Context: First Corinthians 2:16 concludes Paul's argument about Spirit-revealed wisdom with one of the most astonishing statements in the NT: "For who has understood the mind of the Lord so as to instruct Him? But we have the mind of Christ." Paul quotes Isaiah 40:13 (via the LXX: "Who has known the mind [νοῦν] of the Lord?"), which in its original context is a rhetorical question demanding the answer "No one." God's wisdom is so transcendent that no creature can comprehend or counsel Him. But Paul adds a stunning declaration: "But we have the mind of Christ" (ἡμεῖς δὲ νοῦν Χριστοῦ ἔχομεν). The emphatic "we" (ἡμεῖς) contrasts Spirit-taught believers with the "natural person" who "does not accept the things of the Spirit" (v. 14). Through the Spirit, believers possess what Isaiah declared impossible: access to the divine mind. The "mind of Christ" is not merely intellectual knowledge but participation in Christ's perspective — seeing reality, including the cross, from God's vantage point.
Greek Key Terms:
OT-to-OT Development: Isaiah 40:13 is part of the "Book of Comfort" (Isaiah 40-55), where the prophet proclaims God's infinite superiority over all creation. The questions "Who has directed the Spirit of the LORD? Who made Him understand?" emphasize the absolute transcendence of divine wisdom — God's thoughts are uncounseled and incomprehensible (Isaiah 55:8-9: "My thoughts are not your thoughts"). This tradition connects to Job's declaration that wisdom is hidden from all living (Job 28:21) and to God's interrogation of Job (chapters 38-41), which silences all human pretension to understanding divine purposes. Paul also cites Isaiah 40:13 in Romans 11:34 as the conclusion of his meditation on God's inscrutable purposes in salvation history.
Connections:
Christological Connection: This verse represents the most dramatic reversal in the wisdom trajectory. Isaiah asked "Who has known the mind of the Lord?" and the answer was an absolute "No one." Paul quotes the same text and adds: "But we have the mind of Christ." The reversal is not a contradiction but a redemptive-historical development: what was impossible under the old covenant (knowing God's mind) is now granted under the new covenant through the Spirit's union with Christ. The "mind of Christ" is the perspective that sees the cross not as foolishness but as God's wisdom, that understands apparent defeat as actual victory, that recognizes weakness as the venue for divine power.
The escalation is from total inaccessibility to gracious participation. No creature can instruct God or independently comprehend His purposes (Isaiah's point remains true). But God Himself has granted access to His purposes through the Spirit who "searches all things, even the depths of God" (v. 10). Believers do not attain the mind of Christ through intellectual achievement — it is received through the Spirit. This is why Paul frames the entire discussion as a contrast between the "natural person" (ψυχικὸς ἄνθρωπος) who cannot accept God's things and the "spiritual person" (πνευματικός) who discerns all things (vv. 14-15). The difference is not IQ but Spirit.
The wisdom that was hidden in God before the ages (1 Corinthians 2:7), that no ruler of this age understood (v. 8), that no eye has seen or ear heard (v. 9) — is now revealed and received through Christ's Spirit. The mind of Christ is the key that unlocks what Job could not find, what Isaiah declared unknowable, and what the rulers of this age fatally misunderstood.
Connection Method(s): Contrast — Paul quotes Isaiah 40:13's rhetorical question emphasizing the inaccessibility of God's mind, then declares "we have the mind of Christ," contrasting the OT's emphasis on the infinite gap between divine and human wisdom with the Spirit's revelatory bridge through Christ. Also Promise-Fulfillment — the Spirit's disclosure of God's hidden wisdom fulfills the new covenant promise of direct knowledge of God (Jeremiah 31:33-34), now mediated through Christ's mind given to believers by the Spirit.
Trajectory Table: 172 - Wisdom and Foolishness of the Cross