1 Corinthians 12:6

6 diversities in work, and yet one and the same God--He who in each person brings about the whole result.

1 Corinthians 12:6 Meaning and Commentary

1 Corinthians 12:6

And there are diversities of operations,
There are some that are ordinary, as the good work of grace, and the several parts of it, the work of faith, the labour of love, and patience of hope, which the Spirit of God begins, carries on, and finishes in all the elect of God, and members of Christ; and there are others which are extraordinary, and are here meant, and hereafter specified.

But it is the same God which worketh all in all.
Interpreters in general understand by God here, God the Father; as by the Lord in the preceding verse, the Lord Jesus Christ, as distinct from the Spirit in ( 1 Corinthians 12:4 ) and apprehend that this furnishes out a considerable proof of a trinity of persons in the Godhead, which I will not deny; but I rather think that the Holy Ghost is designed in each verse, by Spirit, Lord, and God; since the various gifts, administrations, and operations, are particularly and peculiarly ascribed to him in the following verses; and the distribution of them is said to be the effect of his sovereign will; and so we have a most illustrious testimony of his proper deity and personality; who is the only true "Jehovah" with the Father and Son, to which the word "Lord" in the New Testament generally answers, and who is the omnipotent God, "which worketh all in all"; all the works of nature throughout the universe, and all the, works of grace in the hearts of all his people, and all the extraordinary operations effected by any of them.

1 Corinthians 12:6 In-Context

4 Now there are various kinds of gifts, but there is one and the same Spirit;
5 various forms of official service, and yet one and the same Lord;
6 diversities in work, and yet one and the same God--He who in each person brings about the whole result.
7 But to each of us a manifestation of the Spirit has been granted for the common good.
8 To one the utterance of wisdom has been granted through the Spirit; to another the utterance of knowledge in accordance with the will of the same Spirit;
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