Growing Up as God’s Temple
All Scripture references are from the New Living Translation (NLT), unless noted otherwise.
In 1 Corinthians 3, Paul speaks to a church that is gifted but still spiritually immature. The believers in Corinth are arguing, comparing leaders, and thinking about church life the way their city thinks about status and success. Paul reminds them that the church belongs to God, not to any human leader, and that they are called to grow up together as God’s field and God’s holy temple.
Big idea
Paul describes the Corinthians as “babies in Christ” (1 Corinthians 3:1). They believe in Jesus, but they are still thinking and acting in ways that match the culture around them. They are jealous, they argue, and they form little groups around their favorite leaders (1 Corinthians 3:3–4). Instead of seeing themselves as one family in Christ, they are slipping back into patterns of competition and comparison.
To correct this, Paul gives them a new way to see the church. He says that leaders like Paul and Apollos are only servants, and that God alone makes the church grow (1 Corinthians 3:5–7). He calls the church “God’s field” and “God’s building” (1 Corinthians 3:9). Jesus is the only foundation, and everything built on that foundation will one day be tested (1 Corinthians 3:10–15).
Finally, Paul gives them a powerful image: the church is God’s temple, and His Spirit lives among them (1 Corinthians 3:16–17). This means the way they treat one another, the way they handle conflict, and the way they think about wisdom and success are all deeply spiritual matters. To belong to Christ is to grow up into His way of life, together.
Watch the teaching
You can use this short video overview of 1 Corinthians 3–4 to help your group see how this chapter fits into Paul’s larger message. Watching together can create a shared starting point before you discuss the passage.
Chapter 3 contents
Use these links to jump directly to a section or to your assigned Navigator portion.
Navigator 1 – Spiritual infants and jealousy (1 Corinthians 3:1–4)
Your goal as Navigator 1
Help the group see that spiritual immaturity is not about how long someone has been a Christian, but about whether their attitudes and relationships are being shaped by Jesus or by the culture around them. Paul’s words are firm, but they are also an invitation to grow.
Spiritual infancy (1 Corinthians 3:1–2)
Paul says he could not address the Corinthians as “spiritual people” but as “babies in Christ” (1 Corinthians 3:1). This does not mean they are not saved. It means that their way of thinking and living has not yet grown to match their new identity in Jesus.
He uses the picture of feeding them with milk instead of solid food (1 Corinthians 3:2). Milk is not bad. It is exactly what a baby needs. The problem is when a baby never grows. In the same way, it is normal for new believers to begin with simple truths. But God’s plan is that over time we grow in understanding, character, and love.
A spiritually immature person may love Jesus, but still respond to pressure the same way they always have: with anger, jealousy, control, or fear. Paul’s concern is not to shame them, but to wake them up to the fact that there is more growth ahead.
Jealousy and quarrels (1 Corinthians 3:3–4)
Paul gives a very practical sign of spiritual infancy: jealousy and fighting in the church (1 Corinthians 3:3). When believers are competing for attention, status, or influence, they are living “like people of the world.” The problem is not just bad behavior. The deeper problem is that their hearts are still trying to find worth in comparison instead of in Christ.
He gives an example: some say “I follow Paul,” others say “I follow Apollos” (1 Corinthians 3:4). Instead of being grateful for different leaders and gifts, they are using leaders as badges of spiritual importance. Paul wants them to see how small this is compared to the greatness of belonging to Jesus together.
This can happen in our time as well. We may compare churches, pastors, worship styles, or Christian authors. Paul invites us to see jealousy and rivalry as warning lights. When these are present, God is calling us to grow into a deeper, Christ-shaped love.
Key terms made simple
These terms can help your group understand what Paul is saying in this first section. Tap a term to open it in a larger pop-up.
1. A church shaped by culture
Corinth was a city that praised strong speakers, clever ideas, and visible success. It was easy for believers to think that the loudest or most impressive voices were the most spiritual. When Paul calls them “babies in Christ,” he is helping them see that their way of thinking has not yet been renewed.
In Romans 12:2, Paul writes that we should not copy the behavior and customs of this world, but let God transform us into new people by changing the way we think. Something similar is happening here: their faith is real, but their minds and relationships still need to be formed by the cross.
2. Honest but hopeful correction
Paul’s words are direct, but they are also full of hope. He still calls them “brothers and sisters” (1 Corinthians 3:1). He believes that God is at work in them. Spiritual immaturity is not the end of the story. It is an invitation to take the next step.
3. Signs of spiritual growth
One simple way to think about maturity is this: immature love asks, “How can I get what I want?” Growing love asks, “How can I serve, bless, and build up others?” When jealousy and conflict are replaced by patience, kindness, and forgiveness, that is a real sign of the Holy Spirit at work (compare 1 Corinthians 13:4–7; Galatians 5:22–23).
Questions for the group
Read 1 Corinthians 3:1–2. In simple terms, what do you think it means to be a “baby in Christ”? Can you think of an area in your own life where God might be inviting you to grow up a little more in this season?
Look at 1 Corinthians 3:3. Where do you most easily compare yourself with other believers or other churches? How does remembering that you are loved and called by God help you let go of jealousy and competition?
In 1 Corinthians 3:4, some believers identify strongly with Paul or Apollos. What might this look like today with pastors, speakers, or Christian authors? How can we appreciate human leaders without building our identity on them?
What is one simple change your group or church could make that would help people move from comparison and competition toward encouragement and shared growth in Christ?
Navigator 2 – God’s field and God’s servants (1 Corinthians 3:5–9)
Your goal as Navigator 2
Help the group see that every leader and every believer is a servant in God’s work, not the center of it. The focus of this section is to shift our attention from “who is greater” to “what is God doing among us?”
Servants through whom you believed (1 Corinthians 3:5)
Paul asks an important question: “After all, who is Apollos? Who is Paul?” He answers, “We are only God’s servants through whom you believed the Good News” (1 Corinthians 3:5). This does not insult leaders. It puts them in their proper place. Leaders are gifts from God, but they are not the source of life. That belongs to God alone.
This helps us hold leaders with gratitude and humility. We can be thankful for those who preached the gospel to us, prayed for us, or walked with us, but we remember that they themselves depend on God’s grace.
Planting, watering, and God’s growth (1 Corinthians 3:6–9)
Paul uses a simple picture from farming. He planted the seed by preaching the gospel. Apollos “watered” by teaching and encouraging the believers. But God made the seed grow (1 Corinthians 3:6). Neither planting nor watering is enough on its own. At the same time, neither the planter nor the one who waters can take the credit for the life that appears.
This picture frees us in two ways. First, we do not have to feel like failures when results are slow. We are called to be faithful, not famous. Second, we do not need to become proud when things go well. Growth is a gift. God alone can change hearts.
Paul then calls the believers “God’s workers,” “God’s field,” and “God’s building” (1 Corinthians 3:9). This means the church is not a project we own. It is a people God owns and loves. Leaders and members alike are invited into God’s ongoing work, side by side.
Key terms made simple
These terms help explain Paul’s picture language about leaders, growth, and God’s work.
1. The danger of personality-centered faith
Throughout church history, there have been seasons when people attached their faith too strongly to particular leaders, movements, or styles. Paul cuts through this by reminding the Corinthians that even the most gifted leaders are still servants. In 2 Corinthians 4:5, he writes, “We don’t go around preaching about ourselves. We preach that Jesus Christ is Lord, and we ourselves are your servants for Jesus’ sake.”
2. Encouragement for “ordinary” servants
Many believers feel that their contribution is small. But in this passage, the “small” acts of planting and watering are honored by God. A quiet conversation, a prayer, a faithful word of encouragement, or a simple act of kindness can all be part of God’s work in someone’s life. God sees what others overlook.
3. Shared ownership under God’s rule
When Paul calls the church “God’s field” and “God’s building,” he is reminding them that the church is not a human project or a spiritual club. It belongs to God. This means every decision, every ministry, and every relationship is part of something holy. It also means no one can claim the church as “theirs.” It is God’s.
Questions for the group
Read 1 Corinthians 3:5. Who were some of the people God used to help you come to faith or grow in your faith? How does this passage help you thank God for them without putting them on a pedestal?
Look again at 1 Corinthians 3:6–7. Where in your life are you planting or watering right now, but not yet seeing much growth? How can this picture help you stay patient and trust that God is at work in ways you cannot see?
In 1 Corinthians 3:9, Paul says, “We are both God’s workers.” What might change in a church or life group if everyone truly saw themselves as co-workers in God’s field, rather than spectators or consumers?
When you hear that your church is “God’s field” and “God’s building” (1 Corinthians 3:9), what emotions arise in you? Does it change how you think about attending, serving, or praying for your church family?
Navigator 3 – Building on the only foundation (1 Corinthians 3:10–15)
Your goal as Navigator 3
Help the group see that Jesus Himself is the only foundation of the church, and that everything we build on that foundation will one day be tested. This is not meant to create fear, but to invite us into a life of honest, lasting faithfulness.
Christ, the foundation (1 Corinthians 3:10–11)
Paul says that, by God’s grace, he laid a foundation “like an expert builder,” and that “no one can lay any foundation other than the one we already have—Jesus Christ” (1 Corinthians 3:10–11). The foundation of a building is what carries the weight of everything else. In the same way, Jesus is the One who carries the full weight of the church.
This means our hope does not rest on our plans, our buildings, our programs, or our personalities. It rests on the life, death, and resurrection of Christ. Other passages make the same point. For example, Ephesians 2:20 describes the church as built on the foundation of the apostles and prophets, with Christ Jesus Himself as the “cornerstone.”
What we build, and how we build (1 Corinthians 3:12–15)
Paul then describes different building materials: gold, silver, and jewels on one side; wood, hay, and straw on the other (1 Corinthians 3:12). These pictures are not about literal materials. They point to the quality and motives of our service. Some work is done with love, humility, and obedience to Christ. Other work may look successful, but is driven by pride or self-promotion.
He explains that a day is coming when “the fire will show if a person’s work has any value” (1 Corinthians 3:13). This likely refers to the final judgment, when God will lovingly and truthfully reveal what was done for His glory and what was not. The person who has built with care will receive a reward. The one whose work is burned up “will suffer great loss,” but “will be saved” (1 Corinthians 3:15).
This is not about losing salvation. It is about the sadness of discovering that much of what we worked for did not last. At the same time, this passage gives great hope. Even simple acts done in love for Jesus are seen, remembered, and rewarded by God (compare Matthew 10:42).
Key terms made simple
These terms focus on what it means to build our lives and ministries on Christ.
1. Grace and responsibility together
Paul’s language holds grace and responsibility side by side. The foundation is already laid by God’s grace in Christ. We do not create it or earn it. At the same time, how we build on that foundation matters deeply. Our choices, words, and patterns of service are seen by God.
2. Quiet, hidden faithfulness
Some of the most “valuable” work in God’s eyes may never appear on a platform. Patient care for a suffering friend, steady faithfulness in prayer, or humble service in the background may look small to the world but can be like “gold” in God’s sight.
3. Letting this passage search us
Rather than trying to judge other people’s ministries, this passage invites us to ask gentle questions about our own hearts. Why am I serving? What am I hoping to gain? Am I building on Christ, or on my own image and comfort? These questions are not meant to crush us, but to draw us closer to Jesus, the true foundation.
Questions for the group
Read 1 Corinthians 3:10–11. In your own words, what does it mean for Jesus to be the only foundation for the church and for your life? Are there “other foundations” you are tempted to lean on?
Paul describes two types of “building materials” in 1 Corinthians 3:12. What do you think are examples of “gold, silver, and jewels” in real life? What might be examples of “wood, hay, or straw”?
When you think about God one day revealing the value of everything we built (1 Corinthians 3:13), what feelings rise in you — encouragement, caution, hope, fear, or something else?
1 Corinthians 3:14–15 says believers can be saved yet still “suffer loss.” What do you think Paul wants us to understand through this? How can his words help us live with deeper purpose today?
Navigator 4 – God’s temple and true wisdom (1 Corinthians 3:16–23)
Your goal as Navigator 4
Help the group realize the weight and beauty of Paul’s words: the gathered church is God’s holy temple, and God’s Spirit lives among His people. Paul uses this truth to challenge pride and to call the church to unity, humility, and a new understanding of wisdom.
God’s Spirit among His people (1 Corinthians 3:16–17)
Paul tells the Corinthians, “You are God’s temple, and God’s Spirit lives in you” (1 Corinthians 3:16). In the Old Testament, the temple was the place where heaven and earth met, where God’s glory rested. Now Paul says that God’s presence rests in His people — not a building.
This truth should shape how we treat one another. Paul warns that anyone who destroys God’s temple will face God’s judgment (1 Corinthians 3:17). Dividing, attacking, or tearing down the church is not a small thing. It is resisting the work of the Holy Spirit.
True wisdom vs. worldly wisdom (1 Corinthians 3:18–20)
Paul returns to the theme of wisdom. The Corinthians admired clever speakers and cultural influence. Paul says, “If you think you are wise by this world’s standards, you need to become a fool to be truly wise” (1 Corinthians 3:18).
This does not mean Christians should be ignorant. It means we refuse to measure success by the world’s values. Paul quotes Job 5:13 and Psalm 94:11 to say God sees through human pride and the empty pursuit of status (1 Corinthians 3:19–20).
All things are yours in Christ (1 Corinthians 3:21–23)
Paul ends this chapter with a surprising statement: “Everything belongs to you… and you belong to Christ” (1 Corinthians 3:21–23). The Corinthians were fighting to “own” certain leaders. Paul says they already have more than they realize. Because they belong to Christ, everything God gives to His people — life, death, the present, the future — belongs to them as well.
Instead of striving to claim leaders or status, believers can rest in their identity as God’s temple and Christ’s people.
Key terms made simple
Tap to open each term in a clear, full-screen modal.
1. The temple as God’s dwelling place
In the Old Testament, the temple was the center of worship and sacrifice. Paul now uses this rich image to show that God’s Spirit dwells not only in individuals but also in the gathered community.
2. Why division is so serious
Some believers treat division or gossip lightly, as if it were a normal part of church life. Paul says it is spiritual destruction. To harm Christ’s people is to harm what God calls holy.
3. True wisdom begins with humility
Throughout Scripture, humility is the doorway to real wisdom (see Proverbs 11:2; James 3:17). Paul wants the church to stop chasing admiration and start pursuing the quiet wisdom that comes from dependence on Christ.
4. Identity secured in Christ
The Corinthians worked hard to feel important. Paul says they are already rich in Christ. When believers know who they are in Him, competition fades and unity grows.
Questions for the group
Read 1 Corinthians 3:16. What emotions or thoughts come to mind when you hear that your church community is God’s holy temple?
Paul says we must “become fools” in the world’s eyes to become truly wise (1 Corinthians 3:18). What do you think this looks like in practical, everyday life?
In your own words, what do you think Paul means by “Everything belongs to you… and you belong to Christ” (1 Corinthians 3:21–23)?
How might remembering that we belong to Christ help us overcome conflict or comparison in the church?
Video resources for 1 Corinthians
These videos can help you or your group understand the big picture of 1 Corinthians. Feel free to watch them on your own or with your group.
- Spoken Gospel — 1 Corinthians 3–4: Watch on YouTube
- BibleProject — 1 Corinthians 1–4 Overview: Watch on YouTube
Navigator leader toolkit
Use this toolkit to help guide healthy discussion, stay on track, and create space for spiritual growth.
- Start with Scripture — read slowly and clearly.
- Ask open questions — not yes/no, but “what do you see?”
- Let silence do its work — reflection creates depth.
- Encourage participation from everyone, gently guiding the quiet voices.
- Keep the focus on Jesus, not on winning arguments.
Tips for guiding a section
These tips help keep the group centered on Scripture while creating space for honest conversation.
- Give people time to think before answering.
- Affirm participation — never shame someone’s answer.
- Bring the conversation back to the text when needed.
- Keep Jesus and the gospel at the center.
Babies in Christ
A picture Paul uses for believers who are saved but still shaped more by old habits than by the new life Jesus gives. It is not an insult — it is an invitation to grow.
Milk, not solid food
“Milk” refers to the basic teachings of the faith. “Solid food” refers to deeper understanding and maturity. Both are good — but growth means moving toward deeper obedience and wisdom.
Jealousy and quarrels
Signs that believers are still measuring themselves by comparison instead of by God’s grace. Paul points to jealousy as evidence of spiritual infancy.
Behaving like people of the world
Living as if Christ has not changed your identity — following cultural patterns of pride, competition, or selfishness rather than the way of the Spirit.
“I follow Paul… I follow Apollos”
When believers identify too strongly with human leaders, they divide the church. Paul calls them to remember that all leaders serve the same Lord.
Servants
Paul describes himself and Apollos as servants — not masters, not heroes. This word puts leadership in its proper place: humble, faithful, and dependent on God.
Planted and watered
A picture of the different roles believers play in God’s work. Some plant seeds by sharing Jesus. Others water through teaching, prayer, or encouragement. God gives the growth.
God makes it grow
The heart of Paul’s teaching: only God can change hearts or produce spiritual fruit. Our role is faithful participation, not pressure or performance.
God’s workers together
A reminder that believers do not serve alone or in competition. We work side by side in God’s field, belonging to Him and serving His purposes.
God’s field, God’s building
Two images showing that the church belongs to God. We are His planting and His construction — cared for and shaped by Him.
The foundation — Jesus Christ
The unshakeable base of the Christian life. Any church, ministry, or belief built on something other than Christ cannot last.
Gold, silver, jewels / wood, hay, straw
Images for the quality of our work. Work done in love and obedience lasts. Work done for pride or show does not endure God’s testing.
The Day when fire reveals
A picture of the final judgment when God lovingly reveals what was done for His glory and what was done for ourselves. It is meant to purify us, not to frighten us.
Reward and loss
Believers are saved by grace alone. Yet our faithful work is honored with reward, and work built on pride or self-interest is burned away. God judges with truth and grace together.
God’s temple
Not a building but a people — the place where God’s Spirit lives. When believers gather, God’s presence dwells among them in a real and holy way.
Destroying the temple
Causing division, harm, or spiritual destruction in the church. Paul warns that God takes this seriously because the church is holy to Him.
Become a fool to become wise
The world sees humility and obedience to Jesus as foolish. Yet this is the doorway to true wisdom — wisdom shaped by the cross, not by pride or status.
“All things are yours”
Because believers belong to Christ, they share in all that He gives — life, purpose, hope, and the future God is preparing. There is no need to fight for status or ownership.
Recognizing spiritual infancy
Read 1 Corinthians 3:1–2. What do you think it means to be a “baby in Christ”? Can you identify an area in your life where God may be inviting you to grow?
Jealousy and comparison
Where do you most easily compare yourself to others? How does remembering God’s love and calling help free you from jealousy and competition?
Following people or following Christ
How can you appreciate human leaders without building your identity on them? What does it look like to follow Christ first?
Growing together
What is one practical step your group or church could take to grow in unity, encouragement, and shared responsibility?
How God used people in your story
Who were some of the people God used to help you believe or grow in faith? How does this passage help you thank God without putting people on a pedestal?
Planting, watering, and waiting
Where in your life are you planting or watering but not yet seeing results? How can this passage encourage patience and trust that God is working?
Serving side by side
What could your church or life group look like if everyone saw themselves as God’s co-workers rather than spectators?
God’s field, God’s building
How does seeing the church as God’s field and God’s building change the way you approach community, serving, and prayer?
Only one foundation
What does it mean that Jesus is the only foundation of your life and the church? What “other foundations” are you sometimes tempted to trust?
How we build
Which motivations help you build with “gold”? Which tempt you toward “straw”? How can this passage help you build with deeper purpose?
The Day of testing
What emotions arise when you think about God one day revealing the value of everything we build? Encouragement? Caution? Hope? Something else?
Reward and loss
How does Paul’s teaching about reward and loss shape the way you want to serve Christ today?
God’s temple today
What thoughts or emotions come when you hear that your church is God’s holy temple where His Spirit lives?
Becoming truly wise
What does it look like in everyday life to become a “fool” in the world’s eyes so you can become truly wise in Christ’s way?
All things are yours
What do you think Paul means when he says “Everything belongs to you… and you belong to Christ”? How does this shape your sense of identity?
Unity shaped by identity
How can remembering that we belong to Christ help us overcome conflict, comparison, or pride in the church?