Paul the apostle, writing with pastoral urgency and careful administrative integrity as he renews the Corinthians’ participation in the collection for the saints.
Grace-Given Generosity, Tested Love, and Honorable Stewardship
The grace of Christ turns generosity into willing, tested, accountable love that serves the saints and glorifies the Lord.
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The grace of Christ turns generosity into willing, tested, accountable love that serves the saints and glorifies the Lord.
Paul’s argument is that grace received from God must become grace embodied through voluntary, proportionate, and accountable generosity. He does not detach giving from doctrine, nor does he turn it into coercion. He begins with grace at work in the Macedonians, tests the sincerity of Corinthian love, centers the appeal in Christ’s self-giving poverty, and protects the offering through transparent stewardship.
The church in Corinth, a gifted but relationally tested congregation being summoned to complete the grace of giving they had previously begun.
After the reconciliation movement of chapters 5-7, Paul turns to the collection for needy believers, using the Macedonian churches as an example and sending Titus with trusted brothers so the matter is completed honorably.
The grace of Christ turns generosity into willing, tested, accountable love that serves the saints and glorifies the Lord.
Paul the apostle, writing with pastoral urgency and careful administrative integrity as he renews the Corinthians’ participation in the collection for the saints.
The church in Corinth, a gifted but relationally tested congregation being summoned to complete the grace of giving they had previously begun.
After the reconciliation movement of chapters 5-7, Paul turns to the collection for needy believers, using the Macedonian churches as an example and sending Titus with trusted brothers so the matter is completed honorably.
- Corinth’s honor culture could turn giving into status performance, patronage display, or suspicious financial handling · Paul counters this with voluntary grace, Christ-shaped self-giving, and accountable stewardship before God and people.
Greco-Roman benefaction often reinforced public status and social obligation. Paul’s appeal reframes generosity as gospel grace, fellowship with the saints, and a visible proof of love rather than self-promotion.
This chapter belongs to the church age after Christ’s death and resurrection, where new-covenant believers from different regions share materially with one another because they have first received the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ.
Paul moves from the Macedonians’ grace-shaped generosity, to an appeal for Corinth to complete its own gift, to the Christological ground of giving, and finally to the accountable sending of Titus and the brothers so generosity becomes a visible proof of love and a glory to Christ.
Theological exposition and fulfillment
The gospel center of 2 Corinthians 8 is the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ: though rich, He became poor for His people, so that through His poverty they might become rich. Christian generosity is therefore not a means of earning grace but a fruit of receiving grace. Christ’s self-giving saves and enriches His people, then forms them into a community that gives willingly, proportionately, and honorably.
Paul begins not by demanding money but by testifying to God’s grace in Macedonia, allowing the Corinthians to see what grace can produce under pressure.
The Corinthians’ spiritual abundance must become embodied love; their faith, speech, knowledge, zeal, and affection are incomplete if they do not move toward sacrificial participation.
The chapter’s theological center is Christ’s gracious self-humbling, which turns generosity from social pressure into gospel imitation.
Paul urges completion but guards the appeal with proportionality: willingness matters, giving is measured by what one has, and the goal is relief through mutual care, not crushing burden.
Paul protects the offering by sending Titus and recognized brothers, showing that gospel generosity requires visible accountability as well as willing love.
- 8:1-5: God’s grace made afflicted and impoverished believers eager participants in ministry to the saints.
- 8:6-8: Paul asks a gifted church to prove the genuineness of love by excelling in the grace of giving.
- 8:9: Christ’s voluntary poverty for His people supplies the gospel logic beneath all Christian generosity.
- 8:10-15: The Corinthians are to finish what they started, giving willingly and proportionately so the saints’ need is relieved.
- 8:16-24: Titus and trusted brothers are sent so the gift is administered transparently, honorably, and for the glory of Christ.
Pastoral Entry
χάρις means grace, favor, or gift, and in the Pastoral Epistles it names God's generous saving favor in Christ, His strengthening supply for ministry, and the blessing that frames Christian life. The word appears in greetings and closings, but it is not merely a polite letter formula. Grace comes from God the Father and Christ Jesus our Lord. It overflows to Paul with faith and love in Christ.
It was granted in Christ Jesus before time began, appears with salvation for all people, trains believers for godly life, justifies sinners, and makes them heirs with the hope of eternal life. Paul can also use the word in thanksgiving, but the main pastoral weight is God's unearned favor that saves, strengthens, and forms a people for good works. Grace is therefore not permission to remain unchanged, and it is not a reward for spiritual effort.
In these letters, grace precedes works, creates faith and love, strengthens Timothy, brings salvation, trains renunciation of ungodliness, and secures inheritance. Teachers should keep all of that together. Grace is free, but never thin. It is mercy in motion through Christ that saves and forms the household of God.
Sense God-given grace expressed in generosity
Definition Grace, favor, gift, or gracious action.
References 2 Corinthians 8:1, 4, 6, 7, 9, 19
Lexicon God-given grace expressed in generosity
Why it matters The chapter repeatedly frames the collection not merely as fundraising but as grace received from God and embodied through sacrificial participation.
Pastoral Entry
ἐκκλησία names an assembly or congregation, and in the New Testament it most often names the people Christ gathers as His church. In the Pastoral Epistles, the word is not an abstract institution or a building. The church is God’s household, the church of the living God, the pillar and foundation of the truth, and the community whose vulnerable members must be cared for wisely.
The wider canon adds that Christ builds His church, loves her, gives Himself for her, purchases her with His blood, and rules as head of the body. This word therefore helps readers hold together gathering, belonging, truth, ordered care, and Christ’s ownership without reducing the church to an event, a platform, or a human organization.
Form in passage Dative · Plural · Feminine What is this?
Sense gathered covenant communities
Definition An assembly or gathered congregation.
References 2 Corinthians 8:1
Lexicon gathered covenant communities
Why it matters Paul points to the Macedonian churches as embodied evidence that grace creates generous, worshipful communities, not only generous individuals.
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 Genitive · Singular · Feminine What is this?
Sense pressure or distress
Definition Trouble, affliction, pressure, or distress.
References 2 Corinthians 8:2
Lexicon pressure or distress
Why it matters The Macedonians’ generosity comes from severe affliction, showing that gospel giving is not dependent on ease or excess.
Form in passage Nominative · Singular · Feminine What is this?
Sense overflowing abundance
Definition Abundance, fullness, or overflow.
References 2 Corinthians 8:2
Lexicon overflowing abundance
Why it matters Paul describes an unexpected gospel paradox: joy under affliction overflows into rich generosity.
Pastoral Entry
Chara means joy, gladness, delight, or rejoicing. In the New Testament it is not fragile cheerfulness that survives only when circumstances are pleasant. It is the glad response created by God's saving work, sustained by Christ's presence, produced by the Spirit, and strengthened by future hope. The angel announces great joy because the Savior is born. Jesus gives His joy to His disciples and promises a joy no one can take away.
The Spirit fills disciples with joy in mission. Paul names joy as fruit of the Spirit. Hebrews says Jesus endured the cross for the joy set before Him. James can even call believers to count trials as joy because testing has a forming purpose. Chara therefore holds celebration and endurance together in Christ.
Form in passage Genitive · Singular · Feminine What is this?
Sense Spirit-formed gladness
Definition Joy, gladness, or delight.
References 2 Corinthians 8:2
Lexicon Spirit-formed gladness
Why it matters The Macedonians give not from mere obligation but from an abundance of joy created by divine grace.
Form in passage Nominative · Singular · Feminine What is this?
Sense material lack and low estate
Definition Poverty, destitution, or want.
References 2 Corinthians 8:2, 9
Lexicon material lack and low estate
Why it matters Their deep poverty heightens the grace of their generosity and prevents readers from equating giving only with surplus wealth.
Pastoral Entry
Ploutos means riches, wealth, abundance, or a treasury of resources. The New Testament uses it for earthly wealth that deceives, becomes uncertain, and rots under judgment, but also for God's inexhaustible kindness, wisdom, knowledge, and grace. The noun's moral force therefore comes from its kind, source, use, and object of hope. Material riches are not inherently saving or inherently sinful, yet they can choke the word, invite self-trust, and testify against hoarding.
God's riches move outward in patience, redemption, forgiveness, and generous provision. Christian teaching should neither promise affluence nor romanticize deprivation; it should direct hope to God, expose wealth's instability, and form stewards who repent, share, and bear fruitful love.
Form in passage Accusative · Singular · Neuter What is this?
Sense abundance or wealth
Definition Wealth, riches, or abundance.
References 2 Corinthians 8:2, 9
Lexicon abundance or wealth
Why it matters Paul uses riches paradoxically: poor Macedonians produce a wealth of generosity, and Christ’s poverty makes believers rich in grace.
Pastoral Entry
G572 can describe simplicity, sincerity, single-heartedness, or generosity depending on context. In Paul, it names an undivided quality of life before God and others. It appears in conscience language and in the generosity of the churches. The word helps teachers connect integrity of motive with open-handed love.
For preaching and teaching, this companion keeps the term tied to its cited Pauline settings before moving toward doctrine or application. The aim is not to turn a Greek gloss into a sermon by itself, but to help readers notice how the word functions inside Paul's argument, relationships, warnings, and gospel-centered exhortation with patient clarity.
Form in passage Genitive · Singular · Feminine What is this?
Sense sincere generosity
Definition Simplicity, sincerity, liberality, or generosity.
References 2 Corinthians 8:2
Lexicon sincere generosity
Why it matters The chapter presents generosity as sincerity of heart, not performative patronage or manipulative display.
Pastoral Entry
Dynamis names power, ability, mighty work, or effective strength. The New Testament uses the word for God's power in creation, the Spirit's overshadowing work, Jesus' miracles, apostolic witness, the gospel's saving efficacy, resurrection strength, and Christ's power perfected in weakness. It is not a word for self-display, spiritual performance, or raw force detached from God's purpose.
Luke connects power with the Holy Spirit and witness. Paul says the gospel and the message of the cross are God's power, even when they look foolish to the world. In weakness, Christ's power rests on His servant. The word therefore teaches that true power belongs to God, works through the gospel, and often appears in forms that overturn human boasting.
Sense capacity or power
Definition Power, ability, capacity, or strength.
References 2 Corinthians 8:3
Lexicon capacity or power
Why it matters Paul stresses that the Macedonians gave according to ability and beyond ability, distinguishing voluntary sacrifice from irresponsible coercion.
Form in passage Nominative · Plural · Masculine What is this?
Sense self-chosen willingness
Definition Of one’s own accord, voluntary, self-moved.
References 2 Corinthians 8:3
Lexicon self-chosen willingness
Why it matters This term protects the chapter from coercive readings: true grace-giving is eager and willing, not extracted by pressure.
Pastoral Entry
Δέησις (déēsis) means petition, supplication, or prayer arising from a felt need. Zechariah learns that his long-offered petition has been heard and that Elizabeth will bear John. Paul prays from his heart for Israel's salvation, so theological disagreement does not extinguish intercession. He asks the Corinthians to help through prayer and expects many people to give thanks when God answers.
Ephesians places every kind of petition within prayer in the Spirit, alertness, perseverance, and concern for all the saints. Philippians shows Paul's recurring petitions filled with joy for gospel partners. The noun is more specific than prayer in general, but it is not a technique for securing desired outcomes. Need is brought to God under His will, through communal participation, with perseverance, thanksgiving, love, and confidence that He hears.
Sense urgent request
Definition Petition, entreaty, or earnest request.
References 2 Corinthians 8:4
Lexicon urgent request
Why it matters The Macedonians plead for the privilege of helping, reversing normal assumptions about donors and need.
Pastoral Entry
Koinonia means fellowship, participation, sharing, communion, or partnership. In the New Testament it is not mere friendliness or social warmth. The church in Acts devotes itself to the apostles' teaching, fellowship, breaking of bread, and prayer. Paul says believers are called into fellowship with God's Son, share in the cup and bread as participation in Christ, and join in practical service for the saints.
He also speaks of fellowship in Christ's sufferings. John says apostolic proclamation brings hearers into fellowship with the witnesses, and that this fellowship is with the Father and His Son. The word joins shared life, shared gospel, shared worship, shared suffering, and shared care.
Form in passage Accusative · Singular · Feminine What is this?
Sense shared participation
Definition Fellowship, partnership, participation, or sharing.
References 2 Corinthians 8:4
Lexicon shared participation
Why it matters The collection is more than money; it is communion with the saints through costly partnership in their need.
Pastoral Entry
διακονία is the word the New Testament uses for service — not the general Greek concept of duty or labor, but the concrete, directed, personal work of attending to someone's need. The word and its cognates (διάκονος, διακονέω) cluster around the image of a table-servant, someone who moves between the need and the provision, who attends, who brings, who cares for the practical dimension of another person's life. The NT takes this ordinary image and elevates it into the very shape of Christian ministry.
In the Gospels, the same root is used for Martha serving at table (Luke 10:40) and for the angels who came and served Jesus after His temptation (Matthew 4:11). Jesus declares in Mark 10:45 that the Son of Man came not to be served (diakonēthēnai) but to serve (diakonēsai) — making the servant posture the very definition of Messianic authority. The one who holds all power uses it in attending to others.
In Acts 6, the word generates the church's first organizational decision. The Hellenistic widows are being overlooked in the daily διακονία — the distribution of food. The Twelve distinguish between the διακονία of the word (preaching and teaching) and the διακονία of tables (practical relief). Both are named with the same word because both are genuine forms of service. The point is not that one kind of service is more important than the other — it is that different gifts fit different forms of the one calling.
In Paul, διακονία becomes the comprehensive term for apostolic ministry. Paul describes his entire calling as the διακονία he received from the Lord (Acts 20:24). He names the collection for Jerusalem saints as a διακονία (2 Corinthians 8:4; 9:1). The ministry of reconciliation given to the church is a διακονία (2 Corinthians 5:18). And in Ephesians 4:12, the whole structure of gifted leaders in the church is aimed at equipping the saints for the work of διακονία — the service of the body builds the body up.
For the preacher, διακονία does important clarifying work. It resists the clericalization of ministry — the assumption that ministry belongs to ordained professionals while ordinary members attend. In the NT, every member of the body is equipped for works of service. And it resists the reduction of ministry to preaching alone — relief, care, hospitality, and practical attention to need are all genuine forms of the same service.
Form in passage Genitive · Singular · Feminine What is this?
Sense ministry service
Definition Service, ministry, or practical aid.
References 2 Corinthians 8:4
Lexicon ministry service
Why it matters Paul frames the gift as ministry to the saints, integrating mercy, worship, and church unity.
Pastoral Entry
ἅγιος names holiness as belonging to God, being set apart for Him, and sharing the moral distinctness that flows from His character. The word can describe God Himself, Christ as the Holy One, the Holy Spirit, the holy calling given by grace, and the saints who belong to God. In the Pastoral Epistles, holiness is not decorative religion. It is tied to salvation before time began, the indwelling Spirit who guards the entrusted treasure, mercy that renews, and practical service among the saints.
Holiness therefore begins with God, is secured in Christ, is formed by the Spirit, and becomes visible in a consecrated life.
Form in passage Accusative · Plural · Masculine What is this?
Sense holy ones set apart for God
Definition Holy, set apart, or belonging to God.
References 2 Corinthians 8:4
Lexicon holy ones set apart for God
Why it matters The recipients are not anonymous beneficiaries but God’s holy people, likely the needy believers in Jerusalem in the wider Pauline collection context.
Pastoral Entry
Δίδωμι is a Greek verb for giving, granting, entrusting, handing over, or placing something in another person's possession or care. It can name a gift, an assignment, an authority, a command, or a transfer, depending on the sentence.
Pastorally, this word matters because Scripture uses giving language for the Father's gift of the Son, the Son's gift of eternal life, the Spirit given to believers, and gifts given for the church. It also appears in ordinary actions, so the context must say whether the giving is divine grace, entrusted ministry, human generosity, or a narrative transfer.
The word should not be flattened into one kind of gift. It marks giving or granting, while the passage defines the giver, the recipient, the gift, and the purpose.
Form in passage Aorist · Active · Indicative · 3rd Person · Plural What is this?
Sense to give or grant
Definition To give, grant, entrust, or offer.
References 2 Corinthians 8:5
Lexicon to give or grant
Why it matters The verb is used of Macedonian self-giving, showing that financial generosity flows from prior surrender to the Lord.
Sense God’s purpose or will
Definition Will, desire, purpose; God as the divine subject.
References 2 Corinthians 8:5
Lexicon God’s purpose or will
Why it matters The Macedonians’ giving is interpreted as obedience to God’s will, not merely emotional philanthropy.
Pastoral Entry
Σπουδή names earnestness, diligence, or serious concern. In 2 Corinthians 7, godly sorrow produces earnestness that takes wrongdoing seriously, seeks vindication, and demonstrates changed allegiance. Paul also says the difficult letter made the Corinthians' concern for him visible before God. Romans 12 commands believers not to become sluggish in diligence but to remain fervent in spirit while serving the Lord.
The noun therefore describes responsive seriousness, not anxious intensity or reputation management. Godly earnestness faces sin, repairs what can be repaired, serves faithfully, and continues in hope. Its fruit must be distinguished from panic, defensiveness, or public displays designed merely to clear one's image.
Form in passage Dative · Singular · Feminine What is this?
Sense zeal and eagerness
Definition Earnestness, diligence, haste, zeal, or eagerness.
References 2 Corinthians 8:7, 8, 16
Lexicon zeal and eagerness
Why it matters Paul wants the Corinthians’ generosity to be marked by the same seriousness and eagerness Titus already has for them.
Pastoral Entry
πίστις means faith, trust, or faithfulness, and in the Pastoral Epistles it carries both personal reliance on Christ and the entrusted body of apostolic truth. The word can describe sincere faith, the faith that receives salvation in Christ Jesus, faith held with a clear conscience, faith that can be shipwrecked, faith some abandon, and the faith Paul has kept to the end.
It can also describe the faith of God's elect and the faithful conduct that adorns the teaching about God our Savior. This range requires careful teaching. Paul is not using πίστις as bare religious sincerity. Faith has an object: Christ Jesus. Faith also has a moral companion: a good conscience. Faith can be nourished by Scripture, guarded against false teaching, modeled across generations, and persevered in through suffering.
In these letters, faith is personal and doctrinal, received and guarded, confessed and lived. It is not works-righteousness, but neither is it empty profession. Pastoral teaching should help readers trust Christ, hold the apostolic faith, keep conscience clear, resist shipwreck, and finish the race.
Form in passage Dative · Singular · Feminine What is this?
Sense trust and faithfulness
Definition Faith, trust, belief, or faithfulness.
References 2 Corinthians 8:7
Lexicon trust and faithfulness
Why it matters Paul locates giving among the graces in which the Corinthians claim to excel, refusing to separate generosity from discipleship.
Pastoral Entry
λόγος is a broad word for word, message, saying, matter, account, or speech, and context must decide the sense. In the Pastoral Epistles, it carries several ministry-critical uses: trustworthy sayings, the word of God, words of faith, the pattern of sound words, the word that cannot be chained, the word of truth, the preached word, faithful word for elders, and sound speech that cannot be condemned.
This range makes λόγος especially important for teaching and church order. The word is not a magic term for any religious statement. It names speech or message that must be received, nourished on, guarded, handled accurately, preached patiently, held firmly, and embodied in uncondemned speech. Because λόγος can also describe empty or spreading talk, the Pastoral Epistles force a moral distinction between God's word and destructive words.
The church lives by the faithful word, not by the mere abundance of words.
Sense word or speech
Definition Word, message, reason, or speech.
References 2 Corinthians 8:7
Lexicon word or speech
Why it matters The Corinthians’ verbal gifts and knowledge must be joined to concrete love, lest giftedness remain unembodied.
Pastoral Entry
Gnōsis means knowledge, recognition, or understanding. The New Testament values knowledge of salvation and of Christ, yet repeatedly refuses to separate knowing from love, holiness, and faithful reception. Luke links knowledge of salvation with forgiveness of sins. First Corinthians warns that not every believer possesses the same understanding about idols and that knowledge can become destructive when wielded without love.
Paul pictures the knowledge of Christ spreading like fragrance through gospel ministry. Philippians counts all rival grounds of confidence as loss beside knowing Christ. Second Peter commands growth in grace and knowledge together. The noun does not make information saving or maturity automatic. Its worth depends on its object, its truth, and the life it produces.
Form in passage Dative · Singular · Feminine What is this?
Sense understanding or knowledge
Definition Knowledge, understanding, or insight.
References 2 Corinthians 8:7
Lexicon understanding or knowledge
Why it matters Paul refuses a knowledge-rich but love-poor Christianity; true grace matures into practical concern.
Pastoral Entry
ἀγάπη means love, but in the New Testament it must be governed by God's own action rather than by modern sentiment. The word can describe human love, Christian love, and God's love, but its center of gravity is revealed in God giving His Son for sinners and in Christ forming a people who love one another. In the Pastoral Epistles, love is not detached affection.
The goal of instruction is love from a pure heart, a clear conscience, and sincere faith. God does not give His servants a spirit of fear, but of power, love, and self-control. Timothy must hold sound teaching with faith and love in Christ Jesus. He must flee youthful passions and pursue love with those who call on the Lord from a pure heart. Older men must be sound in love.
These uses show that ἀγάπη belongs with doctrine, conscience, faith, self-control, holiness, and endurance. It is not soft religious warmth. It is the gospel-shaped posture that seeks another's good under God's truth. The wider canon anchors this love in God Himself: God proves His love in Christ's death for sinners, love rejoices in truth, and anyone who claims to love God while hating a brother lies.
ἀγάπη therefore guards the church from loveless orthodoxy and truthless sentiment at the same time. Within church life, that means the teacher asks what kind of people instruction is forming, not merely whether arguments are being won. Love guards truth from becoming proud, and truth guards love from becoming indulgent. Because God's love moves toward sinners in Christ, the church's love moves toward people with patience, clarity, holiness, and hope.
Form in passage Dative · Singular · Feminine What is this?
Sense covenantal love in action
Definition Love, benevolence, self-giving concern.
References 2 Corinthians 8:7-8, 24
Lexicon covenantal love in action
Why it matters The collection tests the genuineness of love without reducing love to money or making money a substitute for love.
Pastoral Entry
Δοκιμάζω means to test, examine, discern, or approve after examination. Jesus rebukes people able to assess weather but unwilling to discern the decisive time of His ministry. Paul describes humanity refusing to approve the knowledge of God, teaches that the coming Day will test each person's work, tests the sincerity of generous love, and commands believers to examine their own work.
The verb can refer both to the process of evaluation and to the approval that follows a favorable result. Testing is not automatically suspicious or destructive. Its standard, examiner, object, and outcome matter. Biblical discernment brings claims, motives, conduct, and labor under God's revealed truth rather than personal preference.
Form in passage Present · Active · Participle · Singular What is this?
Sense to prove by testing
Definition To test, examine, approve, or prove genuine.
References 2 Corinthians 8:8
Lexicon to prove by testing
Why it matters Paul explicitly treats the appeal as a test of love’s sincerity, not as a bare administrative request.
Form in passage Accusative · Singular · Neuter What is this?
Sense authentic or legitimate
Definition Genuine, sincere, legitimate, or true-born.
References 2 Corinthians 8:8
Lexicon authentic or legitimate
Why it matters The Corinthians’ love is to be shown genuine through practical completion of what they began.
Pastoral Entry
Ginosko means to know, come to know, recognize, understand, perceive, become aware, or know relationally. The New Testament uses it for ordinary awareness, discernment, recognition, moral knowledge, relational knowledge, and saving knowledge of God. It can describe knowing a fact, recognizing a person, learning the meaning of sin through the law, being known by God, keeping Christ's commandments as evidence of knowing Him, and eternal life as knowing the Father and Jesus Christ whom He sent.
The word is broad enough that context must govern every claim. It does not always mean intimate covenant knowledge, and it does not always mean bare information. In its highest uses, knowing is personal, obedient, and God-given: the Shepherd knows His sheep, the sheep know Him, and eternal life is communion with the true God through the sent Son.
Form in passage Present · Active · Indicative · 2nd Person · Plural What is this?
Sense to know personally
Definition To know, perceive, recognize, or understand.
References 2 Corinthians 8:9
Lexicon to know personally
Why it matters Paul grounds the appeal in what believers know about the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ.
Cross-language bridge 1 link · View in lexicon
Pastoral Entry
κύριος names one who has rightful authority, whether a human master in ordinary use or the Lord whose authority governs life before God. In the Pastoral Epistles, the word is concentrated around Christ Jesus our Lord, the Lord who strengthens His servant, the Lord whose appearing must shape faithful obedience, the Lord who knows those who are His, and the Lord who rescues His people into His heavenly kingdom.
The letters do not use κύριος as a religious ornament. The title places ministry, doctrine, endurance, prayer, church conduct, and hope under the authority of the risen Christ. Paul can bless Timothy with grace from Christ Jesus our Lord, thank the Lord who appointed him to service, charge Timothy to keep the commandment until the appearing of the Lord Jesus Christ, and rest his final confidence in the Lord who will rescue him.
The word also requires careful contextual reading. Some occurrences name Christ directly; some occur in scriptural or doxological language where divine authority is in view. Pastoral teaching should therefore avoid both vagueness and overclaim. κύριος calls the church to confess Christ, obey His command, depart from iniquity, and endure with confidence because the Lord knows, strengthens, judges, rescues, and reigns.
Sense Lord and master
Definition Lord, master, or one with authority.
References 2 Corinthians 8:9
Lexicon Lord and master
Why it matters Christ’s lordship frames generosity as worshipful imitation of His grace rather than human-centered philanthropy.
Form in passage Aorist · Active · Indicative · 3rd Person · Singular What is this?
Sense to become poor
Definition To be poor, become poor, or live in poverty.
References 2 Corinthians 8:9
Lexicon to become poor
Why it matters Paul names Christ’s voluntary humiliation as the gospel pattern beneath Christian generosity.
Pastoral Entry
Plousios means rich, wealthy, or possessing abundance. Jesus applies it to a landowner whose surplus deepens self-reliance, while Paul applies richness to the Lord's generosity and to the grace believers receive through Christ's poverty. The adjective can describe material position, divine abundance, or wealth in faith, so no occurrence should be flattened into a single economic claim.
Scripture neither treats riches as proof of favor nor makes poverty automatically virtuous. Those rich in the present age face particular temptations toward pride and misplaced hope and receive particular commands toward generosity. Gospel richness is received from God, shared with neighbors, and ordered toward the kingdom rather than used to rank human worth.
Form in passage Nominative · Singular · Masculine What is this?
Sense wealthy or rich
Definition Rich, wealthy, or abounding.
References 2 Corinthians 8:9
Lexicon wealthy or rich
Why it matters Christ was rich before becoming poor, which points to His preexistent glory without implying He ceased to be divine.
Pastoral Entry
Πλουτέω means to be rich or become rich, and Paul repeatedly redefines the wealth that matters before God. In 1 Corinthians 4, “already you have become rich” is biting irony aimed at a triumphal church that imagines it reigns while the apostles suffer. First Timothy 6 commands materially wealthy believers not to set hope on uncertain riches but to become rich in good works, generosity, and readiness to share.
Second Corinthians 8 places all Christian enrichment under the grace of Jesus Christ, who though rich became poor for His people so that they might become rich through His poverty. The verb cannot be reduced to money, nor does it promise financial increase. Gospel riches are received in Christ and expressed through humble generosity.
Form in passage Aorist · Active · Subjunctive · 2nd Person · Plural What is this?
Sense to be enriched
Definition To be rich, become rich, or abound.
References 2 Corinthians 8:9
Lexicon to be enriched
Why it matters Believers are enriched through Christ’s grace, not necessarily with earthly wealth, but with salvation, covenant blessing, and participation in His life.
Pastoral Entry
G2005 is represented in this Pauline-focused companion by the reviewed display gloss "to complete." In Paul's letters, the term appears in passages such as 2Cor. 8. 11, Gal. 3. 3, Php. 1. 6, where the local argument determines whether the emphasis is doctrinal, ethical, pastoral, or ministry-related. The companion therefore treats To Complete 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 Aorist · Active · Subjunctive · 3rd Person · Singular What is this?
Sense to bring to completion
Definition To complete, finish, accomplish, or bring to an end.
References 2 Corinthians 8:6, 11
Lexicon to bring to completion
Why it matters Paul presses the Corinthians to complete what they began so that desire becomes faithful action.
Form in passage Nominative · Singular · Feminine What is this?
Sense willing eagerness
Definition Readiness, willingness, eager disposition.
References 2 Corinthians 8:11-12
Lexicon willing eagerness
Why it matters God receives willing generosity according to what one has, not according to what one does not have.
Form in passage Nominative · Singular · Feminine What is this?
Sense acceptable or well-received
Definition Acceptable, pleasing, or favorably received.
References 2 Corinthians 8:12
Lexicon acceptable or well-received
Why it matters Paul anchors giving in willing readiness, protecting poorer believers from guilt over what they cannot give.
Form in passage Genitive · Singular · Feminine What is this?
Sense fairness or equitable balance
Definition Equality, fairness, or proportionate balance.
References 2 Corinthians 8:13-14
Lexicon fairness or equitable balance
Why it matters The aim is relief and mutual supply within the people of God, not coerced leveling or neglect of local responsibility.
Form in passage Nominative · Singular · Neuter What is this?
Sense surplus or overflow
Definition That which abounds, surplus, abundance.
References 2 Corinthians 8:14
Lexicon surplus or overflow
Why it matters Paul describes present abundance serving another’s lack, anticipating reciprocal care within the body of Christ.
Pastoral Entry
G5303 names lack, deficiency, or what is missing. In Paul, the word often appears where need is met through costly fellowship. Second Corinthians uses it for the needs of the saints, where one church's abundance supplies another's lack and thanksgiving rises to God. Philippians uses related need language around ministry partnership and risk. Colossians 1 requires special care: Paul is not saying Christ's atoning suffering is deficient, but that Paul's apostolic sufferings fill out the appointed ministry of witness for the sake of the church.
The word helps teachers speak about need without shame, generosity without pride, and suffering without confusion about the sufficiency of Christ.
Form in passage Accusative · Singular · Neuter What is this?
Sense lack or deficiency
Definition Need, want, deficiency, or what is lacking.
References 2 Corinthians 8:14
Lexicon lack or deficiency
Why it matters The collection responds to concrete lack among the saints and trains the church in burden-bearing love.
Pastoral Entry
γράφω (graphō) is the ordinary Greek verb for writing, inscribing, or recording something in written form. In the New Testament its theological importance comes not from a hidden sacred meaning in the verb but from the things God has caused to be written and the purposes those writings serve. Jesus answers temptation with “It is written,” appealing to the settled authority of Scripture in context.
Luke writes an orderly account after careful investigation. John explains that selected signs are written so readers may believe and have life in Jesus' name. Paul identifies what he writes as the Lord's command, and Revelation commissions John to write what he sees for the churches. The verb can describe many kinds of writing, so not every occurrence is a doctrine of inspiration.
Taken in these passages, however, γράφω helps readers see written witness as durable, transmissible, publicly examinable testimony through which prophetic Scripture, apostolic instruction, Gospel proclamation, and apocalyptic exhortation serve God's people across distance and time.
Sense Scripture citation
Definition To write; in citation formulas, what stands written in Scripture.
References 2 Corinthians 8:15
Lexicon Scripture citation
Why it matters Paul quotes the manna narrative to show that God’s provision creates a pattern of shared sufficiency among His people.
Pastoral Entry
χάρις means grace, favor, or gift, and in the Pastoral Epistles it names God's generous saving favor in Christ, His strengthening supply for ministry, and the blessing that frames Christian life. The word appears in greetings and closings, but it is not merely a polite letter formula. Grace comes from God the Father and Christ Jesus our Lord. It overflows to Paul with faith and love in Christ.
It was granted in Christ Jesus before time began, appears with salvation for all people, trains believers for godly life, justifies sinners, and makes them heirs with the hope of eternal life. Paul can also use the word in thanksgiving, but the main pastoral weight is God's unearned favor that saves, strengthens, and forms a people for good works. Grace is therefore not permission to remain unchanged, and it is not a reward for spiritual effort.
In these letters, grace precedes works, creates faith and love, strengthens Timothy, brings salvation, trains renunciation of ungodliness, and secures inheritance. Teachers should keep all of that together. Grace is free, but never thin. It is mercy in motion through Christ that saves and forms the household of God.
Sense thanksgiving or grace
Definition Grace, favor, thanks, or gracious gift.
References 2 Corinthians 8:16
Lexicon thanksgiving or grace
Why it matters In 8:16 the same word family marks gratitude to God for Titus’s earnest concern, keeping the whole mission under divine grace.
Form in passage Accusative · Singular · Masculine What is this?
Sense Paul’s trusted coworker
Definition Titus, a named ministry partner of Paul.
References 2 Corinthians 8:6, 16, 23
Lexicon Paul’s trusted coworker
Why it matters Titus embodies earnest concern and provides personal continuity between Paul’s appeal and Corinth’s response.
Pastoral Entry
Κοινωνός names one who shares in something, a participant, companion, or partner. Paul uses the noun to describe bonds that are real because people share in an altar, in suffering and comfort, or in gospel fellowship. First Corinthians 10 warns that participation is morally and spiritually meaningful: those who eat Israel's sacrifices are participants in the altar, a comparison that supports Paul's prohibition of idolatrous fellowship.
Second Corinthians 1 comforts believers who share both affliction and consolation. Philemon 17 turns partnership into costly reception as Paul asks Philemon to welcome Onesimus as he would welcome Paul. The word is warmer and weightier than casual association. It does not erase personal identity or accountability, but it does show that shared allegiance creates obligations of holiness, endurance, welcome, and mutual care.
Form in passage Nominative · Singular · Masculine What is this?
Sense sharing partner
Definition Partner, sharer, companion, or participant.
References 2 Corinthians 8:23
Lexicon sharing partner
Why it matters Paul calls Titus his partner and fellow worker, showing that accountable ministry is shared rather than isolated.
Pastoral Entry
ἀπόστολος is derived from the verb ἀποστέλλω (to send out), and its core meaning is 'one sent' — a commissioned delegate acting with the authority and on behalf of the one who sent them. In the ancient world this word covered both formal ambassadors and practical messengers, always with the sense that the sender's authority travels with the sent one. In the NT the word carries a specific technical weight in two directions.
The narrow sense designates the Twelve who were chosen by Jesus, witnesses of his resurrection, and foundational to the church (Eph 2:20). The broader sense in Paul's letters can include others who were sent out by the Spirit and recognized by the churches — Barnabas (Acts 14:14), Andronicus and Junia (Rom 16:7), and Paul himself, whose apostolic authority he defends at length precisely because it did not derive from the Jerusalem circle (Gal 1:1).
The theological weight of ἀπόστολος rests on the logic of sending: the apostle's authority is derivative, not inherent. Jesus was himself first the apostle of the Father (Heb 3:1 calls him 'the Apostle and High Priest of our confession'), sent with full divine authority, and the Twelve participated in that sending as its extension. The commission of Matthew 28:18-20 — all authority in heaven and on earth given to Jesus, therefore the disciples are sent — is the apostolic logic made explicit: mission flows from the authority of the one who sends.
Form in passage Nominative · Plural · Masculine What is this?
Sense sent representatives
Definition Messenger, envoy, delegate, apostle.
References 2 Corinthians 8:23
Lexicon sent representatives
Why it matters The brothers are messengers of the churches, not unaccountable handlers of funds, which protects gospel integrity.
Pastoral Entry
δόξα means glory, honor, splendor, or radiance, and in the Pastoral Epistles it gathers the weight of gospel truth, worship, Christ's vindication, eternal salvation, final rescue, and the appearing of Jesus Christ. The word does not function as vague religious brightness. In 1 Timothy, the gospel entrusted to Paul agrees with the glorious gospel of the blessed God, and the King eternal receives honor and glory forever.
In the confession of godliness, Christ is taken up in glory. In 2 Timothy, Paul endures so that the elect may obtain salvation in Christ Jesus with eternal glory, and he closes his confidence in rescue with a doxology: to the Lord be glory forever. Titus places believers in hope as they await the blessed hope and glorious appearance of our great God and Savior Jesus Christ.
The word therefore links the message, the God who is worshiped, the Christ who is vindicated and appears, and the future inheritance of the saved. Pastoral teaching should keep that movement intact. δόξα is not human impressiveness. It is the radiance and honor of God revealed in the gospel, centered in Christ, received in hope, and returned to God in worship.
Sense honor and visible praise
Definition Glory, honor, splendor, or praise.
References 2 Corinthians 8:19, 23
Lexicon honor and visible praise
Why it matters The ministry of generosity is connected to the glory of Christ, preventing the collection from being reduced to institutional finance.
Form in passage Present · Active · Indicative · 1st Person · Plural What is this?
Sense to give forethought
Definition To think beforehand, provide for, take thought for what is honorable.
References 2 Corinthians 8:21
Lexicon to give forethought
Why it matters Paul takes pains to do what is honorable before the Lord and people, modeling transparent stewardship.
Pastoral Entry
καλός means good, beautiful, noble, fitting, honorable, or commendable. It is not merely a bland synonym for morally acceptable. In Scripture the word often names goodness that has recognizable quality: good fruit, good soil, good works, a good conscience, a noble task, a good confession, a good fight, and a good deposit. The term can carry moral worth, visible beauty, public honor, and fitness for purpose.
In the Pastoral Epistles, καλός becomes a key adjective for the church's visible life. Overseership is a noble task. Widows are known by good deeds. Timothy fights the good fight and guards the good deposit. Believers are to be rich in good works, ready for every good work, and zealous for good deeds. This goodness does not save as merit, and it is not religious display for self-glory.
It is the fitting beauty of life shaped by God's saving grace, sound teaching, and the hope of eternal life. καλός therefore helps teachers show that Christian goodness is visible without becoming performative, public without becoming proud, and beautiful because it fits the gospel that produced it. In the Pastorals, the good life is not vague niceness. It is doctrine embodied in noble conduct, generous service, guarded truth, and persevering faith.
The word also protects goodness from being reduced to private intention. Paul expects goodness to be seen in reputation, service, leadership, confession, and need-meeting generosity. At the same time, he keeps it accountable to Christ's redeeming work, so what is publicly good remains humble, holy, and useful rather than self-advertising.
Form in passage Accusative · Plural · Neuter What is this?
Sense good, noble, honorable
Definition Good, beautiful, noble, useful, or honorable.
References 2 Corinthians 8:21
Lexicon good, noble, honorable
Why it matters The handling of the gift must be visibly honorable both before God and before people.
Cross-language bridge 1 link · View in lexicon
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 Genitive · Singular · Feminine What is this?
Sense confidence or boasting
Definition Boasting, glorying, or ground of confidence.
References 2 Corinthians 8:24
Lexicon confidence or boasting
Why it matters Paul’s boasting about the Corinthians must become visibly true through their completed love.
Form in passage Accusative · Singular · Feminine What is this?
Sense demonstration or proof
Definition Proof, evidence, demonstration, or showing.
References 2 Corinthians 8:24
Lexicon demonstration or proof
Why it matters Paul calls for a visible proof of love before the churches, not hidden intention alone.
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 (48 main verbs)
| v.1 | Γνωρίζομενgnōrízōknowpresent active indicativeongoingPresent indicative — ongoing, habitual, or general truthδεδομένηνdídōmigivenperfect passive participleparticipleParticiple — verbal adjective, supporting action |
| v.2 | ἐπερίσσευσενperisseúōoverflowedaorist active indicativecompletedAorist indicative — punctiliar or completed action |
| v.3 | μαρτυρῶmartyréōtestifypresent active indicativeongoingPresent indicative — ongoing, habitual, or general truth |
| v.4 | δεόμενοιdéomaibeggingpresent middle participleparticipleParticiple — verbal adjective, supporting action |
| v.5 | ἠλπίσαμενelpízōexpectedaorist active indicativecompletedAorist indicative — punctiliar or completed actionἔδωκανdídōmigaveaorist active indicativecompletedAorist indicative — punctiliar or completed action |
| v.6 | παρακαλέσαιparakaléōurgedaorist active infinitiveinfinitiveInfinitive — verbal noun or complementary verbπροενήρξατοproenárchomaibegunaorist middle indicativecompletedAorist indicative — punctiliar or completed actionἐπιτελέσῃepiteléōcompleteaorist active subjunctivesubjunctiveSubjunctive mood — conditional, purpose, or contingent |
| v.7 | περισσεύετεperisseúōexcelpresent active indicativeongoingPresent indicative — ongoing, habitual, or general truthπερισσεύητεperisseúōexcelpresent active subjunctivesubjunctiveSubjunctive mood — conditional, purpose, or contingent |
| v.8 | λέγωlégōsayingpresent active indicativeongoingPresent indicative — ongoing, habitual, or general truthδοκιμάζωνdokimázōtestingpresent active participleparticipleParticiple — verbal adjective, supporting action |
| v.9 | γινώσκετεginṓskōknowpresent active indicativeongoingPresent indicative — ongoing, habitual, or general truthἐπτώχευσενptōcheúōbecame pooraorist active indicativecompletedAorist indicative — punctiliar or completed actionπλουτήσητεploutéōrichaorist active subjunctivesubjunctiveSubjunctive mood — conditional, purpose, or contingent |
| v.10 | δίδωμιdídōmigivingpresent active indicativeongoingPresent indicative — ongoing, habitual, or general truthσυμφέρειsymphérōappropriatepresent active indicativeongoingPresent indicative — ongoing, habitual, or general truthποιῆσαιpoiéōdoaorist active infinitiveinfinitiveInfinitive — verbal noun or complementary verbθέλεινthélōdesirepresent active infinitiveinfinitiveInfinitive — verbal noun or complementary verbπροενήρξασθεproenárchomaibeganaorist middle indicativecompletedAorist indicative — punctiliar or completed action |
| v.11 | ποιῆσαιpoiéōdoingaorist active infinitiveinfinitiveInfinitive — verbal noun or complementary verbἐπιτελέσατεepiteléōfinishaorist active imperativeimperativeImperative mood — command or exhortationθέλεινthélōdesirepresent active infinitiveinfinitiveInfinitive — verbal noun or complementary verbἐπιτελέσαιepiteléōcompletionaorist active infinitiveinfinitiveInfinitive — verbal noun or complementary verbἔχεινéchōhavepresent active infinitiveinfinitiveInfinitive — verbal noun or complementary verb |
| v.12 | πρόκειταιprókeimaiispresent middle indicativeongoingPresent indicative — ongoing, habitual, or general truthἔχῃéchōhaspresent active subjunctivesubjunctiveSubjunctive mood — conditional, purpose, or contingentἔχειéchōhavepresent active indicativeongoingPresent indicative — ongoing, habitual, or general truth |
| v.14 | γένηταιgínomaibeaorist middle subjunctivesubjunctiveSubjunctive mood — conditional, purpose, or contingentγένηταιgínomaibeaorist middle subjunctivesubjunctiveSubjunctive mood — conditional, purpose, or contingent |
| v.15 | γέγραπταιgráphōwrittenperfect passive indicativeresultantPerfect indicative — completed action with present resultἐπλεόνασενpleonázōhave too muchaorist active indicativecompletedAorist indicative — punctiliar or completed actionἠλαττόνησενelattonéōhave too littleaorist active indicativecompletedAorist indicative — punctiliar or completed action |
| v.16 | διδόντιdídōmihaving givenpresent active participleparticipleParticiple — verbal adjective, supporting action |
| v.17 | ἐδέξατοdéchomaiacceptedaorist middle indicativecompletedAorist indicative — punctiliar or completed actionἐξῆλθενexérchomaiwent outaorist active indicativecompletedAorist indicative — punctiliar or completed action |
| v.18 | συνεπέμψαμενsympémpōsentaorist active indicativecompletedAorist indicative — punctiliar or completed action |
| v.19 | χειροτονηθεὶςcheirotonéōappointedaorist passive participleparticipleParticiple — verbal adjective, supporting actionδιακονουμένῃdiakonéōadministeredpresent passive participleparticipleParticiple — verbal adjective, supporting action |
| v.20 | στελλόμενοιstéllōavoidpresent middle participleparticipleParticiple — verbal adjective, supporting actionμωμήσηταιmōmáomaiblameaorist middle subjunctivesubjunctiveSubjunctive mood — conditional, purpose, or contingentδιακονουμένῃdiakonéōadministeredpresent passive participleparticipleParticiple — verbal adjective, supporting action |
| v.21 | προνοοῦμενpronoéōintendpresent active indicativeongoingPresent indicative — ongoing, habitual, or general truth |
| v.22 | συνεπέμψαμενsympémpōsent withaorist active indicativecompletedAorist indicative — punctiliar or completed actionἐδοκιμάσαμενdokimázōtestedaorist active indicativecompletedAorist indicative — punctiliar or completed action |
| v.24 | ἐνδεικνύμενοιendeíknymishowpresent middle participleparticipleParticiple — verbal adjective, supporting action |
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 is that grace received from God must become grace embodied through voluntary, proportionate, and accountable generosity. He does not detach giving from doctrine, nor does he turn it into coercion. He begins with grace at work in the Macedonians, tests the sincerity of Corinthian love, centers the appeal in Christ’s self-giving poverty, and protects the offering through transparent stewardship.
Grace given by God produces self-giving to the Lord, tested love toward the saints, Christ-shaped generosity, equitable supply, and visible integrity before the churches.
- 1.God’s grace had already produced unexpected generosity among afflicted and poor Macedonian believers.
- 2.The Macedonians’ self-giving to the Lord reveals that Christian giving is worship before it is transaction.
- 3.Because the Corinthians claim to excel in spiritual gifts and affection, their love should become concrete through completion of the collection.
- 4.Paul does not command coercively but tests genuineness by placing Corinth’s love beside the earnestness of others.
- 5.The decisive theological ground is the grace of Christ, whose voluntary humiliation enriches His people.
- 6.Willingness and proportionality protect the weak: the gift is acceptable according to what one has, not according to what one does not have.
- 7.The manna citation frames material sharing within the covenant people as a pattern of God-given sufficiency, not anxious hoarding.
- 8.The sending of Titus and recognized brothers shows that gospel work requires public integrity in handling resources.
Theological Focus
- Grace as the source and shape of generosity
- Christ’s voluntary humiliation for the enrichment of His people
- Love tested through practical completion
- Voluntary giving without coercion
- Proportional generosity according to what one has
- Mutual care among the saints
- Integrity and accountability in ministry stewardship
- The glory of Christ in church partnership
- The unity of doctrine, affection, and material service
- Grace embodied
- Christ-shaped generosity
- Sincere love tested
- Equitable supply among God’s people
- Transparent stewardship
- Grace
- Christology
- Sanctification
- Stewardship
- Ecclesiology
- Love
- Good Works
- Unity of the Church
- Christian Liberty and Responsibility
- Ministry Integrity
Theological Themes
Grace is not only a status received but a power that reshapes worship, priorities, and material relationships.
The pattern of giving is not Corinthian patronage but the gracious self-humbling of the Lord Jesus Christ.
Paul treats practical generosity as evidence that professed love is genuine and complete.
The church practices mutual care so that abundance answers need without crushing the giver or shaming the receiver.
Money handled for ministry must be administered in a way that is honorable before both God and people.
Covenant Significance
Second Corinthians 8 shows new-covenant generosity as the fruit of Christ’s grace and the continuation of God’s pattern of caring for His people through shared provision. The manna citation does not impose the Mosaic economy on the church, but it does show continuity in God’s concern that His people receive provision without hoarding, neglect, or self-exalting display.
- New-covenant grace produces material care - The collection is a practical expression of Spirit-formed love among believers who belong to Christ.
- Self-giving before gift-giving - The Macedonians first gave themselves to the Lord, showing that covenant loyalty precedes and governs material generosity.
- Manna-shaped sufficiency - The quotation from Exodus 16:18 links the church’s mutual care to God’s provision pattern in Israel’s wilderness life.
- Inter-church fellowship - Gentile-majority churches participate in service to the saints, displaying cross-regional unity within the one people of God in Christ.
- No coercive replacement of stewardship - Paul calls for willing, proportionate giving and does not erase responsibility, prudence, or local household obligations.
- Exodus 16:18 - Paul quotes the manna narrative to frame shared sufficiency among God’s people.
- Deuteronomy 15:7-11 - The law’s concern for openhanded care for the poor provides broader covenant background for generous relief.
- Proverbs 11:24-25 - Wisdom’s pattern of generous blessing resonates with Paul’s call to cheerful, openhanded love.
Canonical Connections
Paul quotes Exodus 16:18 to show that God’s provision among His people creates a pattern where abundance and lack are held under divine sufficiency rather than selfish accumulation.
The appeal resonates with Torah’s concern that God’s people not harden their hearts toward poor brothers, while Paul applies the principle within new-covenant church fellowship.
The statement that Christ became poor for His people stands alongside the wider apostolic witness to His voluntary humiliation and servant obedience.
Second Corinthians 8 belongs to Paul’s wider collection effort, closely related to instructions and reports in 1 Corinthians and Romans.
Paul’s concern for the collection aligns with the apostolic priority of remembering the poor as part of gospel ministry.
Paul’s teaching elsewhere that believers abound in good works and share with the saints parallels the grace-shaped generosity of this chapter.
Paul’s care to do what is honorable before the Lord and people fits the broader apostolic pattern of public integrity and credible witness.
The collection embodies the gospel’s mission-shaped unity as churches in different regions share in one another’s burdens in Christ.
Jesus’ teaching on treasure, poverty, and trust provides a Gospel backdrop for understanding generosity as allegiance to God rather than anxiety over possessions.
Practical service is not beneath theology; it becomes a context where Christ is honored and displayed through the churches.
Cross References
So let a man think of us as Christ’s servants, and stewards of God’s mysteries. Here, moreover, it is required of stewards that they be found faithful.
As each has received a gift, employ it in serving one another, as good managers of the grace of God in its various forms. If anyone speaks, let it be as it were the very words of God. If anyone serves, let it be as of the strength which...
For you know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, that though he was rich, yet for your sakes he became poor, that you through his poverty might become rich.
I coveted no one’s silver, gold, or clothing. You yourselves know that these hands served my necessities, and those who were with me. In all things I gave you an example, that so laboring you ought to help the weak, and to remember the...
In all things I gave you an example, that so laboring you ought to help the weak, and to remember the words of the Lord Jesus, that he himself said, ‘It is more blessed to give than to receive.’”
Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places in Christ, even as he chose us in him before the foundation of the world, that we would be holy and without...
But when the fullness of the time came, God sent out his Son, born to a woman, born under the law, that he might redeem those who were under the law, that we might receive the adoption of children. And because you are children, God sent...
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.
From his fullness we all received grace upon grace. For the law was given through Moses. Grace and truth were realized through Jesus Christ.
A new commandment I give to you, that you love one another. Just as I have loved you, you also love one another. By this everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another.”
He who is faithful in a very little is faithful also in much. He who is dishonest in a very little is also dishonest in much. If therefore you have not been faithful in the unrighteous mammon, who will commit to your trust the true riches?...
For the Son of Man also came not to be served, but to serve, and to give his life as a ransom for many.”
Have this in your mind, which was also in Christ Jesus, who, existing in the form of God, didn’t consider equality with God a thing to be grasped, but emptied himself, taking the form of a servant, being made in the likeness of men.
But now, I say, I am going to Jerusalem, serving the saints. For it has been the good pleasure of Macedonia and Achaia to make a certain contribution for the poor among the saints who are at Jerusalem. Yes, it has been their good pleasure,...
If a poor man, one of your brothers, is with you within any of your gates in your land which Yahweh your God gives you, you shall not harden your heart, nor shut your hand from your poor brother; but you shall surely open your hand to him,...
“This is the thing which Yahweh has commanded: ‘Gather of it everyone according to his eating; an omer a head, according to the number of your persons, you shall take it, every man for those who are in his tent.’ ” The children of Israel...
Moreover you shall provide out of all the people able men which fear God: men of truth, hating unjust gain; and place such over them, to be rulers of thousands, rulers of hundreds, rulers of fifties, and rulers of tens.
“Hey! Come, everyone who thirsts, to the waters! Come, he who has no money, buy, and eat! Yes, come, buy wine and milk without money and without price. Why do you spend money for that which is not bread, and your labor for that which...
and the land is subdued before Yahweh; then afterward you shall return, and be clear of obligation to Yahweh and to Israel. Then this land shall be your possession before Yahweh.
There is one who scatters, and increases yet more. There is one who withholds more than is appropriate, but gains poverty. The liberal soul shall be made fat. He who waters shall be watered also himself.
The integrity of the upright shall guide them, but the perverseness of the treacherous shall destroy them.
He who has pity on the poor lends to Yahweh; he will reward him.
A good name is more desirable than great riches, and loving favor is better than silver and gold.
Don’t let kindness and truth forsake you. Bind them around your neck. Write them on the tablet of your heart. So you will find favor, and good understanding in the sight of God and man.
For the love of Christ constrains us; because we judge thus, that one died for all, therefore all died. He died for all, that those who live should no longer live to themselves, but to him who for their sakes died and rose again. Therefore...
We give no occasion of stumbling in anything, that our service may not be blamed, but in everything commending ourselves, as servants of God, in great endurance, in afflictions, in hardships, in distresses, in beatings, in imprisonments,...
For even when we had come into Macedonia, our flesh had no relief, but we were afflicted on every side. Fightings were outside. Fear was inside. Nevertheless, he who comforts the lowly, God, comforted us by the coming of Titus, and not by...
Moreover, brothers, we make known to you the grace of God which has been given in the assemblies of Macedonia, how in much proof of affliction, the abundance of their joy and their deep poverty abounded to the riches of their generosity....
Moreover, brothers, we make known to you the grace of God which has been given in the assemblies of Macedonia, how in much proof of affliction, the abundance of their joy and their deep poverty abounded to the riches of their generosity....
Canon-Wide Connections
Cross-reference data: OpenBible.info (CC BY 4.0)
The gospel center of 2 Corinthians 8 is the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ: though rich, He became poor for His people, so that through His poverty they might become rich. Christian generosity is therefore not a means of earning grace but a fruit of receiving grace. Christ’s self-giving saves and enriches His people, then forms them into a community that gives willingly, proportionately, and honorably.
- Grace precedes giving - The chapter begins with the grace of God given, not with human achievement.
- Christ is the pattern and ground - The Lord Jesus Christ’s voluntary poverty for sinners supplies the theological center of the appeal.
- Giving is fruit, not merit - Generosity tests love and displays grace, but it does not purchase salvation or divine favor.
- The church becomes a grace-shaped community - Those enriched by Christ are formed into people who share with saints in need.
- Integrity protects gospel witness - Because the gift is connected to Christ’s glory, it must be administered honorably.
- Do not turn 8:9 into a prosperity formula promising material wealth to all believers.
- Do not make generosity the basis of justification · it is the fruit of grace and love.
- Do not bypass Christ’s own self-humbling by making the chapter merely about church fundraising.
- Do not weaponize the Macedonian example against poor believers · Paul explicitly honors proportion and willingness.
- Do not detach generosity from integrity · gospel-shaped giving requires gospel-shaped administration.
So let a man think of us as Christ’s servants, and stewards of God’s mysteries. Here, moreover, it is required of stewards that they be found faithful.
As each has received a gift, employ it in serving one another, as good managers of the grace of God in its various forms. If anyone speaks, let it be as it were the very words of God. If anyone serves, let it be as of the strength which...
For you know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, that though he was rich, yet for your sakes he became poor, that you through his poverty might become rich.
I coveted no one’s silver, gold, or clothing. You yourselves know that these hands served my necessities, and those who were with me. In all things I gave you an example, that so laboring you ought to help the weak, and to remember the...
In all things I gave you an example, that so laboring you ought to help the weak, and to remember the words of the Lord Jesus, that he himself said, ‘It is more blessed to give than to receive.’”
Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places in Christ, even as he chose us in him before the foundation of the world, that we would be holy and without...
But when the fullness of the time came, God sent out his Son, born to a woman, born under the law, that he might redeem those who were under the law, that we might receive the adoption of children. And because you are children, God sent...
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.
From his fullness we all received grace upon grace. For the law was given through Moses. Grace and truth were realized through Jesus Christ.
A new commandment I give to you, that you love one another. Just as I have loved you, you also love one another. By this everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another.”
He who is faithful in a very little is faithful also in much. He who is dishonest in a very little is also dishonest in much. If therefore you have not been faithful in the unrighteous mammon, who will commit to your trust the true riches?...
For the Son of Man also came not to be served, but to serve, and to give his life as a ransom for many.”
Have this in your mind, which was also in Christ Jesus, who, existing in the form of God, didn’t consider equality with God a thing to be grasped, but emptied himself, taking the form of a servant, being made in the likeness of men.
But now, I say, I am going to Jerusalem, serving the saints. For it has been the good pleasure of Macedonia and Achaia to make a certain contribution for the poor among the saints who are at Jerusalem. Yes, it has been their good pleasure,...
Primary Emphasis
Second Corinthians 8:9 gives the chapter its gospel center: the Lord Jesus Christ, rich in preexistent divine glory, willingly entered poverty and humiliation for His people so that through His poverty they might become rich. This does not teach that Christ ceased to be God or promises earthly wealth to every believer. It teaches that His incarnate self-giving grace is the pattern and power beneath Christian generosity.
Chapter Contribution
Paul’s argument is that grace received from God must become grace embodied through voluntary, proportionate, and accountable generosity. He does not detach giving from doctrine, nor does he turn it into coercion. He begins with grace at work in the Macedonians, tests the sincerity of Corinthian love, centers the appeal in Christ’s self-giving poverty, and protects the offering through transparent stewardship.
New covenant giving is sincere, willing, completed, proportionate to means, and shaped by Christ rather than by command, pressure, or display.
Material gifts entrusted for ministry must be handled with accountability, openness, and a concern for what is honorable before God and people.
Paul involves recognized representatives of the churches so the administration of the collection is not isolated, opaque, or dependent on personal authority alone.
The churches belong to one body across geography and circumstance, so the need of one congregation can become the loving responsibility of another.
Even logistical ministry is part of gospel service when it advances care for the saints, honors the Lord, and protects the credibility of the church's witness.
God's grace not only forgives and comforts but produces concrete generosity, endurance, and willingness to participate in the needs of the saints.
Christ's self-giving poverty for His people is the decisive theological ground for Christian generosity and the clearest gospel center of this giving appeal.
Paul treats generosity as a test of the genuineness of love, meaning love must move beyond profession into concrete care for needy saints.
God works within the hearts of servants, giving earnest concern for His people and raising up trustworthy workers for gospel ministry.
The Corinthians' faith, speech, knowledge, earnestness, and love must mature into obedient generosity, showing that grace shapes the whole life.
Believers' resources are entrusted to them for faithful service, and even poverty does not exclude meaningful participation when grace creates willing generosity.
Grace is the divine source and controlling framework for generosity, service, and thanksgiving throughout the chapter.
Christ’s richness, voluntary poverty, and enriching grace reveal His preexistent glory and saving humiliation.
Believers are formed by grace into people whose love becomes practical, willing, and complete obedience.
Material resources are to be used for ministry to the saints with willingness, proportion, fairness, and accountability.
The churches participate together in fellowship, service, and accountability, showing that congregations are bound together in Christ.
Love is tested and made visible through concrete care, not merely professed through affection or rhetoric.
The collection is a grace-produced good work that follows salvation and serves real need among the saints.
The inter-regional collection displays fellowship between churches and shared responsibility for the saints.
Paul appeals without coercive command, while still urging responsible completion of a freely embraced commitment.
Paul’s careful handling of the collection teaches that public ministry must be visibly honorable before God and people.
Theological exposition and fulfillment
- The gospel center of 2 Corinthians 8 is the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ: though rich, He became poor for His people, so that through His poverty they might become rich. Christian generosity is therefore not a means of earning grace but a fruit of receiving grace. Christ’s self-giving saves and enriches His people, then forms them into a community that gives willingly, proportionately, and honorably.
Grace is not inert; the grace of God given in Christ creates a people whose love becomes willing, proportionate, and accountable generosity.
A church may be gifted in speech and knowledge yet immature in love if it does not complete practical care for the saints with integrity.
Willing, Christ-shaped, trustworthy generosity that gives itself first to the Lord and then serves the body with joy, fairness, and honor.
- Identify an unfinished act of generosity, mercy, or partnership and bring it to faithful completion.
- Review whether giving practices are willing, proportionate, and free from manipulative pressure.
- Strengthen financial accountability so ministry resources are handled honorably before God and people.
- Connect every stewardship appeal to the grace of Christ rather than to institutional anxiety.
- Teach the church to see benevolence and missions support as fellowship with the saints, not detached charity.
- The chapter warns against giftedness without embodied love, good intentions without completion, giving without willingness, appeals without integrity, and financial ministry handled in ways that invite suspicion or dishonor.
- Treating 2 Corinthians 8 as a prosperity promise that Christ became poor so believers will become materially wealthy. - Paul’s focus is the saving grace and self-humbling of Christ, which enriches believers in Him and produces generosity, not a guarantee of earthly riches.
- Using the Macedonian example to pressure poor believers into irresponsible giving. - Paul honors voluntary eagerness but later states that a gift is acceptable according to what one has, not according to what one does not have.
- Reducing the chapter to fundraising strategy. - The chapter is theological and pastoral: grace, love, Christ’s self-giving, fellowship, fairness, and integrity govern the collection.
- Reading equality as coerced economic leveling detached from willingness and stewardship. - Paul speaks of fair supply within the church’s mutual care, guarded by readiness, proportion, and relief of need.
- Assuming sincerity alone is enough without visible completion. - Paul calls the Corinthians to finish what they began so that readiness becomes faithful action.
- Treating financial accountability as distrustful or unspiritual. - Paul deliberately sends recognized brothers and takes pains to do what is honorable before the Lord and people.
- Using the chapter to shame the wealthy while romanticizing poverty. - Paul does not shame wealth itself or romanticize lack · he calls abundance to serve need under the grace of Christ.
- Where has God’s grace already produced generosity in others that should encourage, not shame, our obedience?
- Have we given ourselves first to the Lord, or are we trying to practice generosity without surrender?
- Do our faith, speech, knowledge, and zeal become concrete love for real people with real needs?
- What good intention have we begun but not yet completed?
- Are we giving according to what we have, or hiding behind what we do not have?
- Do we confuse voluntary sacrifice with irresponsible pressure placed on vulnerable people?
- How does Christ’s becoming poor for us correct both selfishness and self-exalting generosity?
- Do our financial practices as a church look honorable before the Lord and before people?
- Where does abundance in one part of the body need to answer need in another part of the body?
- What visible proof of love would strengthen the church’s witness right now?
- Preaching - Preach generosity from grace, not guilt. Let the Macedonian example encourage faith, but let 8:12 guard poorer saints from being crushed by appeals that ignore proportion and willingness.
- Church leadership - Build financial processes that are visibly honorable: shared oversight, recognized servants, clear communication, and no unnecessary secrecy around ministry funds.
- Discipleship - Teach believers to connect giving with worship, fellowship, love, completion, and Christ’s self-giving rather than treating generosity as an isolated budget line.
- Counseling - Help burdened believers distinguish between Spirit-formed willingness and manipulative pressure. The gift is acceptable according to what one has.
- Missions and benevolence - Use this chapter to frame inter-church partnership: churches with abundance can serve churches or saints in need without superiority, control, or patronage.
- Stewardship training - Pair calls to generosity with integrity in administration. Paul does not separate the appeal from the trustworthy handling of the gift.
- Conflict recovery - After reconciliation, renewed partnership should become practical. Chapters 7 and 8 together show that restored affection should bear fruit in shared mission.
- Youth and family discipleship - Teach that generosity is not only for the wealthy · even small gifts, given willingly to the Lord, can become a real expression of grace-shaped love.
A.T. Robertson, Word Pictures in the New Testament (1930–31) — public domain
The Biblical World
Chapter At A Glance
Paul moves from the Macedonians’ grace-shaped generosity, to an appeal for Corinth to complete its own gift, to the Christological ground of giving, and finally to the accountable sending of Titus and the brothers so generosity becomes a visible proof of love and a glory to Christ.
Second Corinthians 8 shows new-covenant generosity as the fruit of Christ’s grace and the continuation of God’s pattern of caring for His people through shared provision. The manna citation does not impose the Mosaic economy on the church, but it does show continuity in God’s concern that His people receive provision without hoarding, neglect, or self-exalting display.
The gospel center of 2 Corinthians 8 is the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ: though rich, He became poor for His people, so that through His poverty they might become rich. Christian generosity is therefore not a means of earning grace but a fruit of receiving grace. Christ’s self-giving saves and enriches His people, then forms them into a community that gives willingly, proportionately, and honorably.
Willing, Christ-shaped, trustworthy generosity that gives itself first to the Lord and then serves the body with joy, fairness, and honor.
Focus Points
- Grace as the source and shape of generosity
- Christ’s voluntary humiliation for the enrichment of His people
- Love tested through practical completion
- Voluntary giving without coercion
- Proportional generosity according to what one has
- Mutual care among the saints
- Integrity and accountability in ministry stewardship
- The glory of Christ in church partnership
- The unity of doctrine, affection, and material service
- Grace embodied
- Christ-shaped generosity
- Sincere love tested
- Equitable supply among God’s people
- Transparent stewardship
- Grace
- Christology
- Sanctification
- Stewardship
- Ecclesiology
- Love
- Good Works
- Unity of the Church
- Christian Liberty and Responsibility
- Ministry Integrity
Cross References
Passages
Chapter opening: 2 Corinthians 8:1-7
The grace (την χαριν). As manifested in the collection in the churches, poor as they were. The Romans had lacerated Macedonia (Livy, XLV. 30).
Proof (δοκιμη). Tests as of metals as in 2:9 . Abundance (περισσεια). Late word from περισσευω, to overflow. Their deep poverty (η κατα βαθους πτωχεια αυτων). Πτωχεια is old word from πτωχευω, to be a beggar, as of Jesus in 8:9 (from πτωχος, cowering in fear and poverty, as in Lu 14:13 , but ennobled by Christ as in Mt 5:3 ; 2Co 8:9 ). Poverty down deep. Strabo (LX 419) has κατα βαθους, down to the bottom.
Liberality (απλοτητος). From απλους, single, simple ( Mt 6:22 ). "The passage from single-mindedness or simplicity to liberality is not quite obvious" (Plummer). Perhaps "heartiness" supplies the connecting link. See also 9:11-13 .
Beyond their power (παρα δυναμιν). "Alongside" with accusative like υπερ δυναμιν in 1:8 . Field ( Ot. Nov .) quotes Josephus ( Ant . iii. 6, 1) for κατα δυναμιν and παρα δυναμιν as here. Few give κατα δυναμιν (according to actual ability). Paul commends this high pressure collection because of the emergency. Of their own accord (αυθαιρετο). Old verbal adjective (αυτοσ, αιρετος from αιρεομα, to choose), of their own initiative, voluntary.
Only here and verse 17 in N. T. Papyri often have εκουσιως κα αυθαιρετως (willingly and voluntarily).
Beseeching us with much intreaty in regard of this grace (μετα πολλης παρακλησεως δεομενο ημων την χαριν). Literally, "with much intreaty begging of us the favour and the partnership in the ministry to the saints." The accusative (χαριν) after δεομα is unusual. By χαρις Paul means the privilege of giving (cf. Ac 24:27 ). Apparently Paul had been reluctant to press the Macedonians because of their manifest poverty. They demanded the right to have a share in it.
We had hoped (ηλπισαμεν). First aorist active indicative of ελπιζω. "Expected," he means. They went beyond his hopes about them. First they gave their own selves (εαυτους εδωκαν πρωτον). First aorist active indicative of διδωμ (k aorist). "Themselves they gave first." That is the explanation of the generous giving.
Insomuch that we exhorted Titus (εις το παρακαλεσα ημας Τιτον). Use of εις το and the infinitive for result with accusative of general reference (ημας). See Robertson, Grammar , p. 1003. He had made a beginning before (προενηρξατο). First aorist active indicative of the double compound verb προ-εν-αρχομα, still found only here and verse 10 , to make a start before others. Complete (επιτελεσε) First aorist (effective) active subjunctive of επιτελεω, to finish, with perfective use of επ in composition.
In this grace also (κα εν ταυτη τη χαριτ). This gifted church ( 1Co 12-14 ) had fallen behind in the grace of giving. Kindly irony in this allusion.
Proving (δοκιμαζων). Testing and so proving. The sincerity also of your love (κα το της υμετερας αγαπης γνησιον). Old adjective, contraction of γενεσιος (γινομα), legitimately born, not spurious. A collection is a test of one's love for Christ, not the only test, but a real one.
Though he was rich (πλουσιος ων). Concessive present participle ων from ειμ, to be. Be became poor (επτωχευσεν). Ingressive aorist active indicative of πτωχευω (see verse 2 on πτωχεια). Through his poverty (τη εκεινου πτωχεια). Instrumental case, by means of. Might become rich (πλουτησητε). Ingressive first aorist active subjunctive of πλουτεω, to be rich with ινα (that). See on Lu 1:53 ; 1Co 4:8 .
Judgment (γνωμην). Deliberate opinion, but not a "command" (επιταγη verse 8 ). Cf. 1Co 7:25 . A year ago (απο περυσ) From last year. Not only to do, but also to will (ου μονον το ποιησαι, αλλα κα το θελειν). Articular infinitives the objects of προενηρξασθε on which verb see verse 6 ). That is to say, the Corinthians promised before any others.
The readiness to will (η προθυμια του θελειν). Old word from προθυμος (προ, θυμος), forwardness, eagerness ( Ac 17:11 ). They were quick to pledge. The completion also (κα το επιτελεσα). The finishing also (articular first aorist active infinitive). Out of your ability (εκ του εχειν). "Out of the having," literally, and so, "out of what you can give" (verse 12 ).
Is there (προκειτα). Lies before one. Old word. Acceptable (ευπροσδεκτος). See on 6:2 . According as a man hath (καθο εαν εχη). Indefinite comparative clause with εαν and present subjunctive εχε. Clearly God does not expect us to give what we do not have. Not according as he hath not (ου καθο ουκ εχε). Note present indicative rather than subjunctive because a specific case is presented. See 9:7 ; Mr 12:43 .
Others may be eased (αλλοις ανεσις). "Release to others." Ye distressed (υμιν θλιψις). "To you tribulation." The verb η (present subjunctive) with ινα is not expressed.
By equality (εξ ισοτητος). Old word from ισος, fair, equal. In N.T. only here and Col 4:1 . Abundancy (περισσευμα). Late word from περισσευω like περισσεια (verse 2 ) Cf. Mt 12:34 . Want (υστερημα). Late word from υστερεω, to be in want. See also 9:12 ; Lu 21:4 (cf. υστερησις in Mr 12:44 ).
Which putteth (τω διδοντ). Present active articular participle, "who is continually giving." Hence Titus is full of zealous care for you.
Very earnest (σπουδαιοτερος). "More earnest than ordinarily," comparative adjective.
We have sent with him (συνεπεμψαμεν μετ' αυτου). Epistolary aorist. The brother (τον αδελφον). This may be, probably is, Luke who may also be the brother of Titus (see also 12:18 ) according to a common Greek idiom where the article is used as "his." But this idiom is not necessary. As a matter of fact, we do not know who this brother is. Is spread through all the churches (δια πασων των εκκλησιων). No verb in the Greek (ellipsis).
But who was also appointed (αλλα κα χειροτονηθεις). Anacoluthon. The first aorist passive participle χειροτονηθεις is from χειροτονεω, old verb to stretch out the hands (χειρ τεινω) and so to vote in public. The idea is that this brother was chosen by the churches, not by Paul. Only here in N. T. save Ac 14:23 where it means to appoint without notion of raising the hands.
In Ac 10:41 we have προχειροτονεω. To travel with us (συνεκδημος). Late word for travelling companion. So in the inscriptions (συν, together with, εκδημος, away from home).
Avoiding this (στελλομενο τουτο). Present middle participle of στελλω, old verb, to set, to arrange. So "arranging for ourselves this." That any man should blame us (μη τις ημας μωμησητα). Literally, "lest any one blame us" (negative purpose with μη and first aorist middle subjunctive of μωμεομα. See on 6:3 , only other N.T. example). Bounty (αδροτητ). Old word from αδρος, thick, stout, ripe, rich, great as in 1Ki 1:9 ; 2Ki 10:6 . Only here in N.T.
We take thought (προνουμεν). Old verb, to plan beforehand (προ-) as in Ro 12:17 ; 1Ti 5:8 . But also in the sight of men (αλλα κα ενωπιον ανθρωπων). It is not enough for one's financial accounts to be honourable (καλα) as God sees them, but they should be so kept that men can understand them also. A timely warning. Paul took the utmost pains that no suspicion could be attached to him in this collection.
Our brother (τον αδελφον ημων). Not Paul's personal brother, but a brother in Christ, one whom Paul had tested and was willing to trust. It may have been Tychicus or Apollos, but we do not know.
About Titus (υπερ Τιτου). There is no verb expressed. Supply "inquire." He endorses Titus up to the hilt. He is "my partner" (κοινωνος εμος) and "fellow-worker" (συνεργος). Messengers of the churches (αποστολο εκκλησιων). Apostles in the general sense of "sent ones" (from αποστελλω, to send) by the churches and responsible to the churches for the handling of the funds. The glory of Christ (δοξα Χριστου). Financial agents, please observe.
The proof of your love (την ενδειξιν της αγαπης υμων). There is a word here for pastors and deacons who try to protect the churches from the denominational representatives of kingdom causes. In the face of the churches (εις προσωπον των εκκλησιων). A great host is pictured as watching how the Corinthians will treat these duly accredited agents in the collection (Titus and the other two brethren). It requires courage to stand by such representatives of great causes before stingy saints.