Picture an orchestra in a grand concert hall and about to begin a performance. The musicians tune their instruments, and then the conductor raises a baton. The musicians begin to play their various instruments. The violins, cellos, trumpets, flutes, drums, and other instruments collectively produce beautiful music as they follow the conductor.
Now, imagine if the violinist suddenly said, “I don’t want to play because I’m not playing a trumpet. My part isn’t important.” Or what if the percussionist decided to pound the drums or clang the cymbals as loudly as possible, drowning out all the other instruments? The beautiful harmony would turn into chaos!
In the orchestra, no instrument is unnecessary. Every musician contributes to the masterpiece. But the musicians must work together. If one person refuses to play, the music suffers. The musicians don’t play for themselves. They follow the conductor’s direction to create something greater than themselves.
In 1 Corinthians 12, Paul uses a different metaphor to emphasize the same truth. In the church, each believer has been given a different spiritual gift. Some gifts are more visible, while others work quietly in the background, but every one is essential.
Lesson Themes
This week’s lesson highlights three important themes:
First Things First. Whatever our gifts or ministry, we are called to focus on Jesus as our Savior, Healer, and, ultimately, as the One who equips us for service to help others (1 Cor. 12:1–3).
One Spirit, Many Gifts. Paul reminds his readers of the fact that all the gifts ultimately have the same origin, for it is God Himself who empowers His church with these gifts to bless and reach the world (1 Cor. 12:4–11).
One Body, Many Parts. Paul introduces the metaphor of the body to illustrate the diversity of the gifts within the church and challenges his readers to keep looking at the big picture (1 Cor. 12:12–31).
Part II: Commentary
1. Historical Background of 1 Corinthians 12: In first-century Corinth, mystical experiences, such as prophecy and ecstatic speech, were common in Greek and Roman religions. These experiences often were associated with divine possession, mystery cults, and oracles. The Oracle of Delphi, one of the most famous religious sites in Greece, featured a priestess (Pythia) who would enter a trance-like state in which she was believed to be possessed by the Greek god Apollo. In this state, she would utter ecstatic, cryptic messages. These messages were then interpreted by priests. Other temples, such as the Oracle of Dodona, also had prophetic practices in which priests or priestesses received divine messages through natural signs (wind, rustling leaves, etc.). Such ecstatic speech was considered a sign of divine favor and insight, similar to how some Corinthians viewed speaking in tongues.
Mystery cults such as those of Dionysus (Bacchus), Cybele, and Isis involved rituals, music, and frenzied worship that often led to trance states, emotional highs, and perceived communication with the gods. In the Dionysian cult, worshipers engaged in ecstatic dancing and chanting, believing they were filled with the god’s presence. Some scholars suggest that certain Corinthian Christians, influenced by these traditions, may have associated spiritual gifts, such as speaking in tongues and prophecy, with similar ecstatic experiences. This mindset likely contributed to divisions in the Corinthian church, as some believers ranked themselves as more “spiritual,” based on their gifts. Paul challenges this idea by emphasizing that all gifts come from the same Spirit (1 Cor. 12:4–11) and are meant for the benefit of the whole church, not for individual status.
2. First Things First: Paul introduces a new topic in 1 Corinthians 12:1 by the phrase “now concerning spiritual gifts” (ESV). Similar markers for a new topic can be found in 1 Corinthians 7:1, 25; 1 Corinthians 8:1; and 1 Corinthians 16:1, 12. The Greek pneumatikōn is a plural adjective, meaning “spiritual,” and can denote either “spiritual things” or “spiritual persons.” The apostle is concerned about the Corinthian church members and their lopsided self-perception of themselves as “spiritual” (1 Cor. 14:37). “There was a danger—and in some cases a reality—of people claiming that they had a higher spiritual status within the community, which created disparity among the believers. Paul rejected this kind of mentality.”—“1 Corinthians,” in Andrews Bible Commentary, ed. Ángel Manuel Rodríguez et al. (Berrien Springs, MI: Andrews University Press, 2022), p. 1642. Instead of focusing on the gifts, Paul reminds his audience that they should rejoice when God’s Spirit convicts them to confess Jesus as their Savior (1 Cor. 12:3). No one who is truly Spirit-led can curse Jesus. In this sense, all believers are “spiritual” by virtue of the basic Christian confession that Jesus is Lord.
3. One Spirit, Many Gifts: Before elaborating on the different spiritual gifts, Paul makes a statement in 1 Corinthians 12:4–6 that includes all members of the Godhead, highlighting a diversity of gifts given by the Spirit, a diversity of services given by the Lord (i.e., Jesus), and a diversity of activities that is given by the “same God who empowers them all in everyone” (1 Cor. 12:6, ESV). The sequence here is thus Spirit–Son–Father. Thus, the unity of the Godhead becomes the matrix or example against which the often-divided Corinthian church could measure itself.
Paul reminds his readers that the first gift that God bestows on all believers is the confession of faith that “ ‘Jesus is Lord’ ” (1 Cor. 12:2, 3, ESV). This belief is in line with Jesus’ statement in John 6:44: “ ‘No one can come to me unless the Father who sent me draws him’ ” (ESV). Even though we are given the freedom to choose, we must be drawn by the Spirit (or the Father) to make the first step of faith toward Jesus.
Paul then continues to describe the diversity of spiritual gifts, as well as ministries and activities within the Christian community (1 Cor. 12:4–11). “Paul explains that the gifts of the Holy Spirit are given for the benefit of the entire church (12:7).”—“1 Corinthians,” in Andrews Bible Commentary, p. 1642. Thus, gifts are not a sign of spiritual mastery or superiority, but tokens of God’s grace that empower us to serve one another and also the world around us. The variety of gifts described in the chapter (including spiritual inputs involving wisdom and knowledge, healings or working miracles, prophetic speech, spiritual discernment, languages, and more) are all given to bless the community of believers. None of the gifts should be considered higher or more important than any other.
4. The Body of Christ—A Radical Idea: Paul’s metaphor of the church as a body (1 Cor. 12:12–27) was countercultural. In Roman society, social class and status were rigid, with the wealthy and powerful at the top. The idea that every member of the church—rich or poor, slave or free, male or female—was equally valuable was revolutionary. Paul emphasizes that, in Christ, all believers are interconnected and must honor one another, rejecting the world’s hierarchy.
As noted by New Testament scholar Jason Staples: “Paul takes this image a step further than its usual metaphorical or analogical sense. For the apostle, the ‘body of Christ’ is not just a metaphor for individuals unified by belief in Jesus but an ontological and relational reality in which persons, receiving the ‘spirit of Christ’ (Rom 8:9), thereby become incorporated into Christ himself. Believers actually become the ‘body of Christ’ by being ‘baptized into one body by one spirit’ (1 Cor 12:13).”—Staples, “Body of Christ,” in Dictionary of Paul and His Letters (Downers Grove, IL: IVP Academic, 2023), p. 83.
The use of the body metaphor highlights the oneness of the community, but also the oneness of the church with her Lord—especially in light of the fact that Christ is the head of the body (Col. 1:18, Eph. 4:15). In this sense, the body is not primarily a body of believers but the body of Christ; that is, the primary focus of the metaphor is the unity of believers with Christ.
As Paul described in the chapter, this means that ethnic, gender, and social distinctions are irrelevant for inclusion in Christ’s body. This idea was not only countercultural but also subversive and dangerous to Greco-Roman society, where status, power, shame, honor, and gender played highly important roles.
Note the following example taken from New Testament scholar Philip Ryken regarding perceptions about hierarchy, status, and gender in the world of the early Christian church: “Consider the prayer, sometimes attributed to Socrates, in which a Greek man gave thanks to God ‘that I was born a human being and not a beast, next a man and not a woman, thirdly, a Greek and not a barbarian.’ Pagans generally despised their slaves and mistreated their women. In some places slaves were forbidden to enter pagan temples, while women were treated as chattel.”—Philip Graham Ryken, Galatians, Reformed Expository Commentary (Phillipsburg, NJ: P&R Publishing, 2005), p. 148. Clearly, Paul’s message to the Corinthian church was countercultural.
Part III: Life Application
Our human tendency is to put into hierarchical order the gifts that God has given the church as the body of Christ. Paul introduces the metaphor of the body and body parts to help his readers focus on unity and mission. Body parts, he writes, cannot excel on their own. In fact, they cannot survive on their own. The eye needs the eyelid; the head needs the neck; the foot needs the legs; and they all rely on the heart for sufficient oxygen and blood. Using 1 Corinthians 12 as a reference, discuss the following questions in your group:
How can we apply the Pauline body metaphor to our church realities of competing programs and differing priorities?
What would you say to the idea that God wants to see a body, not body parts, in His church?
What does the metaphor of the church, as the body of Christ, say to people living in the twenty-first century?
What would be the best criteria to evaluate spiritual gifts and their importance to the church?
How can we discover our own gifts in the context of the mission of the church?
If possible, which gift would you like to have, and why?
Adjust My Preferences
Welcome! Please set your reading preferences below.
You can access this panel later by clicking the
preference icon
in the top right of the page.
Key Text: 1 Corinthians 14:1
Study Focus: 1 Corinthians 12.
Introduction
Picture an orchestra in a grand concert hall and about to begin a performance. The musicians tune their instruments, and then the conductor raises a baton. The musicians begin to play their various instruments. The violins, cellos, trumpets, flutes, drums, and other instruments collectively produce beautiful music as they follow the conductor.
Now, imagine if the violinist suddenly said, “I don’t want to play because I’m not playing a trumpet. My part isn’t important.” Or what if the percussionist decided to pound the drums or clang the cymbals as loudly as possible, drowning out all the other instruments? The beautiful harmony would turn into chaos!
In the orchestra, no instrument is unnecessary. Every musician contributes to the masterpiece. But the musicians must work together. If one person refuses to play, the music suffers. The musicians don’t play for themselves. They follow the conductor’s direction to create something greater than themselves.
In 1 Corinthians 12, Paul uses a different metaphor to emphasize the same truth. In the church, each believer has been given a different spiritual gift. Some gifts are more visible, while others work quietly in the background, but every one is essential.
Lesson Themes
This week’s lesson highlights three important themes:
First Things First. Whatever our gifts or ministry, we are called to focus on Jesus as our Savior, Healer, and, ultimately, as the One who equips us for service to help others (1 Cor. 12:1–3).
One Spirit, Many Gifts. Paul reminds his readers of the fact that all the gifts ultimately have the same origin, for it is God Himself who empowers His church with these gifts to bless and reach the world (1 Cor. 12:4–11).
One Body, Many Parts. Paul introduces the metaphor of the body to illustrate the diversity of the gifts within the church and challenges his readers to keep looking at the big picture (1 Cor. 12:12–31).
Part II: Commentary
1. Historical Background of 1 Corinthians 12: In first-century Corinth, mystical experiences, such as prophecy and ecstatic speech, were common in Greek and Roman religions. These experiences often were associated with divine possession, mystery cults, and oracles. The Oracle of Delphi, one of the most famous religious sites in Greece, featured a priestess (Pythia) who would enter a trance-like state in which she was believed to be possessed by the Greek god Apollo. In this state, she would utter ecstatic, cryptic messages. These messages were then interpreted by priests. Other temples, such as the Oracle of Dodona, also had prophetic practices in which priests or priestesses received divine messages through natural signs (wind, rustling leaves, etc.). Such ecstatic speech was considered a sign of divine favor and insight, similar to how some Corinthians viewed speaking in tongues.
Mystery cults such as those of Dionysus (Bacchus), Cybele, and Isis involved rituals, music, and frenzied worship that often led to trance states, emotional highs, and perceived communication with the gods. In the Dionysian cult, worshipers engaged in ecstatic dancing and chanting, believing they were filled with the god’s presence. Some scholars suggest that certain Corinthian Christians, influenced by these traditions, may have associated spiritual gifts, such as speaking in tongues and prophecy, with similar ecstatic experiences. This mindset likely contributed to divisions in the Corinthian church, as some believers ranked themselves as more “spiritual,” based on their gifts. Paul challenges this idea by emphasizing that all gifts come from the same Spirit (1 Cor. 12:4–11) and are meant for the benefit of the whole church, not for individual status.
2. First Things First: Paul introduces a new topic in 1 Corinthians 12:1 by the phrase “now concerning spiritual gifts” (ESV). Similar markers for a new topic can be found in 1 Corinthians 7:1, 25; 1 Corinthians 8:1; and 1 Corinthians 16:1, 12. The Greek pneumatikōn is a plural adjective, meaning “spiritual,” and can denote either “spiritual things” or “spiritual persons.” The apostle is concerned about the Corinthian church members and their lopsided self-perception of themselves as “spiritual” (1 Cor. 14:37). “There was a danger—and in some cases a reality—of people claiming that they had a higher spiritual status within the community, which created disparity among the believers. Paul rejected this kind of mentality.”—“1 Corinthians,” in Andrews Bible Commentary, ed. Ángel Manuel Rodríguez et al. (Berrien Springs, MI: Andrews University Press, 2022), p. 1642. Instead of focusing on the gifts, Paul reminds his audience that they should rejoice when God’s Spirit convicts them to confess Jesus as their Savior (1 Cor. 12:3). No one who is truly Spirit-led can curse Jesus. In this sense, all believers are “spiritual” by virtue of the basic Christian confession that Jesus is Lord.
3. One Spirit, Many Gifts: Before elaborating on the different spiritual gifts, Paul makes a statement in 1 Corinthians 12:4–6 that includes all members of the Godhead, highlighting a diversity of gifts given by the Spirit, a diversity of services given by the Lord (i.e., Jesus), and a diversity of activities that is given by the “same God who empowers them all in everyone” (1 Cor. 12:6, ESV). The sequence here is thus Spirit–Son–Father. Thus, the unity of the Godhead becomes the matrix or example against which the often-divided Corinthian church could measure itself.
Paul reminds his readers that the first gift that God bestows on all believers is the confession of faith that “ ‘Jesus is Lord’ ” (1 Cor. 12:2, 3, ESV). This belief is in line with Jesus’ statement in John 6:44: “ ‘No one can come to me unless the Father who sent me draws him’ ” (ESV). Even though we are given the freedom to choose, we must be drawn by the Spirit (or the Father) to make the first step of faith toward Jesus.
Paul then continues to describe the diversity of spiritual gifts, as well as ministries and activities within the Christian community (1 Cor. 12:4–11). “Paul explains that the gifts of the Holy Spirit are given for the benefit of the entire church (12:7).”—“1 Corinthians,” in Andrews Bible Commentary, p. 1642. Thus, gifts are not a sign of spiritual mastery or superiority, but tokens of God’s grace that empower us to serve one another and also the world around us. The variety of gifts described in the chapter (including spiritual inputs involving wisdom and knowledge, healings or working miracles, prophetic speech, spiritual discernment, languages, and more) are all given to bless the community of believers. None of the gifts should be considered higher or more important than any other.
4. The Body of Christ—A Radical Idea: Paul’s metaphor of the church as a body (1 Cor. 12:12–27) was countercultural. In Roman society, social class and status were rigid, with the wealthy and powerful at the top. The idea that every member of the church—rich or poor, slave or free, male or female—was equally valuable was revolutionary. Paul emphasizes that, in Christ, all believers are interconnected and must honor one another, rejecting the world’s hierarchy.
As noted by New Testament scholar Jason Staples: “Paul takes this image a step further than its usual metaphorical or analogical sense. For the apostle, the ‘body of Christ’ is not just a metaphor for individuals unified by belief in Jesus but an ontological and relational reality in which persons, receiving the ‘spirit of Christ’ (Rom 8:9), thereby become incorporated into Christ himself. Believers actually become the ‘body of Christ’ by being ‘baptized into one body by one spirit’ (1 Cor 12:13).”—Staples, “Body of Christ,” in Dictionary of Paul and His Letters (Downers Grove, IL: IVP Academic, 2023), p. 83.
The use of the body metaphor highlights the oneness of the community, but also the oneness of the church with her Lord—especially in light of the fact that Christ is the head of the body (Col. 1:18, Eph. 4:15). In this sense, the body is not primarily a body of believers but the body of Christ; that is, the primary focus of the metaphor is the unity of believers with Christ.
As Paul described in the chapter, this means that ethnic, gender, and social distinctions are irrelevant for inclusion in Christ’s body. This idea was not only countercultural but also subversive and dangerous to Greco-Roman society, where status, power, shame, honor, and gender played highly important roles.
Note the following example taken from New Testament scholar Philip Ryken regarding perceptions about hierarchy, status, and gender in the world of the early Christian church: “Consider the prayer, sometimes attributed to Socrates, in which a Greek man gave thanks to God ‘that I was born a human being and not a beast, next a man and not a woman, thirdly, a Greek and not a barbarian.’ Pagans generally despised their slaves and mistreated their women. In some places slaves were forbidden to enter pagan temples, while women were treated as chattel.”—Philip Graham Ryken, Galatians, Reformed Expository Commentary (Phillipsburg, NJ: P&R Publishing, 2005), p. 148. Clearly, Paul’s message to the Corinthian church was countercultural.
Part III: Life Application
Our human tendency is to put into hierarchical order the gifts that God has given the church as the body of Christ. Paul introduces the metaphor of the body and body parts to help his readers focus on unity and mission. Body parts, he writes, cannot excel on their own. In fact, they cannot survive on their own. The eye needs the eyelid; the head needs the neck; the foot needs the legs; and they all rely on the heart for sufficient oxygen and blood. Using 1 Corinthians 12 as a reference, discuss the following questions in your group:
How can we apply the Pauline body metaphor to our church realities of competing programs and differing priorities?
What would you say to the idea that God wants to see a body, not body parts, in His church?
What does the metaphor of the church, as the body of Christ, say to people living in the twenty-first century?
What would be the best criteria to evaluate spiritual gifts and their importance to the church?
How can we discover our own gifts in the context of the mission of the church?
If possible, which gift would you like to have, and why?