1 Korinther 4:16

16 Ich bitte euch nun, seid meine Nachahmer!

1 Korinther 4:16 Meaning and Commentary

1 Corinthians 4:16

Wherefore, I beseech you
Though he might have used the power and authority of a father, yet he chose rather to entreat and beseech them; saying,

be ye followers of me;
for who should children follow, but their parents? The Vulgate Latin, adds, "as I am of Christ"; so Chrysostom in his time read it; and Beza says he found it so written in one Greek exemplar; and so it is in one of Stephens's; it seems to have crept in from ( 1 Corinthians 11:1 ) . However, though it might not be now expressed by the apostle, it is to be supposed; for he never desired any to follow him any more, or further than he followed Christ; particularly he was desirous that these his spiritual children would follow him, and abide by him in the doctrine of a crucified Christ, he had preached among them, and not the false apostles, who had represented his ministry as weak and foolish; and in his life and conversation, especially in his humble carriage and deportment among them, and in his tender love and affection for them; observing their growing pride, haughtiness, and vain opinion of themselves, and those unnatural divisions and animosities which were fomented among them; and also in bearing reproach and persecution cheerfully and patiently, for the Gospel of Christ; a detail of which he had given them in some preceding verses.

1 Korinther 4:16 In-Context

14 Nicht euch zu beschämen schreibe ich dieses, sondern ich ermahne euch als meine geliebten Kinder.
15 Denn wenn ihr zehntausend Zuchtmeister in Christo hättet, so doch nicht viele Väter; denn in Christo Jesu habe ich euch gezeugt durch das Evangelium.
16 Ich bitte euch nun, seid meine Nachahmer!
17 Dieserhalb habe ich euch Timotheus gesandt, der mein geliebtes und treues Kind ist in dem Herrn; der wird euch erinnern an meine Wege, die in Christo sind, gleichwie ich überall in jeder Versammlung lehre.
18 Etliche aber sind aufgeblasen, als ob ich nicht zu euch kommen würde.
The Elberfelder Bible is in the public domain.