*5:3 Of course doing such things is out of the question, but why can't we talk about them? If you talk about it you will think about it, which will provide an opening for temptation.
†5:5 To have an insatiable desire for something (say, money) is to be dominated by that something; it has become a god, an idolatry.
‡5:5 According to the grammatical construction here, “Christ and God” refer to the same person.
§5:6 Many ‘churches’ these days are making allowances for sexual immorality of various sorts (getting their values from Freud, not the Bible), but they will find themselves excluded from the Kingdom. Watch out for empty words!
*5:6 See the note at 2:2 above.
†5:9 Instead of “Spirit”, some 5% of the Greek manuscripts have ‘light’ (as in NIV, NASB, LB, TEV, etc.).
‡5:11 I could not decide between ‘expose’ and ‘reprove’, since the verb here includes both ideas. So let us do both.
§5:14 This is not a direct quote of any Old Testament passage. Not all God-given prophesies, though written down and read by subsequent generations, were included in the Canon.
*5:17 The ultimate foolishness is to not understand the Lord's will.
†5:18 Literally, ‘in which is dissipation’, so where did I get ‘harmful and wasteful’? Well, to dissipate is to waste, and a dictionary I have defines it as “to indulge in pleasure to the point of harming oneself”. Drunkenness always harms and wastes.
‡5:18 Observe that this is a command, so it depends on us. The Holy Spirit is waiting to fill us, if we will only yield to Him. For light to fill the room all you have to do is flip the switch.
§5:20 We are to declare God's goodness, faithfulness and wisdom, even when we do not like what is happening.
*5:21 Instead of “God”, perhaps 30% of the Greek manuscripts have ‘Christ’ (as in NIV, NASB, LB, TEV, etc.).
†5:22 Observe that this is something she should do of her own volition, not because she is beaten into submission.
‡5:24 This “everything” obviously does not include things that God forbids.
§5:30 Less than 2.5% of the Greek manuscripts, of objectively inferior quality, omit “of His flesh and of His bones” (as in NIV, NASB, LB, TEV, etc.—an easy case of ‘similar ending’). Flesh and bones are definitely physical, not spiritual; so what is Paul saying? Perhaps he is emphasizing that “His body” is just as real as a physical body.
*5:31 This is not just poetic language, it is a chemical reality. See Genesis 2:24.
†5:33 Observe that ‘wife’ is singular. Although in the Old Testament men were not condemned for having more than one wife, in the context of the Church monogamy is the norm. The instruction in verse 33 is basic: if a wife does not feel loved and/or a husband does not feel respected, negative things start to happen.