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1
A Race of Ultimate Importance
Commentators explain that Paul's analogy was deeply familiar to the Corinthians, whose city hosted the famous Isthmian games. These were not casual sports but major festivals where athletes trained for months with extreme discipline, all for a perishable wreath. Paul uses this powerful image to show that the Christian life demands a similar, if not greater, level of serious commitment and self-denial.
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Book Overview
1 Corinthians
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9
18th Century
Theologian
Know ye not, etc.? In the remainder of this chapter, Paul illustrates the general sentiment on which he had been dwelling—the duty of prac…
In a race (εν σταδιω). Old word from ιστημ, to place. A stated or fixed distance, 606 3/4 feet, both masculine σταδιο ([Reference …
19th Century
Bishop
Know you not . . .—The illustration which follows refers to these Isthmian games (so called from their taking place in th…
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19th Century
Preacher
I am made all things to all men, that I might by all means save some. And this I do for the gospel's sake, that I might be partaker thereof wit…
By way of practical application, Paul now gives a strong exhortation for Christian self-denial, using himself as an example and employing athletic …
16th Century
Theologian
Do you not know that those who run in a race. He has laid down the doctrine, and now, to impress it upon the minds of the Corinthians, he …
17th Century
Pastor
Error: Completed but no modernized text found in DB
17th Century
Minister
The apostle compares himself to the racers and combatants in the Isthmian games, which were well known to the Corinthians. But in the Christian rac…