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THE SECOND
EPISTLE OF PAUL THE APOSTLE TO THE
CORINTHIANS
Commentary by A. R. FAUSSETT
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CHAPTER 10
@2Co
10:1-18. HE VINDICATES HIS APOSTOLIC AUTHORITY AGAINST
THOSE WHO DEPRECIATED HIM FOR HIS PERSONAL APPEARANCE. HE
WILL MAKE HIS POWER FELT WHEN HE COMES. HE BOASTS NOT, AS
THEY, BEYOND HIS MEASURE.
1. I Paul myself--no longer "we,"
"us," "our" (@2Co
9:11): I who am represented by depreciators as
"base," I, the same Paul, of my own accord
"beseech you"; or rather "entreat,"
"exhort" you for your sake. As "I
beseech you" (a distinct Greek verb, @2Co
10:2) for my sake.
by the meekness and
gentleness of Christ--He mentions these graces of Christ
especially (@Ps
18:35 Mt 11:29), as on account of his imitation of them
in particular he was despised [GROTIUS]. He entreats them by
these, in order to show that though he must have recourse to
more severe measures, he is naturally inclined to gentle
ones after Christ's example [MENOCHIUS].
"Meekness" is more in the mind internally;
"gentleness" in the external behavior, and in
relation to others; for instance, the condescending yieldingness
of a superior to an inferior, the former not insisting on
his strict rights [TRENCH]. BENGEL explains it, "By the
meekness and gentleness derived by me from Christ,"
not from my own nature: he objects to understanding it of Christ's
meekness and gentleness, since nowhere else is
"gentleness" attributed to Him. But though the
exact Greek word is not applied to Him, the idea
expressed by it is (compare @Isa
40:11 Mt 12:19,20).
in presence--in
personal appearance when present with you.
base--Greek,
"lowly"; timid, humbly diffident: opposed to
"bold." "Am" stands here by ironical
concession for "am reputed to be" (compare @2Co
10:10).
2. I beseech you--Intimating that, as he can beseech
in letters, so he can be severe in their presence.
that I may not be--that
I may not have to be bold, &c.
with that confidence--that
authoritative sternness.
I think--I am
minded to be.
as if we walked according
to the flesh--His Corinthian detractors judged of him by
themselves, as if he were influenced by fleshly motives, the
desire of favor or fear of giving offense, so as not to
exercise his authority when present.
3. For--Reason why they should regard him
"beseeching" them (@2Co
10:2) not to oblige him to have recourse to
"bold" and stern exercise of authority. "We
walk IN the flesh," and so in weakness: but not
"ACCORDING TO the flesh" (@2Co
10:2). Moreover, though we WALK in it, we do not WAR
according to it. A double contrast or antithesis. "They
who accuse us of walking after the flesh, shall find [to
their cost] that we do not war after the flesh;
therefore compel us not to use our weapons" [ALFORD].
4. A confutation of those who try to propagate their
creed by force and persecution (compare @Lu
9:54-56).
weapons--for punishing
offending members (@2Co
10:6 1Co 4:21 5:5,13); boldness of speech,
ecclesiastical discipline (@2Co
10:8 2Co 13:10), the power of the word, and of the
sacraments, the various extraordinary gifts of the Spirit.
carnal--Translate,
"fleshly," to preserve the allusion to @2Co
10:2,3.
mighty through God--Greek,
"mighty to God," that is, mighty before God: not
humanly, but divinely powerful. The power is not ours, but
God's. Compare "fair to God," that is, divinely
fair (@Ac
7:20, Margin). Also above (@2Co
2:15), "unto God a sweet savor."
"The efficacy of the Christian religion proves its
truth" [BENGEL].
pulling down--As the Greek
is the same as in @2Co
10:5, translate, "casting down." Compare @Jer
1:10: the inspired servants of God inherit the
commission of the Old Testament prophets.
strongholds--(@Pr
21:22); namely, in which sinners entrench themselves
against reproof; all that opposes itself to Christ; the
learning, and eloquence, and philosophical subtleties on
which the Corinthians prided themselves. So Joshua's trumpet
blast was "mighty" under God to overthrow the
walls of Jericho.
5. imaginations--rather, "reasonings."
Whereas "thought" expresses men's own purpose
and determination of living after their own pleasure [TITTMANN].
high thing--So it
ought to be translated (@Ro
8:39). A distinct Greek word from that in @Eph
3:18, "height," and @Re
21:16, which belongs to God and heaven from whence we
receive nothing hurtful. But "high thing" is not
so much "height" as something made high,
and belongs to those regions of air where the powers of
darkness ::exalt themselves" against Christ and us (@Eph
2:2 6:12 2Th 2:4).
exalteth itself--@2Th
2:4 supports English Version rather than the
translation of ELLICOTT, &c., "is lifted up."
Such were the high towers of Judaic
self-righteousness, philosophic speculations, and rhetorical
sophistries, the "knowledge" so much prized by
many (opposed to "the knowledge of God"), which
endangered a section of the Corinthian Church.
against the knowledge of
God--True knowledge makes men humble. Where there is
exaltation of self, there knowledge of God is wanting [BENGEL].
Arrange the words following thus: "Bringing every
thought (that is, intent of the mind or will) into
captivity to the obedience of Christ," that is, to obey
Christ. The three steps of the apostle's spiritual warfare
are: (1) It demolishes what is opposed to Christ; (2) It
leads captive; (3) It brings into obedience to Christ (@Ro
1:5 16:26). The "reasonings" (English
Version, "imaginations") are utterly
"cast down." The "mental intents" (English
Version, "thoughts") are taken willing
captives, and tender the voluntary obedience of faith to
Christ the Conqueror.
6. Translate, "Having ourselves (that is, being)
in readiness to exact punishment for all disobedience,"
&c. We have this in store for the disobedient: it will
be brought into action in due time.
when your obedience,
&c.--He charitably assumes that most of the Corinthian
Church will act obediently; therefore he says "YOUR
obedience." But perhaps some will act otherwise; in
order, therefore, to give all an opportunity of joining the
obedient, he will not prematurely exact punishment, but wait
until the full number of those gathered out to Christ has
been "completed," and the remainder have been
proved incorrigible. He had acted already so at Corinth (@Ac
18:6-11; compare @Ex
32:34 Mt 13:28-30).
7. Do ye regard mere outward appearance (mere
external recommendations, personal appearance, voice,
manner, oratory of teachers present face to face,
such as they admired in the false teachers to the
disparagement of Paul, @2Co
10:10; see on 2Co 5:12)? Even in outward bearing
when I shall be present with you (in contrast to
"by letters," @2Co
10:9) I will show that I am more really armed with the
authority of Christ, than those who arrogate to themselves
the title of being peculiarly "Christ's" (@1Co
1:12). A Jewish emissary seems to have led this party.
let him of himself think
this again--He may "of himself," without
needing to be taught it in a more severe manner, by
"thinking again," arrive at "this"
conclusion, "that even as," &c. Paul modestly
demands for himself only an equal place with those whom he
had begotten in the Gospel [BENGEL].
8. "For even if I were to boast somewhat more
exceedingly (than I do, @2Co
10:3-6) of our (apostolic) authority (@2Co
10:6 2Co 13:10) . . . I should not be put to
shame (by the fact; as I should be if my authority proved to
be without foundation: my threats of punishment not being
carried into effect)."
for edification . . .
not for . . . destruction--Greek,
"for building up . . . not for . . .
CASTING DOWN" (the same Greek as in @2Co
10:5):the image of a building as in @2Co
10:4,5. Though we "cast down reasonings," this
is not in order to destroy, but really to build up
("edify"), by removing those things which are
hindrances to edification, and testing what is unsound, and
putting together all that is true in the building [CHRYSOSTOM].
9. I say this lest I should seem to be terrifying
you, as children, with empty threats [BENGEL]. ESTIUS
explains, "I might boast more of my authority, but I
forbear to do so, that I may not seem as if,"
&c. But this ellipsis is harsh: and @2Co
10:10,11 confirm BENGEL'S view.
10. letters--implying that there had been already
more letters of Paul received by the Corinthians than the
one we have, namely, First Corinthians; and that they
contained strong reproofs.
say they--Greek,
"says one," "such a one" (@2Co
10:11) seems to point to some definite individual.
Compare @Ga
5:10; a similar slanderer was in the Galatian Church.
weak--(@2Co
12:7 1Co 2:3). There was nothing of majesty or authority
in his manner; he bore himself tremblingly among them,
whereas the false teachers spoke with authoritative bearing
and language.
11. think this--"consider this."
such will we be--or
"are," in general, not merely shall we be at our
next visit.
12. "We do not presume (irony) to judge
ourselves among, or in comparison with, some of them that
commend themselves." The charge falsely brought against
him of commending himself (@2Co
3:1 5:12), really holds good of the false teachers. The
phrase, "judge ourselves of the number," is drawn
from the testing of athletes and senators, the
"approved" being set down on the roll [WAHL].
measuring themselves by
themselves--"among themselves": to
correspond to the previous verb, "judge ourselves among
them." Instead of measuring themselves by the public
standard, they measure themselves by one made by themselves:
they do not compare themselves with others who excel them,
but with those like themselves: hence their high
self-esteem. The one-eyed is easily king among the blind.
are not wise--with all
their boasted "wisdom" (@1Co
1:19-26), they are anything but "wise."
13. not boast . . . without . . .
measure--Greek, "to unmeasured bounds."
There is no limit to a man's high opinion of himself, so
long as he measures himself by himself (@2Co
10:13) and his fellows, and does not compare himself
with his superiors. It marks the personal character
of this Epistle that the word "boast" occurs
twenty-nine times in it, and only twenty-six times in all
the other Epistles put together. Undeterred by the charge of
vanity, he felt he must vindicate his apostolic authority by
facts [CONYBEARE and HOWSON]. It would be to "boast of
things without our measure," were we to boast of
conversions made by "other men's labors" (@2Co
10:15).
distributed--apportioned
[ALFORD].
a measure--as a
measure [ALFORD].
to reach--"that
we should reach as far as even to you": not that he
meant to go no further (@2Co
10:16 Ro 15:20-24). Paul's "measure" is the apportionment
of his sphere of Gospel labors ruled for him by God.
A "rule" among the so-called "apostolic
canons" subsequently was, that no bishop should appoint
ministers beyond his own limits. At Corinth no minister
ought to have been received without Paul's sanction, as
Corinth was apportioned to him by God as his
apostolic sphere. The Epistle here incidentally, and
therefore undesignedly, confirms the independent history,
the Acts, which represents Corinth as the extreme limit as
yet of his preaching, at which he had stopped, after
he had from Philippi passed southward successively through
Amphipolis, Apollonia, Thessalonica, Berea, and Athens [PALEY,
Horę Paulinę].
14. "We are not stretching ourselves beyond our
measure, as (we should be) if we did not reach
unto you: (but we do), for as far as even to you have we
come in preaching the Gospel."
15. "Not boasting to unmeasured bounds (that is,
not exceeding our own bounds by boasting) of (literally,
'in') other men's labors."
when--"As your
faith goes on increasing." The cause of his not yet
reaching with the Gospel the regions beyond Corinth, was the
weakness as yet of their faith. He desired not to leave the
Corinthians before the proper time, and yet not to put off
preaching to others too long.
enlarged by you--Greek,
"in your case." Our success in your case will give
us an important step towards further progress beyond you (@2Co
10:16).
according to our rule--according
to our divinely assigned apportionment of the area or sphere
of our work; for "we stretch not ourselves beyond our
measure" (@2Co
10:14).
abundantly--Greek,
"unto exceeding abundance": so as to exceed the
limits we have yet reached (@2Co
10:16).
16. To--that is, so as to preach . . .
beyond you (and) not to boast, &c.
in another man's line of
things made ready to our hand--Do not connect "line
of things," &c.; but "boast of things,"
&c. To make this clearer, arrange the words thus,
"Not to boast as to things (already made by the
preaching of others) ready to our hand in another man's line
(that is, within the line, or sphere of labor, apportioned
by God to another)."
17. glorieth--Translate, to accord with @2Co
10:16, "boasteth." In contrast to his
opponents' practice of boasting in another's line or sphere,
Paul declares the only true boasting is in the Lord (@1Co
1:31 15:10).
18. (@Pr
27:2).
whom the Lord commendeth--to
whom the Lord has given as His "Epistle of
commendation," the believers whom he has been the
instrument of converting: as was Paul's case (@2Co
3:1-3).
is approved--can stand
the test of the final trial. A metaphor from testing metals
(@Ro
16:10 1Co 11:19). So on the other hand those finally
rejected by the Lord are termed "reprobate
silver" (@Jer
6:30).
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