| Scripture | 
Expanded Comments | 
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| 1 Now concerning things sacrificed to idols: We know that we all have knowledge. Knowledge puffeth up, but love edifieth. | 
Offered unto idols –  Nearly all meat used in those times was first offered to idols. R3145:1
  All have knowledge –  That since an idol is nothing, meat offered to an idol cannot in any sense of the word be injured. R3144:3, 5412:2
  Knowledge puffeth up –  Knowledge alone. R2219:6
  A comparatively little knowledge might puff one up greatly without any solidity of character. R3145:1
  Knowledge alone without self-submission to God would incline to puff us up, to make us heady, arrogant, self-sufficient. R2198:3, 2219:6
  The Lord's object in providing us with the knowledge is that thereby we might grow in grace. We must have knowledge as the basis for love. R4042:3, 5479:3, 2198:3
  We could not have any love if we did not have some knowledge; because how could you love that of which you knew nothing? CR149:6
  But charity –  Greek: agape, disinterested love. R2807:5
  We must have love as the outgrowth of the knowledge, if we would be acceptable as members of the elect Church. R4042:5, 2198:3
  Love would forbid the use of knowledge and liberty if it perceived that their exercise might work injury to another. R3145:2,6, 2198:5, 1587:4
  Edifieth –  Builds up. R1587:4, 2219:6
  The getting of love is sure to build us up substantially (avoiding the inflation or pride) in all the various graces of the spirit. R3145:2, 2219:6
  If knowledge be accompanied by a love to God, which leads to self-consecration in his service, it will work good for us by introducing the spirit of love as the controlling factor in our lives. R2198:3
  Love is constructive and builds up our own characters after the divine pattern, making us co-workers together with God, in our sympathies for and interest in others. R2198:3
  Measure oneself by growth in love, rather than by growth merely in knowledge. R3145:1
 
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| 2 If any man thinketh that he knoweth anything, he knoweth not yet as he ought to know; | 
Think –  Confidently think. E256
  Knoweth anything –  Of his own wisdom. E256
 
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| 3 but if any man loveth God, the same is known by him. | 
Love God –  Knowledge without love would be an injury. To consider it otherwise would imply that real knowledge has not yet been secured. R4920:2
  Is known of him –  Acquainted with him, recognized by him. R3145:2
  God's special love and provision for his saints as distinguished from the world. R1254:5
  We might have a great deal of knowledge and yet not know God and not be known or recognized by him. R4920:2
 
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| 4 concerning therefore the eating of things sacrificed to idols, we know that no idol is anything in the world, and that there is no God but one. | 
Eating of those –  It was the custom to eat consecrated food--meat that had been offered before an idol. R2198:3, 2158:6, 2119:1, 1586:3
  An idol is nothing –  It is only an imaginary god. R1587:1, 1052:3*
  The meat could be neither benefited nor injured by the offering. R3020:4, 4478:3, 3145:1, 2198:5, 2158:6, 2119:1
  The personal liberty question alone would be in dispute for there was no law given on this matter except the law of love. R4006:3
  Is none other God –  No other eternal and almighty author and source of all things. E54
  But one –  Not two, nor three, nor more. E54
 
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| 5 For though there be that are called gods, whether in heaven or on earth; as there are gods many, and lords many; | 
Though there be –  Many. R1410:6
  Those. R1052:2*
  Are called gods –  Greek: theos, a mighty one, not Jehovah. B274; R803:1
  There be gods many –  To the heathen. SM483:2
 
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| 6 yet to us there is one God, the Father, of whom are all things, and we unto him; and one Lord, Jesus Christ, through whom are all things, and we through him. | 
To us –  Christians. R3474:6
  There is but one God –  One supreme God. E82; NS255:6
  Not three! R4165:2, 2199:4, 1411:1; SM602:T
  The word god signifies mighty one; but there is only one God whose name is the Almighty. R5352:1, 3474:6, 1410:6
  The Father –  One God over all. R1410:6; HG410:6
  Jehovah is the fountain of our blessings. R1410:4, 5392:4, 2465:1
  A father is a life-giver; a son is one who receives life from a father. This distinction implies that the father existed first. R5747:3; E143
  Of whom –  Out of whom. E82
  Who created. R369:3
  Of or from whom, as the first cause or Creator, all things came, including ourselves. R3145:3, 1778:3; E82, E398
  The entire plan of salvation is of the Father and through the Son. R5847:4, 5809:3, 3172:3, 1778:3; E54, F401
  Are all things –  Blessings. E45; R1410:4, 5392:4, 1777:6
  Including all life on every plane. E398
  The various features of our salvation. R1778:3, 1269:5
  It is by our willing and our running that we obtain the prize; but it is of God's mercy. R2001:1
  And we in him –  And we for him. E82
  Unto him. R1052:2*
  Lord –  Master, Rabbi. OV114:3
  Jesus Christ –  The channel of blessings. R5392:4, 1410:4
  The only direct creation of Jehovah. R1060:4, 5992:6, 5748:1, 4051:6, 2431:3, 1278:3, 446:5*
  The Head of the Church. R1278:3
  The Lord Jesus is not the second person of a triune God. The word "triune" is unscriptural; so is the thought. R5748:3, 1411:1, 802:5; SM494:3; NS257:6
  By whom –  By, or through whom all things, including ourselves, have been brought into existence. R3145:3, 5748:1, 4051:6, 1060:4, 1052:2*; E82
  The power was of the Father, but it was exercised through the Son. R4107:3
  Jesus was the Father's honored agent. R5748:2, 4107:3, 2464:6, 2199:5, 1061:4, 446:5*; HG297:2
  Every divine favor is granted in and through Christ. R965:2
  "All things were made by him, and without him was not anything made that was made." (John 1:3) R1904:6, 5748:1, 2431:3, 2199:5, 1278:3, 369:5; OV114:3
  The Father bestowed the holy Spirit upon the Son, and authorized him to bestow it upon his Body. R5549:5, 5537:1
  Are all things –  Including the creation of the angels. R5748:5, 4051:6
  Including the judgment of the Church. F401
  And we by him –  And we through him. E82; R1052:2*, 715:4*
 
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| 7 Howbeit there is not in all men that knowledge: but some, being until now used to the idol, eat as of a thing sacrificed to an idol; and their conscience being weak is defiled. | 
Not in every man –  By reason of differing conditions of mental strength, perception, reasoning faculties, etc., all could not have exactly the same standpoint of knowledge and appreciation of principles. R3145:2
  All men were not enlightened by the gospel and so relieved from superstition. R1587:1
  Of the idol –  The appreciation of idols as gods had become so ingrained that it would be impossible for many fully to divest themselves of some respect for the idols--to eat meat that had been offered to idols. R3145:2
  Conscience –  The voice of conscience must be obeyed. Every violation is so much of character destruction, no matter how erroneous may be its standards. R3020:4, 3144:6
  Being weak –  We should deny self rather than injure the conscience of another. R5412:2
  Is defiled –  The eating of such meats in the presence of a weak ones might seem to them to be an endorsement of the idol worship; and thus they might be misled into a partial endorsement of idolatry. R1587:1
 
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| 8 But food will not commend us to God: neither, if we eat not, are we the worse; nor, if we eat, are we the better.
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Commendeth us not –  It is not the food that we eat that makes us acceptable to God. Our relationship to God is that of the new creation, a heart relationship. R3145:4; HG368:2
  Are we the worse –  There would be nothing wrong--no sacrifice of any principle. R1587:1
 
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| 9 But take heed lest by any means this liberty of yours become a stumblingblock to the weak. | 
Liberty of yours –  Control your liberty by the law of love. R4478:6, 3145:2
  The liberty of Christ gives liberty to eat without restraint, in a manner that the Jews were not at liberty to eat, it gives liberty also to abstain; sacrificing on behalf of the brethren. R3145:5, 2198:5, 1473:1
  Stumblingblock –  It is a serious crime against the law of love to cause one of our brethren to stumble. R3145:6, 5412:3
  Abstain altogether from eating meat rather than risk stumbling a brother who could not take the broader, truer view. To stumble such a one, might be to throw him out of the right way entirely. R5412:2
 
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| 10 For if a man see thee who hast knowledge sitting at meat in an idol’s temple, will not his conscience, if he is weak, be emboldened to eat things sacrificed to idols? | 
Idol's temple –  Some Corinthian brethren might be fully at ease in their own consciences if as guests they attended a municipal feast or banquet in an idol temple, but there might be onlookers with less knowledge. R2198:6, 3145:1
  We do not feel such a restraint that we would fear to enter a nominal church building to hear a service there; but would not seem to give our assent to their errors by regular attendance and participation. R3146:4
  Weak –  Of weaker mind, feebler reasoning powers or inferior knowledge; likely to be weaker in every respect. R3145:5, 4920:4
  Be emboldened –  Follow the example of his stronger brother. R3145:5, 2198:6
  Susceptible to the leadings of others, into paths which his conscience could not approve. R3145:5, 4920:4
 
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| 11 For through thy knowledge he that is weak perisheth, the brother for whose sake Christ died. | 
Thy knowledge –  Intelligence, poise of mind. R5412:3
  Weak –  Greek: astheneo, without strength. R4099:6*
  Brother –  A term of general salutation in the early Church. F230; R1523:5
  We certainly should have special patience with the brethren. R3136:3
  Perish –  To stumble such a one might be to throw him out of the right way entirely. R5412:2, 4920:5, 3145:5
  If one should be influenced by another to violate conscience, one might thus be started on the downward course which would lead him from righteousness. R4831:1, 2198:6
  Every violation of conscience, whether the thing itself be right or wrong, is a step in the direction of wilful sin, leading into grosser transgressions of conscience, and possibly to the second death. R3145:5, 4920:5, 3020:4
  For whom Christ died –  It would be a sin against the spirit of love to do anything which could reasonably prove a cause of stumbling to our brother, or fellow-creature--for Christ died for the sins of the whole world. R3145:6, 4920:5
 
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| 12 And thus, sinning against the brethren, and wounding their conscience when it is weak, ye sin against Christ. | 
When ye sin so –  Some perceived that there could be no sin in the eating of such meat where their consciences were not violated; perhaps to show not only their Christian liberty, but that they entirely disregarded an idol. R3144:6
  Wound their weak conscience –  If a Christian could take the position that his own conscience would approve of a certain course, then would he allow his poise of mind, to work injury to a brother, to lead him to violate his conscience? R5412:3
  Sin against Christ –  Against the very spirit of his law of love one for the other. R2199:1
 
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| 13 Wherefore, if meat causeth my brother to stumble, I will eat no flesh for evermore, that I cause not my brother to stumble. | 
I will eat no flesh –  In order that he might be a help to the brethren, and not a stumbling block to any, the Apostle would take pleasure in denying himself, not only the meat offered to idols, but all meat of every kind. R2199:1, 1587:4
  Similar arguments might be urged respecting the use of liquor, tobacco, cards and the various implements which the Adversary uses in luring mankind into sin. R3146:5, 2199:1, 1695:6, 1101:5
  Any liberty of ours that would work our brother's injury, that liberty we will not exercise. (Rom. 14:21) R4920:5, 5412:2, 4833:5*, 3145:6, 2198:5, 1101:5
  Let our light so shine before men as to assist them to glorify their Father in heaven. R4191:5
  While the world standeth –  Forevermore. (Revised Version) R4920:6
  As long as Paul lived. R2199:1
  To offend –  To stumble. (Revised Version) R4920:6
  Lose all influence for good over a brother. R5412:3
  Any liberty of ours, however reasonable in itself, that would work our brother's injury, we will not exercise; we will sacrifice it; we will to that extent lay down our life for him. R3145:6, 4920:5
  This is not meaning that the Lord's people are to favor the mental crochets of each other in such a manner as would be to the general injury of the Church. R3146:2
 
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