In the second case, Paul gave no express injunction. But it will not for this reason be found that he expresses his opinion of what ought to be done in a less binding and urgent manner. Chapter 6:12–20 develops the principle of this section in a special glance at the first case. It sounds as if he were answering an unspoken objection when in 6:12 he again interposes with: “All things are lawful for me.” This was, according to 2:15; 3:21; 6:2, Paul’s own preaching. Does this mean that the Christian, made lord of all things, has in Christ the right, and probably the duty, simply to be a man again like all other men, to assert his personality, to satisfy his instincts, to seek his right where he finds it? Manifestly as little as God can employ His omnipotence and freedom anywhere and anyhow to be no longer God. Paul gives first two provisional answers (6:12); he says first: “All things are not expedient,” and then (to explain what he regards as inexpedient): “I will not be brought under the power of any.” The limit of my power over all is exactly where I have power over things, the point where it is not transformed into power over me. Where that happens, and that is happening in Corinth, things have just gained power over men. What passes for freedom there, is in reality slavery. But this answer is only preparatory; the decisive is now to follow: Man in his earthly existence is not only belly, he not only vegetates, he is body; he is in and with his vegetating corporeality created by God and destined for God. Is the belly corruptible; is it subject for God’s sake to the judgment of death, then the body is due to the Lord, whom God raised up, as He will also raise up us, our body, through the power of this Lord (6:13–14). Our corporeality as God’s work and property (as such, to be sure, here and now invisible) are members of the body of the risen Christ, one Spirit with it. Fornication, and all human hybris, however, signify that not only our corruptible, but also our incorruptible part is surrendered. Christ’s members become in the members of the harlot one flesh with Him (6:15–17). That is the great impossibility of unbridled human vitality, the dragging down into the dust not only of man, but (Paul did not, according to 6–15, shrink from this thought) of the Lord, His being made captive by matter, by something earthly, by a thing. The authority of God may not be threatened; it is that to which our power must set iron barriers. And it is threatened when man persists in thinking that he is permitted to follow his vital impulses. Christ’s right over us and consequently Christ Himself are in that case subordinated to the world’s right. That Paul actually saw this danger of sexual license in a specially revolting form, is from his “Flee fornication” (6:18) very clear. But the quite special accentuation of this remarkable passage unmistakably emphasizes what is fundamental: We are in no sense to regard our earthly existence, our body, as an opportunity to exhaust our vitality. We are not our own masters. “Ye are not your own.” Rather are we dearly bought. We belong to Another. We have a Master. The Holy Ghost dwells in us; we are His temple. To praise God with our body and with our spirit is the purpose of our existence (6:19–20). Hence the protest and the demand which Paul made (5:1; 6:11). It must be clear how and to what extent this section with its peculiar severity, with its occasional passages of mordant incisiveness, especially at the end, is sensibly connected with the preceding one. The flaming sword, “from God,” which was there unsheathed as the Christian truth against the religious velleities of the Corinthians, is raised here accusingly and menacingly over their natural life, in which they feel secure or even strengthened by the Pauline “All things are lawful for me.” Christianity brings not peace but unrest into the natural life; it transforms it into the members of the body of the risen Lord, which, as such, shall be sanctified. Against the life urge of man, Paul opposes the unassailable truth that he cannot do what he wants: the imperious question, whether and how in his actions he will honour or dishonour the Lord. A hand has been held out to man which will not let him go. Paul does not pursue this theme further. It is not an independent theme, but a paradigm like the preceding. Again, from a new angle, something has become visible in outline, of what he will, in chapter 15, proclaim as the Resurrection of the Dead.
§ 3
Chapter 7 constitutes a section by itself. An unspoken question is in the air, just as in the immediately preceding case. If, then, man in Christ is forbidden to expend his vitality; if the sphere of sexuality is that in which the danger is particularly great of his doing so; if, then, for the sake of God’s honour, it is just here that we must remember the phrase “All things are lawful unto me” has its necessary inner limitation—must, then, the struggle against human wilfulness and presumption not also and perhaps mainly become a struggle against all sexuality, a struggle against marriage? For what distinguishes the captivity in which man and his heavenly Lord are involved through fornication from that which holds sway even in the orderly sexual relations of civic life? Is it worth while, then, when once the sanctity of the body created by God, and destined for God, its waiting for