Corinth in Easton's Bible Dictionary
a Grecian city, on the isthmus which joins the Peloponnesus
to
the mainland of Greece. It is about 48 miles west of
Athens. The
ancient city was destroyed by the Romans (B.C. 146),
and that
mentioned in the New Testament was quite a new city,
having been
rebuilt about a century afterwards and peopled by a
colony of
freedmen from Rome. It became under the Romans the
seat of
government for Southern Greece or Achaia (Acts
18:12-16). It was
noted for its wealth, and for the luxurious and
immoral and
vicious habits of the people. It had a large mixed
population of
Romans, Greeks, and Jews. When Paul first visited
the city (A.D.
51 or 52), Gallio, the brother of Seneca, was
proconsul. Here
Paul resided for eighteen months (18:1-18). Here he
first became
aquainted with Aquila and Priscilla, and soon after
his
departure Apollos came to it from Ephesus. After an
interval he
visited it a second time, and remained for three
months (20:3).
During this second visit his Epistle to the Romans
was written
(probably A.D. 55). Although there were many Jewish
converts at
Corinth, yet the Gentile element prevailed in the
church there.
Some have argued from 2 Cor. 12:14; 13:1, that Paul
visited
Corinth a third time (i.e., that on some unrecorded
occasion he
visited the city between what are usually called the
first and
second visits). But the passages referred to only
indicate
Paul's intention to visit Corinth (comp. 1 Cor.
16:5, where the
Greek present tense denotes an intention), an
intention which
was in some way frustrated. We can hardly suppose
that such a
visit could have been made by the apostle without
more distinct
reference to it.
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