Wednesday, January 7, 2026

1 Cor. 6:1-8 - Rules for harmonious living

1 Corinthians Chapter 6
6:1-8 - Going to Court vs. Handling Disputes Internally 
6:9-11 - Inheritors of the Kingdo 
6:12-13 - All Things Lawful
6:14-20 - In the Body of Christ
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This is a continuation of the discussion in the previous chapter: 

1 Corinthians 6:1-8 - Going to Court

1 Does any one of you, when he has a case against his neighbor, dare to go to law before the unrighteous and not before the saints?
2 Or do you not know that the saints will judge the world? If the world is judged by you, are you not competent to constitute the smallest law courts?
3 Do you not know that we will judge angels? How much more matters of this life?
4 So if you have law courts dealing with matters of this life, do you appoint them as judges who are of no account in the church?
5 I say this to your shame. Is it so, that there is not among you one wise man who will be able to decide between his brethren,
6 but brother goes to law with brother, and that before unbelievers?
7 Actually, then, it is already a defeat for you, that you have lawsuits with one another. Why not rather be wronged? Why not rather be defrauded?
8 On the contrary, you yourselves wrong and defraud. You do this even to your brethren. (NASB)

Don't Go To Court If Possible

V. 1 -Does any one of you... dare to go to law” - The question is: Are you going to take a fellow Christian to court over a dispute? The “neighbor” in this verse and the “brother” (vss. 6, 8) is someone in the same church as you, believes in the same Lord Jesus Christ as you. Are you willing (if not eager to do so) to take your dispute with another Christian and air that out to the non-believing world? Why would you show the world that Christians cannot get along? Why would you want the world to know you cannot work out differences face-to-face?

This train of thought places the church on a different plane than non-believers. We tend to think of the law as a moral influence or force in the world. Indeed, some of our laws are based on Biblical principles (murder, rape, theft, etc.). Many of societies laws are rules devised to bring some sort of order to society, and may not be moral at all.

before the unrighteous and not before the saints?” - Going to court in the secular world (the unrighteous world) rather than asking for help and decisions from fellow believers (the saints). Paul is not saying the court system is immoral, or evil. It is not Christian; it is not operated on Biblical principles. Our court system has decoupled itself from Scripture and God.

Don’t take your disputes and differences into the secular system. Is this concept a command? I don’t think so, but is sound advice for the church.

V. 2 -Or do you not know that the saints will judge the world?” - Whoa! How does this correlate with Jesus and God the Father judging the universe at the Great White Throne judgement (See: Rev. 20). John sees people on thrones who have the authority to judge (Rev. 20:4) - it doesn’t say what they are judging. Later in the chapter, all will come before God, where it will be revealed whether they are in the Lamb’s Book of Life. (Rev. 20:11-15). Christians, involved in judgements at the end times are listed in several New Testament verses. (See: Mat. 19:28; Jude 14, 15; 1 Thes. 3:13). They (believers) have already been judged and approved by the Lord. (Mat. 25:31-41). We cannot supplant the Lord and His power and authority to judge all creation. On view has us there to nod our heads in agreement. Another view is that we will have the mind of Christ; we are resurrected in our new minds and bodies and will be able to reflect the judgment of Christ on the world and unbelievers. Remember, God has the final authority.

are you not competent to constitute the smallest law courts?” - Being led by Jesus Christ, and empowered by the Holy Spirit, following the precepts of the Lord, we are (should be...) more than competent to make judgments on ‘legal’ or ‘disputes’ between members of the church. 

V. 3 -Do you not know that we will judge angels?” - See Rev. 20:4-15. (See notes on verse 2, above.) I don’t understand how we will judge angels. It is pointed out that Jesus was ‘a little lower than angels (see: Heb. 2:7, 9) when he was born as a human. He returned to his position, greater than the angels when he was raised from the dead to be seated at the right hand of God the Father. We can extrapolate we too will be greater than the angels, because we will be just like Him. (See: 1 John2:1-3).

How much more matters of this life?” - So, if we will judge angels, spiritual beings, how big a deal is it to make judgements on our physical lives? One commentary (I looked at several to try to get a better understanding) noted the Greek word used here is not about issuing a verdict of guilty or innocent, but indicates a relative value decision. That is, we will acknowledge that what was done or said does not comport with God’s standards, and thereby agree with Jesus’ judgement. We will applaud Jesus’ righteous decisions, but will not make or execute any such decision. We will be ‘like Him’ (1 John 3:3), but will not be Him. Only God is God. 

There is also the aspect of this being about civil matters, not legal or moral matters. This is about disagreements between individuals, not criminal issues. Matters of conflict within the church body should never be aired in public civil courts.

V. 4 -do you appoint them as judges who are of no account in the church?” - Are you really going take personal disagreements between Christian church members (a.k.a. - brothers) to secular civil courts? Are you really going to air out your dirty laundry before non-believers? Whether it is as trivial as arguing about padded church pews, or musical instruments in the worship leaders, or more seriously - immoral behavior in the church body - are these things you want to broadcast to the world?

V. 5-6 -Is it so, that there is not among you one wise man” - Is there no one you can trust in the church to help you resolve these issues? Not one person? Not the pastor/preacher, nor a teacher, nor an elder or deacon, the guy in the back row - no one in the family of believers can help?

but brother goes to law with brother, and that before unbelievers?” - Rather than work it out inside the church family, you go to those who do not accept or believe in Jesus Christ as Lord and ask them to make a judgement. Now the whole world, people who have no respect for God, knows you cannot live in harmony with likeminded believers! The dirty secret is out - your “faith” has not made you a better person than before. You are as petty and vindictive as any heathen. Paul is chastising them for a couple of things: that they cannot resolve disputes, and that they are appealing to non-believers. 

V. 7 -Actually, then, it is already a defeat for you” - What a victory for Satan! You have just shown the world that ‘Christ in you, the hope of glory’ is a fraudulent concept. You do not have the ‘peace of Christ’ in you. You do not have the love and forgiveness that Jesus promised. Your actions, taking issues to civil court, have indicated the church of Christ is bogus. Why should anyone bother with all that church stuff if they end up no different than before? No one needs extra baggage.

But that is not the way it should be.

Why not rather be wronged?” - It is better for you to suffer a little, than to damage the image of the church. This is not telling them to put on a bag over their head, and be blindfolded so as not to see what is happening. Also, Paul is not telling them to be punching bags, to be victims to every person’s schemes.

No. We Christians should first talk to each other, especially if there is a problem between two. Work it out between you. If you can’t work it out with each other. Go to your church leaders. Lay out the problem to them. Look back at verse 5, above, “Is there not one wise man among you?” Find a wise leader, pastor, elder, deacon - tell them. Tell both sides, viewpoints. Perhaps you won’t like the ruling. On the other hand, it might go in your favor and the other person is not pleased. Either result is better than going into civil court. Going to court shows the world that Christians cannot get along and fight with each other.

This is not a New Testament ‘invention’, i.e., taking a dispute or problem to a religious leader to decide. When Moses led the people of Israel out of Egypt, the people began to quarrel with God and each other (Surprise! Surprise!). They were camped in the wilderness at the mount of God, and Moses’ father-in-law (Jethro) noticed how overwhelmed Moses was. Moses was being besieged by people bringing their disputes with each other. They wanted him to ask God for a ruling. So, we have 2-3 million cantankerous people needing disputes settled. The advice given to Moses was to appoint leaders - leaders of tens (10s), fifties (50s), hundreds (100s), and thousands (1000s) - who would make decisions on these disputes. A dispute would be resolved in the lowest ‘court’ possible (the 10s). If that didn’t work, they went to the next higher level. A dispute might eventually make its way to Moses, but it had been heard many times with many opportunities to end the dispute. (See: Exo. 18:13-26)

The ‘judges’ in the book of Judges were not just military leaders. They also governed the people and made decisions about issues that came up. During the time of the kings, the famous dispute is the two mothers disagreeing about a baby. (See: 1 Ki. 3:16-26) The leaders of the synagogues also had the duty of resolving differences.

Jesus did teach something similar. (See: Matt. 18:15-17)… Interesting observation: Jesus is directing His comments to the ‘church’, the body of His believers, not the synagogue or the nation of Israel. He is guiding those who believe in Him to new relationships with other believers. Why do I thing this is 'interesting'? Jesus is calling His followers the 'church', but this was well before Jesus was arrested, tried, executed, and resurrected. It was well before the apostles were given the Holy Spirit at Pentecost to preach and lead people to salvation. Jesus was foretelling that His family of believers would be the church.

V. 8 -You yourselves wrong and defraud. You do this even to your brethren” - Paul accuses them to treating people in wrong ways and defrauding others, especially fellow Christians. Perhaps this is the point, even more than not going to civil court against a brother in Christ. Not that as good Christian you will never have a dispute with another Christian, but that you will resolve it by being kind, forgiving, and loving each other. You have a good example to follow, for you have been forgiven by God, even though you do not deserve it. But even before you get to the point of conflict, as followers of Jesus you should not be treating other people in ways that cause offense. Here are some teachings with respect to living with others:

Be kind to each other. (Eph. 4:32; Titus 2:5, 3:2)
Forgive each other (Eph. 4:32; Col. 3:13)
Love one another. (John 13:34, 35; 15:12, 17; Rom. 12:10; 13:8; Gal. 5:13; Eph. 4:2)
Live at peace with each other (1 Thes. 5:13).
Remember, love covers a multitude of sins (1 Pet. 4:8).

This is a theme repeated throughout this letter. Paul accuses them of acting like unbelievers in 1 Cor 3:3, etc.

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