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1 Corinthians 2

1 Corinthians 2

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Daily Meditation | June 4, 2026

1 Corinthians 2:1–16 — Nothing Except Christ Crucified

"For I resolved to know nothing while I was with you except Jesus Christ and him crucified." — 1 Corinthians 2:2 (NIV)

Paul had just come from Athens. He had stood on the Areopagus, delivered a philosophically sophisticated address, and watched most of his audience walk away (Acts 17:32–34). When he arrived in Corinth, something had crystallized in him. He would not try to out-argue the culture. He would not dazzle them with rhetoric. He came, as he puts it, "in weakness and fear, and with much trembling" (v. 3).

That is a startling admission from the greatest Christian theologian who ever lived. But Paul is not apologizing. He is making a theological point that runs straight through the heart of this entire letter.

The Foolishness That Is Wisdom

Corinth was a city in love with eloquence. Traveling sophists were celebrities. People paid to hear brilliant speeches the way we might pay for a concert. Into that world, Paul walked in with one thing: a crucified Messiah.

From the vantage point of Corinth, this was absurd. And yet Paul says:

"My message and my preaching were not with wise and persuasive words, but with a demonstration of the Spirit's power, so that your faith might not rest on human wisdom, but on God's power" (vv. 4–5).

This is not anti-intellectualism. Paul is one of history's most brilliant minds. He is making a point about source and foundation. If the Corinthians came to faith because Paul had out-debated them, their faith would stand on Paul's cleverness. But faith grounded in the Spirit's conviction — faith that has encountered the risen Christ through the proclaimed cross — stands on something no argument can dismantle.

John Stott once described this as a triple weakness: a weak message — Christ crucified — proclaimed by weak preachers full of fear and trembling, received by weak hearers, socially despised by the world. And yet through that triple weakness, God demonstrated his almighty power (Stott, as paraphrased in Woodley, Preaching Today, Christianity Today).

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