Text Size
1 Corinthians 3

God’s Field, God’s Building, God’s Temple

Because the church belongs to God and is his holy temple, believers must abandon worldly boasting, reject immature factionalism, and build carefully on the one foundation, Jesus Christ.

Chapter Summary

Because the church belongs to God and is his holy temple, believers must abandon worldly boasting, reject immature factionalism, and build carefully on the one foundation, Jesus Christ.

Overview

Paul takes the theological principles of the previous chapters and applies them to the Corinthians’ corporate life. He begins by exposing their immaturity. Though they are truly in Christ, their jealousy and party spirit reveal that they are still behaving according to the flesh. He then reorients their view of leadership: ministers are not rival lords but servants assigned by God.

Their roles differ, but the growth is entirely God’s work. Paul next shifts metaphors from agriculture to architecture. As a wise master builder, he laid the foundation, which is Jesus Christ, and others now build upon it. The issue is not whether one may build, but how one builds. The quality of each person's work will be tested eschatologically. Some work will endure and receive reward; other work will be burned up, though the worker himself may still be saved.

Paul then heightens the seriousness of the matter by identifying the church as God’s temple. To damage or corrupt the church is to assault what is holy, and God will respond in judgment. Finally, Paul concludes by forbidding boasting in human leaders and overturning their scarcity mentality. Since they belong to Christ, all legitimate servants and gifts are already theirs in him.

Therefore the church must stop exalting men and recover a God-centered, Christ-founded, temple-conscious identity.

Context
Setting

Paul continues addressing the church in Corinth, a congregation shaped by a status-driven urban culture that prized rhetoric, patronage, philosophical display, and social ranking.

The Biblical World

Chapter At A Glance

Covenant Significance

The church is presented as God’s holy dwelling, his covenant people among whom he lives by his Spirit. This temple language places the congregation within the storyline of God dwelling with his people, now fulfilled corporately in the church under the lordship of Christ.

Gospel Clarity

The chapter assumes and reinforces the gospel by showing that believers are in Christ, built on Christ, and belong to Christ. Since the church is God’s work from foundation to growth to final testing, there is no room for boasting in human agents. All saving life and lasting fruit come from God through Jesus Christ.

Focus Points

  • Spiritual immaturity within a truly Christian church
  • The distinction between fleshly conduct and spiritual identity
  • Ministers as servants rather than personalities to idolize
  • God as the sole source of spiritual growth
  • Christ as the one foundation of the church
  • The testing of ministry work on the Day of judgment
  • The corporate church as God’s temple
  • The danger of destroying or corrupting the church
  • The rejection of worldly wisdom and boasting in men
  • Believers’ inheritance in Christ
  • Ecclesiology
  • Christology
  • Sanctification
  • Eschatology
  • Pneumatology
  • Ministry theology

Cross References

Job 5:13
He catches the wise in their craftiness, and sweeps away the plans of the cunning.
Old Testament foundation
Psalm 94:11
The Lord knows the thoughts of man, that they are futile.
Old Testament foundation
Isaiah 28:16
So this is what the Lord God says: “See, I lay a stone in Zion, a tested stone, a precious cornerstone, a sure foundation; the one who believes will never be shaken.
Old Testament foundation
1 Corinthians 3:11
For no one can lay a foundation other than the one already laid, which is Jesus Christ.
Gospel resolution
1 Corinthians 3:21-23
Therefore, stop boasting in men. All things are yours, whether Paul or Apollos or Cephas or the world or life or death or the present or the future. All of them belong to you, and you belong to Christ, and Christ belongs to God.
Gospel resolution
Ephesians 2:19-22
Therefore you are no longer strangers and foreigners, but fellow citizens with the saints and members of God’s household, built on the foundation of the apostles and prophets, with Christ Jesus Himself as the cornerstone. In Him the whole building is fitted together and grows into a holy temple in the Lord.
Thematic parallel
1 Peter 2:4-5
As you come to Him, the living stone, rejected by men but chosen and precious in God’s sight, you also, like living stones, are being built into a spiritual house to be a holy priesthood, offering spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God through Jesus Christ.
Thematic parallel
2 Corinthians 6:16
What agreement can exist between the temple of God and idols? For we are the temple of the living God. As God has said: “I will dwell with them and walk among them, and I will be their God, and they will be My people.”
Thematic parallel
John 15:5
I am the vine and you are the branches. The one who remains in Me, and I in him, will bear much fruit. For apart from Me you can do nothing.
Thematic parallel

Passages

Book Arc