2 Corinthians 6:15

Authorized King James Version

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And what concord hath Christ with Belial? or what part hath he that believeth with an infidel?

Original Language Analysis

τίς what G5101
τίς what
Strong's: G5101
Word #: 1 of 12
an interrogative pronoun, who, which or what (in direct or indirect questions)
δὲ And G1161
δὲ And
Strong's: G1161
Word #: 2 of 12
but, and, etc
συμφώνησις concord G4857
συμφώνησις concord
Strong's: G4857
Word #: 3 of 12
accordance
Χριστῷ hath Christ G5547
Χριστῷ hath Christ
Strong's: G5547
Word #: 4 of 12
anointed, i.e., the messiah, an epithet of jesus
πρὸς with G4314
πρὸς with
Strong's: G4314
Word #: 5 of 12
a preposition of direction; forward to, i.e., toward (with the genitive case, the side of, i.e., pertaining to; with the dative case, by the side of,
Βελιάρ Belial G955
Βελιάρ Belial
Strong's: G955
Word #: 6 of 12
worthlessness; belial, as an epithet of satan
or G2228
or
Strong's: G2228
Word #: 7 of 12
disjunctive, or; comparative, than
τίς what G5101
τίς what
Strong's: G5101
Word #: 8 of 12
an interrogative pronoun, who, which or what (in direct or indirect questions)
μερὶς part G3310
μερὶς part
Strong's: G3310
Word #: 9 of 12
a portion, i.e., province, share or (abstractly) participation
πιστῷ hath he that believeth G4103
πιστῷ hath he that believeth
Strong's: G4103
Word #: 10 of 12
objectively, trustworthy; subjectively, trustful
μετὰ with G3326
μετὰ with
Strong's: G3326
Word #: 11 of 12
properly, denoting accompaniment; "amid" (local or causal); modified variously according to the case (genitive association, or accusative succession)
ἀπίστου an infidel G571
ἀπίστου an infidel
Strong's: G571
Word #: 12 of 12
(actively) disbelieving, i.e., without christian faith (specially, a heathen); (passively) untrustworthy (person), or incredible (thing)

Analysis & Commentary

And what concord hath Christ with Belial? (τίς δὲ συμφώνησις Χριστῷ πρὸς Βελίαρ; tis de symphōnēsis Christō pros Beliar?)—Symphōnēsis means harmony, agreement, or concord (root of 'symphony'). Beliar (Hebrew בְּלִיַּעַל, beliya'al, 'worthlessness' or 'wickedness') appears in the Old Testament for wicked or lawless people (Deut 13:13; Judg 19:22; 1 Sam 2:12). By New Testament times it became a name for Satan or demonic powers. Paul personifies ultimate spiritual antithesis: Christ versus Satan. The answer: zero concord, absolute incompatibility.

Or what part hath he that believeth with an infidel? (ἢ τίς μερὶς πιστῷ μετὰ ἀπίστου; ē tis meris pistō meta apistou?)—Meris means share, portion, or part—what they have in common or can share together. Pistos (believer, faithful one) versus apistos (unbeliever, unfaithful one) represents the fundamental divide of humanity: those who trust Christ and those who don't. In ultimate spiritual realities, they have no common ground, no shared inheritance, no mutual spiritual life.

Paul escalates from abstract concepts (righteousness/unrighteousness, light/darkness) to personal embodiments (Christ/Satan, believer/unbeliever). This isn't merely philosophical incompatibility but personal, relational impossibility. Attempting to unite opposites doesn't create synthesis but compromise—the holy is polluted, not the profane sanctified, when wrongly mixed.

Historical Context

Belial appears in Jewish apocalyptic literature (Dead Sea Scrolls, Testaments of the Twelve Patriarchs) as a leader of demonic forces opposing God. Paul uses this familiar Jewish concept to express absolute spiritual antithesis. The Corinthians' tolerance of pagan entanglements amounted to attempting harmony between Christ and Satan—spiritual adultery against their covenant Lord.

Questions for Reflection