More about Paul’s right to be respected
1 Am I not free? Am I not an apostle? Have I not seen Jesus our Master? Are you not there because of my work for the Master? 2 Even if I am not an apostle to others, I certainly am to you! For you are the official seal of my commission by the Master.
3 So my defense to those who have put me on trial is this: 4 Do we not have the right to eat and drink? 5 Do we not have the right to take a believing spouse with us, just like the rest of the apostles, the Master’s brothers, and Cephas? 6 What?! Is it only I and Barnabas who do not have the privilege of being supported? 7 Who goes to war but has to supply their own rations? Who plants a vineyard and gets none of the produce? Who tends a flock but gets none of the milk from it?
8 And I’m not making this up out of my head; the Law says the same thing. 9 For in the law of Moses it is written, “Do not muzzle an ox while it threshes the grain.” Do you really think God only said this for the benefit of oxen? 10 What?! He is obviously saying it to us, for our benefit. For it is written that the one who plows and the one who threshes expect to have a share in the crop.
11 So since we have planted spiritual things for you, are we asking too much when we expect physical produce from you? 12 If others have this right from you, why not us all the more? But in spite of all that, we do not use these rights; instead we forfeit them all so that we put no obstacle in front of the good news of Christ.
13 Do you not know that the ones who work in the temple eat the offerings? Just as those who attend to the altar get a share in the offerings, 14 so also the Master prescribed a living from the good news for those who proclaim it. 15 Yet I have not exercised any of these rights— and I’m not writing this so I can start. I’d rather die than be deprived of my boast! 16 For if I am to announce the good news, it’s not something for me to brag about, but something I must do, and woe to me if I don’t! 17 If I do this voluntarily I am earning wages, but if I do it involuntarily I am only discharging my duty. 18 So what is my wage? To bring the good news free of charge, waiving my rights.
Reaching out to all
19 By being free of all obligation I become the slave of all, so as to gain all the more. 20 To the Judeans I became like them, in order to win them over. To those under the Law I became like them— though I myself am not under the Law— in order to win them over. 21 To those without the Law I became as without the law— not that I am free from God’s law, since I am the legal property of Christ— in order to win them over. 22 To the weak I became weak, to win them over. To everyone I became whatever I needed to become, so that some could be saved. 23 I did it all so I could be a joint partner of the good news.
Self-discipline
24 Do you not know that the competitors in a stadium all run the race, but only one gets the prize? You too must run to win the prize. 25 Every athlete trains in order to win a perishable medal, but we are after an imperishable one. 26 So then, I do not run aimlessly; I am not like a poor boxer who only punches the air. 27 Instead, I defeat my body and subdue it, so that in the process of proclaiming the good news to others, I don’t find myself disqualified.