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THE SECOND
EPISTLE OF PAUL THE APOSTLE TO THE
CORINTHIANS
Commentary by A. R. FAUSSETT
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CHAPTER 5
@2Co
5:1-21. THE HOPE (@2Co
4:17,18) OF ETERNAL GLORY IN THE RESURRECTION BODY.
Hence arises his ambition to be accepted at the Lord's
coming judgment. Hence, too, his endeavor to deal openly
with men, as with God, in preaching; thus giving the
Corinthians whereof to boast concerning him against his
adversaries. His constraining motive is the transforming
love of Christ, by whom God has wrought reconciliation
between Himself and men, and has committed to the apostle
the ministry of reconciliation.
1. For--Assigning the reason for the statement (@2Co
4:17), that affliction leads to exceeding
glory.
we know--assuredly (@2Co
4:14 Job 19:25).
if--For all
shall not die; many shall be "changed" without
"dissolution" (@1Co
15:51-53). If this daily delivering unto death (@2Co
3:11) should end in actual death.
earthly--not the same
as earthy (@1Co
15:47). It stands in contrast to "in the
heavens."
house of this
tabernacle--rather, "house of the tabernacle."
"House" expresses more permanency than
belongs to the body; therefore the qualification, "of
the tabernacle" (implying that it is shifting,
not stationary), is added (compare @Job
4:19 2Pe 1:13,14). It thus answers to the tabernacle in
the wilderness. Its wooden frame and curtains wore out in
course of time when Israel dwelt in Canaan, and a fixed
temple was substituted for it. The temple and the tabernacle
in all essentials were one; there was the same ark, the same
cloud of glory. Such is the relation between the
"earthly" body and the resurrection body. The Holy
Spirit is enshrined in the believer's body as in a sanctuary
(@1Co
3:16). As the ark went first in taking down the
wilderness tabernacle, so the soul (which like the ark is
sprinkled with blood of atonement, and is the sacred deposit
in the inmost shrine, @2Ti
1:12) in the dissolution of the body; next the coverings
were removed, answering to the flesh; lastly, the framework
and boards, answering to the bones, which are last to give
way (@Nu
4:1-49). Paul, as a tent-maker, uses an image
taken from his trade (@Ac
18:3).
dissolved--a mild word
for death, in the case of believers.
we have--in assured
prospect of possession, as certain as if it were in our
hands, laid up "in the heavens" for us. The tense
is present (compare @Joh
3:36 6:47, "hath").
a building of God--rather
"from God." A solid building, not a
temporary tabernacle or tent. "Our"
body stands in contrast to "from God." For
though our present body be also from God, yet it is
not fresh and perfect from His hands, as our resurrection
body shall be.
not made with hands--contrasted
with houses erected by man's hands (@1Co
15:44-49). So Christ's body is designated, as contrasted
with the tabernacle reared by Moses (@Mr
14:58 Heb 9:11). This "house" can only be the resurrection
body, in contrast to the "earthly house of the
tabernacle," our present body. The intermediate state
is not directly taken into account. A comma should
separate "eternal," and "in the
heavens."
2. For in this--Greek, "For also
in this"; "herein" (@2Co
8:10). ALFORD takes it, "in this" tabernacle.
@2Co
5:4, which seems parallel, favors this. But the
parallelism is sufficiently exact by making "in this we
groan" refer generally to what was just said (@2Co
5:1), namely, that we cannot obtain our "house in
the heavens" except our "earthly tabernacle"
be first dissolved by death.
we groan--(@Ro
8:23) under the body's weaknesses now and liability to
death.
earnestly desiring to be
clothed upon--translate, "earnestly longing
to have ourselves clothed upon," &c.,
namely, by being found alive at Christ's coming, and
so to escape dissolution by death (@2Co
5:1,4), and to have our heavenly body put on over the
earthly. The groans of the saints prove the existence of the
longing desire for the heavenly glory, a desire which cannot
be planted by God within us in vain, as doomed to
disappointment.
our house--different Greek
from that in @2Co
5:1; translate, "our habitation," "our
domicile"; it has a more distinct reference to the inhabitant
than the general term "house" (@2Co
5:1) [BENGEL].
from heaven--This
domicile is "from heaven" in its origin,
and is to be brought to us by the Lord at His coming again
"from heaven" (@1Th
4:16). Therefore this "habitation" or
"domicile" is not heaven itself.
3. If so be, &c.--Our "desire" holds
good, should the Lord's coming find us alive. Translate,
"If so be that having ourselves clothed (with our
natural body, compare @2Co
5:4) we shall not be found naked (stripped of our
present body)."
4. For--resuming @2Co
5:2.
being burdened: not for
that--rather, "in that we desire not
to have ourselves unclothed (of our present body), but
clothed upon (with our heavenly body).
that mortality,
&c.--rather, "that what is mortal (our mortal part)
may be swallowed up of (absorbed and transformed into)
life." Believers shrink from, not the consequences,
but the mere act of dying; especially as believing in
the possibility of their being found alive at the Lord's
coming (@1Th
4:15), and so of having their mortal body absorbed into
the immortal without death. Faith does not divest us of all
natural feeling, but subordinates it to higher feeling.
Scripture gives no sanction to the contempt for the body
expressed by philosophers.
5. wrought us--framed us by redemption,
justification, and sanctification.
for the selfsame thing--"unto"
it; namely, unto what is mortal of us being swallowed up in
life (@2Co
5:4).
who also--The oldest
manuscripts omit "also."
earnest of the Spirit--(See
on 2Co 1:22). It is the Spirit (as "the
first-fruits") who creates in us the groaning desire
for our coming deliverance and glory (@Ro
8:23).
6. Translate as Greek, "Being therefore
always confident and knowing," &c. He had intended
to have made the verb to this nominative, "we are
willing" (rather, "well content"), but
digressing on the word "confident" (@2Co
5:6,7), he resumes the word in a different form, namely,
as an assertion: "We are confident and well
content." "Being confident . . . we are
confident" may be the Hebraic idiom of emphasis;
as @Ac
7:34, Greek, "Having seen, I have
seen," that is, I have surely seen.
always--under all
trials. BENGEL makes the contrast between "always
confident" and "confident" especially at the
prospect of being "absent from the body." We are
confident as well at all times, as also most of all
in the hope of a blessed departure.
whilst . . . at
home . . . absent--Translate as Greek,
"While we sojourn in our home in the body, we
are away from our home in the Lord." The image
from a "house" is retained (compare @Php
3:20 Heb 11:13-16 13:14).
7. we walk--in our Christian course here on earth.
not by sight--Greek,
"not by appearance." Our life is governed by faith
in our immortal hope; not by the outward specious appearance
of present things [TITTMANN, Greek Synonyms of the New
Testament]. Compare "apparently," the Septuagint,
"by appearance," @Nu
12:8. WAHL supports English Version. @2Co
4:18 also confirms it (compare @Ro
8:24 1Co 13:12,13). God has appointed in this life faith
for our great duty, and in the next, vision for our reward
[SOUTH] (@1Pe
1:8).
8. willing--literally, "well content."
Translate also, "To go (literally, migrate) from
our home in the body, and to come to our home with the
Lord." We should prefer to be found alive at the Lord's
coming, and to be clothed upon with our heavenly body (@2Co
5:2-4). But feeling, as we do, the sojourn in the body
to be a separation from our true home "with the
Lord," we prefer even dissolution by death, so that in
the intermediate disembodied state we may go to be
"with the Lord" (@Php
1:23). "To be with Christ" (the disembodied
state) is distinguished from Christ's coming to take us to be
with Him in soul and body (@1Th
4:14-17, "with the Lord"). Perhaps the
disembodied spirits of believers have fulness of communion with
Christ unseen; but not the mutual recognition of one
another, until clothed with their visible bodies at the
resurrection (compare @1Th
4:13-17), when they shall with joy recognize Christ's
image in each other perfect.
9. Wherefore--with such a sure "confidence"
of being blessed, whether we die before, or be found alive
at Christ's coming.
we labour--literally,
"make it our ambition"; the only lawful ambition.
whether present or absent--whether
we be found at His coming present in the body, or absent
from it.
accepted--Greek,
"well-pleasing."
10. appear--rather, "be made manifest,"
namely, in our true character. So "appear," Greek,
"be manifested" (@Col
3:4; compare @1Co
4:5). We are at all times, even now, manifest to God; then
we shall be so to the assembled intelligent universe and to
ourselves: for the judgment shall be not only in order to
assign the everlasting portion to each, but to vindicate
God's righteousness, so that it shall be manifest to all His
creatures, and even to the conscience of the sinner himself.
receive--His reward of
grace proportioned to "the things done," &c.
(@2Co
9:6-9 2Jo 1:8). Though salvation be of grace purely,
independent of works, the saved may have a greater or less reward,
according as he lives to, and labors for, Christ more or
less. Hence there is scope for the holy "ambition"
(see on 2Co 5:9; @Heb
6:10). This verse guards against the Corinthians
supposing that all share in the house "from
heaven" (@2Co
5:1,2). There shall be a searching judgment which shall
sever the bad from the good, according to their
respective,deeds, the motive of the deeds being taken
into account, not the mere external act; faith and love to
God are the sole motives recognized by God as sound and good
(@Mt
12:36,37 25:35-45),
done in his body--The Greek
may be, "by the instrumentality of the body"; but English
Version is legitimate (compare Greek, @Ro
2:27). Justice requires that substantially the same
body which has been the instrument of the unbelievers' sin,
should be the object of punishment. A proof of the essential
identity of the natural and the resurrection body.
11. terror of the Lord--the coming judgment, so full
of terrors to unbelievers [ESTIUS]. ELLICOTT and ALFORD,
after GROTIUS and BENGEL, translate, "The fear of the
Lord" (@2Co
7:1 Ec 12:13 Ac 9:31 Ro 3:18 Eph 5:21).
persuade--Ministers
should use the terrors of the Lord to persuade men,
not to rouse their enmity (@Jude
1:23). BENGEL, ESTIUS, and ALFORD explain:
"Persuade men" (by our whole lives, @2Co
5:13), namely, of our integrity as ministers. But this
would have been expressed after "persuade," had it
been the sense. The connection seems as follows: He had been
accused of seeking to please and win men, he therefore says
(compare @Ga
1:10), "It is as knowing the terror (or fear)
of the Lord that we persuade men; but (whether men
who hear our preaching recognize our sincerity or not) we
are made manifest unto God as acting on such motives (@2Co
4:2); and I trust also in your consciences." Those
so "manifested" need have no "terror" as
to their being "manifested (English Version,
'appear') before the judgment-seat" (@2Co
5:10).
12. For--the reason why he leaves the manifestation
of his sincerity in preaching to their consciences (@2Co
3:1), namely, his not wishing to "commend"
himself again.
occasion to glory--(@2Co
1:14), namely, as to our sincerity.
in appearance--Greek,
"face" (compare @1Sa
16:7). The false teachers gloried in their outward
appearance, and in external recommendations (@2Co
11:18) their learning, eloquence, wisdom, riches, not in
vital religion in their heart. Their conscience does
not attest their inward sincerity, as mine does (@2Co
1:12).
13. be--rather as Greek, "have
been." The contrast is between the single act implied
by the past tense, "If we have ever been beside
ourselves," and the habitual state implied by the
present, "Or whether we be sober," that is,
of sound mind. beside ourselves--The accusation
brought by Festus against him (@Ac
26:24). The holy enthusiasm with which he spake of what
God effected by His apostolic ministry, seemed to many to be
boasting madness.
sober--humbling myself
before you, and not using my apostolic power and privileges.
to God . . . for
your cause--The glorifying of his office was not for his
own, but for God's glory. The abasing of himself was in
adaptation to their infirmity, to gain them to Christ (@1Co
9:22).
14. For--Accounting for his being "beside
himself" with enthusiasm: the love of Christ towards us
(in His death for us, the highest proof of it, @Ro
5:6-8), producing in turn love in us to Him, and not
mere "terror" (@2Co
5:11).
constraineth us--with
irresistible power limits us to the one great object
to the exclusion of other considerations. The Greek
implies to compress forcibly the energies into one
channel. Love is jealous of any rival object
engrossing the soul (@2Co
11:1-3).
because we thus judge--literally,
"(as) having judged thus"; implying a judgment
formed at conversion, and ever since regarded as a settled
truth.
that if--that is, that
since. But the oldest manuscripts omit
"if." "That one died for all (Greek,
'in behalf of all')." Thus the following clause will
be, "Therefore all (literally, 'the all,'
namely, for whom He 'died') died." His dying is
just the same as if they all died; and in their so
dying, they died to sin and self, that they might live to
God their Redeemer, whose henceforth they are (@Ro
6:2-11 Ga 2:20 Col 3:3 1Pe 4:1-3).
15. they which live--in the present life (@2Co
4:11, "we which live") [ALFORD]; or, they who
are thus indebted to Him for life of soul as well as body [MENOCHIUS].
died for them--He does
not add, "rose again for them," a phrase not found
in Paul's language [BENGEL]. He died in their stead,
He arose again for their good, "for (the
effecting of) their justification" (@Ro
4:25), and that He might be their Lord (@Ro
14:7-9). ELLICOTT and ALFORD join "for them"
with both "died" and "rose again"; as
Christ's death is our death, so His resurrection is our
resurrection; Greek, "Who for them died and rose
again."
not henceforth--Greek,
"no longer"; namely, now that His death for them
has taken place, and that they know that His death saves
them from death eternal, and His resurrection life brings
spiritual and everlasting life to them.
16. Wherefore--because of our settled judgment
(@2Co
5:14),
henceforth--since our
knowing Christ's constraining love in His death for us.
know we no man after the
flesh--that is, according to his mere worldly and
external relations (@2Co
11:18 Joh 8:15 Php 3:4), as distinguished from what he
is according to the Spirit, as a "new
creature" (@2Co
5:17). For instance, the outward distinctions of Jew or
Gentile, rich or poor, slave or free, learned or unlearned,
are lost sight of in the higher life of those who are dead
in Christ's death, and alive with Him in the new life of His
resurrection (@Ga
2:6 3:28).
yea, though--The
oldest manuscripts read, "if even."
known Christ after the
flesh--Paul when a Jew had looked for a temporal
reigning, not a spiritual, Messiah. (He says
"Christ," not Jesus: for he had not known
personally Jesus in the days of His flesh, but he had looked
for Christ or the Messiah). When once he was converted he no
longer "conferred with flesh and blood" (@Ga
1:16). He had this advantage over the Twelve, that as
one born out of due time he had never known Christ save in
His heavenly life. To the Twelve it was "expedient that
Christ should go away" that the Comforter should come,
and so they might know Christ in the higher spiritual aspect
and in His new life-giving power, and not merely "after
the flesh," in the carnal aspect of Him (@Ro
6:9-11 1Co 15:45 1Pe 3:18 4:1,2). Doubtless Judaizing
Christians at Corinth prided themselves on the mere fleshly
(@2Co
11:18) advantage of their belonging to Israel, the
nation of Christ, or on their having seen Him in the flesh,
and thence claimed superiority over others as having a
nearer connection with Him (@2Co
5:12 2Co 10:7). Paul here shows the true aim should be
to know Him spiritually as new creatures (@2Co
5:15,17), and that outward relations towards Him profit
nothing (@Lu
18:19-21 Joh 16:7,22 Php 3:3-10). This is at variance
with both Romish Mariolatry and transubstantiation. Two
distinct Greek verbs are used here for
"know"; the first ("know we no
man") means "to be personally acquainted
with"; the latter ("known Christ . . .
know . . . more") is to recognize, or
estimate. Paul's estimate of Christ, or the expected
Messiah, was carnal, but is so now no more.
17. Therefore--connected with the words in @2Co
5:16, "We know Christ no more after the
flesh." As Christ has entered on His new heavenly life
by His resurrection and ascension, so all who are "in
Christ" (that is, united to Him by faith as the branch
is In the vine) are new creatures (@Ro
6:9-11). "New" in the Greek implies a
new nature quite different from anything previously
existing, not merely recent, which is expressed by a
different Greek word (@Ga
6:15).
creature--literally,
"creation," and so the creature resulting
from the creation (compare @Joh
3:3,5 Eph 2:10 4:23 Col 3:10,11). As we are "in
Christ," so "God was in Christ" (@2Co
5:19):hence He is Mediator between God and us.
old things--selfish,
carnal views (compare @2Co
5:16) of ourselves, of other men, and of Christ.
passed away--spontaneously,
like the snow of early spring [BENGEL] before the advancing
sun.
behold--implying an
allusion to @Isa
43:19 65:17.
18. all--Greek, "THE."
things--all our
privileges in this new creation (@2Co
5:14,15).
reconciled us--that
is, restored us ("the world," @2Co
5:19) to His favor by satisfying the claims of
justice against us. Our position judicially considered in
the eye of the law is altered, not as though the mediation
of Christ had made a change in God's character, nor as if
the love of God was produced by the mediation of Christ;
nay, the mediation and sacrifice of Christ was the provision
of God's love, not its moving cause (@Ro
8:32). Christ's blood was the price paid at the expense
of God Himself, and was required to reconcile the exercise
of mercy with justice, not as separate, but as the eternally
harmonious attributes in the one and the same God (@Ro
3:25,26). The Greek "reconcile" is reciprocally
used as in the Hebrew Hithpahel conjugation, appease,
obtain the favor of. @Mt
5:24, "Be reconciled to thy brother"; that is,
take measures that he be reconciled to thee, as well as thou
to him, as the context proves. Diallagethi, however
(@Mt
5:24), implying mutual reconciliation, is
distinct from Katallagethi here, the latter referring
to the change of status wrought in one of the
two parties. The manner of God reconciling the world to
Himself is implied (@2Co
5:19), namely, by His "not imputing their
trespasses to them." God not merely, as subsequently,
reconciles the world by inducing them to lay aside their
enmity, but in the first instance, does so by satisfying His
own justice and righteous enmity against sin (@Ps
7:11). Compare @1Sa
29:4, "Reconcile himself unto his master"; not
remove his own anger against his master, but his master's
against him [ARCHBISHOP MAGEE, Atonement]. The
reconciling of men to God by their laying aside their
enmity is the consequence of God laying aside His just
enmity against their sin, and follows at @2Co
5:20.
to us--ministers (@2Co
5:19,20).
19. God was in Christ, reconciling--that is, God was
BY Christ (in virtue of Christ's intervention)
reconciling," &c. Was reconciling" implies the
time when the act of reconciliation was being carried into
effect (@2Co
5:21), namely, when "God made Jesus, who knew no
sin, to be sin for us." The compound of "was"
and the participle "reconciling," instead of the
imperfect (Greek), may also imply the continuous
purpose of God, from before the foundation of the world, to
reconcile man to Himself, whose fall was foreseen. The
expression " IN Christ" for "by
Christ" may be used to imply additionally that
God was IN Christ (@Joh
10:38 14:10), and so by Christ (the God-man) was
reconciling . . . The Greek for
"by" or "through" Christ (the
best manuscripts omit "Jesus"), @2Co
5:18, is different. "In" must mean here in
the person of Christ. The Greek Katallasson
implies "changing" or altering the judicial
status from one of condemnation to one of justification. The
atonement (at-one-ment), or reconciliation,
is the removal of the bar to peace and acceptance with a
holy God, which His righteousness interposed against our
sin. The first step towards restoring peace between us and
God was on God's side (@Joh
3:16). The change therefore now to be
effected must be on the part of offending man, God the
offended One being already reconciled. It is man, not God,
who now needs to be reconciled, and to lay aside his enmity
against God (@Ro
5:10,11). ("We have received the atonement"
[Greek, reconciliation], cannot mean "We have
received the laying aside of our own enmity").
Compare @Ro
3:24,25.
the world--all men (@Col
1:20 1Jo 2:2). The manner of the reconciling is
by His "not imputing to men their trespasses," but
imputing them to Christ the Sin-bearer. There is no
incongruity that a father should be offended with that son
whom he loveth, and at that time offended with him when he
loveth him. So, though God loved men whom He created, yet He
was offended with them when they sinned, and gave His Son to
suffer for them, that through that Son's obedience He might
be reconciled to them (reconcile them to Himself, that is,
restore them WITH JUSTICE to His favor) [BISHOP PEARSON, Exposition
of the Creed].
hath committed unto us--Greek,
"hath put into our hands." "Us," that
is, ministers.
20. for Christ . . . in Christ's stead--The
Greek of both is the same: translate in both cases
"on Christ's behalf."
beseech . . .
pray--rather, "entreat [plead with you] . . .
beseech." Such "beseeching" is uncommon in
the case of "ambassadors," who generally stand on
their dignity (compare @2Co
10:2 1Th 2:6,7).
be ye reconciled to God--English
Version here inserts "ye," which is not in the
original, and which gives the wrong impression, as if it
were emphatic thus: God is reconciled to you, be ye
reconciled to God. The Greek expresses rather, God
was the RECONCILER in Christ . . . let this
reconciliation then have its designed effect. Be
reconciled to God, that is, let God reconcile you to
Himself (@2Co
5:18,19).
21. For--omitted in the oldest manuscripts. The grand
reason why they should be reconciled to God, namely, the
great atonement in Christ provided by God, is stated without
the "for" as being part of the message of
reconciliation (@2Co
5:19).
he--God.
sin--not a sin
offering, which would destroy the antithesis to
"righteousness," and would make "sin" be
used in different senses in the same sentence: not a
sinful person, which would be untrue, and would require
in the antithesis "righteous men," not
"righteousness"; but "sin," that is, the
representative Sin-bearer (vicariously) of the
aggregate sin of all men past, present, and future. The
sin of the world is one, therefore the singular, not
the plural, is used; though its manifestations
are manifold (@Joh
1:29). "Behold the Lamb of God, that taketh away
the SIN of the world." Compare "made a curse for
us," @Ga
3:13.
for us--Greek,
"in our behalf." Compare @Joh
3:14, Christ being represented by the brazen serpent,
the form, but not the substance, of the old
serpent. At His death on the cross the sin-bearing for us
was consummated.
knew no sin--by
personal experience (@Joh
8:46) [ALFORD]. @Heb
7:26 1Pe 2:22 1Jo 3:5.
might be made--not the
same Greek as the previous "made." Rather,
"might become."
the righteousness of God--Not
merely righteous, but righteousness itself; not
merely righteousness, but the righteousness of God,
because Christ is God, and what He is we are (@1Jo
4:17), and He is "made of God unto us
righteousness." As our sin is made over to Him, so His
righteousness to us (in His having fulfilled all the
righteousness of the law for us all, as our representative,
@Jer
23:6 1Co 1:30). The innocent was punished voluntarily as
if guilty, that the guilty might be gratuitously rewarded as
if innocent (@1Pe
2:24). "Such are we in the sight of God the Father,
as is the very Son of God himself" [HOOKER].
in him--by virtue of
our standing in Him, and in union with Him [ALFORD].
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