1 Corinthians 12:29

Authorized King James Version

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Are all apostles? are all prophets? are all teachers? are all workers of miracles?

Original Language Analysis

μὴ Are all G3361
μὴ Are all
Strong's: G3361
Word #: 1 of 12
(adverb) not, (conjunction) lest; also (as an interrogative implying a negative answer (whereas g3756 expects an affirmative one)) whether
πάντες G3956
πάντες
Strong's: G3956
Word #: 2 of 12
all, any, every, the whole
ἀπόστολοι apostles G652
ἀπόστολοι apostles
Strong's: G652
Word #: 3 of 12
a delegate; specially, an ambassador of the gospel; officially a commissioner of christ ("apostle") (with miraculous powers)
μὴ Are all G3361
μὴ Are all
Strong's: G3361
Word #: 4 of 12
(adverb) not, (conjunction) lest; also (as an interrogative implying a negative answer (whereas g3756 expects an affirmative one)) whether
πάντες G3956
πάντες
Strong's: G3956
Word #: 5 of 12
all, any, every, the whole
προφῆται prophets G4396
προφῆται prophets
Strong's: G4396
Word #: 6 of 12
a foreteller ("prophet"); by analogy, an inspired speaker; by extension, a poet
μὴ Are all G3361
μὴ Are all
Strong's: G3361
Word #: 7 of 12
(adverb) not, (conjunction) lest; also (as an interrogative implying a negative answer (whereas g3756 expects an affirmative one)) whether
πάντες G3956
πάντες
Strong's: G3956
Word #: 8 of 12
all, any, every, the whole
διδάσκαλοι teachers G1320
διδάσκαλοι teachers
Strong's: G1320
Word #: 9 of 12
an instructor (genitive case or specially)
μὴ Are all G3361
μὴ Are all
Strong's: G3361
Word #: 10 of 12
(adverb) not, (conjunction) lest; also (as an interrogative implying a negative answer (whereas g3756 expects an affirmative one)) whether
πάντες G3956
πάντες
Strong's: G3956
Word #: 11 of 12
all, any, every, the whole
δυνάμεις workers of miracles G1411
δυνάμεις workers of miracles
Strong's: G1411
Word #: 12 of 12
force (literally or figuratively); specially, miraculous power (usually by implication, a miracle itself)

Analysis & Commentary

Are all apostles? are all prophets? are all teachers? are all workers of miracles?Mē pantes apostoloi; mē pantes prophētai; mē pantes didaskaloi; mē pantes dynameis;—the Greek particle (μή) expects a negative answer: "Not all are apostles, are they?" Paul's rhetorical questions (continuing v.30) hammer home gift-diversity. Not every believer is an apostle; not every Christian is a teacher. The Spirit distributes as He wills (v.11), not uniformly to all.

This demolishes two errors:

  1. elitism—"superior Christians have all gifts, especially tongues"
  2. egalitarianism—"all Christians should have the same gifts." God's design features specialization, not duplication.

A body needs one mouth, not multiple mouths competing to speak. This means some believers will never speak in tongues (v.30)—contradicting any theology demanding tongues as evidence of Spirit-baptism. Paul's questions refute the notion that any single gift should be universal among believers.

Historical Context

Some Corinthians apparently taught that tongues-speaking was essential proof of Spirit-baptism or spiritual maturity, creating pressure for all believers to manifest this gift. Paul's rhetorical questions show such teaching contradicts the Spirit's sovereign, diverse distribution.

Questions for Reflection

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