Summary
We often want more than a map when we preach 1 Corinthians, we want the city to feel real. This classic guide does that work for us. It is not a glossy picture book, it is a careful reconstruction of Corinth's streets, buildings, social habits, and public life, written to help readers picture the setting behind Paul's ministry.
In preaching, the book serves best when a series needs steady background rather than a quick fact. We can open it when a passage turns on public honour and shame, patronage, dining customs, or the shape of a Roman colony. It also helps when questions arise about temples, markets, and the everyday religious atmosphere that presses in on the church.
Used well, it gives us a grounded sense of place. It helps us avoid both vague generalities and overconfident claims that go beyond the evidence.
Why Should I Own This Resource?
A clear strength is its disciplined attention to what can actually be shown. The detail is concrete without becoming showy, and the arguments are usually tied to material remains, inscriptions, and the kinds of sources that help us say, "This is how the city likely worked." That restraint is a gift for pulpit work.
The limitation is that it is specialised to Corinth and it reflects an older stage of scholarship. We should not treat every reconstruction as final, and we will still want to check newer work for updates in excavation results and debate points. That matters most if we are building a teaching session around a contested claim.
In sermon preparation, we would keep this beside the text as we draft our exposition. We can use it to sharpen illustrative detail, to explain why certain behaviours carried weight, and to illuminate how the gospel confronts a culture without simply mirroring it.
Because it is written with a steady hand, it strengthens confidence rather than feeding scepticism. It helps us bring the world of Corinth into focus so that Paul's pastoral urgency lands with fresh force.
Closing Recommendation
We would happily recommend this for pastors preaching through 1 Corinthians, or anyone teaching in Acts where Corinth appears. It is a focused resource that repays slow reading and repeated consultation.
Jerome Murphy-O'Connor
Jerome Murphy-O’Connor was an Irish Dominican priest and New Testament scholar of the late twentieth and early twenty first century, writing from a Roman Catholic tradition with careful historical judgement.
He became especially known for research on Paul and for illuminating the places and pressures behind the apostle’s letters. His work helps teachers picture the world of the early churches, so that arguments are heard as pastoral counsel addressed to real congregations, not abstract theology.
He remains valued for clarity, disciplined use of evidence, and an ability to serve understanding without showmanship. Recommended titles include Paul, A Critical Life, St Paul’s Corinth, and The Holy Land, An Oxford Archaeological Guide.
Theological Perspective: Non-Evangelical/Critical