Saints are called to settle disputes inside the family and to treat their bodies as the Lord’s. Washed, sanctified, and justified, they now live by the Spirit and honor God with both actions and desires.
Bible Themes and Doctrines
Welcome to the complete exposition of God’s Word. This free resource provides a detailed, chapter-by-chapter study of the entire Bible (1,189 chapters) alongside overview articles for all 66 books. Unlike topical studies, these commentaries walk through the text verse-by-verse, ensuring that we hear the whole counsel of God in context.
Our Interpretive approach allows us to maintain consistency across the entire Bible, these studies utilize a Literal, Grammatical-Historical method of interpretation. This framework ensures:
Contextual Integrity: We respect the original audience and history of each passage.
Israel & The Church: We distinguish between God’s program for National Israel and His distinct calling for the Body of Christ.
Christ-Centeredness: While respecting the timeline, we see Jesus Christ as the center of all history and the only Savior for all ages.
For a detailed explanation of our interpretive method, read Our Theological Framework.
How to Use This Library: The chapter studies below are organized by the traditional divisions of Scripture. Click on a section (like “The Pentateuch” or “The Gospels”) to reveal the individual books and chapter links. Traditional keyword searching is not enabled in this category. This library is designed for browsing. Please locate your study using the book and chapter designations below:
Saints are called to settle disputes inside the family and to treat their bodies as the Lord’s. Washed, sanctified, and justified, they now live by the Spirit and honor God with both actions and desires.
A tolerant church had learned to be proud of what grieves God. Paul calls them to remove old leaven because Christ our Passover has been sacrificed, so that holiness and hope can flourish together.
Paul rejects celebrity logic and defines ministers as stewards under Christ, judged by the Lord at the appointed time. His fatherly appeal invites imitation and points to a kingdom where words yield to Spirit-given power.
A divided church learns that only God gives growth and only Christ is the foundation that lasts. Build with care, guard the temple, and boast in the Lord alone.
Paul came to Corinth in weakness so that faith would rest on God’s power rather than polished words. The Spirit now makes God’s long-planned wisdom clear and gives believers the mind of Christ.
In a city obsessed with status and eloquence, Paul opens by thanking God for grace and then calls the church back to the singular center: Christ crucified. True unity, lasting assurance, and humble joy flow from boasting only in the Lord.
Paul readies a third visit with firm fairness, calls the church to test itself in Christ, and blesses them with the triune benediction. Authority builds, truth strengthens, and peace becomes the church’s way.
Paul hides the details of paradise and boasts instead in weakness, teaching that Christ’s power rests on those who depend on Him. True authority spends itself for people and seeks their holiness with patient love.
Paul guards a betrothed church from clever counterfeits and exposes false apostles by boasting in scars, not polish. Real authority serves, suffers, and keeps the bride loyal to Christ.
Paul rejects comparison games and worldly weapons. With Christ’s gentleness and God’s power, he aims to build the church, capture thoughts for Jesus, and boast only in the Lord.
Paul aligns readiness with cheerful resolve, teaching sowing and reaping under God’s sufficiency. As gifts supply real needs, thanksgiving overflows to the God who gave the indescribable gift.
Grace met believers in trial and overflowed in generosity. Anchored in Christ’s self-giving, the church finishes what love began and handles money in the light for God’s honor and others’ good.
Paul roots holiness in God’s pledge to dwell with His people and shows how godly sorrow leads to repentance and restored joy. Through Titus and the church’s obedience, comfort and confidence return.
Paul urges the church to treat grace as a “now” call, commends ministry through Spirit-formed endurance, and asks for open hearts. Because God dwells with His people, they refuse unequal yokes and walk in the joy of His welcome.
1 Corinthians 7 Chapter Study
Published by Brother Woody BrohmPaul answers Corinth’s questions about intimacy, calling, and contentment with the cross in view. Remain with God where you were called and choose the path that serves undivided devotion to the Lord.