gift of
God Continence is a state that
cannot be acquired by human art or industry; a man has it from
God, or not at all: and if he have it from God, he has it from
him as the author of his nature; for where it does not exist
naturally, it never can exist, but either by
miraculous interference, which should never be
expected, or by chirurgical operation, which is
a shocking abomination in the sight of God. See Clarke on Matthew
19:12.
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Verse 8. The unmarried and
widows It is supposed that the apostle
speaks here of men who had been married, in the word
οτοις ,
, but were now widowers; as he does of women who
had been married, in the word χηραι, but were now
widows. And when he says ωςκαγω, even as I, he
means that he himself was a widower; for several of the
ancients rank Paul among the married apostles.
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Verse 9. But if they cannot
contain If they find it inconvenient and
uncomfortable to continue as widowers and widows, let them
remarry.
It is better to marry than to
burn. Bishop Pearce translates the original
thus: For it is better to marry than to be made
uneasy. οτοις ,
, says he, "signifies primarily to
burn; but in a metaphorical sense, to be troubled,
vexed, or made uneasy. So in 2 Corinthians
11:29: Who is offended and I burn not,
καιουκεγωπυρουμαι, and I am not troubled. So in
Terence, Uro hominem, is I vex him." It would be
well to soften the sense of this word in reference to
the subject of which the apostle speaks. He cannot mean
burning with lust, no more than Virgil means so
when he says, AEn. iv. ver. 68: Uritur infelix Dido,
the unfortunate Dido is tormented; and in Eccl. ii. 68:
Me tamen urit amor, love torments me. All this may be
said with the strictest truth in such cases where the
impure fire referred to above has no existence.
A curious story, which certainly casts light on the
phraseology of this place, is related by Dr. Lightfoot,
from the tract Kiddushin, fol. 81. "Some captive women
were brought to Nehardea, and disposed in the house and the
upper room of Rabbi Amram. They took away the ladder {that the
women might not get down, but stay there till they were
ransomed.} As one of these captives passed by the window, the
light of her great beauty shined into the house. Amram
{captivated} set up the ladder; and when he was got to the
middle of the steps {checked by his conscience} he stopped
short, and with a loud voice cried out FIRE! FIRE! in the
house of Amram! {This he did that, the neighbours
flocking in, he might be obliged to desist from the
evil affection which now prevailed in him.} The rabbins ran to
him, and {seeing no fire} they said, Thou hast disgraced
us. To which he replied: It is better that ye be
disgraced in the house of Amram in this world, then that ye
be disgraced by me in the world to come. He then
adjured that evil affection to go out of him, and it went out
as a pillar of FIRE. Amram said: Thou art FIRE,
and I am FLESH; yet for all that I have
prevailed against thee." From this story much
instruction may be derived.
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Verse 10. I command, yet not I, but
the Lord I do not give my own private
opinion or judgment in this case; for the Lord Jesus commands
that man shall not put asunder them whom God hath joined, Matthew
5:32;; 19:6.
And God has said the same, ; Genesis
2:24. The following extracts will prove that the law among
the Jews was very loose relative to the firmness of the
marriage bond:-
A woman might put away or depart from her husband by giving
this simple reason to the elders, who would give the following
certificate. "In ____ day of ____ week, of ____ year, A.,
daughter of B., put away before us and said: My mother, or my
brethren, deceived me, and wedded me or betrothed me, when I
was a very young maid, to C., son of D.; but I now reveal my
mind before you, that I will not have him."
Sometimes they parted with mutual consent, and this also
was considered legal, as was also the marriage of the
separated parties to others. Witness the following story: "A
good man had a good wife; but because they had no children,
they mutually put away each other. The good man married a bad
(a heathen) wife, and she made him bad (a heathen;) the good
woman married a bad (a heathen) husband, and she made him
good."
Divorces were easily obtained among them, and they
considered them the dissolving of the marriage bond; and, in
consequence of these, the parties might remarry with others.
This was contrary to the original institution of marriage, and
is opposed both by our Lord and the apostle.
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Verse 11. But, and if she
depart He puts the case as probable,
because it was frequent, but lays it under restrictions.
Let her remain
unmarried She departs at her own
peril; but she must not marry another: she must either
continue unmarried, or be reconciled to her husband.
And let not the husband put away
his wife. Divorces cannot be allowed but in
the case of fornication: an act of this kind dissolves
the marriage vow; but nothing else can. It is a fact
that, among the Jews, the wife had just as much right to put
away her husband as the husband had to put away his wife. As
divorces were granted, it was right that each should have an
equal power; for this served as a mutual check.
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Verse 12. But to the rest speak I,
not the Lord As if he had said: For what I
have already spoken I have the testimony of the Lord by Moses,
and of my own Lord and Master, Christ; but for the directions
which I am now about to give there is no written
testimony, and I deliver them now for the first time.
These words do not intimate that the apostle was not now under
the influences of the Divine Spirit; but, that there was
nothing in the sacred writings which bore directly on this
point.
If any brother
A Christian man, have a wife that believeth
not, i.e. who is a heathen, not yet converted to the
Christian faith, and she be pleased to dwell with him,
notwithstanding his turning Christian since their
marriage, let him not put her away because she still
continues in her heathen superstition.
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Verse 13. And the
woman Converted from heathenism to the
Christian faith; which hath a husband, who still abides
in heathenism; if he be pleased to dwell with her,
notwithstanding she has become a Christian since their
marriage; let her not leave him because he still
continues a heathen.
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Verse 14. The unbelieving husband is
sanctified by the wife Or rather, is to be
reputed as sanctified on account of his wife; she being
a Christian woman, and he, though a heathen,
being by marriage one flesh with her: her sanctity, as
far as it refers to outward things, may be considered as
imputed to him so as to render their connection not
unlawful. The case is the same when the wife is a
heathen and the husband a Christian. The word
sanctification here is to be applied much more to the
Christian state than to any moral change in the
persons; for, saints, is a common term for
Christians-those who were baptized into the faith of Christ;
and as its corresponding term kedoshim signified all
the Jews who were in the covenant of God by circumcision, the
heathens in question were considered to be in this holy
state by means of their connection with those who were by
their Christian profession saints.
Else were your children
unclean If this kind of relative
sanctification were not allowed, the children of these persons
could not be received into the Christian Church, nor enjoy any
rights, or privileges as Christians; but the Church of
God never scrupled to admit such children as members, just as
well as she did those who had sprung from parents both of whom
were Christians.
The Jews considered a child as born out of holiness
whose parents were not proselytes at the time of the birth,
though afterwards they became proselytes. On the other hand,
they considered the children of heathens born in
holiness, provided the parents became proselytes
before the birth. All the children of the heathens were
reputed unclean by the Jews; and all their own children
holy.-See Dr. Lightfoot. This shows clearly what the
apostle's meaning is.
If we consider the apostle as speaking of the children of
heathens, we shall get a remarkable comment on this
passage from Tertullian, who, in his treatise De
Carne Christi, chaps. 37,39, gives us a melancholy account
of the height to which superstition and idolatry had arrived
in his time among the Romans. "A child," says he, "from its
very conception, was dedicated to the idols and demons they
worshipped. While pregnant, the mother had her body swathed
round with bandages, prepared with idolatrous rites.
The embryo they conceived to be under the inspection of the
goddess Alemona, who nourished it in the womb.
Nona and Decima took care that it should be born
in the ninth or tenth month. Partula
adjusted every thing relative to the labour; and
Lucina ushered it into the light. During the
week preceding the birth a table was spread for Juno;
and on the last day certain persons were called together to
mark the moment on which the Parcae, or
Fates, had fixed its destiny. The first step the
child set on the earth was consecrated to the goddess
Statina; and, finally, some of the hair was cut off, or
the whole head shaven, and the hair offered to some god or
goddess through some public or private motive of devotion." He
adds that "no child among the heathens was born in a state of
purity; and it is not to be wondered at," says he, "that
demons possess them from their youth, seeing they were thus
early dedicated to their service." In reference to this, he
thinks, St. Paul speaks in the verse before us: The
unbelieving husband is sanctified by the wife-else were
your children unclean; but now are they holy; i.e.
"As the parents were converted to the Christian faith, the
child comes into the world without these impure and unhallowed
rites; and is from its infancy consecrated to the true God."
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Verse 15. But if the unbelieving,
depart Whether husband or wife: if such
obstinately depart and utterly refuse all cohabitation,
a brother or a sister-a Christian man or woman,
is not under bondage to any particular laws, so
as to be prevented from remarrying. Such, probably, the
law stood then; but it is not so now; for the marriage
can only be dissolved by death, or by the
ecclesiastical court. Even fornication or
adultery does not dissolve the marriage contract; nor
will the obstinate separation of any of the parties,
however long continued, give the party abandoned authority to
remarry. If the person have been beyond sea, and not heard of
for seven years, it is presumed he may be dead; and marriage
has been connived at in such cases. If there be no person to
complain, it may be presumed that there is none
injured. But I have known instances where even a
marriage after seven years' absence has been very
unfortunate; the husband returning at the end of ten or twelve
years, and to his utter distress finding his wife married to
another man, and with issue of that marriage! There can be no
safety in this case, unless there be absolute certainty of the
death of the party in question.
God hath called us to
peace. The refractory and disagreeing party
should not be compelled to fulfil such matrimonial
engagements as would produce continual jarring and
discord. At the same time each should take care that he
give no cause for disagreements and separations, for the
author of the Christian religion is the author of
peace, and has called us to it.
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Verse 16. For what knowest thou, O
wife You that are Christians, and
who have heathen partners, do not give them up because
they are such, for you may become the means of saving them
unto eternal life. Bear your cross, and look up to God, and he
may give your unbelieving husband or wife to your prayers.
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Verse 17.
But as God hath distributed to every man, every man
fulfil the duties of the state to which God in the course of
his providence has called him.
So ordain I in all
Churches. I do not lay on you a
burden which others are not called to bear: this is the
general rule which, by the authority of God, I impose on every
Christian society.
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Verse 18. Is any man called being
circumcised? Is any man who was formerly a
Jew converted to Christianity?
Let him not become
circumcised. Let him not endeavour to
abolish the sign of the old covenant, which he bears in his
flesh. The Greek words οτοις ,
, let him not draw
over, are evidently an elliptical expression: the word
οτοις ,
, the fore-skin, being understood; which,
indeed, is added by the Armenian and the Itala,
and several of the Latin fathers. It is a fact that it
was possible by the assistance of art to do this; and
Celsus himself prescribes the mode, De Medic.
vii. 25. By frequent stretching, the circumcised skin could be
again so drawn over, as to prevent the ancient sign of
circumcision from appearing. Some in their zeal against
Judaism endeavoured to abolish this sign of it in their flesh:
it is most evidently against this that the apostle speaks.
Many false Jews made use of this practice, that they might
pass through heathen countries unobserved; otherwise, in
frequenting the baths they would have been detected.
Let him not be
circumcised. Let no man who, being a
Gentile, has been converted to the Christian faith, submit to
circumcision as something necessary to his salvation.
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Verse 19. Circumcision is
nothing Circumcision itself, though
commanded of God, is nothing of itself, it being only a
sign of the justification which should be afterwards received
by faith. At present, neither it nor its opposite either
hinders or furthers the work of grace; and
keeping the commandments of God, from his love shed
abroad in a believing heart, is the sum and substance of
religion.
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Verse 20. Let every man abide in the
same calling As both the circumcised and
uncircumcised, in Christ, have the same advantages, and to
their believing the same facilities; so any situation of life
is equally friendly to the salvation of the soul, if a man be
faithful to the grace he has received. Therefore, in all
situations a Christian should be content, for all things work
together for good to him who loves God.
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Verse 21. Art thou called being a
servant? οτοις ,
, Art thou converted
to Christ while thou art a slave-the property of
another person, and bought with his money? care not for
it-this will not injure thy Christian condition, but if
thou canst obtain thy liberty-use it rather-prefer this
state for the sake of freedom, and the temporal
advantages connected with it.
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Verse 22. For he that is
called The man who, being a slave,
is converted to the Christian faith, is the Lord's freeman;
his condition as a slave does not vitiate any of the
privileges to which he is entitled as a Christian: on
the other hand, all free men, who receive the grace of Christ,
must consider themselves the slaves of the Lord, i.e.
his real property, to be employed and disposed of according to
his godly wisdom, who, notwithstanding their state of
subjection, will find the service of their Master to be
perfect freedom.
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Verse 23. Ye are bought with a
price As truly as your bodies have become
the property of your masters, in consequence of his paying
down a price for you; so sure you are now the Lord's property,
in consequence of your being purchased by the blood of Christ.
Some render this verse interrogatively: Are ye bought
with a price from your slavery? Do not again
become slaves of men. Never sell yourselves;
prefer and retain your liberty now that ye have acquired it.
In these verses the apostle shows that the Christian
religion does not abolish our civil connections; in
reference to them, where it finds us, there it leaves
us. In whatever relation we stood before our embracing
Christianity, there we stand still; our secular condition
being no farther changed than as it may be affected by the
amelioration of our moral character. But slavery, and
all buying and selling of the bodies and souls of men, no
matter what colour or complexion, is a high offence against
the holy and just God, and a gross and unprincipled attack on
the liberty and rights of our fellow creatures.
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Verse 24. Let every man-abide with
God. Let him live to God in whatsoever
station he is placed by Providence. If he be a slave, God will
be with him even in his slavery, if he be faithful to
the grace which he has received. It is very likely that some
of the slaves at Corinth, who had been converted to
Christianity, had been led to think that their Christian
privileges absolved them from the necessity of continuing
slaves; or, at least, brought them on a level with their
Christian masters. A spirit of this kind might have soon led
to confusion and insubordination, and brought scandals into
the Church. It was therefore a very proper subject for the
apostle to interfere in; and to his authority, the persons
concerned would doubtless respectfully bow.
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Verse 25. Now concerning
virgins This was another subject on which
the Church at Corinth had asked the advice of the apostle. The
word οτοις ,
, virgin, we take to signify a pure,
unmarried young woman; but it is evident that the
word in this place means young unmarried persons of either
sex, as appears from 1 Corinthians
7:26,27,32-34 and from ; Revelation
14:4. The word παρθενος, virgin, is frequently
applied to men as well as to women. See Suidas,
under the word οτοις ,
, He
(Abel) was a virgin, and a righteous man. In 1 Corinthians
7:36the word is supposed to mean the state of
virginity or celibacy, and very probable reasons
are assigned for it; and it is evident that persons of either
sex in a state of celibacy are the persons intended.
I have no commandment of the
Lord There is nothing in the sacred
writings that directly touches this point.
Yet I give my
judgment As every way equal to such
commandments had there been any, seeing I have received the
teaching of his own Spirit, and have obtained mercy of the
Lord to be faithful to this heavenly gift, so that
it abides with me to lead me into all truth. In this way I
think the apostle's words may be safely understood.
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Verse 26. This is good for the
present distress There was no period in the
heathen times when the Church was not under persecutions and
afflictions; on some occasions these were more oppressive than
at others.
The word οτοις ,
signifies, necessity, distress,
tribulation, and calamity; as it does in Luke
21:23; ; 2 Corinthians
6:4;; 12:10.
In such times, when the people of God had no certain
dwelling-place, when they were lying at the mercy of their
enemies without any protection from the state-the state
itself often among the persecutors-he who had a
family to care for, would find himself in very
embarrassed circumstances, as it would be much more easy to
provide for his personal safety than to have the care
of a wife and children. On this account it was much better for
unmarried persons to continue for the present in their
celibacy.
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Verse 27. Art thou bound unto a
wife? i e. Married; for the marriage
contract was considered in the light of a bond.
Seek not to be
loosed. Neither regret your circumstances,
notwithstanding the present distress, nor seek on this account
for a dissolution of the marriage contract. But if thou art
under no matrimonial engagements, do not for the present enter
into any.
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Verse 28. But, and if thou
marry As there is no law against this, even
in the present distress, thou hast not sinned, because
there is no law against this; and it is only on account of
prudential reasons that I give this advice.
And if a virgin
marry Both the man and the woman have equal
privileges in this case; either of them may marry without sin.
It is probable, as there were many sects and parties in
Corinth, that there were among them those who forbade to
marry, 1 Timothy
4:3, and who might have maintained other doctrines of
devils besides. These persons, or such doctrines, the
apostle has in view when he says, They may marry and yet
not sin.
Trouble in the
flesh From the simple circumstance of the
incumbrance of a family while under persecution; because of
the difficulty of providing for its comfort and safety while
flying before the face of persecution.
But I spare you.
The evil is coming; but I will not press upon you the
observance of a prudential caution, which you might deem too
heavy a cross.
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Verse 29. The time is
short These persecutions and distresses are
at the door, and life itself will soon be run out. Even
then Nero was plotting those grievous persecutions with
which he not only afflicted, but devastated the Church of
Christ.
They that have
wives Let none begin to think of any
comfortable settlement for his family, let him sit loose to
all earthly concerns, and stand ready prepared to escape for
his life, or meet death, as the providence of God may permit.
The husband will be dragged from the side of his wife to
appear before the magistrates, and be required either to
abjure Christ or die.
Linquenda tellus, et domus, et placens Uxor;
neque harum, quas colis, arborum Te, praeter invisas
cupressos, Ulla brevem dominum sequetur. HOR. ODAR.
lib. ii., Od. xiv., v. 22.
Your pleasing consort must be left; And you, of
house and lands bereft, Must to the shades descend: The
cypress only, hated tree! Of all thy much-loved groves, shall
thee, Its short-lived lord, attend. FRANCIS.
Poor heathenism! thou couldst give but cold comfort
in such circumstances as these: and infidelity, thy
younger brother, is no better provided than thou.
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Verse 30.
They that weep, complete system of distress and
confusion that private sorrows and private joys will be
absorbed in the weightier and more oppressive public evils:
yet, let every man still continue in his calling, let him buy,
and sell, and traffic, as usual; though in a short time,
either by the coming persecution or the levelling hand of
death, he that had earthly property will be brought into the
same circumstances with him who had none.
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Verse 31. And they that use this
world Let them who have earthly property or
employments discharge conscientiously their duties, from a
conviction of the instability of earthly things. Make a
right use of every thing, and pervert nothing
from its use. To use a thing is to employ it
properly in order to accomplish the end to which it refers. To
abuse a thing signifies to pervert it
from that use. Pass through things
temporal, so as not to lose those which are eternal.
For the fashion of this
world οτοις ,
signifies
properly the present state or constitution of things;
the frame of the world, that is, the world
itself. But often the term κοσμος, world, is taken to
signify the Jewish state and polity; the
destruction of this was then at hand, and this the Holy Spirit
might then signify to the apostle.
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Verse 32. Without
carefulness. Though all these things will
shortly come to pass, yet do not be anxious about them. Every
occurrence is under the direction and management of God. The
wrath of man shall praise him, and the remainder of it he
shall restrain, and none can harm you if ye be followers of
that which is good. We should all take the advice of the
poet:-
"With patient mind thy course of duty run; God nothing
does, nor suffers to be done, But thou
wouldst do thyself, couldst thou but see The
end of all events as well as He."-BYROM.
He that is unmarried careth for
the things that belong to the Lord
He has nothing to do with a family, and therefore can give
his whole time to the service of his Maker, having him alone
to please.
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Verse 33. But he that is
married He has a family to provide
for, and his wife to please, as well as to fulfil his duty to
God, and attend to the concerns of his own soul. The
single man has nothing to attend to but what concerns
his own salvation: the married man has all this to
attend to, and besides to provide for his wife and family, and
take care of their eternal interests also. The single
man has very little trouble comparatively; the married
man has a great deal. The single man is an
atom in society; the married man is a small
community in himself. The former is the
centre of his own existence, and lives for
himself alone; the latter is diffused
abroad, makes a much more important part of the body
social, and provides both for its support and continuance. The
single man lives for and does good to himself
only; the married man lives both for himself and
the public. Both the state and the Church
of Christ are dependent on the married man, as from him
under God the one has subjects, the other
members; while the single man is but an
individual in either, and by and by will cease from both, and
having no posterity is lost to the public for ever. The
married man, therefore, far from being in a state of
inferiority to the single man, is
beyond him out of the limits of comparison. He can do
all the good the other can do, though perhaps sometimes in a
different way; and he can do ten thousand goods that the other
cannot possibly do. And therefore both himself and his
state are to be preferred infinitely before those of
the other. Nor could the apostle have meant any thing less;
only for the present distress he gave his opinion that
it was best for those who were single to continue
so. And who does not see the propriety of the advice?
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Verse 34. There is a difference also
between a wife and a virgin. That
is: There is this difference between a married and an
unmarried woman. The unmarried careth (only)
for the things of the Lord, having no domestic
duties to perform. That she may be
holy-separated to Divine employments, both in body
and spirit. Whereas she that is married careth
(also) for the things of the world, how she may
please her husband, having many domestic duties to fulfil,
her husband being obliged to leave to her the care of the
family, and all other domestic concerns.
On this verse there is a profusion of various readings in
MSS., versions, and fathers, for which I must
refer to Griesbach, as it would be impossible to
introduce them here so as to make them look like sense.
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Verse 35. This I speak for your own
profit The advices belong to yourselves
alone, because of the peculiar circumstances in which
you are placed. Nothing spoken here was ever designed to be of
general application; it concerned the Church at Corinth
alone, or Churches in similar circumstances.
Not that I may cast a snare upon
you οτοις ,
-Here is a
manifest allusion to the Retiarius among the
Romans, who carried a small casting net, which
he endeavoured to throw over the head of his adversary and
thus entangle him. Or to a similar custom among the
Persians, who made use of a noose called the [Arabic]
camand; which they employed in the same way. One of
these lies before me; it is a strong silken cord, one end of
which is a loop to be held in the hand, and the rest is in the
form of a common snare or noose, which, catching
hold of any thing, tightens in proportion as it is
pulled by the hand that holds the loop.
The apostle, therefore, intimates that what he says was not
intended absolutely to bind them, but to show them the
propriety of following an advice which in the present case
would be helpful to them in their religious connections, that
they might attend upon the Lord without
distraction, which they could not do in times of
persecution, when, in addition to their own personal safety,
they had a wife and children to care for.
For that which is comely, and that
ye may attend upon the Lord without
distraction, The original
οτοις ,
, of which
our version is only a paraphrase, is thus translated by
Bishop Pearson: But for the sake of decency, and of
attending more easily upon the Lord without
distraction. This is much more literal than ours.
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Verse 36. Uncomely towards his
virgin Different meanings have been
assigned to this verse; I shall mention three of the
principal.
-
1. "In those early times, both among the Hebrews
and Christians, the daughters were wholly in the power
of the father, so that he might give or not give them
in marriage as he chose; and might bind them to perpetual
celibacy if he thought proper; and to this case the apostle
alludes. If the father had devoted his daughter to perpetual
virginity, and he afterwards found that she had fixed her
affections upon a person whom she was strongly inclined to
marry, and was now getting past the prime of life; he,
seeing from his daughter's circumstances that it would be
wrong to force her to continue in her state of
celibacy; though he had determined before to keep her single,
yet he might in this case alter his purpose without sin, and
let her and her suitor marry."
- 2. "The whole verse and its context speaks of young women
dedicated to the service of God, who were called παρθενοι,
virgins, in the primitive Church. And a case is put
here, 'that circumstances might occur to render the breach of
even a vow of this kind necessary, and so no sin
be committed.'"
- 3. "The apostle by οτοις
,
, does not mean a virgin,
but the state of virginity or celibacy,
whether in man or woman."
Both Mr. Locke and Dr.
Whitby are of this opinion, and the latter reasons on
it thus:-
It is generally supposed that these three verses relate to
virgins under the power of parents and guardians and the usual
inference is, that children are to be disposed of in marriage
by the parents, guardians, foundation in the text, for
οτοις ,
is not to keep his daughter's,
but his own virginity, or rather his purpose of
virginity; for, as Phavorinus says, He is
called a virgin who freely gives himself up to the
Lord, renouncing matrimony, and preferring a life spent
in continency. And that this must be the true import of
these words appears from this consideration, that this depends
upon the purpose of his own heart, and the power he has over
his own will, and the no necessity arising from
himself to change this purpose. Whereas the keeping a daughter
unmarried depends not on these conditions on her
father's part but on her own; for, let her have
a necessity, and surely the apostle would not advise
the father to keep her a virgin, because he had
determined so to do; nor could there be any doubt
whether the father had power over his own will or not,
when no necessity lay upon him to betroth his
virgin. The Greek runs to this sense: if he had
stood already firm in his heart, finding no necessity,
viz. to change his purpose; and hath power over his own
will, not to marry; finding himself able to persist in the
resolution he had made to keep his virginity, he
does well to continue a virgin: and then the phrase,
if any man think he behaves himself unseemly towards
his virgin, if it be over-aged, and thinks he ought rather
to join in marriage, refers to the opinions both of
Jews and Gentiles that all ought to
marry. The Jews say that the time of marriage is from 16
or 17 to 20; while some of the Gentiles specify from 30 to 35.
If any think thus, says the apostle, let them
do what they will, they sin not: let them marry. And then
he concludes with those words applied to both cases: so
then, both he that marries doeth well, and he that
marries not, doeth better.
This last opinion seems to be the true sense of the
apostle.
It may be necessary to make a few general observations on
these verses, summing up what has been said.
1. οτοις ,
here should be considered as implying not a
virgin, but the state of virginity or
celibacy.
2. υπερακμος, over-aged, must refer to the passing
of that time in which both the laws and customs of Jews and
Gentiles required men to marry. See above, and See Clarke on
1 Corinthians
7:6.
3. οτοις ,
, And need so require; or,
if there appear to be a necessity; is to be
understood of any particular change in his circumstances or in
his feelings; or, that he finds, from the law and
custom in the case, that it is a scandal for him
not to marry; then let him do what he wills or
purposes.
4. Instead of οτοις ,
, let THEM marry, I
think γαμειτω, let HIM marry, is the true
reading, and agrees best with the context. This reading is
supported by D*EFG, Syriac, in the Arabic,
Slavonic, one of the Itala, and St.
Augustine. Si nubat, if he marry, is the
reading of the Vulgate, several copies of the Itala,
Ambrose, Jerome, Ambrosiaster, Sedulius, and Bede.
This reading is nearly of the same import with the other:
Let him do what he willeth, he sinneth not, let him
marry; or, he sinneth not if he marry.
5. The whole of the 37th verse relates to the
purpose that the man has formed; and the
strength that he has to keep his purpose of perpetual
celibacy, being under no necessity to change that
purpose.
6. Instead of οεκγαμιζων, he who giveth her in
marriage, I purpose to read ογαμιζων, he who
marrieth, which is the reading of the Codex
Alexandrinus, the Codex Vaticanus, No. 1209, and of
some others: with Clement, Methodius, and Basil.
τηνεαυτου παρθενον, his own virgin, is added after the
above, by several very ancient and reputable MSS, as also by
the Syriac, Armenian, Vulgate, AEthiopic, Clement,
Basil, Optatus, and others; but it seems so much like a
gloss, that Griesbach has not made it even a candidate
for a place in the text. He then who marrieth, though
previously intending perpetual virginity, doeth well;
as this is agreeable to laws both Divine and human: and he
who marrieth not, doeth better, because of the
present distress. See 1 Corinthians
7:26.
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Verse 39. The wife is bound by the
law This seems to be spoken in answer to
some other question of the Corinthians to this effect: "May a
woman remarry whose husband is dead, or who has
abandoned her?" To which he replies, in general, That as long
as her husband is living the law binds her to him
alone; but, if the husband die, she is free to remarry, but
only in the Lord; that is she must not marry a
heathen nor an irreligious man; and she should
not only marry a genuine Christian, but one of her own
religious sentiments; for, in reference to domestic
peace, much depends on this.
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Verse 40. But she is happier if she
so abide If she continue in her
widowhood because of the present distress; for
this must always be taken in, that consistency in the
apostle's reasoning may be preserved. If this were not
understood, how could St. Paul tell the widow that it would be
more happy for her to continue in her widowhood
than to remarry? She who had tried both the
state of celibacy and the state of marriage
could certainly best tell which was most for her
comfort; and he could not tell any thing but by an express
revelation from heaven, relative to the future state of any
widow: it is certain that he can never be understood as
speaking in general, as there are multitudes of persons
abundantly more happy in their married than in their single
state; and there are many widows also much more happy in their
second marriage than they have been in their first.
After my judgment
According to the view I have of the subject, which view I
take by the light of the Divine Spirit, who shows me the
tribulations which are coming on the Church. But, says
he, 1 Corinthians
7:28: I spare you-I will not be more explicit
concerning coming evils, as I wish to save you from all
forebodings which bring torment.
I think-I have the Spirit of
God. οτοις ,
might be
translated, I am CERTAIN that I have the Spirit
of God. This sense of δοκειν (which we translate to
seem, to think, to appear, work.
Ulpian, on Demosthen. Olynth. 1, says,
οτοις ,
. The word δοκειν is used by the
ancients, not always to express what is DOUBTFUL,
but often to express what is TRUE and
CERTAIN.-See Bp. Pearce. The apostle cannot be
understood as expressing any doubt of his being under the
inspiration of the Divine Spirit, as this would have defeated
his object in giving the above advices; for-if they were not
dictated by the Spirit of God, can it be supposed that,
in the face of apparent self-interest, and the prevalence of
strong passions, they could have been expected to have become
rules of conduct to this people? They must have
understood him as asserting that he had the direction
of the Spirit of God in giving those opinions, else they could
not be expected to obey.
- 1. IN the preceding chapter we have met with subjects both
of difficulty and importance. As to the
difficulties, it is hoped that they have been so
generally considered in the notes that few or none of them
remain; and on the subjects of peculiar importance much
time has been spent, in order to impress them on the mind of
the reader. The delicacy of some of them would not
admit of greater plainness; and in a few instances I have been
obliged to wrap the meaning in a foreign language.
- 2. On the important subject of marriage I have said
what I believe to be true, and scruple not to say that it is
the most useful state in which-the human being can be
placed; and consequently that in which most honour may
be brought to God. I have listened with much attention for the
better part of half a century to the arguments against
marriage and in favour of celibacy; and I have had the
opportunity of being acquainted with many who endeavoured to
exemplify their own doctrine. But I have seen an end of
all their perfection: neither the world nor the Church are
under any obligations to them: they either married when they
could do it to their mind and convenience; or, continuing in
their celibacy, they lived a comparatively useless life; and
died as they should, unregretted. The doctrine is not
only dangerous but anti-scriptural: and I hope I have
sufficiently vindicated Paul from being its patron or
supporter.
- 3. While I contend for the superior excellence of the
marriage state, I hope I shall not be understood
to be the apologist of indiscriminate marriages-no,
many of them are blamable in a very high degree. Instead of
consulting common sense and propriety, childish
affections, brutish passions, or the love of money are the
motives on which many of them have been contracted. Such
marriages are miserable; must be so, and should not be
otherwise; and superficial people looking at these form
an estimate of the state itself, and then indulge
themselves in exclaiming against an ordinance of God, either
perverted by themselves or the equally foolish
persons who are the subjects of their animadversion. That
genuine Christians can never be so useful in any state as that
of marriage I am fully convinced; but to be happy, the
marriage must be in the Lord. When believers
match with unbelievers, generally pars sincera
trahitur; the good becomes perverted; and Satan has his
triumph when he has got an immortal soul out of the Church of
Christ into his own synagogue. But who among young people will
lay this to heart? And how few among young men and young women
will not sell their Saviour and his people for a
husband or a wife!
- 4. The doctrine of second marriages has been long a
subject of controversy in the Church. The Scriptures, properly
understood, have not only nothing against them, but much for
them. And in this chapter St. Paul, in the most pointed
manner, admits of them. A widow may marry again,
only let it be in the Lord; and a widower has
certainly the same privilege.
- 5. The conversion which the Scripture requires,
though it makes a most essential change in our souls in
reference to God, and in our works in reference both to
God and man, makes none in our civil state: even if a
man is called, i.e. converted in a state of slavery, he
does not gain his manumission in consequence of his
conversion; he stands in the same relation both to the
state and to his fellows that he stood in
before; and is not to assume any civil rights or
privileges in consequence of the conversion of his soul to
God. The apostle decides the matter in this chapter, and
orders that every man should abide in the calling wherein he
is called.
- 6. From the 20th to the 23d verse the apostle refers to the
state of slavery among the Greeks; and from what he
says we find that even among the slaves there were
Christian converts, to whom, though he recommends
submission and contentment, yet he intimates
that if they could get their freedom they should prefer
it; and he strongly charges those that were free not to
become again the slaves of men, 1 Corinthians
7:23; from which we learn that a man might dispose of his
own liberty, which, in a Christian, would be a disgrace
to his redemption by Christ. The word ελευθερος, which we
translate freeman, means properly freed-man, one
who had been a slave but had regained his liberty. It
is the same as libertus among the Romans, one who was
manumitted. The manumission was performed three
several ways: 1. The consent of the master that the
slave should have his name entered in the census; or public
register of the citizens. 2. The slave was led before the
praetor, and the magistrate laid his wand, called
vindicta, on his head, and declared him free. 3. By
testament or will, the master bequeathing
to the slave his freedom.
The manner in which the second mode of manumission was
performed is curious. The praetor having laid the rod
vindicta upon the slave's head, pronounced these words,
Dico eum liberum esse more Quiritum, "I
pronounce him free according to the custom of the Romans."
This done he gave the rod to the lictor, or serjeant,
who struck the slave with it upon the head, and afterwards
with the hand upon the face and back. The head also of the
slave was shaven, and a cup given him by his master as a token
of freedom, and the notary entered the name of the new
freed-man in the public register, with the reasons of
his manumission: it was customary also to give him another
surname.
- 7. Among our Saxon ancestors, and also after
the conquest, there was a species of slavery: all the
villani were slaves to their respective lords, and each
was bound to serve him in a great variety of ways. There is a
profusion of curious examples of this in the ancient record
preserved in the bishop's auditor's office in the cathedral of
Durham, commonly known by the name of the Bolden Book.
This record has been lately printed under the direction of his
majesty's commissioners on the public records of the kingdom,
in the supplement to Domesday Book.
- 8. Among our Saxon ancestors manumissions were
granted on various accounts: 1. A person might, if able,
purchase his own freedom. 2. One man might purchase the
freedom of another. 3. Manumissions were granted to procure by
their merit the salvation of departed souls. 4. Persons were
manumitted also in order to be consecrated to the service of
God. These manumissions were usually recorded in some
holybook, especially in copies of the four
Evangelists, which, being preserved in the libraries of
abbeys, times be consulted. Several entries of these
manumissions exist in a MS. of the four Evangelists, s. 4,14,
in the library of Corpus Christi or Bennet
college, Cambridge.
I shall produce a specimen of one of the several kinds
mentioned above, giving the original only of the first; and of
the others, verbal translations.
- 1. The certificate of a man's having purchased his own
freedom. {Anglo-Saxon} {Anglo-Saxon} {Anglo-Saxon}
{Anglo-Saxon} "Here is witnessed, in this book of Christ,
that AElfwig the Red hath redeemed himself from
Abbot AElfsig, and the whole convent, with one pound.
And this is witnessed by the whole convent at Bath. May
Christ strike him blind Who this writing perverts." This is a
usual execration at the end of these forms, and is in rhyme in
the original.
- 2. Certificate of one having purchased the liberty
of another.
"Here is witnessed, in this book of Christ, that AEdric
Atford has redeemed Saegyfa, his daughter, from the
Abbot AElfsig, and from the convent of Bath, to be for
ever free, and all her posterity."
- 3. Certificate of redemption in behalf of one
departed.
"Here is witnessed, in this book of Christ, that AElfric
Scot and AEgelric Scot are manumitted for the soul
of Abbot AElfsig, to perpetual liberty. This was done
with the testimony of the whole convent."
- 4. Certificate of persons manumitted to be
devoted to the service of God.
"Here is witnessed, in this book of Christ, that
John bought Gunnilda the daughter of
Thurkill, from Goda, widow of Leafenath,
with half a pound. With the testimony of the whole convent.
May Christ strike him blind Who this writing perverts.
And he has dedicated her to Christ and St.
Peter, in behalf of his mother's soul."
- 9. When a man was made free, it was either in the church or
at some public meeting: the sheriff of the county took him by
the right hand and proclaimed him a freeman, and showed him
the open door and the public highway, intimating that he was
free to go whithersoever he pleased, and then gave him the
arms of a freeman, viz. a spear and a sword. In
some cases the man was to pay thirty pence to his master of
hide money, intimating that he was no longer under
restraint, chastisement, or correction. From
which it appears that our ancestors were in the habit of
flogging their slaves. See the laws of Ina, c.
24,39; of Wm. the Conqueror, c. 65; and of
Hen. I. c. 78.
- 10. Among the Gentoos the manumission of a slave was
as follows: The slave took a pitcher, filled it with water,
and put therein berenge-arook (rice that had been
cleansed without boiling) and flowers of doob, (a kind
of small salad,) and taking the pitcher on his shoulder
he stands near his master; the master then puts the pitcher on
the slave's head, breaks it so that the water, rice, flowers,
and doob that were in the pitcher may fall on the slave's
body: when this is done the master thrice pronounces, I
have made thee free; then the slave steps forward a few
paces towards the east, and then the manumission is complete.
See Code of Gentoo laws, chap. 8: sec. 2, page 160. It
is evident that the whole of this ceremony is emblematical:
- 1.
The pitcher represents the confined, servile state of the
slave.
- 2. The articles contained in it, his exclusion
while in a state of slavery from the grand benefits and
comforts of life.
- 3. The water contained
in the pitcher, his exclusion from the refreshing
influences of heaven; for slaves were not permitted to take
part in the ordinances of religion.
- 4. The clean, unboiled
rice, his incapacity to have secular possessions; for
slaves were not permitted to possess lands either by
inheritance or purchase: a slave could sow no seed for
himself, and consequently have no legal claim on support from
this staff of life.
- 5. The doob or salad shut
up, his being without relish for that state of
being which was rendered insupportable to him by his thraldom.
- 6. The breaking of the pitcher, his manumission
and enjoyment of liberty: being as free to go whithersoever he
would as the water was to run, being now disengaged from the
pitcher.
- 7. The shedding of the water, rice,
flower, enjoying and possessing every heavenly and earthly
good.
- 8. His stepping towards the east, his
acknowledgment to the supreme Being, the fountain of light and
life, (of whom the sun was the emblem,) for his enlargement;
and his eagerness to possess the light and comfort of
that new state of happiness into which he was now
brought in consequence of his manumission.
- 11. The description that Dr. John Taylor gives, ln
his Elements of Civil Law, of the state of
slaves among the ancients, will nearly suit with their
state among our ancestors, though scarcely as bad as their
state in the West Indies. "They were held among the Romans,
pro nullis; pro mortuis; pro quadrupedibus:- -for
no men; for dead men; for beasts:
nay, were in a much worse state than any cattle
whatever. They had no head in the state, no
name, no tribe or register. They were not
capable of being injured, nor could they take by
purchase or descent, had no heirs, and could make no
will. Exclusive of what was called their
peculium, whatever they acquired was their master's;
they could neither plead nor be impleaded; but
were entirely excluded from all civil concerns;
were not entitled to the rights of matrimony,
and therefore had no relief in case of adultery; nor
were they proper objects of cognation or
affinity. They might be sold,
transferred, or pawned, like other goods
or personal estate; for goods they were, and such were
they esteemed. They might be tortured for evidence,
punished at the discretion of their lord,
and even put to death, by his authority. They were laid
under several other civil incapacities, too tedious to
mention."
When all this is considered, we may at once see the
horrible evil of slavery, and wonder at the grace which
could render them happy and contented in this situation see
the preceding chapter, 1 Corinthians
7:20-22. And yet we need not be surprised that the apostle
should say to those who were free or freed, Ye are
bought with a price; do not become slaves of men.
- 12. I have entered the more particularly into this subject,
because it, or allusions to it, are frequently
occurring in the New Testament, and I speak of it here once
for all.
And, to conclude, I here register my testimony
against the unprincipled, inhuman, anti-Christian, and
diabolical slave-trade, with all its authors,
promoters, abettors, and sacrilegious gains; as
well as against the great devil, the father of it and them.
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Copyright Statement The Adam Clarke Commentary is a derivative of an
electronic edition prepared by GodRules.net.
Bibliography
Information Clarke, Adam. "Commentary
on 1 Corinthians 7". "The Adam Clarke Commentary".
<http://www.studylight.org/com/acc/view.cgi?book=1co&chapter=007>.
1832.
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