1 Corinthians 4
The apostle Paul views himself and other ministers as servants of Christ and stewards of God's mysteries, and their faithfulness is what matters, not human judgment. Paul does not judge himself, and neither does he care about being judged by others, for it is the Lord who judges him. He warns the Corinthians not to judge prematurely, but to wait for the Lord's return, when the secrets of hearts will be revealed. Paul uses himself and Apollo as examples to teach the Corinthians not to be puffed up with pride, but to recognize that everything they have is a gift from God.
1Accordingly, let man consider us to be ministers of Christ and attendants of the mysteries of God2Here and now, it is required of attendants that each one be found to be faithful3But as for me, it is such a small thing to be judged by you, or by the age of mankind. And neither do I judge myself4For I have nothing on my conscience. But I am not justified by this. For the Lord is the One who judges me5And so, do not choose to judge before the time, until the Lord returns. He will illuminate the hidden things of the darkness, and he will make manifest the decisions of hearts. And then each one shall have praise from God6And so, brothers, I have presented these things in myself and in Apollo, for your sakes, so that you may learn, through us, that no one should be inflated against one person and for another, not beyond what has been written7For what distinguishes you from another? And what do you have that you have not received? But if you have received it, why do you glory, as if you had not received it8So, now you have been filled, and now you have been made wealthy, as if to reign without us? But I wish that you would reign, so that we, too, might reign with you9For I think that God has presented us as the last Apostles, as those destined for death. For we have been made into a spectacle for the world, and for Angels, and for men10So we are fools because of Christ, but you are discerning in Christ? We are weak, but you are strong? You are noble, but we are ignoble11Even to this very hour, we hunger and thirst, and we are naked and repeatedly beaten, and we are unsteady12And we labor, working with our own hands. We are slandered, and so we bless. We suffer and endure persecution13We are cursed, and so we pray. We have become like the refuse of this world, like the reside of everything, even until now14I am not writing these things in order to confound you, but in order to admonish you, as my dearest sons15For you might have ten thousand instructors in Christ, but not so many fathers. For in Christ Jesus, through the Gospel, I have begotten you16Therefore, I beg you, be imitators of me, just as I am of Christ17For this reason, I have sent you Timothy, who is my dearest son, and who is faithful in the Lord. He will remind you of my ways, which are in Christ Jesus, just as I teach everywhere, in every church18Certain persons have become inflated in thinking that I would not return to you19But I will return to you soon, if the Lord is willing. And I will consider, not the words of those who are inflated, but the virtue20For the kingdom of God is not in words, but in virtue21What would you prefer? Should I return to you with a rod, or with charity and a spirit of meekness
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