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The First Epistle to the Corinthians is unavailable, but you can change that!

Perhaps more than any other Pauline letter, 1 Corinthians is known for affording insight into the nature and world of the earliest Christian communities. Whether it concerns Corinthian disputes over wisdom, debates over speaking in tongues, or questions about resurrection, 1 Corinthians shows us the early church—warts and all. And that is what makes it such exciting—and relevant—reading today!...

Christian worship was that in use among angels; this was not normally understood by human beings, if we may follow Rev. 14:2 f., and the rabbinic tradition (S.B. ad loc.) that Johanan ben Zakkai, because of his outstanding piety and learning, was able to understand the speech of the angels. Compare also 2 Cor. 12:4. But to speak in this way is to make no more intelligible communication than inanimate objects, which make a noise when struck. This is the main thought in Paul’s mind, but both nouns
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