Paul, with Timothy named in the greeting.
The God of All Comfort and Apostolic Integrity
The God who comforts His afflicted servants establishes His people in Christ, so ministry can endure suffering, answer suspicion with sincerity, and serve the church's joy.
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The God who comforts His afflicted servants establishes His people in Christ, so ministry can endure suffering, answer suspicion with sincerity, and serve the church's joy.
Paul's argument moves from God's comforting character to the formation of afflicted servants, from suffering to resurrection reliance, from questioned conduct to godly sincerity, and from Paul's contested travel plans to the deeper faithfulness of God in Christ.
The church of God in Corinth together with all the saints throughout Achaia.
Paul writes into a strained relationship with the Corinthian believers, defending the sincerity of his ministry while seeking their comfort, stability, and joy.
The God who comforts His afflicted servants establishes His people in Christ, so ministry can endure suffering, answer suspicion with sincerity, and serve the church's joy.
Paul, with Timothy named in the greeting.
The church of God in Corinth together with all the saints throughout Achaia.
Paul writes into a strained relationship with the Corinthian believers, defending the sincerity of his ministry while seeking their comfort, stability, and joy.
- The chapter reflects suspicion around Paul's suffering, travel-plan change, and apostolic credibility · Paul answers by appealing to God's comfort, his own clear conscience, and God's faithfulness in Christ.
In a status-conscious Greco-Roman setting, visible weakness could be misread as shame or failure; Paul reframes affliction as a place where God teaches dependence and equips servants to comfort others.
This chapter stands within the post-resurrection, Spirit-sealed life of the church, where God's promises are confirmed in Christ and applied to believers by the Spirit.
Paul blesses God for comfort in affliction, explains how suffering taught him reliance on the God who raises the dead, defends his sincerity, and grounds his pastoral integrity in God's unfailing Yes in Christ.
Theological exposition and fulfillment
The gospel is clear in this chapter because God's promises are fulfilled in Christ, believers are established and sealed by the Spirit, and suffering servants learn to rely on the God who raises the dead.
Identity, audience, and blessing establish apostolic authority under God and fellowship with the wider Achaian saints.
Praise anchors suffering in God's compassionate character and turns personal affliction into ministry usefulness.
Paul interprets severe suffering as a divine lesson in dependence and an invitation for the church to participate through prayer.
Paul's defense begins with conscience, grace, sincerity, and mutual recognition before the day of the Lord Jesus.
Paul moves from questioned plans to God's unwavering faithfulness, using the certainty of God's promises in Christ to frame the reliability of his ministry.
Paul's delay is explained as restraint for the Corinthians' good, not control over their faith.
- 1:1-2: Paul's apostleship, Timothy's partnership, and the Corinthian audience are named under the blessing of God the Father and the Lord Jesus Christ.
- 1:3-7: God comforts His afflicted servants so that their endurance becomes a ministry of consolation to others.
- 1:8-11: Severe affliction reveals the death-and-resurrection pattern of Christian ministry and the importance of intercessory prayer.
- 1:12-14: Paul defends his conduct as marked by godly sincerity, grace, plainness, and a hope of mutual boasting in the day of Christ.
- 1:15-22: The reliability of the gospel rests in God's faithfulness, Christ's fulfillment of God's promises, and the Spirit's sealing presence.
- 1:23-24: Paul's apostolic authority is pastoral and restrained, laboring with the Corinthians for their joy rather than dominating their faith.
Pastoral Entry
παράκλησις is the noun form of one of the richest word families in the Greek NT, covering a range that English struggles to hold in one word: encouragement, consolation, exhortation, appeal, and comfort. The verb παρακαλέω (to call alongside, to appeal to, to comfort, to encourage) covers all of these, and the noun inherits the full range. What holds the range together is the underlying image: someone who has come alongside you, who is present with you in your need, who speaks to you from a position of genuine solidarity.
In 2 Corinthians 1:3-7, the word appears ten times in five verses — the most concentrated deployment of any single word family in the NT. Paul describes God as the Father of mercies and God of all παράκλησις — He is not merely a God who sometimes comforts; He is defined by comfort. And then Paul shows the mechanism: God comforts us in all our affliction, so that we may be able to comfort those who are in any affliction, with the comfort with which we ourselves are comforted by God. The flow of παράκλησις runs from God to Paul, then from Paul to the Corinthians, then by implication outward into all who suffer. The comfort received becomes the resource for the comfort given.
The word's range from consolation to exhortation is visible in Acts 13:15 — the synagogue rulers invite Paul to offer a 'word of encouragement/exhortation' (logos paraklēseōs), which becomes his great sermon on the resurrection. The same phrase appears in Hebrews 13:22 to describe the entire letter as a 'word of exhortation.' In both cases, παράκλησις covers strengthening speech that includes appeal, instruction, and stirring to action — not only the comforting of grief.
Luke 2:25 names Simeon as one who was looking for the 'consolation of Israel' (paraklēsin tou Israel) — the promised Messianic consolation of Isaiah 40, the comfort that would come when God moved to end the exile and restore His people. In this use, παράκλησις names the entire redemptive hope.
For the preacher, παράκλησις is the word that names one of the most undervalued pastoral ministries: the ministry of coming alongside suffering people and being present with them in it. The God who is defined by comfort has designed the flow of that comfort to pass through human relationships. To be comforted by God is to be equipped to comfort others.
Form in passage Genitive · Singular · Feminine What is this?
Sense comfort, consolation, encouragement, strengthening presence
Definition God-given consolation that strengthens afflicted believers and equips them to encourage others.
References 2 Corinthians 1:3-7
Lexicon comfort, consolation, encouragement, strengthening presence
Why it matters This word dominates the chapter's opening movement and shows that comfort is both received from God and shared in ministry.
Pastoral Entry
Thlipsis names pressure, affliction, distress, and tribulation that presses on God's people from the outside and can expose what is rooted within. The word can describe trouble that comes because of the word, the pains of childbirth, the normal hardships through which disciples enter the kingdom, apostolic suffering, and the great tribulation from which the redeemed finally emerge.
It does not make suffering a virtue in itself. Rather, it teaches readers to see affliction under Christ's rule: real trouble, real weakness, real endurance, and real hope. In John 16:33 Jesus does not deny tribulation; He locates peace in Himself and courage in His victory over the world.
Form in passage Dative · Singular · Feminine What is this?
Sense pressure, distress, affliction, tribulation
Definition Severe pressure or distress endured by God's servants in a fallen and hostile world.
References 2 Corinthians 1:4, 8
Lexicon pressure, distress, affliction, tribulation
Why it matters Paul does not minimize affliction; he shows that God comforts His people within it and uses it for faithful ministry.
Form in passage Accusative · Singular · Neuter What is this?
Sense sentence, verdict, answer
Definition A judicial-style verdict or decisive sentence, used here for Paul's felt experience of death under severe affliction.
References 2 Corinthians 1:9
Lexicon sentence, verdict, answer
Why it matters The term sharpens the extremity of Paul's suffering and prepares the theological point that he had to rely on God who raises the dead.
Form in passage Dative · Singular · Feminine What is this?
Sense sincerity, purity, unmixed integrity
Definition Transparent genuineness before God, without manipulative or double-minded motive.
References 2 Corinthians 1:12
Lexicon sincerity, purity, unmixed integrity
Why it matters Paul's defense of ministry rests on conduct shaped by godly sincerity rather than worldly wisdom.
Pastoral Entry
G2746 names boasting, pride, or the ground on which someone claims honor. In Paul, the word is never a simple ban on all glad testimony. Romans 3 excludes boasting before God because justification rests on faith and grace, not human achievement. Second Corinthians shows that Paul can still speak of a boast when the ground is God's grace at work in conscience, weakness, and ministry fruit.
The word helps teachers ask what a person is resting on. Boasting becomes deadly when it makes the self the basis of standing before God or superiority over others. It becomes rightly ordered only when the Lord, His grace, and His work carry the weight.
Form in passage Nominative · Singular · Feminine What is this?
Sense boast, ground of confidence, reason for glorying
Definition A stated ground of confidence or rejoicing, here redirected toward integrity before God and mutual recognition in Christ.
References 2 Corinthians 1:12-14
Lexicon boast, ground of confidence, reason for glorying
Why it matters Paul's boasting is not worldly self-promotion; it is confidence in grace-shaped conduct and future accountability before Christ.
Pastoral Entry
The Greek adjective pistos is one of the New Testament's most theologically load-bearing words. Derived from the same root as pistis (G4102, faith), it operates in two complementary directions: it describes something or someone as worthy of trust (faithful, reliable, trustworthy — the objective sense), and it describes someone who actively trusts (believing, a person of faith — the subjective sense).
Context usually makes clear which direction is in view, but the overlap is deliberate: the character of God as faithful is the ground on which human faith rests. When Paul writes 'God is faithful' (1 Cor. 1:9), he is not simply praising a divine attribute — he is establishing the bedrock on which the Corinthians' shaken confidence can stand. When he describes an elder as 'faithful' (Tit.
1:6) Or a servant as 'faithful and dear' (Eph. 6:21), he is commending the human virtue that mirrors the divine. The word spans the whole biblical theology of covenant: Yahweh is the faithful God who keeps covenant (Deut. 7:9), and the calling of his people is to become, by grace, faithful in return. For the preacher, pistos is a window into the grammar of the covenant relationship — reliability moving in both directions, from God to his people and from his people toward him and one another.
Form in passage Nominative · Singular · Masculine What is this?
Sense faithful, trustworthy, reliable
Definition True and dependable, especially of God whose character guarantees the reliability of the gospel.
References 2 Corinthians 1:18
Lexicon faithful, trustworthy, reliable
Why it matters Paul anchors the reliability of his message not in human planning but in the faithful God.
Pastoral Entry
Nai means yes, assent, affirmation, or so it is. The New Testament uses it in ordinary answers, prayerful agreement with the Father's pleasure, humble faith before Jesus, confession of Christ, apostolic concern for truthful speech, the certainty of God's promises in Christ, and final hope in the Lord's coming. The word is small, but it often exposes whether speech is plain, faithful, and aligned with reality.
Pastorally, nai warns against manipulative double-speech and calls for truthful assent to what God has said. Its strongest theological use is not human positivity, but God's reliable yes in Christ, through whom His promises stand and His people answer Amen to His glory.
Sense yes, affirmation, certainty
Definition An affirmative response, used theologically for the certainty of God's promises in Christ.
References 2 Corinthians 1:19-20
Lexicon yes, affirmation, certainty
Why it matters The term crystallizes the chapter's promise theology: God's promises are decisively affirmed in Christ.
Pastoral Entry
G950 is represented in this Pauline-focused companion by the reviewed display gloss "to confirm." In Paul's letters, the term appears in passages such as 1Cor. 1. 6, 2Cor. 1. 21, Col. 2. 7, where the local argument determines whether the emphasis is doctrinal, ethical, pastoral, or ministry-related. The companion therefore treats To Confirm as a passage-governed word study rather than a detached lexical slogan.
It gives teachers a compact way to notice the term, compare several Pauline settings, and move toward application only after the immediate context has set the boundary. The aim is disciplined clarity: the Greek term can sharpen reading, but it does not replace the grammar, flow, and theological burden of the passage itself.
Form in passage Present · Active · Participle · Singular What is this?
Sense to establish, confirm, make firm
Definition To make firm or confirm securely.
References 2 Corinthians 1:21
Lexicon to establish, confirm, make firm
Why it matters God Himself establishes believers in Christ, providing stability deeper than changing circumstances or questioned plans.
Form in passage Aorist · Active · Participle · Singular What is this?
Sense to anoint, appoint, consecrate
Definition To anoint or consecrate for God's purpose.
References 2 Corinthians 1:21
Lexicon to anoint, appoint, consecrate
Why it matters Paul links the church's standing in Christ to God's own consecrating work, not to human self-authorization.
Pastoral Entry
Σφραγίζω means to seal: to mark, secure, authenticate, close, or reserve something with the authority of the one who seals it. The New Testament uses the verb in several distinct settings. A tomb can be sealed for security. A message can be sealed so that it is not disclosed. A testimony can be sealed in the sense of being certified as true. Most pastorally, believers are said to be sealed with or in relation to the Holy Spirit. That sealing language speaks of God's ownership, authentication, pledge, and preservation, but each passage must determine which aspect is in view. The word does not by itself supply a full doctrine of assurance, final perseverance, or sacramental identity. It gives a rich image of divine marking and custody, then the surrounding text explains what that seal means.
In John 6:27, the Father has placed His seal on the Son, authenticating Him as the giver of food that endures to eternal life. In 2 Corinthians 1:22 and Ephesians 1:13, believers are sealed in connection with the Spirit, and the seal is joined to pledge language and the day of redemption. Revelation uses the verb in more than one way: servants are sealed as belonging to God, the seven thunders are sealed up as unrevealed speech, and Satan's abyss is sealed as confinement. The shared idea is authoritative marking or closure, but the pastoral conclusion changes with the context. The word should make readers ask: who is sealing, what is being sealed, and for what purpose?
Form in passage Aorist · Middle · Participle · Singular What is this?
Sense to seal, mark as belonging, authenticate
Definition To mark with a seal of ownership, authenticity, or security.
References 2 Corinthians 1:22
Lexicon to seal, mark as belonging, authenticate
Why it matters God seals believers, indicating that their identity and security are grounded in His action.
Sense pledge, deposit, guarantee, first installment
Definition A pledge or down payment guaranteeing the full completion of what is promised.
References 2 Corinthians 1:22
Lexicon pledge, deposit, guarantee, first installment
Why it matters The Spirit is God's guarantee, anchoring Christian assurance in God's pledge rather than in unstable circumstances.
Cross-language bridge 1 link · View in lexicon
Lexicon data: MorphGNT Strong's Dictionary XML (CC0) · Open Scriptures Hebrew Bible (CC BY 4.0) · Open Scriptures Hebrew Lexicon (CC BY 4.0) · STEPBible Data (CC BY 4.0) · Full details
Verb Aspect (51 main verbs)
| v.4 | παρακαλῶνparakaléōcomfortspresent active participleparticipleParticiple — verbal adjective, supporting actionδύνασθαιdýnamaiablepresent middle infinitiveinfinitiveInfinitive — verbal noun or complementary verbπαρακαλεῖνparakaléōcomfortpresent active infinitiveinfinitiveInfinitive — verbal noun or complementary verbπαρακαλούμεθαparakaléōcomfortedpresent passive indicativeongoingPresent indicative — ongoing, habitual, or general truth |
| v.5 | περισσεύειperisseúōoverflowpresent active indicativeongoingPresent indicative — ongoing, habitual, or general truthπερισσεύειperisseúōoverflowspresent active indicativeongoingPresent indicative — ongoing, habitual, or general truth |
| v.6 | θλιβόμεθαthlíbōafflictedpresent passive indicativeongoingPresent indicative — ongoing, habitual, or general truthπαρακαλούμεθαparakaléōcomfortedpresent passive indicativeongoingPresent indicative — ongoing, habitual, or general truthἐνεργουμένηςenergéōproducespresent middle participleparticipleParticiple — verbal adjective, supporting actionπάσχομενpáschōsufferpresent active indicativeongoingPresent indicative — ongoing, habitual, or general truth |
| v.7 | εἰδότεςeídōknowperfect active participleparticipleParticiple — verbal adjective, supporting action |
| v.8 | θέλομενthélōwantpresent active indicativeongoingPresent indicative — ongoing, habitual, or general truthἀγνοεῖνignorantpresent active infinitiveinfinitiveInfinitive — verbal noun or complementary verbἐβαρήθημενburdenedaorist passive indicativecompletedAorist indicative — punctiliar or completed actionἐξαπορηθῆναιexaporéomaidespairedaorist passive infinitiveinfinitiveInfinitive — verbal noun or complementary verbζῆνzáōlifepresent active infinitiveinfinitiveInfinitive — verbal noun or complementary verb |
| v.9 | ἐσχήκαμενéchōhadperfect active indicativeresultantPerfect indicative — completed action with present resultἐγείροντιegeírōraisespresent active participleparticipleParticiple — verbal adjective, supporting action |
| v.10 | ἐρρύσατοrhýomaideliveredaorist middle indicativecompletedAorist indicative — punctiliar or completed actionῥύσεταιrhýomaideliverfuture middle indicativeprospectiveFuture indicative — anticipated or promised actionἠλπίκαμενelpízōset ~ hopeperfect active indicativeresultantPerfect indicative — completed action with present resultῥύσεταιrhýomaideliverfuture middle indicativeprospectiveFuture indicative — anticipated or promised action |
| v.11 | συνυπουργούντωνsynypourgéōjoin in helpingpresent active participleparticipleParticiple — verbal adjective, supporting actionεὐχαριστηθῇeucharistéōgive thanksaorist passive subjunctivesubjunctiveSubjunctive mood — conditional, purpose, or contingent |
| v.12 | ἀνεστράφημενconducted ourselvesaorist passive indicativecompletedAorist indicative — punctiliar or completed action |
| v.13 | γράφομενgráphōwritingpresent active indicativeongoingPresent indicative — ongoing, habitual, or general truthἀναγινώσκετεreadpresent active indicativeongoingPresent indicative — ongoing, habitual, or general truthἐπιγινώσκετεepiginṓskōunderstandpresent active indicativeongoingPresent indicative — ongoing, habitual, or general truthἐλπίζωelpízōhopepresent active indicativeongoingPresent indicative — ongoing, habitual, or general truthἐπιγνώσεσθεepiginṓskōunderstandfuture middle indicativeprospectiveFuture indicative — anticipated or promised action |
| v.14 | ἐπέγνωτεepiginṓskōunderstoodaorist active indicativecompletedAorist indicative — punctiliar or completed action |
| v.15 | ἐβουλόμηνboúlomaiplannedimperfect middle indicativebackgroundImperfect indicative — continuous or repeated past actionἐλθεῖνérchomaicomeaorist active infinitiveinfinitiveInfinitive — verbal noun or complementary verbσχῆτεéchōhaveaorist active subjunctivesubjunctiveSubjunctive mood — conditional, purpose, or contingent |
| v.16 | διελθεῖνdiérchomaivisit ~ on ~ wayaorist active infinitiveinfinitiveInfinitive — verbal noun or complementary verbἐλθεῖνérchomaicomeaorist active infinitiveinfinitiveInfinitive — verbal noun or complementary verbπροπεμφθῆναιpropémpōsend ~ on ~ wayaorist passive infinitiveinfinitiveInfinitive — verbal noun or complementary verb |
| v.17 | βουλόμενοςboúlomaiplannedpresent middle participleparticipleParticiple — verbal adjective, supporting actionἐχρησάμηνchráomaimaking use ofaorist middle indicativecompletedAorist indicative — punctiliar or completed actionβουλεύομαιbouleúōplanpresent middle indicativeongoingPresent indicative — ongoing, habitual, or general truthβουλεύομαιbouleúōplanpresent middle indicativeongoingPresent indicative — ongoing, habitual, or general truth |
| v.19 | κηρυχθείςkērýssōproclaimedaorist passive participleparticipleParticiple — verbal adjective, supporting action |
| v.21 | βεβαιῶνestablishespresent active participleparticipleParticiple — verbal adjective, supporting actionχρίσαςchríōanointedaorist active participleparticipleParticiple — verbal adjective, supporting action |
| v.22 | σφραγισάμενοςsphragízōsealedaorist middle participleparticipleParticiple — verbal adjective, supporting actionδοὺςdídōmigivenaorist active participleparticipleParticiple — verbal adjective, supporting action |
| v.23 | ἐπικαλοῦμαιepikaléomaicallpresent middle indicativeongoingPresent indicative — ongoing, habitual, or general truthφειδόμενοςpheídomaisparepresent middle participleparticipleParticiple — verbal adjective, supporting actionἦλθονérchomaicomeaorist active indicativecompletedAorist indicative — punctiliar or completed action |
| v.24 | κυριεύομενkyrieúōlord ~ overpresent active indicativeongoingPresent indicative — ongoing, habitual, or general truthἑστήκατεhístēmistand firmperfect active indicativeresultantPerfect indicative — completed action with present result |
Verb forms indicate aspect — not interpretive weight. Consult context before drawing conclusions about emphasis.
Clause data: MACULA Greek (Clear Bible, CC BY 4.0) · SBLGNT (Logos/SBL, CC BY 4.0)
Theological Argument
Paul's argument moves from God's comforting character to the formation of afflicted servants, from suffering to resurrection reliance, from questioned conduct to godly sincerity, and from Paul's contested travel plans to the deeper faithfulness of God in Christ.
Comfort in suffering creates ministry usefulness; suffering teaches reliance on the God who raises; sincerity defends gospel ministry; Christ and the Spirit secure the promises of God; authority serves joy.
- 1.God's identity as Father of compassion and God of all comfort governs how believers understand affliction.
- 2.Comfort received from God is not private possession but ministry equipment for comforting others.
- 3.Extreme suffering exposes the weakness of self-reliance and trains trust in God who raises the dead.
- 4.Intercessory prayer participates in God's preserving work and leads to thanksgiving among many.
- 5.Apostolic credibility is defended by conscience, holiness, sincerity, grace, and transparent speech.
- 6.The reliability of Paul's message rests not in human flexibility but in God's faithfulness and Christ's fulfillment of divine promises.
- 7.The Spirit's establishing, anointing, sealing, and guaranteeing work secures the church's confidence in God's promise.
- 8.Pastoral authority is rightly exercised as co-labor for joy, not domination over faith.
Theological Focus
- Divine comfort in affliction
- God's mercy and compassion
- Resurrection reliance
- Prayerful participation in God's deliverance
- Apostolic sincerity and integrity
- Christ as the Yes to God's promises
- The Spirit as seal and guarantee
- Pastoral authority ordered toward joy
- Suffering and Consolation
- Weakness and Dependence
- Integrity Under Suspicion
- Promise and Fulfillment in Christ
- Spirit-Sealed Assurance
- Divine Mercy and Comfort
- Providence in Suffering
- Resurrection Hope
- Christological Fulfillment of Promise
- Work of the Holy Spirit
- Apostolic Ministry and Integrity
- Prayer and Thanksgiving
Theological Themes
Affliction is neither denied nor romanticized; God comforts His people in it and makes them agents of comfort for others.
Paul's near-death pressure teaches that Christian confidence rests in God who raises the dead, not in human capacity.
Paul answers mistrust with conscience, transparent speech, grace-shaped conduct, and accountability before the day of Christ.
God's promises are not unstable; they reach their decisive affirmation in Christ and produce worshipful Amen through believers.
God establishes believers in Christ, anoints them, seals them, and gives the Spirit as a pledge of what He has promised.
Covenant Significance
The chapter locates the Corinthian church in the new-covenant age, where God's promises are fulfilled in Christ and personally secured to believers by the Spirit.
- Promise fulfillment in Christ - All God's promises find their Yes in Christ, showing that covenant hope is not uncertain or divided but confirmed in Him.
- Spirit as seal and guarantee - The Spirit's presence marks believers as belonging to God and anticipates the completion of what God has pledged.
- Church formed by grace and peace - The chapter's greeting and argument place the church under grace from God and peace through the Lord Jesus Christ.
- Apostolic ministry as new-covenant service - Paul's ministry is not self-authorizing · it serves God's promise-keeping work in Christ and the Spirit-formed stability of the church.
- Exodus 34:6-7
- Isaiah 40:1-2
- Isaiah 53:3-12
- Psalm 116:3-9
Canonical Connections
Acts narrates Paul's ministry in Corinth, giving historical background to the church now addressed in a strained apostolic relationship.
Paul's praise of the Father of compassion resonates with the Old Testament revelation of the Lord as compassionate and gracious.
The theme of God's comfort for His people provides canonical depth to Paul's description of God as the God of all comfort.
Paul's reference to the sufferings of Christ coheres with the Servant pattern of suffering that leads to redemptive good and comfort for God's people.
The claim that God's promises are Yes in Christ gathers the covenant-promise storyline into Christ without flattening individual promises into private entitlement.
Paul elsewhere describes the Spirit as the seal and guarantee of inheritance, paralleling 2 Corinthians 1:21-22.
The chapter participates in the wider New Testament pattern where suffering under God becomes witness, hope, endurance, and service.
Cross References
Because of him, you are in Christ Jesus, who was made to us wisdom from God, and righteousness and sanctification, and redemption: that, as it is written, “He who boasts, let him boast in the Lord.”
Christ redeemed us from the curse of the law, having become a curse for us. For it is written, “Cursed is everyone who hangs on a tree,” that the blessing of Abraham might come on the Gentiles through Christ Jesus, that we might receive...
Brothers, even if a man is caught in some fault, you who are spiritual must restore such a one in a spirit of gentleness; looking to yourself so that you also aren’t tempted. Bear one another’s burdens, and so fulfill the law of Christ.
But far be it from me to boast, except in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, through which the world has been crucified to me, and I to the world.
You have forgotten the exhortation which reasons with you as with children, “My son, don’t take lightly the chastening of the Lord, nor faint when you are reproved by him; for whom the Lord loves, he disciplines, and chastises every son...
The Word became flesh, and lived among us. We saw his glory, such glory as of the one and only Son of the Father, full of grace and truth. John testified about him. He cried out, saying, “This was he of whom I said, ‘He who comes after me...
Jesus said to her, “I am the resurrection and the life. He who believes in me will still live, even if he dies. Whoever lives and believes in me will never die. Do you believe this?”
I will pray to the Father, and he will give you another Counselor, that he may be with you forever: the Spirit of truth, whom the world can’t receive; for it doesn’t see him and doesn’t know him. You know him, for he lives with you, and...
I will pray to the Father, and he will give you another Counselor, that he may be with you forever: the Spirit of truth, whom the world can’t receive; for it doesn’t see him and doesn’t know him. You know him, for he lives with you, and...
I have spoken these things to you, that my joy may remain in you, and that your joy may be made full.
However when he, the Spirit of truth, has come, he will guide you into all truth, for he will not speak from himself; but whatever he hears, he will speak. He will declare to you things that are coming. He will glorify me, for he will take...
Most certainly I tell you that you will weep and lament, but the world will rejoice. You will be sorrowful, but your sorrow will be turned into joy. A woman, when she gives birth, has sorrow because her time has come. But when she has...
I have told you these things, that in me you may have peace. In the world you have trouble; but cheer up! I have overcome the world.”
So when they had eaten their breakfast, Jesus said to Simon Peter, “Simon, son of Jonah, do you love me more than these?” He said to him, “Yes, Lord; you know that I have affection for you.” He said to him, “Feed my lambs.” He said to him...
This is the judgment, that the light has come into the world, and men loved the darkness rather than the light; for their works were evil. For everyone who does evil hates the light, and doesn’t come to the light, lest his works would be...
He said to them, “This is what I told you, while I was still with you, that all things which are written in the law of Moses, the prophets, and the psalms, concerning me must be fulfilled.” Then he opened their minds, that they might...
Then Jesus said to his disciples, “If anyone desires to come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me. For whoever desires to save his life will lose it, and whoever will lose his life for my sake will find it.
Blessed are those who mourn, for they shall be comforted.
Now I say that Christ has been made a servant of the circumcision for the truth of God, that he might confirm the promises given to the fathers, and that the Gentiles might glorify God for his mercy. As it is written, “Therefore I will...
Being therefore justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ; through whom we also have our access by faith into this grace in which we stand. We rejoice in hope of the glory of God. Not only this, but we also...
We were buried therefore with him through baptism into death, that just as Christ was raised from the dead through the glory of the Father, so we also might walk in newness of life. For if we have become united with him in the likeness of...
But if the Spirit of him who raised up Jesus from the dead dwells in you, he who raised up Christ Jesus from the dead will also give life to your mortal bodies through his Spirit who dwells in you.
For the grace of God has appeared, bringing salvation to all men, instructing us to the intent that, denying ungodliness and worldly lusts, we would live soberly, righteously, and godly in this present age;
He said to them, “Yahweh is witness against you, and his anointed is witness today, that you have not found anything in my hand.” They said, “He is witness.”
When your days are fulfilled, and you sleep with your fathers, I will set up your offspring after you, who will proceed out of your body, and I will establish his kingdom. He will build a house for my name, and I will establish the throne...
Many of those who sleep in the dust of the earth will awake, some to everlasting life, and some to shame and everlasting contempt.
Many of those who sleep in the dust of the earth will awake, some to everlasting life, and some to shame and everlasting contempt. Those who are wise will shine as the brightness of the expanse. Those who turn many to righteousness will...
“See now that I myself am he. There is no god with me. I kill and I make alive. I wound and I heal. There is no one who can deliver out of my hand.
I will also give you a new heart, and I will put a new spirit within you. I will take away the stony heart out of your flesh, and I will give you a heart of flesh. I will put my Spirit within you, and cause you to walk in my statutes. You...
Now Yahweh said to Abram, “Leave your country, and your relatives, and your father’s house, and go to the land that I will show you. I will make of you a great nation. I will bless you and make your name great. You will be a blessing. I...
Canon-Wide Connections
Cross-reference data: OpenBible.info (CC BY 4.0)
The gospel is clear in this chapter because God's promises are fulfilled in Christ, believers are established and sealed by the Spirit, and suffering servants learn to rely on the God who raises the dead.
- God is merciful toward the afflicted - The Father of compassion comforts His people, showing that suffering is not outside His care.
- Christ fulfills God's promises - The gospel rests on God's unwavering Yes in Christ rather than human strength, status, or persuasive control.
- The Spirit secures believers - God establishes, anoints, seals, and gives the Spirit as a guarantee, making assurance God-grounded.
- Resurrection hope shapes endurance - Paul's reliance on God who raises the dead shows that Christian hope reaches beyond visible deliverance.
- Grace creates ministry for joy - Gospel authority works with believers for joy and stability rather than controlling them.
- Do not turn comfort into mere emotional soothing detached from Christ, resurrection hope, and Spirit-sealed assurance.
- Do not turn God's promises into a prosperity formula · Paul speaks from affliction, not from ease.
- Do not make apostolic integrity the ground of salvation · it is the fruit of grace-shaped ministry before God.
- Do not bypass the chapter's conflict and suffering in order to reach a shallow triumphalism.
Because of him, you are in Christ Jesus, who was made to us wisdom from God, and righteousness and sanctification, and redemption: that, as it is written, “He who boasts, let him boast in the Lord.”
Christ redeemed us from the curse of the law, having become a curse for us. For it is written, “Cursed is everyone who hangs on a tree,” that the blessing of Abraham might come on the Gentiles through Christ Jesus, that we might receive...
Brothers, even if a man is caught in some fault, you who are spiritual must restore such a one in a spirit of gentleness; looking to yourself so that you also aren’t tempted. Bear one another’s burdens, and so fulfill the law of Christ.
But far be it from me to boast, except in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, through which the world has been crucified to me, and I to the world.
You have forgotten the exhortation which reasons with you as with children, “My son, don’t take lightly the chastening of the Lord, nor faint when you are reproved by him; for whom the Lord loves, he disciplines, and chastises every son...
The Word became flesh, and lived among us. We saw his glory, such glory as of the one and only Son of the Father, full of grace and truth. John testified about him. He cried out, saying, “This was he of whom I said, ‘He who comes after me...
Jesus said to her, “I am the resurrection and the life. He who believes in me will still live, even if he dies. Whoever lives and believes in me will never die. Do you believe this?”
I will pray to the Father, and he will give you another Counselor, that he may be with you forever: the Spirit of truth, whom the world can’t receive; for it doesn’t see him and doesn’t know him. You know him, for he lives with you, and...
I will pray to the Father, and he will give you another Counselor, that he may be with you forever: the Spirit of truth, whom the world can’t receive; for it doesn’t see him and doesn’t know him. You know him, for he lives with you, and...
I have spoken these things to you, that my joy may remain in you, and that your joy may be made full.
However when he, the Spirit of truth, has come, he will guide you into all truth, for he will not speak from himself; but whatever he hears, he will speak. He will declare to you things that are coming. He will glorify me, for he will take...
Most certainly I tell you that you will weep and lament, but the world will rejoice. You will be sorrowful, but your sorrow will be turned into joy. A woman, when she gives birth, has sorrow because her time has come. But when she has...
I have told you these things, that in me you may have peace. In the world you have trouble; but cheer up! I have overcome the world.”
So when they had eaten their breakfast, Jesus said to Simon Peter, “Simon, son of Jonah, do you love me more than these?” He said to him, “Yes, Lord; you know that I have affection for you.” He said to him, “Feed my lambs.” He said to him...
This is the judgment, that the light has come into the world, and men loved the darkness rather than the light; for their works were evil. For everyone who does evil hates the light, and doesn’t come to the light, lest his works would be...
He said to them, “This is what I told you, while I was still with you, that all things which are written in the law of Moses, the prophets, and the psalms, concerning me must be fulfilled.” Then he opened their minds, that they might...
Then Jesus said to his disciples, “If anyone desires to come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me. For whoever desires to save his life will lose it, and whoever will lose his life for my sake will find it.
Blessed are those who mourn, for they shall be comforted.
Now I say that Christ has been made a servant of the circumcision for the truth of God, that he might confirm the promises given to the fathers, and that the Gentiles might glorify God for his mercy. As it is written, “Therefore I will...
Being therefore justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ; through whom we also have our access by faith into this grace in which we stand. We rejoice in hope of the glory of God. Not only this, but we also...
We were buried therefore with him through baptism into death, that just as Christ was raised from the dead through the glory of the Father, so we also might walk in newness of life. For if we have become united with him in the likeness of...
But if the Spirit of him who raised up Jesus from the dead dwells in you, he who raised up Christ Jesus from the dead will also give life to your mortal bodies through his Spirit who dwells in you.
For the grace of God has appeared, bringing salvation to all men, instructing us to the intent that, denying ungodliness and worldly lusts, we would live soberly, righteously, and godly in this present age;
Primary Emphasis
Christ is presented as the one in whom God's promises receive their decisive Yes, the one through whom comfort overflows to afflicted servants, and the one whose day will reveal the mutual integrity and joy of gospel ministry.
Chapter Contribution
Paul's argument moves from God's comforting character to the formation of afflicted servants, from suffering to resurrection reliance, from questioned conduct to godly sincerity, and from Paul's contested travel plans to the deeper faithfulness of God in Christ.
By calling God as witness, Paul frames ministry integrity as answerable first to the Lord who knows motives and judges truthfully.
Paul's apostleship is by the will of God, making his ministry accountable to Christ rather than dependent on charisma, public image, or congregational approval.
All God's saving promises receive their decisive yes in Jesus Christ, making Him the center of biblical hope and covenant fulfillment.
Necessary correction may bring sorrow, but in gospel ministry sorrow is ordered toward repentance, reconciliation, and renewed joy rather than punitive control.
Apostolic communication is not meant to manipulate through obscurity but to serve the church through truthful words that can be read and understood.
Conscience functions as a witness to conduct, but in Paul's argument it is accountable to God and therefore not a license for self-justification.
Comfort is not sentimental escape but Christ-mediated strengthening that enables endurance and service in affliction.
God is praised as the Father of compassion, revealing His fatherly mercy toward afflicted believers.
The day of the Lord Jesus frames present ministry relationships, reminding the church that final evaluation belongs to Christ.
Believers stand by faith, so even apostolic ministry must not act as though human leaders possess mastery over the foundation of Christian life.
God's character is reliable and unchanging; the stability of the gospel rests on His faithfulness rather than on human strength or reputation.
Paul's greeting presents grace and peace as gifts from God the Father and the Lord Jesus Christ, not merely as polite religious language.
God's grace not only saves but shapes the manner of Christian life and ministry, replacing fleshly wisdom with godly sincerity.
Christian ministry must not operate through fleshly double-speech but through truthful conduct consistent with the faithful gospel it proclaims.
Paul's tears reveal that faithful correction should be governed by genuine love for the church and not by anger, image management, or a desire to win.
Spiritual authority in the church is accountable before God and must serve the faith, joy, and restoration of God's people rather than exercising domination over them.
The prayers of the church are real instruments in God's work, leading to shared thanksgiving when grace is granted.
God's past, present, and future deliverance governs Paul's confidence without denying the severity of his suffering.
Paul's reliance on the God who raises the dead grounds courage when death seems near and human resources are exhausted.
God marks believers as His own and secures them by placing His Spirit in their hearts as a seal and pledge of what is to come.
God comforts His people in trouble so that received comfort becomes ministry to others, forming a cruciform pattern of care within the body of Christ.
The Corinthian believers are called the church of God and holy people, showing that their identity rests in God's claim upon them even amid conflict and correction.
The passage presents God establishing believers in Christ and giving the Spirit, showing the unified work of Father, Son, and Spirit in salvation and assurance.
Believers share in Christ's sufferings and receive comfort through Christ, showing that Christian life and ministry are shaped by participation in Him.
God is the Father of compassion and God of all comfort, meeting His people in affliction and making them instruments of comfort.
Paul interprets extreme affliction as a means by which God trains reliance on Himself rather than self.
Confidence in God who raises the dead grounds endurance when circumstances feel like a sentence of death.
All God's promises are Yes in Christ, making Him the decisive confirmation of God's covenant faithfulness.
God establishes, anoints, seals, and gives the Spirit as a guarantee to His people.
Gospel ministry is marked by godly sincerity, grace, clear conscience, and service for the church's joy.
The church participates in God's preserving work through prayer, leading many to give thanks.
Theological exposition and fulfillment
- The gospel is clear in this chapter because God's promises are fulfilled in Christ, believers are established and sealed by the Spirit, and suffering servants learn to rely on the God who raises the dead.
God's comfort, God's resurrection power, God's faithfulness in Christ, and God's sealing Spirit form the deep ground of Christian endurance.
Afflicted believers and questioned leaders need a way to suffer, serve, speak, and lead without despair, defensiveness, or domination.
Humble endurance, transparent integrity, prayerful dependence, Christ-centered assurance, and authority used for joy.
- Name affliction truthfully before God instead of minimizing it.
- Identify one person who can be comforted with comfort you have received from God.
- Examine whether your plans and explanations can stand before conscience and God.
- Pray specifically for servants of Christ who are under pressure.
- Rehearse God's Yes in Christ when circumstances feel unstable.
- Use leadership influence to strengthen another believer's standing faith.
- The chapter warns against interpreting suffering as divine abandonment, treating changed circumstances as automatic evidence of deceit, detaching God's promises from Christ, or using spiritual authority to dominate rather than serve.
- Comfort means God will quickly remove all suffering. - Paul says God comforts in affliction and often uses affliction to teach dependence and equip ministry.
- Paul's changed travel plans prove unreliability. - Paul distinguishes human planning from gospel fickleness and explains his delay as a pastoral act meant to spare the Corinthians.
- All God's promises are Yes in Christ means every desired blessing is guaranteed now. - Paul speaks of God's covenant promises being fulfilled in Christ and secured by the Spirit, not of unchecked personal wish fulfillment.
- Apostolic authority gives leaders control over the faith of others. - Paul explicitly rejects lording over their faith and defines ministry as working with the church for joy.
- Suffering discredits ministry. - Paul presents affliction endured with faith as a place where God's comfort, deliverance, and resurrection power are displayed.
- Where am I interpreting affliction as abandonment rather than as a place where the Father of compassion can meet me?
- How has God comforted me in a way that should become comfort for someone else?
- What forms of self-reliance are exposed when I am pressed beyond my strength?
- Do my words, plans, and explanations reflect godly sincerity or worldly calculation?
- Am I reading God's promises through Christ, or am I using them apart from their gospel center?
- Where do I need to use leadership, influence, or counsel to work for another person's joy rather than control their faith?
- Suffering and counseling - Use the chapter to help sufferers name real affliction without despair, receiving comfort from God's character rather than from denial or shallow optimism.
- Church leadership - Model Paul's pattern of clear conscience, transparent speech, and pastoral restraint when decisions are questioned.
- Congregational conflict - Teach that strained relationships require sincerity, patience, explanation, and a refusal to weaponize authority.
- Prayer ministry - Invite the church to participate in deliverance and thanksgiving through intercession, as Paul asks the Corinthians to help by their prayers.
- Assurance - Ground the believer's confidence in God's promise-keeping faithfulness in Christ and the Spirit's sealing work rather than in fluctuating circumstances.
- Discipleship and witness - Help believers see that comfort received from God creates responsibility to comfort others.
Affliction becomes a ministry pathway when God's comfort is received and then extended to others.
Paul's weakness teaches reliance on God who raises the dead and produces prayerful thanksgiving among many.
Paul answers mistrust not with manipulation but with clear conscience, plain speech, and pastoral motive.
God's promises are confirmed in Christ and personally secured by the Spirit.
Faithful leadership works with believers for joy instead of ruling over faith.
A.T. Robertson, Word Pictures in the New Testament (1930–31) — public domain
The Biblical World
Chapter At A Glance
Paul blesses God for comfort in affliction, explains how suffering taught him reliance on the God who raises the dead, defends his sincerity, and grounds his pastoral integrity in God's unfailing Yes in Christ.
The chapter locates the Corinthian church in the new-covenant age, where God's promises are fulfilled in Christ and personally secured to believers by the Spirit.
The gospel is clear in this chapter because God's promises are fulfilled in Christ, believers are established and sealed by the Spirit, and suffering servants learn to rely on the God who raises the dead.
Humble endurance, transparent integrity, prayerful dependence, Christ-centered assurance, and authority used for joy.
Focus Points
- Divine comfort in affliction
- God's mercy and compassion
- Resurrection reliance
- Prayerful participation in God's deliverance
- Apostolic sincerity and integrity
- Christ as the Yes to God's promises
- The Spirit as seal and guarantee
- Pastoral authority ordered toward joy
- Suffering and Consolation
- Weakness and Dependence
- Integrity Under Suspicion
- Promise and Fulfillment in Christ
- Spirit-Sealed Assurance
- Divine Mercy and Comfort
- Providence in Suffering
- Resurrection Hope
- Christological Fulfillment of Promise
- Work of the Holy Spirit
- Apostolic Ministry and Integrity
- Prayer and Thanksgiving
Cross References
Passages
Chapter opening: 2 Corinthians 1:1-4
And Timothy (κα Τιμοθεος). Timothy is with Paul, having been sent on to Macedonia from Ephesus ( Ac 19:22 ). He is in no sense co-author any more than Sosthenes was in 1Co 1:1 . In all Achaia (εν ολη τη Αχαια). The Romans divided Greece into two provinces (Achaia and Macedonia). Macedonia included also Illyricum, Epirus, and Thessaly. Achaia was all of Greece south of this (both Attica and the Peloponnesus).
The restored Corinth was made the capital of Achaia where the pro-consul resided ( Ac 18:12 ). He does not mention other churches in Achaia outside of the one in Corinth, but only "saints" (αγιοις). Athens was in Achaia, but it is not clear that there was as yet a church there, though some converts had been won ( Ac 17:34 ), and there was a church in Cenchreae, the eastern port of Corinth ( Ro 16:1 ).
Paul in 2Co 9:2 speaks of Achaia and Macedonia together. His language here would seem to cover the whole (ολη, all) of Achaia in his scope and not merely the environment around Corinth.
Identical with 1Co 1:3 which see.
Blessed (ευλογητος). From old verb ευλογεω, to speak well of, but late verbal in LXX and Philo. Used of men in Ge 24:31 , but only of God in N. T. as in Lu 1:68 and chiefly in Paul ( 2Co 11:31 ; Ro 1:25 ). Paul has no thanksgiving or prayer as in 1Co 1:4-9 , but he finds his basis for gratitude in God, not in them. The God and Father (ο θεος κα πατηρ). So rightly, only one article with both substantives as in 2 Peter 1:1 .
Paul gives the deity of Jesus Christ as our Lord (Κυριου), but he does not hesitate to use the language here as it occurs. See 1Pe 1:3 ; Eph 1:3 where the language is identical with that here. The father of mercies (ο πατηρ των οικτιρμων) and God of all comfort (κα θεος πασης παρακλησεως). Paul adds an item to each word. He is the compassionate Father characterized by mercies (οικτιρμων, old word from οικτειρω, to pity, and here in plural, emotions and acts of pity).
He is the God of all comfort (παρακλησεως, old word from παρακαλεω, to call to one's side, common with Paul). Paul has already used it of God who gave eternal comfort ( 2Th 2:16 ). The English word comfort is from the Latin confortis (brave together). The word used by Jesus of the Holy Spirit as the Comforter or Paraklete is this very word ( Joh 14:16 ; 16:7 ).
Paul makes rich use of the verb παρακαλεω and the substantive παρακλησις in this passage ( 3-7 ). He urges all sorrowing and troubled hearts to find strength in God.
In all our affliction (επ παση τη θλιψε ημων). Θλιψις is from θλιβω, to press, old and common word, as tribulation is from Latin tribulum (roller). See on Mt 13:21 and 1Th 1:6 . The English affliction is Latin afflictio from ad-fligere , to strike on. That we may be able to comfort (εις το δυνασθα ημας παρακαλειν). Purpose clause with εις and the articular infinitive with the accusative of general reference, a common idiom.
Paul here gives the purpose of affliction in the preacher's life, in any Christian's life, to qualify him for ministry to others. Otherwise it will be professional and perfunctory. Wherewith (ης). Genitive case of the relative attracted to that of the antecedent παρακλησεως. The case of the relative here could have been either the accusative ην with the passive verb retained as in Mr 10:38 or the instrumental η.
Either is perfectly good Greek (cf. Eph 1:6 ; 4:1 ). Personal experience of God's comfort is necessary before we can pass it on to others.
The sufferings of Christ (τα παθηματα του Χριστου). Subjective genitive, Christ's own sufferings. Abound unto us (περισσευε εις ημας). Overflow unto us so that we suffer like sufferings and become fellow sufferers with Christ ( 4:10 f. ; Ro 8:17 ; Php 3:10 ; Col 1:24 ). Through Christ (δια του Χριστου). The overflow (περισσευε) of comfort comes also through Christ.
Is Paul thinking of how some of the Jewish Christians in Corinth have become reconciled with him through Christ? Partnership with Christ in suffering brings partnership in glory also ( Ro 8:17 ; 1Pe 4:13 ).
--or (ειτε). The alternatives in Paul's experience (afflicted θλιβομεθα, comforted παρακαλουμεθα) work out for their good when they are called on to endure like sufferings "which we also suffer" (ων κα ημεις πασχομεν). The relative ων is attracted from neuter accusative plural α to genitive case of the antecedent παθηματων (sufferings).
Our hope for you (η ελπις ημων υπερ υμων). The old word ελπις, from ελπιζω, to hope, has the idea of waiting with expectation and patience. So here it is "steadfast" (βεβαια, stable, fast, from βαινω, to plant the feet down). Partakers (κοινωνο). Partners as in Lu 5:10 .
Concerning our affliction (υπερ της θλιψεως ημων). Manuscripts read also περ for in the Koine υπερ (over) often has the idea of περ (around). Paul has laid down his philosophy of afflictions and now he cites a specific illustration in his own recent experience. In Asia (εν Ασια). Probably in Ephesus, but what it was we do not know whether sickness or peril. We do know that the disciples and the Asiarchs would not allow Paul to face the mob in the amphitheatre gathered by Demetrius ( Ac 20:30 f.
). In Ro 16:4 Paul says that Prisca and Aquila laid down their necks for him, risked their very lives for him. It may have been a later plot to kill Paul that hastened his departure from Ephesus ( Ac 20:1 ). He had a trial so great that "we were weighed down exceedingly beyond our power" (καθ' υπερβολην υπερ δυναμιν εβαρηθημεν). Old verb from βαρος, weight, βαρυς, weighty.
First aorist passive indicative. See on 1Co 12:31 for καθ' υπερβολην (cf. our hyperbole). It was beyond Paul's power to endure if left to himself. Insomuch that we despaired even of life (ωστε εξαπορηθηνα ημας κα του ζηιν). Usual clause of result with ωστε and the infinitive. First aorist passive infinitive εξαπορηθηνα, late compound for utter despair (perfective use of εξ and at a complete loss, α privative and πορος, way).
There seemed no way out. Of life (του ζηιν). Ablative case of the articular infinitive, of living.
Yea (αλλα). Confirmatory use as in 7:11 , rather than adversative. The answer of death (το αποκριμα του θανατου) This late word from αποκρινομα, to reply, occurs nowhere else in N. T. , but is in Josephus, Polybius, inscriptions and papyri (Deissmann, Bible Studies , p. 257; Moulton and Milligan's Vocabulary ), and always in the sense of decision or judgment rendered.
But Vulgate renders it by responsum and that idea suits best here, unless Paul conceives God as rendering the decision of death. We ourselves have had within ourselves (αυτο εν εαυτοις εσχηκαμεν). Regular perfect of εχω, to have. And still have the vivid recollection of that experience. For this lively dramatic use of the present perfect indicative for a past experience see also εσχηκα in 2:13 (Moulton, Prolegomena , p.
143f. ; Robertson, Grammar , p. 896f.) That we should not trust in ourselves (ινα μη πεποιθοτες ωμεν εφ' εαυτοις). A further purpose of God in affliction beyond that in verse 4 . "This dreadful trial was sent to him in order to give him a precious spiritual lesson ( 12:7-10 )" (Robertson and Plummer). Note periphrastic perfect active subjunctive of πειθω, to persuade.
In (επ), upon, both ourselves and God.
Out of so great a death (εκ τηλικουτου θανατου). He had considered himself as good as dead. --will deliver (ρυσετα). Old verb ρυω, middle, ρυομα, draw oneself, as out of a pit, rescue. So Paul faces death without fear. On whom we have set our hope (εις ον ηλπικαμεν). Perfect active indicative of ελπιζω. We still have that hope, emphasized by ετ ρυσετα (he will still deliver).
Ye also helping together on our behalf (συνυπουργουντων κα υμων υπερ ημων). Genitive absolute with present active participle of late compound verb (συν and υπουργεω for υπο and εργον). Paul relied on God and felt the need of the prayer of God's people. By means of many (εκ πολλων προσωπων). Προσωπον means face (προσ, οπς). The word is common in all Greek. The papyri use it for face, appearance, person.
It occurs twelve times in II Corinthians. It certainly means face in eight of them ( 3:7 , 13 , 18 ; 8:24 ; 10:1 , 7 ; 11:20 ). In 5:12 it means outward appearance. It may mean face or person here, 2:10 ; 4:6 . It is more pictorial to take it here as face "that out of many upturned faces" thanks may be given (ινα--ευχαριστηθη first aorist passive subjunctive) for the gift to us by means of many (δια πολλον).
It is indeed a difficult sentence to understand.
Glorying (καυχησις). Act of glorying, while in verse 14 καυχημα is the thing boasted of. The testimony of our conscience (το μαρτυριον της συνειδησεως ημων). In apposition with καυχησις. Sincerity of God (ειλικρινεια του θεου). Like δικαιοσυνη θεου ( Ro 1:17 ; 3:21 ), the God-kind of righteousness. So the God-kind (genitive case) of sincerity. Late word from ειλικρινης.
See on 1Co 5:8 . Not in fleshly wisdom (ουκ εν σοφια σαρκικη). See on 1Co 1:17 ; 2:4 , 13 f . Paul uses σαρκικος five times and it occurs only twice elsewhere in N. T. See on 1Co 3:3 . We behaved ourselves (ανεστραφημεν). Second aorist passive indicative of αναστρεφω, old verb, to turn back, to turn back and forth, to walk. Here the passive is used as in late Greek as if middle.
More abundantly to you-ward (περισσοτερως προς υμας). They had more abundant opportunity to observe how scrupulous Paul was ( Ac 18:11 ).
Than what ye read (αλλ' η α αναγινωσκετε). Note comparative conjunction η (than) after αλλ' and that after αλλα (other things, same word in reality), "other than." Read in Greek (αναγινωσκω) is knowing again, recognizing. See on Ac 8:30 . Or even acknowledge (η κα επιγινωσκετε). Paul is fond of such a play on words (αναγινωσκετε, επιγινωσκετε) or paronomasia.
Does he mean "read between the lines," as we say, by the use of επ (additional knowledge)? Unto the end (εως τελους). The report of Titus showed that the majority now at last understood Paul. He hopes that it will last ( 1Co 1:8 ).
As also ye did acknowledge us in part (καθως κα επεγνωτε ημας απο μερους). Gracious acknowledgment (second aorist active indicative of επιγνωσκω) to the original Pauline party ( 1Co 1:12 ; 3:4 ) that he had seemed to care so little for them. And now in his hour of victory he shows that, if he is their ground of glorying, they are his also (cf. 1Th 2:19 f.; Php 2:16 ).
Confidence (πεποιθησε). This late word (LXX Philo, Josephus) is condemned by the Atticists, but Paul uses it a half dozen times ( 3:4 also). I was minded to come (εβουλομην ελθειν). Imperfect, I was wishing to come, picturing his former state of mind. Before unto you (προτερον προς υμας). This was his former plan (προτερον) while in Ephesus to go to Achaia directly from Ephesus.
This he confesses in verse 16 "and by you to pass into Macedonia." That ye might have a second benefit (ινα δευτεραν χαριν σχητε). Or second "joy" if we accept χαραν with Westcott and Hort. This would be a real second blessing (or joy) if they should have two visits from Paul.
And again (κα παλιν). This would have been the second benefit or joy. But he changed his plans and did not make that trip directly to Corinth, but came on to Macedonia first ( Ac 19:21 ; 20:1 f. ; 1Co 16:2 ; 2Co 2:12 ). To be set forward by you (υφ' υμων προπεμφθηνα). First aorist passive infinitive of προπεμπω. Paul uses this same verb in Ro 15:24 for the same service by the Roman Christians on his proposed trip to Spain.
The Corinthians, especially the anti-Pauline party, took advantage of Paul's change of plans to criticize him sharply for vacillation and flippancy. How easy it is to find fault with the preacher! So Paul has to explain his conduct.
Did I shew fickleness? (μητ αρα τη ελαφριαι?) An indignant negative answer is called for by μητ. The instrumental case of ελαφρια is regular after εχρησαμην from χραομα, to use. Ελαφρια is a late word for levity from the old adjective, ελαφρος, light, agile ( 2Co 10:17 ; Mt 11:30 ). Here only in N. T. Purpose (βουλευομα). Paul raises the question of fickleness about any of his plans.
--nay nay (ου ου). See a similar repetition in Mt 5:37 . It is plain in Jas 5:12 where "the yea" is "yea" and "the nay" is "nay." That seems to be Paul's meaning here, "that the Yea may be yea and the Nay may be nay."
Is not yea and nay (ουκ εστιν να κα ου). He is not a Yes and No man, saying Yes and meaning or acting No. Paul calls God to witness on this point.
Was not Yea and Nay (ουκ εγενετο να κα ου). "Did not become Yes and No." But in him is yea (αλλα Να εν αυτω γεγονεν). Rather, "But in him Yes has become yes," has proved true. So Paul appeals to the life of Christ to sustain his own veracity.
In him is the yea (εν αυτω το Να). Supply γεγονεν from the preceding sentence, "In him was the Yea come true." This applies to all God's promises. The Amen (το Αμην). In public worship ( 1Co 14:16 ).
Establishes (βεβαιων). Present active participle from βεβαιος, firm. An apt metaphor in Corinth where confirmation of a bargain often took place (βεβαιωσις) as Deissmann shows ( Bible Studies , p. 109) and as verse 22 makes plain. Anointed (χρισας). From χριω, to anoint, old verb, to consecrate, with the Holy Spirit here as in 1Jo 2:20 .
Sealed us (σφραγισαμενος ημας). From σφραγιζω old verb, common in LXX and papyri for setting a seal to prevent opening ( Da 6:17 ), in place of signature ( 1Ki 21:18 ). Papyri examples show a wide legal use to give validity to documents, to guarantee genuineness of articles as sealing sacks and chests, etc. (Deissmann, Bible Studies , p. 238; Moulton and Milligan's Vocabulary ).
The earnest of the Spirit (τον αρραβωνα του πνευματος). A word of Semitic origin (possibly Phoenician) and spelled both αραβων and αρραβων. It is common in the papyri as earnest money in a purchase for a cow or for a wife (a dowry). In N. T. only here; 5:5 ; Eph 1:14 . It is part payment on the total obligation and we use the very expression today, "earnest money."
It is God, says Paul, who has done all this for us and God is Paul's pledge that he is sincere. He will come to Corinth in due time. This earnest of the Spirit in our hearts is the witness of the Spirit that we are God's.
But I call God for a witness upon my soul (Εγω δε μαρτυρα τον θεον επικαλουμα επ την εμην ψυχην). Solemn attestation, "calling heaven to witness is frequent in literature from Homer onwards" (Plummer). Thus God is described above (cf. 1Th 2:5 , 10 ; Ro 1:9 ; Ga 1:20 ; Php 1:8 ). To spare you (φειδομενος υμων). Present middle participle (causal rather than final) of φειδομα, old verb, to hold back, to spare. Ablative case υμων.
We have lordship over (κυριευομεν). Old verb from κυριος, to be lord of or over. See Lu 22:25 . Helpers of your joy (συνεργο της χαρας υμων). Co-workers ( 1Co 3:8 ) in your joy. A delicate correction to present misapprehension (επανορθωσις).