James_Newman
New Member
Brother, I know what a paragraph marker looks like and there is not one in all of 1Corinthians.DHK said:If I explain it again, will you accept my explanation? I have already explained this passage many times to you.
James you highly regard the KJV, and so do I. When the NT was originally written it was written in the Greek language. There were no chapter breaks, and no paragraph breaks. In most cases the KJV translators did a very good job of putting these breaks where they should go. They were the scholars of their time. Your KJV does have a symbol which indicates when a separate paragraph or different subject is about to start. Among others there is one at verse 11, verse 16, and verse 18. That inidicated to these many scholars that verses 11-15 were speaking of one topic, 16,17 another topic, and 18-20 still another topic. Those are where the paragraph breaks are according to the KJV translators.
http://dewey.library.upenn.edu/sceti/printedbooksNew/index.cfm?TextID=kjbible&PagePosition=1401
I don't think the church is going to transform into a temple either, but I wouldn't be dogmatic about it. Whats your point?Thus the passage from verse 11-15 is a scene that takes place in heaven. It is known at the JSOC. As TCGreek has pointed out, many of the elements used in that picture are figurative simply because it is a heavenly scene. It is our works that are being judged. A work is a work. I don't think a work is automatically and miraculously going to metamorphose into either gold or stubble. Rather it will be accounted as such in value. Remember it a heavenly scene. It depicts the results of the works of the temple that was being built on earth (any given local church).
Once again there is no paragraph break. If you got hold of a KJV with a paragraph break in verse 16, somebody that knows better than the King James translators is trying to help you out. If you forget about the paragraph break and read the whole chapter out loud, you might find that verses 16 and 17 have more to do with the previous verses than you imagined.In verse sixteen (see paragraph break), Paul brings this picture back to reality, back to earth once again. He brings it back to where he left off in verse 10, speaking of the building of the temple.
Every work you do in the church is pictured by one of those elements. What you build in this life is what you will be judged for then. There is no building going on at the judgment seat of Christ, what you have built is being tried by fire. What is God's building if it is not the temple? That is what is being built with gold, silver, precious stones, wood, hay and stubble.We do not build this earthly temple (our local church) with wood, hay and stubble). We have left that heavenly scene and its symbolic and figurative language, and have come back to earth. One cannot impose the picturesque language of Paul in vs.11-15 into verses 16 and 17! Do you build temples with wood hay and stubble? No, no one does. So don't force this into this verse where it does not belong.
You still can't get a handle on punishment as a reward for evil. Reward is not automatically good. Destruction is a reward for defiling the temple.You ask: "Why would God judge our works that we build upon the foundation if it were not possible to defile the temple?"
--God judges our works and hands out rewards accordingly. The passage only speaks of rewards and loss of rewards. One cannot read into that passage anything more than what it says. It speaks of reward that is gained, and reward that is lost. It does not speak of chastisement, punishment, hell, thousand year exclusion, or punishment of any kind. It speaks only of reward and loss of reward. That is all that we can glean from that passage. Nothing more.
It is directed toward those who do, not those who would.Verses 16 and 17 are not even directed to believers. They are directed to those who would destoy the temple (the local church).
You are placing a lot of emphasis on this imaginary paragraph break.They are directed against false teachers. These verses have nothing to do with vs.11-15. It is a different subject as the paragraph break shows.
The whole context of this chapter is believers being judged for their works. There is no 'satan's emissary' in verse 16. Believers who try to adorn God's temple with their stinking wood hay and stubble are going to be destroyed. When God gives you gold to build with, you better use it.Why are trying to impose the subject matter of the previous paragraph into this one. It doesn't fit. False teachers are trying to defile and destroy the local church, and yet God says that they themselves will be destroyed. Remember that Jesus said: "I will build my church and the gates of Hell shall not prevail against it." False teachers (Satan's emissaries) shall not prevail against God's work. They shall be destroyed. Ultimately they were destroyed at the cross. Victory is found in each believer as they look to the cross, the shed blood of Christ. There is victory in Jesus.
I hope you have better reason for this than the secret knowledge of where the paragraph markers are supposed to be.Only in verses 11-15
Hebrews 9:27 And as it is appointed unto men once to die, but after this the judgment:It is not God's will for any believer to experience wrath, and no believer will. No believer will suffer through the Tribulation Period, and no believer will suffer the wrath of God in a Baptist Purgatory. The only "wrath" if you call it that, is the suffering we endure on this earth. But that is not wrath. That is God's love as he allows us to endure suffering in a process of sanctification that we might be molded and conformed to the image of Christ.
There you have it, every man has to die once because it is appointed. But wait, some men died more than once. And some men never die at all... so what? So not appointed to wrath is not a guarantee that you can't change your appointment.
Luke 12
45 But and if that servant say in his heart, My lord delayeth his coming; and shall begin to beat the menservants and maidens, and to eat and drink, and to be drunken;
46 The lord of that servant will come in a day when he looketh not for him, and at an hour when he is not aware, and will cut him in sunder, and will appoint him his portion with the unbelievers.
See, you can get a new appointment.
No, it was discussed, but I'm not going to dig backwards and find the post where you pasted it.That is a very poor debate tactic, as never was that verse being discussed.
Here is what was being discussed or debated.
1 Corinthians 3:17 If any man defile the temple of God, him shall God destroy; for the temple of God is holy, which temple ye are.