1st Corinthians Chapter 7 verse 1 Holy Bible

ASV 1stCorinthians 7:1

Now concerning the things whereof ye wrote: It is good for a man not to touch a woman.
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BBE 1stCorinthians 7:1

Now, as to the things in your letter to me: It is good for a man to have nothing to do with a woman.
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DARBY 1stCorinthians 7:1

But concerning the things of which ye have written [to me]: [It is] good for a man not to touch a woman;
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KJV 1stCorinthians 7:1

Now concerning the things whereof ye wrote unto me: It is good for a man not to touch a woman.
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WBT 1stCorinthians 7:1


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WEB 1stCorinthians 7:1

Now concerning the things about which you wrote to me: it is good for a man not to touch a woman.
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YLT 1stCorinthians 7:1

And concerning the things of which ye wrote to me: good `it is' for a man not to touch a woman,
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Pulpit Commentary

Pulpit CommentaryVerses 1-40. - Answers to the inquiries of the Corinthians respecting marriage. Verses 1-11. - The lawfulness of marriage, and its duties. Verse 1. - Now concerning. This refers to questions of the Corinthians (comp. 1 Corinthians 7:25; 1 Corinthians 8:1; 1 Corinthians 12:1). It is good for a man not to touch a woman. The word used is not agathon, good, but kalon, fair; "an excellent thing." In ver. 26 he limits the word by the clause, "good for the present necessity." There is no limitation here, and it is probable that St. Paul is quoting the actual words of the letter which he had received from Corinth. There had sprung up among them some antinomians, who, perhaps by perverting his own teaching or that of Apollos, had made liberty a cloak of lasciviousness. In indignant reaction against such laxity, others, perhaps, with Essene proclivities, had been led to disparage matrimony as involving an inevitable stain. Gnosticism, and the spirit which led to it, oscillated between the two extremes of asceticism and uncleanness. Both extremes were grounded on the assertion that matter is inherently evil. Ascetic Gnostics, therefore, strove to destroy by severity every carnal impulse; antinomian Gnostics argued that the life of the spirit was so utterly independent of the flesh that what the flesh did was of no consequence. We find the germs of Gnostic heresy long before the name appeared. Theoretically, St. Paul inclines to the ascetic view, not in the abstract, but in view of the near advent of Christ, and of the cares, distractions, and even trials which marriage involved in days of struggle and persecution. Yet his wisdom is shown in the cautious moderation with which he expresses himself. The tone of the letter written by Gregory the Great to Augustine with reference to similar inquiries about Saxon converts is very different. The example of St. Paul should have shown the mediaeval moralists and even the later Fathers how wrong it is "to give themselves airs of certainty on points where certainty is not to be had." Not to touch a woman. St. Paul means generally "not to marry" (comp. Genesis 20:4 [LXX.]). Celibacy under the then existing conditions of the Christian world is, he admits, in itself an honourable and morally salutary thing, though, for the majority, marriage may be a positive duty. He is not dreaming of the nominal marriages of mediaeval ascetics, for he assumes and directs that all who marry should live in conjugal union.

Ellicott's Commentary