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Does Bad Company Really Corrupt Good Character?
Contributed by Chris Swanson on Nov 27, 2025 (message contributor)
Summary: The company that we keep can determine if and how our spiritual walk is affected.
Does Bad Company Really Corrupt Good Character?
1 Corinthians 15:33
Keeping associations with the individuals who deny or contradict the resurrection could ruin and destroy the good character of a Christian person. We ought not to let our affiliation with unbelievers lead us away from Christ or cause our confidence and faith in Christ to waver.
This passage of Scripture asks those in Corinth who deny the Christian resurrection to acknowledge what is valid and true. Presently Paul cautions every one of them not to be tricked by the people who do not trust in the resurrection. He might be citing a famous expression of the day when he says, "good morals are ruined by bad company." As it is being utilized here, that is an opinion Paul is supporting. There are particular, spiritual threats to partner with the individuals who are not in line with God.
In chapter 5, Paul cautioned the Corinthians not to connect with believers who practice different sorts of impropriety (1 Corinthians 5:11). He echoes that guidance again here. Investing energy with individuals who constantly broadcast false doctrine, including lies about the resurrection of the believers, has a method of wearing out even the most devoted Christian. The consequence of releasing one's hold on right conviction unavoidably prompts extricating one's ethical feelings (moral convictions) also. It probably will not bring about full apostacy, yet it very well may be harming.
The Corinthian Christians were being deluded by the people who scrutinized the resurrection. They were paying attention to the people who had quite a lot to say yet had no information on God. Paul is saying that if they listen to and receive the erroneous information, they will begin to act wrongly. He reproves them to quit erring. He wants them to understand that there is a resurrection of the saints to come one day.
Do Not Let the World Rub Off on You!
I know many of you have heard the expressions, “like peas in a pod,” “birds of a feather flock together,” “one bad apple or one bad potato spoils the rest,” or “cut from the same mold.” We have been told during our childhood of how we might be influenced by the associations that we keep, and that we should stay away from people with unhealthy habits.
Guilty by association, was one that I heard and had to deal with as a child, even if I had not done anything wrong, or at least that is what I thought. There are many unpleasant habits from the world that can “rub off on us” if we Christians let them. Or maybe we learned those rude habits from before we became a Christian.
2 Corinthians 6:17, Wherefore come out from among them, and be ye separate, saith the Lord, and touch not the unclean thing; and I will receive you.
Separating ourselves from the world includes more than staying away from the individuals who sin, it implies remaining near to God (2 Corinthians 7:1-2). It includes more than keeping away from diversion that prompts sin, it stretches out into how we invest our energy and money. It is absolutely impossible to isolate ourselves totally from every single corrupt impact. In any case, we are to oppose the transgression around us, do not surrender, and yield to it.
Believers are not to be ''unequally yoked'' with unbelievers. Darkness and Light cannot be in cooperation with each other. Christians are God's sanctuaries on earth since His Spirit lives in them. That is the reason they should isolate themselves from any sort of formal, restricting relationship with unbelievers.
In this verse, Paul is telling Christians to separate themselves from what surrounds them. All the more explicitly, he is directing the Corinthians to isolate themselves from any association with the worship of icons. Worshipping idols is putting anything between us and God.
Paul is citing from a couple of Old Testament verses (Isaiah 52:11, Ezekiel 20:41), to present this defense. God liberated the Israelites from bondage to different countries and advised them to isolate themselves from the people around them and to keep up with their virtue by not contacting things that were forbidden. Then, at that point, the Lord would invite them.
God calls Christians to live in independence and freedom from wrongdoing and the law, and to live a life that is holy. The thing that matters is that God has already welcomed those who believe in Christ, His Son. We are His children with an everlasting life with Christ in Heaven. Paul portrayed in his letter to Titus how God has helped us in Christ and how we should live accordingly: "Looking for that blessed hope, and the glorious appearing of the great God and our Saviour Jesus Christ; Who gave himself for us, that he might redeem us from all iniquity, and purify unto himself a peculiar people, zealous of good works” (Titus 2:13-14).
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