1 Corinthians in Smiths Bible Dictionary
was written by the apostle St. Paul toward the close of his
nearly three-years stay at Ephesus, Ac 19:10; 20:31 which,
we learn from 1Co 16:8 probably terminated with the
Pentecost of A.D. 57 or 58. The bearers were probably
(according to the common subscription) Stephanas, Fortunatus
and Achaicus. It appears to have been called forth by the
information the apostles had received of dissension in the
Corinthian church, which may be thus explained: --The
Corinthian church was planted by the apostle himself, 1Co
3:6 in his second missionary journey. Ac 18:1 seq. He abode
in the city a year and a half. Ac 18:11 A short time after
the apostle had left the city the eloquent Jew of
Alexandria, Apollos, went to Corinth, Ac 19:1 and gained
many followers, dividing the church into two parties, the
followers of Paul and the followers of Apollos. Later on
Judaizing teachers from Jerusalem preached the gospel in a
spirit of direct antagonism to St. Paul personally. To this
third party we may perhaps add a fourth, that, under the
name of "the followers of Christ," 1Co 2:12 sought at first
to separate themselves from the factious adherence to
particular teachers, but eventually were driven by
antagonism into positions equally sectarian and inimical to
the unity of the church. At this momentous period, before
parties had become consolidated and that distinctly
withdrawn from communion with one another, the apostle
writes; and in the outset of the epistle, 1Cor 1-4:21, we
have this noble and impassioned protest against this
fourfold rending of the robe of Christ.
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