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THE SECOND
EPISTLE OF PAUL THE APOSTLE TO THE
CORINTHIANS
Commentary by A. R. FAUSSETT
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CHAPTER 11
@2Co
11:1-33. THROUGH JEALOUSY OVER THE CORINTHIANS, WHO MADE
MORE ACCOUNT OF THE FALSE APOSTLES THAN OF HIM, HE IS
OBLIGED TO COMMEND HIMSELF AS IN MANY RESPECTS SUPERIOR.
1. Would to God--Translate as Greek, "I
would that."
bear with me--I may
ask not unreasonably to be borne with; not so the false
apostles (@2Co
11:4,20).
my--not in the oldest
manuscripts.
folly--The Greek
is a milder term than that for "foolishness" in @1Co
3:19 Mt 5:22 25:2. The Greek for
"folly" here implies imprudence; the Greek
for "foolishness" includes the idea of perversity
and wickedness.
and indeed bear--A
request (so @2Co
11:16). But the Greek and the sense favor the
translation, "But indeed (I need not wish it, for) ye do
bear with me"; still I wish you to bear with me
further, while I enter at large into self-commendations.
2. For I am jealous--The justification of his
self-commendations lies in his zealous care lest they should
fall from Christ, to whom he, as "the friend of the
Bridegroom" (@Joh
3:29), has espoused them; in order to lead them back
from the false apostles to Christ, he is obliged to boast as
an apostle of Christ, in a way which, but for the motive,
would be "folly."
godly jealousy--literally,
"jealousy of God" (compare @2Co
1:12, "godly sincerity," literally,
"sincerity of God"). "If I am immoderate, I
am immoderate to God" [BENGEL]. A jealousy which has
God's honor at heart (@1Ki
19:10).
I . . . espoused
you--Paul uses a Greek term applied properly to the
bridegroom, just as he ascribes to himself
"jealousy," a feeling properly belonging to the
husband; so entirely does he identify himself with Christ.
present you as a
chaste virgin to Christ--at His coming, when the
heavenly marriage shall take place (@Mt
25:6 Re 19:7,9). What Paul here says he desires to do,
namely, "present" the Church as "a chaste
virgin" to Christ, Christ Himself is said to do
in the fuller sense. Whatever ministers do effectively, is
really done by Christ (@Eph
5:27-32). The espousals are going on now. He does
not say "chaste virgins"; for not individual
members, but the whole body of believers conjointly
constitute the Bride.
3. I fear--(@2Co
12:20); not inconsistent with love. His source of fear
was their yielding character.
subtilty--the utter
foe of the "simplicity" which is intent on ONE
object, Jesus, and seeks none "other," and no
"other" and different Spirit (@2Co
11:4); but loves him with tender SINGLENESS OF
AFFECTION. Where Eve first gave way, was in mentally
harboring for a moment the possibility insinuated by the
serpent, of GOD not having her truest interests at heart,
and of this "other" professing friend being more
concerned for her than God.
corrupted--so as to
lose their virgin purity through seducers (@2Co
11:4). The same Greek stands for
"minds" as for "thoughts" (@2Co
10:5, also see on 2Co 10:5); intents of the will,
or mind. The oldest manuscripts after
"simplicity," add, "and the purity" or
"chastity."
in Christ--rather,
"that is towards Christ."
4. if, &c.--which in fact is impossible.
However, if it were possible, ye might then bear with them
(see on 2Co 11:1). But there can be no new Gospel;
there is but the one which I first preached;
therefore it ought not to be "borne" by you, that
the false teachers should attempt to supersede me.
he that cometh--the
high-sounding title assumed by the false teachers, who
arrogated Christ's own peculiar title (Greek, @Mt
11:3, and @Heb
10:37), "He that is coming." Perhaps he was
leader of the party which assumed peculiarly to be
"Christ's" (@2Co
10:7 1Co 1:12); hence his assumption of the title.
preacheth . . .
receive--is preaching . . . ye are receiving.
Jesus--the
"Jesus" of Gospel history. He therefore
does not say "Christ," which refers to the office.
another . . .
another--Greek, "another Jesus . . .
a different Spirit . . . a different
Gospel." Another implies a distinct individual
of the same kind; different implies one quite
distinct in kind.
which ye have not received--from
us.
spirit . . .
received . . . gospel . . . accepted--The
will of man is passive in RECEIVING the "Spirit";
but it is actively concurrent with the will of God (which
goes before to give the good will) in ACCEPTING the
"Gospel."
ye might well bear with
him--There would be an excuse for your conduct, though a
bad one (for ye ought to give heed to no Gospel other than
what ye have already heard from me, @Ga
1:6,7); but the false teachers do not even pretend they
have "another Jesus" and a "different
Gospel" to bring before you; they merely try to
supplant me, your accredited Teacher. Yet ye not only
"bear with" them, but prefer them.
5. For--My claim is superior to that of the false
teachers, "For," &c.
I suppose--I reckon
[ALFORD].
I was not--Greek,
"That I have not been, and am not."
the very chiefest apostles--James,
Peter, and John, the witnesses of Christ's transfiguration
and agony in Gethsemane. Rather, "those overmuch
apostles," those surpassers of the apostles in
their own esteem. This sense is proved by the fact that the
context contains no comparison between him and the apostles,
but only between him and the false teachers; @2Co
11:6 also alludes to these, and not to the apostles;
compare also the parallel phrase, "false apostles"
(see on 2Co 11:13 and 2Co 12:11) [ALFORD].
6. rude--Greek, "a common man"; a
"laic"; not rhetorically trained; unskilled in
finish of diction. @1Co
2:1-4,13 2Co 10:10,11, shows his words were not
without weight, though his "speech" was
deficient in oratorical artifice. "Yet I am not so in
my knowledge" (@2Co
12:1-5 Eph 3:1-5).
have been . . .
made manifest--Read with the oldest manuscripts,
"We have made things (Gospel truths) manifest,"
thus showing our "knowledge." English Version
would mean, I leave it to yourselves to decide whether I be
rude in speech . . . : for we have been thoroughly
(literally, "in everything") made manifest among
you (literally, "in respect to you"; "in
relation to you"). He had not by reserve kept back his
"knowledge" in divine mysteries from them (@2Co
2:17 4:2 Ac 20:20,27).
in all things--The Greek
rather favors the translation, "among all men";
the sense then is, we have manifested the whole truth among
all men with a view to your benefit [ALFORD]. But the Greek
in @Php
4:12, "In each thing and in all things,"
sanctions English Version, which gives a clearer
sense.
7. Have I--literally, "OR have I?"
Connected with @2Co
11:6, "Or will any of you make it an objection that
I have preached to you gratuitously?" He leaves their
good feeling to give the answer, that this, so far from
being an objection, was a decided superiority in him above
the false apostles (@1Co
9:6-15).
abasing myself--in my
mode of living, waiving my right of maintenance, and earning
it by manual labor; perhaps with slaves as his fellow
laborers (@Ac
18:3 Php 4:12).
ye . . . exalted--spiritually,
by your admission to Gospel privileges.
because--"in
that."
gospel of God--"of
God" implies its divine glory to which they were
admitted.
freely--"without
charge."
8. I robbed--that is, took from them in order to
spare you more than what was their fair share of
contribution to my maintenance, for example, the Philippian
Church (@Php
4:15,16).
wages--"subsidy."
to do you service--Greek,
"with a view to ministration to you"; compare
"supplied" (Greek, "in addition"),
@2Co
11:9, implying, he brought with him from the
Macedonians, supplies towards his maintenance at Corinth;
and (@2Co
11:9) when those resources failed ("when I
wanted") he received a new supply, while there,
from the same source.
9. wanted--"was in want."
chargeable--Greek,
"burdensome," literally, "to torpify,"
and so to oppress. JEROME says it is a Cilician word
(@2Co
12:14,16).
the brethren which came--rather,
as Greek, "the brethren when they came."
Perhaps Timotheus and Silas (@Ac
8:1,5). Compare @Php
4:15,16, which refers to donations received from the
Philippians (who were in Macedonia) at two distinct periods
("once and again"), one at Thessalonica, the other
after his departure from Macedonia, that is, when he came
into Achaia to Corinth (from the church in which city he
would receive no help); and this "in the beginning of
the Gospel," that is, at its first preaching in these
parts. Thus all three, the two Epistles and history,
mutually, and no doubt undesignedly, coincide; a sure test
of genuineness.
supplied--Greek,
"supplied in addition," namely, in addition to
their former contributions; or as BENGEL, in addition to the
supply obtained by my own manual labor.
10. Greek, "There is (the) truth of
Christ in me that," &c. (@Ro
9:1).
no man shall stop me of--The
oldest manuscripts read, "This boasting shall not be
shut (that is, stopped) as regards me."
"Boasting is as it were personified . . .
shall not have its mouth stopped as regards me"
[ALFORD].
11. Love is often offended at its favors being not
accepted, as though the party to whom they are offered
wished to be under no obligation to the offerer.
12. I will do--I will continue to decline
help.
occasion--Greek,
"the occasion," namely, of misrepresenting
my motives, which would be afforded to my detractors, if I
accepted help.
that wherein they glory,
they may be found even as we--BENGEL joins this clause
with "the occasion," namely, of glorying or
boasting; the occasion "that they may be found
(a point wherein they glory) even as we," that is,
quite as disinterested, or virtually, quite as gain-seeking
and self-seeking. It cannot mean that the false teachers
taught gratuitously even as Paul (compare @2Co
11:20 1Co 9:12). ALFORD less clearly explains by
reference to @2Co
11:18, &c., where the "glorying" here is
taken up and described as "glorying after the
flesh"; thus it means, that in the matters of which
they beast they may be found even as we, that is, we may
been a fair and equal footing; that there may be no adventitious
comparisons made between us, arising out of misrepresentations
of my course of procedure, but that in every matter of
boasting we may be fairly compared and judged by facts;
FOR (@2Co
11:13) realities they have none, no weapons but
misrepresentation, being false apostles.
13. For--reason why he is unwilling they should be
thought like him [BENGEL].
such--they and those
like them.
false apostles--those
"overmuch apostles" (see on 2Co 11:5) are no
apostles at all.
deceitful workers--pretending
to be "workmen" for the Lord, and really seeking
their own gain.
14. is transformed--rather, "transforms
himself" (compare @Job
1:6); habitually; the first occasion of his doing so was
in tempting Eve. "Himself" is emphatical: If their
master himself, who is the "prince of
darkness," the most alien to light, does so, it is less
marvellous in the case of them who are his servants (@Lu
22:54 Eph 6:12).
15. no great thing--no difficult matter.
if his ministers also--as
well as himself.
righteousness--answering
to "light" (@2Co
11:14); the manifestation wherewith God reveals Himself
in Christ (@Mt
6:33 Ro 1:17).
end--The test of
things is the end which strips off every specious form
into which Satan's agents may now "transform"
themselves (compare @Php
3:19,21).
according to their works--not
according to their pretensions.
16. I say again--again taking up from @2Co
11:1 the anticipatory apology for his boasting.
if otherwise--but if
ye will not grant this; if ye will think me a fool.
yet as a fool--"yet
even as a fool receive me"; grant me the indulgent
hearing conceded even to one suspected of folly. The Greek
denotes one who does not rightly use his mental powers; not
having the idea of blame necessarily attached to it; one
deceived by foolish vanities, yet boasting himself [TITTMANN],
(@2Co
11:17,19).
that I--The oldest
manuscripts read, "that I, too," namely, as
well as they, may boast myself.
17. not after the Lord--By inspired guidance
he excepts this "glorying" or "boasting"
from the inspired authoritativeness which belongs to all
else that he wrote; even this boasting, though undesirable
in itself, was permitted by the Spirit, taking into account
its aim, namely, to draw off the Corinthians from their
false teachers to the apostle. Therefore this passage gives
no proof that any portion of Scripture is uninspired. It
merely guards against his boasting being made a
justification of boasting in general, which is not
ordinarily "after the Lord," that is, consistent
with Christian humility.
foolishly--Greek,
"in foolishness."
confidence of boasting--(@2Co
9:4).
18. many--including the "false teachers."
after the flesh--as
fleshly men are wont to boast, namely, of external
advantages, as their birth, doings, &c. (compare @2Co
11:22).
I will glory also--that
is, I also will boast of such fleshly advantages, to show
you that even in these I am not their inferiors, and
therefore ought not to be supplanted by them in your esteem;
though these are not what I desire to glory in (@2Co
10:17).
19. gladly--willingly. Irony. A plea why they should
"bear with" (@2Co
11:1) him in his folly, that is, boasting; ye are, in
sooth, so "wise" (@1Co
4:8,10; Paul's real view of their wisdom was very
different, @1Co
3:1-4) yourselves that ye can "bear with" the
folly of others more complacently. Not only can ye do
so, but ye are actually doing this and more.
20. For--Ye may well "bear with" fools; for
ye even "bear with" oppressors. Translate,
"Ye bear with them."
a man--as the false
apostles do.
bring you into bondage--to
himself. Translate "brings," not
"bring"; for the case is not merely a supposed
case, but a case actually then occurring. Also
"devours" (namely, by exactions, @Mt
23:24 Ps 53:4), "takes," "exalts,"
"smites."
take of you--So
the Greek for "take" is used for "take
away from" (@Re
6:4). ALFORD translates, as in @2Co
12:16, "catches you."
exalt himself--under
the pretext of apostolic dignity.
smite you on the face--under
the pretext of divine zeal. The height of insolence on their
part, and of servile endurance on yours (@1Ki
22:24 Ne 13:25 Lu 22:64 Ac 23:2 1Ti 3:3).
21. as concerning reproach--rather, "by way of
dishonor (that is, self-disparagement) I say
it."
as though we . . .
weak--in not similarly (@2Co
11:20) showing our power over you. "An
ironical reminiscence of his own abstinence when among them
from all these acts of self-exaltation at their
expense" (as if such abstinence was weakness) [ALFORD].
The "we" is emphatically contrasted with the false
teachers who so oppressively displayed their power. I speak
so as though WE had been weak when with you, because we did
not show our power this way. Howbeit (we are not really
weak; for), whereinsoever any is bold . . . I am
bold also.
22. Hebrews . . . Israelites . . .
the seed of Abraham--A climax. "Hebrews,"
referring to the language and nationality;
"Israelites," to the theocracy and descent
from Israel, the "prince who prevailed with
God" (@Ro
9:4); "the seed of Abraham," to the claim
to a share in the Messiah (@Ro
11:1 9:7). Compare @Php
3:5, "An Hebrew of the Hebrews," not an
Hellenist or Greek-speaking Jew, but a Hebrew in tongue, and
sprung from Hebrews.
23. I speak as a fool--rather, as Greek,
"I speak as if beside myself"; stronger
than "as a fool."
I am more--namely, in
respect to the credentials and manifestations of my
ministry, more faithful and self-denying; and richer in
tokens of God's recognition of my ministry. Old authorities
read the order thus, "In prisons above measures, in
stripes more abundantly" (English Version, less
accurately, "more frequent"). @Ac
16:23-40 records one case of his imprisonment with
stripes. CLEMENT OF ROME [First Epistle to the
Corinthians] describes him as having suffered bonds
seven times.
in death oft--(@2Co
4:10 Ac 9:23 13:50 14:5,6,19 17:5,13).
24. @De
25:3 ordained that not more than forty stripes should be
inflicted To avoid exceeding this number, they gave one
short of it: thirteen strokes with a treble lash [BENGEL].
This is one of those minute agreements with Jewish usage,
which a forger would have not been likely to observe.
25. The beating by Roman magistrates at Philippi (@Ac
16:23) is the only one recorded in Acts, which does not
profess to give a complete journal of his life, but only a
sketch of it in connection with the design of the book,
namely, to give an outline of the history of the Gospel
Church from its foundation at Jerusalem, to the period of
its reaching Rome, the capital of the Gentile world.
once was I stoned--(@Ac
14:19).
thrice . . .
shipwreck--before the shipwreck at Melita (@Ac
27:44). Probably in some of his voyages from Tarsus,
where he stayed for some time after his conversion, and from
which, as being a seafaring place, he was likely to make
missionary voyages to adjoining places (@Ac
9:30 11:25 Ga 1:21).
a night and a day . . .
in the deep--probably in part swimming or in an open
boat.
26. In--rather, "By": connected with @2Co
11:23, but now not with "in," as there, and as
in @2Co
11:27, where again he passes to the idea of surrounding
circumstances or environments [ALFORD, ELLICOTT and others].
waters--rather, as Greek,
"rivers," namely, perils by the flooding of
rivers, as on the road often traversed by Paul between
Jerusalem and Antioch, crossed as it is by the torrents
rushing down from Lebanon. So the traveller Sport lost his
life.
robbers--perhaps in
his journey from Perga to Antioch in Pisidia. Pisidia was
notorious for robbers; as indeed were all the mountains that
divided the high land of Asia from the sea.
the heathen--Gentiles.
in the city--Damascus,
@Ac
9:24,25; Jerusalem, @Ac
9:29; Ephesus, @Ac
19:23.
false brethren--(@Ga
2:4).
27. fastings--voluntary, in order to kindle
devotions (@Ac
13:2,3 14:23 1Co 9:27); for they are distinguished from
"hunger and thirst," which were involuntary
[GROTIUS]. However, see on 2Co 6:5. The context refers
solely to hardships, not to self-imposed devotional
mortification. "Hunger and thirst" are not
synonymous with "foodlessness" (as the Greek
of "fasting" means), but are its consequences.
cold . . .
nakedness--"cold" resulting from
"nakedness," or insufficient clothing, as the Greek
often means: as "hunger and thirst" result from
"foodlessness." (Compare @Ac
28:2 Ro 8:35). "When we remember that he who
endured all this was a man constantly suffering from infirm
health (@2Co
4:7-12 12:7-10 Ga 4:13,14), such heroic self-devotion
seems almost superhuman" [CONYBEARE and HOWSON].
28. without--"Beside" trials falling on me externally,
just recounted, there is "that which cometh upon me
(literally, the impetuous concourse to me of
business; properly, a crowd rising up against one again
and again, and ready to bear him down), the care of all
the churches" (including those not yet seen in the
flesh, @Col
2:1): an internal and more weighty anxiety. But
the oldest manuscripts for "that which cometh,"
read, "the pressure": "the pressing
care-taking" or "inspection that is upon me
daily." ALFORD translates, "Omitting what is
BESIDES"; namely, those other trials besides
those recounted. But the Vulgate, ESTIUS, and BENGEL,
support English Version.
the care--The Greek
implies, "my anxious solicitude for all the
churches."
29. I . . . weak--in condescending sympathy
with the weak (@1Co
9:22). "Care generates sympathy, which
causes the minister of Christ personally to enter into the
feelings of all his people, as if he stood in their
position, so as to accommodate himself to all"
[CALVIN].
offended--by some
stumbling-block put in his way by others: the
"weak" is most liable to be "offended."
I burn not--The
"I" in the Greek is emphatic, which it is
not in the former clause, "I am not weak." I not
only enter into the feeling of the party offended, but I
burn with indignation at the offender, I myself
taking up his cause as my own. "Who meets with a
stumbling-block and I am not disturbed even more than
himself" [NEANDER].
30. glory of . . . infirmities--A striking
contrast! Glorying or boasting of what others
make matter of shame, namely, infirmities; for
instance, his humbling mode of escape in a basket (@2Co
11:33). A character utterly incompatible with that of an
enthusiast (compare @2Co
12:5,9,10).
31. This solemn asseveration refers to what follows.
The persecution at Damascus was one of the first and
greatest, and having no human witness of it to adduce to the
Corinthians, as being a fact that happened long before and
was known to few, he appeals to God for its truth. Luke (@Ac
9:25) afterwards recorded it (compare @Ga
1:20), [BENGEL]. It may ALSO refer to the revelation in
@2Co
12:1, standing in beautiful contrast to his humiliating
escape from Damascus.
32. governor--Greek, "Ethnarch": a
Jewish officer to whom heathen rulers gave authority over
Jews in large cities where they were numerous. He was in
this case under Aretas, king of Arabia. Damascus was in a
Roman province. But at this time, A.D. 38 or 39, three years
after Paul's conversion, A.D. 36, Aretas, against whom the
Emperor Tiberius as the ally of Herod Agrippa had sent an
army under Vitellius, had got possession of Damascus on the
death of the emperor, and the consequent interruption of
Vitellius' operations. His possession of it was put an end
to immediately after by the Romans [NEANDER]. Rather, it was
granted by Caligula (A.D. 38) to Aretas, whose predecessors
had possessed it. This is proved by our having no Damascus
coins of Caligula or Claudius, though we do have of their
immediate imperial predecessors and successors [ALFORD].
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