Christian Stettler, «The 'Command of the Lord' in 1 Cor 14,37 – a Saying of Jesus?», Vol. 87 (2006) 42-51
In 1 Cor 14,37 Paul mentions a “command of the Lord”. The language Paul uses
indicates that he is not referring to his own apostolic authority but to a saying of
Jesus. The context in 1 Corinthians 12–14 makes clear that the principle he has in
mind is mutual love. Therefore he must be referring to the summary of the law
given by Jesus in the love commandment which Paul primarily interprets in the
sense of mutual love among Christians. Like John 13,34 he calls this commandment
a command of Jesus. Moreover, Paul knows a tradition similar to Matt 7,21-23.
The “Command of the Lord†in 1 Cor 14,37 43
understood as referring to a saying of Jesus (7). I will first give reasons for this
view and then analyse different possible candidates of Jesus tradition to which
Paul might allude.
1. Arguments from the Language Used
The language Paul uses in 1 Cor 14,37 clearly points to a saying of Jesus
and not to an apostolic exhortation. This is shown by the fact that he uses
similar language in undisputed references to Jesus tradition in the same letter
in 7,10 (paraggevllw ouk egw; alla; oJ kurio"), 7,25 (ejpitagh; kuriou) and 9,14
jj j v v
(oJ kuvrio" dievtaxen) (8). Furthermore, in 1 Corinthians 7 Paul clearly
distinguishes the commandments of the Lord, which are of unquestionable,
absolute authority, from his own “opinion†(gnwvmh) which is not of the same
authority (7,25.40; cf. 7,10.12). Although he claims to possess the Holy
Spirit, thus adding weight to his view (7,40), and although elsewhere he
claims that he himself speaks “in Christ†(2 Cor 2,17; 12,19) and that Christ
speaks through him (2 Cor 13,3), he maintains a clear distinction between
what was said “by the Lord†and what someone says “in the Lordâ€(9).
Therefore Paul would hardly call his own opinion (however inspired and
authoritative) a “command of the Lordâ€. For this reason we cannot compare
14,37 with 7,40 (10). Furthermore, his reference to the prophets and the
“spiritual†in 14,37 is not on the same level as his claim to possess the Holy
Spirit in 7,40. The latter serves to underline the authority of his own, inspired
opinion, while in 14,37 he expects that those who claim to have the Spirit of
Christ will by this Spirit recognise Christ’s own commandment and accept its
authority (cf. 12,3 for the close connection of possessing the spirit and
accepting Christ’s lordship). Finally, it is hard to understand why, in v. 38,
Paul announces such severe judgement (11) if in v. 37 he only refers to his own
inspiration by the risen Christ. This is very different from the way Paul speaks
about his own opinion in chapter 7. For all these reasons it is most likely that
in 1 Cor 14,37 Paul refers to a saying of Jesus.
(7) In Paul, “Lord†always refers to Jesus, except in some citations from the Septuagint,
see LINDEMANN, 1 Korinther, 322 and SCHRAGE, 1 Korinther, III, 460 with n. 559.
(8) Cf. 1 Cor 11,23 (parevlabon ajpo; tou' kuriou); 1 Thess 4,15 (lovgo" kuriou). That 1
v v
Thess 4,15 refers to a saying of Jesus has been widely questioned. But there are compelling
reasons for this, see D. WENHAM, Paul – Follower of Jesus or Founder of Christianity?
(Grand Rapids, MI 1995) 305-311, 332-333.
(9) See B. GERHARDSSON, The Reliability of the Gospel Tradition (Peabody, MA 2001)
20: Paul “makes a clear distinction between his own words and those of the Lord. … we
observe how Paul proceeds when he does not have a specific word from Jesus to support
him. He then states without circumlocution that in such cases he cannot refer to any
command of the Lord, but is simply providing his own opinion. These passages are
embarrassing evidence against the common opinion that in the early church no distinction
was made between what was said ‘by the Lord (himself)’ and what was said by some one
[sic] else ‘in the Lord’ … In 1 Corinthians 7 we see how … Paul, at least on occasion, very
clearly upheld the distinction between that which was said ‘by the Lord’ and that which was
said ‘in the Lord’â€.
(10) Pace SCHRAGE, 1 Korinther, III, 460 and many others.
(11) Here, “is not recognizedâ€, does not merely mean, “not recognized as a prophetâ€,
but the expression has the last judgement in view, see HAYS, 1 Corinthians, 244-245;
GRUDEM, Gift, 52, especially n. 104 (with further references); SCHRAGE, 1 Korinther, III,
460-461; pace THISELTON, 1 Corinthians, 1165-1166; SENFT, 1 Corinthiens, 183-184.