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THE SECOND
EPISTLE OF PAUL THE APOSTLE TO THE
CORINTHIANS
Commentary by A. R. FAUSSETT
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CHAPTER 3
@2Co
3:1-18. THE SOLE COMMENDATION HE NEEDS TO PROVE GOD'S
SANCTION OF HIS MINISTRY HE HAS IN HIS CORINTHIAN CONVERTS:
HIS MINISTRY EXCELS THE MOSAIC, AS THE GOSPEL OF LIFE AND
LIBERTY EXCELS THE LAW OF CONDEMNATION.
1. Are we beginning again to recommend ourselves (@2Co
5:12) (as some of them might say he had done in his
first Epistle; or, a reproof to "some" who had begun
doing so)!
commendation--recommendation.
(Compare @2Co
10:18). The "some" refers to particular
persons of the "many" (@2Co
2:17) teachers who opposed him, and who came to Corinth
with letters of recommendation from other churches; and when
leaving that city obtained similar letters from the
Corinthians to other churches. The thirteenth canon of the
Council of Chalcedon (A.D. 451) ordained that
"clergymen coming to a city where they were unknown,
should not be allowed to officiate without letters
commendatory from their own bishop." The history (@Ac
18:27) confirms the existence of the custom here alluded
to in the Epistle: "When Apollos was disposed to pass
into Achaia [Corinth], the brethren [of Ephesus] wrote,
exhorting the disciples to receive him." This was about
two years before the Epistle,and is probably one of
the instances to which Paul refers, as many at Corinth
boasted of their being followers of Apollos (@1Co
1:12).
2. our epistle--of recommendation.
in our hearts--not
letters borne merely in the hands. Your conversion
through my instrumentality, and your faith which is
"known of all men" by widespread report (@1Co
1:4-7), and which is written by memory and affection on
my inmost heart and is borne about wherever I go, is my
letter of recommendation (@1Co
9:2).
known and read--words
akin in root, sound, and sense (so @2Co
1:13). "Ye are known to be my converts by
general knowledge: then ye are known more
particularly by your reflecting my doctrine in your
Christian life." The handwriting is first
"known," then the Epistle is "read" [GROTIUS]
(@2Co
4:2 1Co 14:25). There is not so powerful a sermon in the
world, as a consistent Christian life. The eye of the world
takes in more than the ear. Christians' lives are the only
religious books the world reads. IGNATIUS [Epistle to the
Ephesians, 10] writes, "Give unbelievers the chance
of believing through you. Consider yourselves employed by
God; your lives the form of language in which He addresses
them. Be mild when they are angry, humble when they are
haughty; to their blasphemy oppose prayer without ceasing;
to their inconsistency, a steadfast adherence to your
faith."
3. declared--The letter is written so legibly that it
can be "read by all men" (@2Co
3:2). Translate, "Being manifestly shown to be an
Epistle of Christ"; a letter coming manifestly from
Christ, and "ministered by us," that is, carried
about and presented by us as its (ministering) bearers to
those (the world) for whom it is intended: Christ is the
Writer and the Recommender, ye are the letter recommending
us.
written not with ink, but
with the Spirit of the living God--Paul was the
ministering pen or other instrument of writing, as well as
the ministering bearer and presenter of the letter.
"Not with ink" stands in contrast to the letters
of commendation which "some" at Corinth (@2Co
3:1) used. "Ink" is also used here to include
all outward materials for writing, such as the Sinaitic
tables of stone were. These, however, were not written with
ink, but "graven" by "the finger of God"
(@Ex
31:18 32:16). Christ's Epistle (His believing members
converted by Paul) is better still: it is written not merely
with the finger, but with the "Spirit of
the living God"; it is not the
"ministration of death" as the law, but of the
"living Spirit" that "giveth
life" (@2Co
3:6-8).
not in--not on
tables (tablets) of stone, as the ten commandments were
written (@2Co
3:7).
in fleshy tables of the
heart--ALL the best manuscripts read, "On [your] hearts
[which are] tables of flesh." Once your hearts were
spiritually what the tables of the law were physically,
tables of stone, but God has "taken away the stony
heart out of your flesh, given you a heart of flesh" (fleshy,
not fleshly, that is, carnal; hence it is written,
"out of your flesh" that is, your carnal
nature), @Eze
11:19 36:26. Compare @2Co
3:2, "As ye are our Epistle written in our
hearts," so Christ has in the first instance made you
"His Epistle written with the Spirit in (on) your
hearts." I bear on my heart, as a testimony to all men,
that which Christ has by His Spirit written in your heart
[ALFORD]. (Compare @Pr
3:3 7:3 Jer 31:31-34). This passage is quoted by PALEY [Horę
Paulinę] as illustrating one peculiarity of Paul's
style, namely, his going off at a word into a parenthetic
reflection: here it is on the word "Epistle."
So "savor," @2Co
2:14-17.
4. And--Greek, "But." "Such
confidence, however (namely, of our 'sufficiency,' @2Co
3:5,6 2Co 2:16--to which he reverts after the
parenthesis--as ministers of the New Testament, 'not
hinting,' @2Co
4:1), we have through Christ (not through ourselves,
compare @2Co
3:18) toward God" (that is, in our relation to God
and His work, the ministry committed by Him to us, for which
we must render an account to Him). Confidence toward God is
solid and real, as looking to Him for the strength needed
now, and also for the reward of grace to be given hereafter.
Compare @Ac
24:15, "hope toward God." Human confidence is
unreal in that it looks to man for its help and its reward.
5. The Greek is, "Not that we are (even
yet after so long experience as ministers) sufficient to
think anything OF ourselves as (coming) FROM ourselves; but
our sufficiency is (derived) FROM God." "From"
more definitely refers to the source out of which a
thing comes; "of" is more general.
to think--Greek,
to "reason out" or "devise"; to
attain to sound preaching by our reasonings [THEODORET].
The "we" refers here to ministers (@2Pe
1:21).
anything--even the
least. We cannot expect too little from man, or too much
from God.
6. able--rather, as the Greek is the same,
corresponding to @2Co
3:5, translate, "sufficient as
ministers" (@Eph
3:7 Col 1:23).
the new testament--"the
new covenant" as contrasted with the Old
Testament or covenant (@1Co
11:25 Ga 4:24). He reverts here again to the contrast
between the law on "tables of stone," and that
"written by the Spirit on fleshly tables of the
heart" (@2Co
3:3).
not of the letter--joined
with "ministers"; ministers not of the mere
literal precept, in which the old law, as then
understood, consisted; "but of the Spirit," that
is, the spiritual holiness which lay under the old
law, and which the new covenant brings to light (@Mt
5:17-48) with new motives added, and a new power
of obedience imparted, namely, the Holy Spirit (@Ro
7:6). Even in writing the letter of the New
Testament, Paul and the other sacred writers were ministers not
of the letter, but of the spirit. No piety of spirit
could exempt a man from the yoke of the letter of each legal
ordinance under the Old Testament; for God had appointed
this as the way in which He chose a devout Jew to express
his state of mind towards God. Christianity, on the other
hand, makes the spirit of our outward observances
everything, and the letter a secondary consideration (@Joh
4:24). Still the moral law of the ten commandments,
being written by the finger of God, is as obligatory now as
ever; but put more on the Gospel spirit of "love,"
than on the letter of a servile obedience, and in a deeper
and fuller spirituality (@Mt
5:17-48 Ro 13:9). No literal precepts could fully
comprehend the wide range of holiness which LOVE, the work
of the Holy Spirit, under the Gospel, suggests to the
believer's heart instinctively from the word understood in
its deep spirituality.
letter killeth--by
bringing home the knowledge of guilt and its punishment, death;
@2Co
3:7, "ministration of death" (@Ro
7:9).
spirit giveth life--The
spirit of the Gospel when brought home to the heart by the
Holy Spirit, gives new spiritual life to a man (@Ro
6:4,11). This "spirit of life" is for us in
Christ Jesus (@Ro
8:2,10), who dwells in the believer as a
"quickening" or "life-giving Spirit" (@1Co
15:45). Note, the spiritualism of rationalists is very
different. It would admit no "stereotyped
revelation," except so much as man's own inner
instrument of revelation, the conscience and reason, can
approve of: thus making the conscience judge of the written
word, whereas the apostles make the written word the judge
of the conscience (@Ac
17:11 1Pe 4:1). True spirituality rests on the whole
written word, applied to the soul by the Holy Spirit as the
only infallible interpreter of its far-reaching
spirituality. The letter is nothing without the spirit,
in a subject essentially spiritual. The spirit is
nothing without the letter, in a record substantially
historical.
7. the ministration of death--the legal dispensation,
summed up in the Decalogue, which denounces death
against man for transgression.
written and
engraven in stones--There is no "and" in the Greek.
The literal translation is, "The ministration of death in
letters," of which "engraven on stones"
is an explanation. The preponderance of oldest manuscripts
is for the English Version reading. But one (perhaps
the oldest existing manuscript) has "in the
letter," which refers to the preceding words (@2Co
3:6), "the letter killeth," and this
seems the probable reading. Even if we read as English
Version, "The ministration of death (written) in
letters," alludes to the literal precepts of the
law as only bringing us the knowledge of sin and "death,"
in contrast to "the Spirit" in the Gospel
bringing us "life" (@2Co
3:6). The opposition between "the letters" and
"the Spirit" (@2Co
3:8) confirms this. This explains why the phrase in Greek
should be "in letters," instead of the ordinary
one which English Version has substituted,
"written and."
was glorious--literally,
"was made (invested) in glory," glory was the
atmosphere with which it was encompassed.
could not steadfastly
behold--literally, "fix their eyes on." @Ex
34:30, "The skin of his face shone; and they were
AFRAID to come nigh him." "Could not,"
therefore means here, "for FEAR." The "glory
of Moses' countenance" on Sinai passed away when the
occasion was over: a type of the transitory character of the
dispensation which he represented (@2Co
3:11), as contrasted with the permanency of the
Christian dispensation (@2Co
3:11).
8. be rather glorious--literally, "be rather
(that is, still more, invested) in glory." "Shall
be," that is, shall be found to be in part now, but
fully when the glory of Christ and His saints shall be
revealed.
9. ministration of condemnation--the law regarded in
the "letter" which "killeth" (@2Co
3:6 Ro 7:9-11). The oldest existing manuscript seems to
read as English Version. But most of the almost
contemporary manuscripts, versions, and Fathers, read,
"If to the ministration of condemnation there be
glory."
the ministration of
righteousness--the Gospel, which especially reveals the
righteousness of God (@Ro
1:17), and imputes righteousness to men through faith in
Christ (@Ro
3:21-28 4:3,22-25), and imparts righteousness by the
Spirit (@Ro
8:1-4).
exceed--"abound."
10. For even the ministration of condemnation,
the law, @2Co
3:7 (which has been glorified at Sinai in Moses'
person), has now (English Version translates
less fitly, "was made . . . had")
lost its glory in this respect by reason of the
surpassing glory (of the Gospel): as the light of the
stars and moon fades in the presence of the sun.
11. was glorious--literally, "was with
glory"; or "marked by glory."
that which remaineth--abideth
(@Re
14:6). Not "the ministry," but the Spirit, and
His accompaniments, life and righteousness.
is glorious--literally,
"is in glory." The Greek
"with" or "by" is appropriately applied
to that of which the glory was transient.
"In" to that of which the glory is permanent. The
contrast of the Old and New Testaments proves that Paul's
chief opponents at Corinth were Judaizers.
12. such hope--of the future glory, which shall
result from the ministration of the Gospel (@2Co
3:8,9).
plainness of speech--openness;
without reserve (@2Co
2:17 4:2).
13. We use no disguise, "as Moses put a veil
over his face, that the children of Israel might not look
steadfastly upon the end of that which was to be done
away" [ELLICOTT and others]. The view of @Ex
34:30-35, according to the Septuagint is adopted
by Paul, that Moses in going in to speak to God removed
the veil till he came out and had spoken to the people;
and then when he had done speaking, he put on the
veil that they might not look on the end, or the
fading, of that transitory glory. The veil was the
symbol of concealment, put on directly after Moses'
speaking; so that God's revelations by him were interrupted
by intervals of concealment [ALFORD]. But ALFORD'S view does
not accord with @2Co
3:7; the Israelites "could not look steadfastly on
the face of Moses for the glory of his countenance."
Plainly Moses' veil was put on because of their not
having been able to "look steadfastly at him."
Paul here (@2Co
3:13) passes from the literal fact to the truth
symbolized by it, the blindness of Jews and Judaizers to the
ultimate end of the law: stating that Moses put on the
veil that they might not look steadfastly at (Christ, @Ro
10:4) the end of that (law) which (like
Moses' glory) is done away. Not that Moses had
this purpose; but often God attributes to His
prophets the purpose which He has Himself. Because the Jews would
not see, God judicially gave them up so as not to
see. The glory of Moses' face is antitypically Christ s
glory shining behind the veil of legal ordinances. The veil
which has been taken off to the believer is left on to the
unbelieving Jew, so that he should not see (@Isa
6:10 Ac 28:26,27). He stops short at the letter of the
law, not seeing the end of it. The evangelical glory of the
law, like the shining of Moses' face, cannot be borne by a
carnal people, and therefore remains veiled to them until
the Spirit comes to take away the veil (@2Co
3:14-17) [CAMERON].
14-18. Parenthetical: Of Christians in general.
He resumes the subject of the ministry, @2Co
4:1.
minds--Greek,
"mental perceptions"; "understandings."
blinded--rather,
"hardened." The opposite to "looking
steadfastly at the end" of the law (@2Co
3:13). The veil on Moses' face is further typical
of the veil that is on their hearts.
untaken away . . .
which veil--rather, "the same veil . . .
remaineth untaken away [literally, not unveiled], so
that they do not see THAT it (not the veil as English
Version, but 'THE OLD TESTAMENT,' or covenant of legal
ordinances) is done away (@2Co
3:7,11,13) in Christ" or, as BENGEL, "Because
it is done away in Christ," that is, it is not done
away save in Christ: the veil therefore remains
untaken away from them, because they will not come to
Christ, who does away, with the law as a mere letter. If
they once saw that the law is done away in Him, the veil
would be no longer on their hearts in reading it publicly in
their synagogues (so "reading" means, @Ac
15:21). I prefer the former.
15. the veil is--rather, "a veil lieth
upon their heart" (their understanding, affected
by the corrupt will, @Joh
8:43 1Co 2:14). The Tallith was worn in the
synagogue by every worshipper, and to this veil hanging over
the breast there may be an indirect allusion here (see on
1Co 11:4): the apostle making it symbolize the spiritual
veil on their heart.
16. Moses took off the veil on entering into the
presence of the Lord. So as to the Israelites whom Moses
represents, "whensoever their heart (it) turns
(not as English Version, 'shall turn') to the Lord,
the veil is (by the very fact; not as English Version,
'shall be') taken away." @Ex
34:34 is the allusion; not @Ex
34:30,31, as ALFORD thinks. Whenever the Israelites turn
to the Lord, who is the Spirit of the law, the veil is taken
off their hearts in the presence of the Lord: as the literal
veil was taken off by Moses in going before God: no longer
resting on the dead letter, the veil, they by the
Spirit commune with God and with the inner spirit of the
Mosaic covenant (which answers to the glory of Moses'
face unveiled in God's presence).
17. the Lord--Christ (@2Co
3:14,16 2Co 4:5).
is that Spirit--is THE
Spirit, namely, that Spirit spoken of in @2Co
3:6, and here resumed after the parenthesis (@2Co
3:7-16): Christ is the Spirit and "end" of the
Old Testament, ho giveth life to it, whereas "the
letter killeth" (@1Co
15:45 Re 19:10, end).
where the Spirit of the
Lord is--in a man's "heart" (@2Co
3:15 Ro 8:9,10).
there is liberty--(@Joh
8:36). "There," and there only. Such
cease to be slaves to the letter, which they were while the
veil was on their heart. They are free to serve God in the
Spirit, and rejoice in Christ Jesus (@Php
3:3): they have no longer the spirit of bondage, but of
free sonship (@Ro
8:15 Ga 4:7). "Liberty" is opposed to the
letter (of the legal ordinances), and to the veil, the badge
of slavery: also to the fear which the Israelites
felt in beholding Moses' glory unveiled (@Ex
34:30 1Jo 4:18).
18. But we all--Christians, as contrasted with the
Jews who have a veil on their hearts, answering to Moses'
veil on his face. He does not resume reference to ministers
till @2Co
4:1.
with open face--Translate,
"with unveiled face" (the veil being
removed at conversion): contrasted with "hid" (@2Co
4:3).
as in a glass--in a
mirror, namely, the Gospel which reflects the glory of God
and Christ (@2Co
4:4 1Co 13:12 Jas 1:23,25).
are changed into the same
image--namely, the image of Christ's glory, spiritually
now (@Ro
8:29 1Jo 3:3); an earnest of the bodily change hereafter
(@Php
3:21). However many they be, believers all reflect the same
image of Christ more or less: a proof of the truth of
Christianity.
from glory to glory--from
one degree of glory to another. As Moses' face caught a
reflection of God's glory from being in His presence, so
believers are changed into His image by beholding Him.
even as,
&c.--Just such a transformation "as"
was to be expected from "the Lord the Spirit" (not
as English Version, "the Spirit of the
Lord") [ALFORD] (@2Co
3:17): "who receives of the things of Christ, and
shows them to us" (@Joh
16:14 Ro 8:10,11). (Compare as to hereafter, @Ps
17:15 Re 22:4).
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