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Letters to the Editor
"Thank you for your wonderful assurance letters. I wonder if
you might address
the statement, 'To deliver such a one unto
Satan for the destruction of his flesh' (1
Cor. 5:5) and '. . . whom I have delivered
unto Satan' (1 Tim. 1:20). I have heard and
read various views, but would be interested
in your exegesis."
Dr. H. Graham Wilson, Jr.
San Antonio, Texas
Dear Dr. Wilson,
Satan is called the god of this world (2
Cor. 4:4). Delivering one over to him is the
opposite of delivering one into God's loving care. It is handing
one over to suffering
and possibly physical death. We know
from the life of Job (e.g., Job 1:6-2:10ff)
that Satan is able to inflict physical pain and
even death when God permits (God is
sovereign; He is in control). However, this
has nothing to do with one's eternal destiny
as Paul makes clear later in 1 Corinthians
5:5 when he says "that his spirit may be
saved in the day of the Lord Jesus." Dr.
Ryrie comments on 1 Timothy 1:20, "[This
is] a remedial discipline (as in 1 Cor. 5:5),
which excluded such persons from the help
and fellowship of the church-a kind of
last-resort punishment" (Ryrie Study Bible,
p. 1817n).
Editor
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