1 Corinthians
Chapter 2
- 1
So it was, brethren, that when I came to you and preached Christ’s message to you, I did so without any high pretensions to eloquence, or to philosophy.
- 2
I had no thought of bringing you any other knowledge than that of Jesus Christ, and of him as crucified.
- 3
It was with distrust of myself, full of anxious fear, that I approached you;
- 4
my preaching, my message depended on no persuasive language, devised by human wisdom, but rather on the proof I gave you of spiritual power;
- 5
God’s power, not man’s wisdom, was to be the foundation of your faith.
- 6
There is, to be sure, a wisdom which we make known among those who are fully grounded; but it is not the wisdom of this world, or of this world’s rulers, whose power is to be abrogated.
- 7
What we make known is the wisdom of God, his secret, kept hidden till now; so, before the ages, God had decreed, reserving glory for us.
- 8
(None of the rulers of this world could read his secret, or they would not have crucified him to whom all glory belongs.)
- 9
So we read of, Things no eye has seen, no ear has heard, no human heart conceived, the welcome God has prepared for those who love him.
- 10
To us, then, God has made a revelation of it through his Spirit; there is no depth in God’s nature so deep that the Spirit cannot find it out.
- 11
Who else can know a man’s thoughts, except the man’s own spirit that is within him? So no one else can know God’s thoughts, but the Spirit of God.
- 12
And what we have received is no spirit of worldly wisdom; it is the Spirit that comes from God, to make us understand God’s gifts to us;
- 13
gifts which we make known, not in such words as human wisdom teaches, but in words taught us by the Spirit, matching what is spiritual with what is spiritual.
- 14
Mere man with his natural gifts cannot take in the thoughts of God’s Spirit; they seem mere folly to him, and he cannot grasp them, because they demand a scrutiny which is spiritual.
- 15
Whereas the man who has spiritual gifts can scrutinize everything, without being subject, himself, to any other man’s scrutiny.
- 16
Who has entered into the mind of the Lord, so as to be able to instruct him? And Christ’s mind is ours.