1 Corinthians 12
First Corinthians 12 introduces Paul's extended treatment of spiritual gifts, establishing from the outset that the criterion of genuine Spirit-activity is the confession of Jesus as Lord, over against the dumb idols that once led the Corinthians wherever they were driven. The threefold repetition of variety — varieties of gifts but the same Spirit, varieties of service but the same Lord, varieties of activities but the same God — grounds the gifts' diversity in the unity of the Triune God rather than in competition or hierarchy among the recipients. The list of gifts — wisdom, knowledge, faith, healing, miracles, prophecy, discernment of spirits, tongues, interpretation of tongues — is not exhaustive but illustrative of the Spirit's sovereign distribution to each one individually as he wills, the emphatic conclusion that prevents the gifted from claiming personal credit. The body analogy is the chapter's theological heart: one body, many members, the ear cannot say to the eye I do not belong to the body any more than the Gentile or slave can say they are not part of the one body baptized in one Spirit. God has arranged the body giving greater honor to the less presentable members so that there is no division, and so that the members have equal concern for one another — if one member suffers all suffer, if one is honored all rejoice. The second gift list (apostles, prophets, teachers, miracles, gifts of healing, helping, administrating, tongues) is arranged in ordered sequence, the rhetorical questions (are all apostles? are all prophets?) establishing that no gift belongs to all and that the body's health depends on its diversity rather than its uniformity. The chapter ends by directing the Corinthians to earnestly desire the greater gifts, then pivots to the still more excellent way of chapter 13 — love as the context within which all gifts derive their meaning and without which they profit nothing.