Freedom Without Apology | 1 Corinthians 9:1-6
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Welcome to The Daily, where we study the Bible verse by verse, chapter by chapter, every day.
Our shout-out today goes to Douglass Fetters from Port Orchard, WA. Thanks for your partnership in Project23. We cannot do this without donors like you.
Our text today is 1 Corinthians 9:1-6.
Am I not free? Am I not an apostle? Have I not seen Jesus our Lord? Are not you my workmanship in the Lord? If to others I am not an apostle, at least I am to you, for you are the seal of my apostleship in the Lord. This is my defense to those who would examine me. Do we not have the right to eat and drink? Do we not have the right to take along a believing wife, as do the other apostles and the brothers of the Lord and Cephas? Or is it only Barnabas and I who have no right to refrain from working for a living? — 1 Corinthians 9:1-6
Paul opens this chapter without hesitation and without apology.
He asks the questions out loud—questions that force the issue of identity before the issue of sacrifice.
"Am I not free?"
Paul does not ground his freedom in public approval, personal achievement, or cultural status. His freedom is grounded in one decisive reality: he belongs to Christ and has been called by Christ.
He has seen the risen Lord. He has been commissioned by him. And the Corinthians themselves are living evidence of that calling. Their faith is the seal of his apostleship.
Paul's point is not arrogance. It is clarity.
Before Paul ever talks about restraint, he establishes something essential: he is genuinely free, fully authorized, and rightfully entitled. His sacrifices are not the result of weakness, pressure, or insecurity. They flow from identity.
That's why he names the rights plainly. The right to financial support. The right to marriage. The right to live without the need to labor. These are not theoretical privileges. They are real, recognized, and biblically affirmed.
And Paul has them.
Paul is establishing these rights because sacrifice only means something when the rights are realized. You cannot lay down what you never possessed. You cannot surrender what you were never given.
Paul is showing the Corinthians—and us—that gospel-shaped sacrifice does not come from a lack of confidence. It comes from confidence rooted in Christ.
When freedom isn't anchored in identity, it turns into entitlement. And when identity isn't secure, freedom is often surrendered out of fear. But when identity is secured in Christ, freedom becomes something you can hold loosely.
Paul's life is about to illustrate this truth in full. He will willingly lay down rights, limit freedom, and endure hardship—not to prove devotion, but because devotion has already been established.
This chapter begins where all true sacrifice must begin: with freedom that knows who it belongs to.
DO THIS:
Name one right or freedom you possess and reflect on how your identity in Christ changes the way you hold it.
ASK THIS:
- Where do I ground my sense of freedom—identity in Christ or affirmation from others?
- Which rights do I cling to most tightly, and why?
- How might a secure identity free me to sacrifice more willingly?
PRAY THIS:
Lord Jesus, anchor my freedom in you. Free me from insecurity and entitlement, and teach me to live from the confidence that comes from belonging to you. Amen.
PLAY THIS:
"Christ Is Mine Forevermore"