Book Segment
Moral Issues and Church Discipline
Instructions for dealing with sexual immorality and disputes among believers
"Unlike other sins, sexual immorality is uniquely against one's own body — which is the temple of the Holy Spirit, purcha"
1 Corinthians 6:18-20
Background
1 Corinthians 5-7 addresses specific moral issues: sexual immorality in the church (an incestuous relationship being tolerated), lawsuits between believers, sexual ethics (6:12-20), and the complex questions about marriage and singleness (ch. 7). The 'your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit' passage (6:19-20) grounds sexual ethics in pneumatology and Christology — the body matters because the Spirit inhabits it and Christ purchased it. Chapter 7's teaching on marriage and singleness is the most nuanced NT treatment of these topics, affirming both as gifts.
Story Plot
Flee Sexual Immorality — Your Body Is a Temple
1 Corinthians 6:18-20Unlike other sins, sexual immorality is uniquely against one's own body — which is the temple of the Holy Spirit, purchased by Christ.
Gift of Singleness and Gift of Marriage (1 Corinthians 7)
1 Corinthians 7:7Both singleness and marriage are gifts — the single person is freed for undivided devotion to the Lord; the married person is devoted to spouse AND Lord.
Characters
Paul on Marriage and Singleness
Pastoral Pragmatist
As a single person himself, Paul appreciates singleness's freedom without diminishing marriage's covenantal beauty.
Theological Themes
The Body's Theological Dignity
The Holy Spirit's indwelling makes the body sacred — sexual ethics flows from anthropology (what the body is) rather than mere rules.
You are not your own; you were bought at a price. Therefore honor God with your bodies (1 Corinthians 6:19-20).
Life Lessons
The body's status as the Spirit's temple elevates the significance of every physical decision — eating, sleeping, sexuality, health — as spiritual matters.
Both marriage and singleness are called gifts — singleness is not a second-class state but a particular and precious capacity for Kingdom focus.
Church discipline, when practiced redemptively, aims at restoration, not rejection — 'so that his spirit may be saved.'
Fleeing sexual immorality (as opposed to standing firm against it) acknowledges the unique power of sexual temptation to entangle in ways that require physical distance.
Modern Applications
The body-as-temple theology grounds Christian sexual ethics in a way that transcends mere rule-following to a genuinely life-giving framework.
Paul's equal-dignity affirmation of singleness and marriage challenges both the church's pressure on single adults and the culture's disregard for committed marriage.
Church discipline (practiced with the restorative intent of 1 Cor 5) remains one of the most controversial and least practiced aspects of contemporary church life.
The bought-at-a-price principle extends beyond sexuality to every stewardship decision — our bodies, time, money, and gifts belong to Christ.
A Prayer for Reflection
Heavenly Father, as we reflect on Moral Issues and Church Discipline in 1 Corinthians, open our hearts to receive the truth You have embedded in these chapters. Help us to see not merely historical events but Your living word speaking to our present reality. Where we are confused, bring clarity; where we are discouraged, bring hope; where we are proud, bring humility. May the lessons of Moral Issues and Church Discipline take root in us and bear fruit in how we love You and serve others. In Jesus' name, Amen.