April 20, 2026
The general idea of the First Epistle to the Corinthians is the practical consequences of progressive sanctification in the Christian community, with a strong emphasis on unity, moral integrity, and the supreme rule of love. Written by the apostle Paul around 55-56 AD from Ephesus, the letter addresses the internal divisions, sexual immorality, and doctrinal errors that plagued the believers in Corinth. It corrects their misuse of Christian freedom, while providing clear instruction on proper worship and the right use of spiritual gifts.
Key topics include:
- Unity instead of division: Paul sharply rebuked the factions forming around specific leaders (Paul, Apollos, Cephas) and called the church to be perfectly united in one mind and one judgment.
- Moral purity and church discipline: The epistle commands the removal of the immoral member and teaches that the body of every believer is a temple of the Holy Spirit, strictly forbidding sexual immorality and shameful lawsuits among believers.
- Love and spiritual gifts: While addressing the proper use of spiritual gifts and the Lord’s Supper, Paul presents love (agape) as “the most excellent way” and the greatest virtue that surpasses all other gifts.
- The resurrection: The letter offers a powerful defense of the bodily resurrection of Christ and of believers, establishing it as the indispensable cornerstone of Christian faith and hope.
The epistle also makes clear the deep connection between falsehood, idolatry, sexual sins, and the lack of generosity toward the true servants of God (see 1 Corinthians 9). One of the most important conclusions we can draw is that idolatry leads to sexual immorality. This connection is demanded by the very problems described in the Corinthian church, especially in 1 Corinthians 5:1-2, 9 and in chapters 8, 9, and 10.
The link between idolatry and fornication is mentioned several times. The context consistently compares the visible sins of everyday life with realities in the spiritual realm. The worship of false gods and idols distorts the understanding of the truth that comes from God (see 1 Corinthians 5:1-2; 6:12-20).
Fornication (sexual immorality) was evidently one of the most widespread sins in Corinth, and it deeply affected the church there. It is mentioned in chapter 5:1, 9, chapter 7:2 and following, which is why the apostle’s teaching on marriage and celibacy becomes necessary. The central concern is that we must never forget that our spiritual condition and our relationship with God are of supreme importance. Idolatry and the sexual immorality that follows it separate us from Him.
Eating food sacrificed to idols was a very common expression of idolatry in the early church. This is evident both from Paul’s letter to the Corinthians and from the final decision of the Jerusalem Council in Acts 15. The main instruction the apostles gave to newly converted Gentiles was to abstain from food sacrificed to idols, from blood, and from sexual immorality.
In 1 Corinthians 10, Paul shows how idolatry inevitably leads to fornication and sexual debauchery, provoking the burning wrath of God. This passage also beautifully demonstrates the continuity between the Old and New Testaments. The apostle recalls how the people of God in the wilderness, after worshiping idols, fell into sexual immorality. Their behavior is summarized in the telling phrase: “eating and drinking and rising up to play.” Paul declares that these things were written as examples for us—New Testament believers living in “the ends of the ages” (v. 11).
The connection is introduced powerfully at the beginning of the chapter:
“For I do not want you to be ignorant, brethren, that all our fathers were under the cloud, all passed through the sea, all were baptized into Moses in the cloud and in the sea, all ate the same spiritual food, and all drank the same spiritual drink. For they drank of that spiritual Rock that followed them, and that Rock was Christ. But with most of them God was not well pleased, for their bodies were scattered in the wilderness. Now these things became our examples, to the intent that we should not lust after evil things as they also lusted.” (1 Corinthians 10:1-6)
It is remarkable that Christ Himself is identified as the spiritual Rock who accompanied the Israelites in the wilderness, and their passage through the Red Sea is likened to New Testament baptism. This again illustrates the eternal covenant of God through Christ and faith in Him. The passage concludes with the urgent pastoral exhortation: “Therefore, my beloved, flee from idolatry” (v. 14). This command is addressed directly to the Church of Christ today.
Idolatry and sexual immorality are intimately connected. Sexual immorality is a visible illustration of the state of separation from God. It is no coincidence that sexual immorality remains one of the strongest weapons of sin and the devil in our time, through which millions and even billions are kept bound in sin and rebellion against God.
The sexual perversion of entire nations makes them resistant to the faith and to God’s revelation of forgiveness in Christ and eternal life. This is a real spiritual conspiracy—not merely a human theory. Yet this conspiracy is not carried out by people alone, but also by demonic forces. In their desperate resistance to the gospel, they invest vast earthly resources in the complete moral corruption of those who reject God.
With the development of modern technology and the mass creation and distribution of images—both still and moving—human perceptions of sexuality are under constant assault. Pornography, explicit sexual content, temptations to immorality, and the normalization of sexual perversions flood society, demoralizing entire populations and turning them into sex-obsessed societies. This is the mass idolatry of modernity. Though it has different forms than the idolatry of the early church, it is no less powerful. The early church had no television, cinema, radio, or internet; their idolatry centered on pagan temples and meat sacrificed to nonexistent gods (1 Corinthians 10:18-30).
We must remember that the essence of idolatry in that culture involved sacrifice to idols and participation in their meals. This is why the apostles at the Jerusalem Council gave practical instructions to Gentile believers: they did not need to become Jews or follow the full Mosaic Law, but they must abstain from things sacrificed to idols and from sexual immorality. These were not new laws but wise, Spirit-guided directives to help them avoid idolatry and its consequences.
In the New Testament, idolatry is not limited to physical statues. It includes any loyalty of the heart or conscience that gives to another what belongs to Jesus Christ alone. Christians with knowledge must be careful not to cause weaker brothers to stumble by participating in things connected with idols, even while knowing that idols are nothing (1 Corinthians 10:23-33; see also 6:12-20).
That is why Paul points in verses 15-17 to the cup we bless and the bread we break—the participation in the body and blood of Christ. It is impossible to have fellowship both with the table of the Lord and the table of demons. In verses 16-17, the apostle shows that we are one body in Christ and therefore cannot participate in both the Lord’s table and tables dedicated to idols (behind which demons stand—see verses 19-21).
This principle is almost identical to the command in chapter 6 that members of the church must not unite themselves with a prostitute, because we are members of Christ’s body. Just as we cannot join Christ’s body to a prostitute, we cannot join the body of Christ to demonic altars.
Thus, the relationship between sexual immorality (fornication and adultery) and idolatry is more than obvious. Whenever teaching in the church, under the pretext of leading people to Christ, actually leads them to an idol, those who worship that idol frequently fall into sexual sin.
One such idol in our day is the worship of the modern state of Israel. The state of Israel is not the true biblical Israel. The true, new, consecrated Israel is Jesus Christ and the Church of God—composed of Jews and Gentiles who believe in Christ.
As we read in 1 Corinthians 12:12-13:
“For as the body is one and has many members, but all the members of that one body, being many, are one body, so also is Christ. For by one Spirit we were all baptized into one body—whether Jews or Greeks, whether slaves or free—and have all been made to drink into one Spirit.”
There is no separate denomination, no special “Messianic” category, and no distinct plan or Spirit for non-believing Jews apart from faith in Christ. The state of Israel is not biblical Israel; it has taken a stolen identity. Those who claim to be faithful to Christ while exalting this false “people of God” are committing spiritual adultery. It is not surprising that among such groups, leaders and pastors frequently experience divorce and moral failure. Examples include ultra-Judaizing teachers and certain evangelical leaders, such as John Hagee, who divorced and got himself a younger wife, as well as figures like Paula White-Cain, (a spiritual adviser to the current president), who has been married and divorced multiple times and holds positions contrary to the clear moral standards of Scripture (1 Timothy 2).
Recently, in March 2026, Leonid Radinski, the founder of one of the world’s largest pornography websites, OnlyFans, died at the age of 43 from cancer. He was Jewish. The enormous wealth he accumulated by corrupting millions was partly directed toward supporting the state of Israel and its military actions. This man was a pimp on a global scale—a lost soul. For a short time of earthly pleasure and wealth, he now faces eternal torment. Instead of the media declaring the tragedy of a man who spread antichrist corruption worldwide, they reported that he “died in peace after battling cancer.” That peace was not peace with God.
How tragic it is to claim to belong to “the chosen people” while denying God, especially under the New Testament revelation that fulfills all the promises of the Old in Christ. Unlike Moses, who by faith refused the treasures of Egypt and chose the reproach of Christ (Hebrews 11:24-26), many today choose earthly power, wealth, and identity over the true Savior.
One of the prominent figures associated with this industry is Bonnie Blue, a Ukrainian Jewish woman who gained notoriety for engaging in sexual acts with over 1,000 men in a short time. Interviews with masked men waiting in line revealed a dark, demonic culture that destroys human dignity. These phenomena are not new but are clear signs of the last days. History offers parallels, such as the Roman empress Messalina, who lived a double life of imperial power and prostitution.
For all these sins God will judge the world. According to 1 Corinthians 5, we must carefully discern those who call themselves brothers and sisters (in our age of widespread feminism) yet live under the dominion of sinful passions and do not honor the sacrifice of Christ.
Throughout the entire epistle, the apostle Paul gives practical instructions. These are not merely rules of external behavior, but guidelines showing how the kingdom of heaven, established by the Holy Spirit, is manifested in the lives of believers. They call for necessary corrections in both conduct and belief. This is not the introduction of a new “Christian law,” but a call to living faith and a conscience directed toward the true God through Christ. It is the application of the law of Christ—purity, love, salvation, and hope of eternal life—through which we are sanctified. In the practical outworking of this faith and the manifestation of God’s kingdom on earth, there is no room for idols, only for the true Savior.
Therefore, let us obey the clear command of the New Testament Scriptures and the exhortation of the apostle Paul:
“My beloved, run away from idolatry.”
