2 Corinthians 1
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Greeting

1Paul, apostle of Jesus Christ by the will of God, and brother Timothy,a to the churchb of God that is in Corinth, together with all the saints throughout Achaia:

2Grace and peace to you from God our Father and Sovereignc Jesus Christ.

Praise for deliverance

3All praise to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of compassiond and God of all encouragement,

4who encourages us in all our affliction, so that we may be able to encourage those who are in whatever affliction, by means of the encouragement with which we ourselves are encouraged by God.e

5Because just as the sufferings of the Christ flow over into us,f so also our encouraging overflows, through Christ.

6Now then, if we are afflicted, it is for the sake of your encouragement and deliverance, that are effective for enduring the same sufferings that we also are suffering

7(yes, our hope concerning you is steadfast);g if we are encouraged, it also is for the sake of your encouragement and deliverance, since we know that you will share in the encouragement just as you do in the sufferings.h

8And so, brothers, we do not want you to be in ignorance concerning the affliction that came upon us in Asia: we were under extreme pressure, beyond our strength, so that we despaired even of life.

9Yes, we ourselves have had the sentence of death within ourselves, so that we not place confidence in ourselves, but in the God who raises the dead;i

10He did deliver us from that deadly peril, and still delivers; in whom we trust that He will keep on delivering,

11you also adding your cooperation in prayer,j on our behalf; that thanks may be given by many persons for the gift bestowed on us by means of many, on your behalf.k

A change of plans

12Now this is our boast: the testimony of our conscience that we have conducted ourselves in the world with openness and godly sincerity, not by fleshly wisdom but by the grace of God, and especially toward you.

13For we do not write you any other things than what you can read and understand;l and I do hope that you will keep on understanding to the end

14(as indeed some of you have acknowledged) that we are your boast, just as you are ours, in the day of the Lord Jesus.m

15It was in this confidence that I was planning to come by you first,

16and by you to proceed into Macedonia, and to come back to you from Macedonia (that you might benefit twice),n and then to be sent by you on my way to Judea.o

17Now then, when I was deciding this, I was not acting frivolously, was I? Or the things I decide, do I decide according to the flesh, so that with me there would be both “Yes, yes” and “No, no”?

18As God is faithful, our word to you was not “Yes” and “No”,p

19because the Son of God, Jesus Christ, who was proclaimed among you by us—by me and Silvanus and Timothyq —was not “Yes” and “No”. In fact, with Him it has always been “Yes”,

20because all the promises of God in Him are “Yes”; indeed, in Him they are “Amen”, that there be glory to God through us.r

21Now He who establishes us together with you into Christ, and who anointeds us, is God,

22who also sealed us and gave us the down payment of the Spirit in our hearts.t

The change explained

23For my part, I call on God as witness, upon my soul, that it was to spare you that I have not yet returned to Corinth.

24(Not that we have control over your faith,u but we work with you for your joy, for it is by faith that you stand firm.)

Footnotes:

1 aHe acknowledges a junior partner.

1 bSince there were probably several local congregations meeting in homes in Corinth, not to mention “throughout Achaia”, I have rendered “church”. Note that Paul obviously intended that his letter have a wide circulation. Rather than give up their copy, would not the congregation that received the ‘original’ set about making verified copies to distribute to other locales? (Such a procedure would give us the beginnings of a ‘majority text’ in that region from the start.)

2 cWhere ‘Lord’ occurs without the definite article, as here, I usually render ‘Sovereign’; with either ‘the’ or ‘our’ I usually render ‘Lord’.

3 dLiterally, ‘the compassions’ or ‘the mercies’. I suppose the point to be that He is the Source of all genuine compassion (you won't get any from Satan).

4 eOne important reason God sends suffering our way is so that we can help others later.

5 fWe get our share of suffering, we participate in Christ's sufferings—Colossians 1:24 and 1 Peter 4:13. Evidently for God's Kingdom to increase among men, as we continue to undo Satan's works in the world, we have to suffer.

7 gI take it that he is affirming his confidence that they will not cave in under the suffering.

7 hWe cannot stop people from going through their share of suffering, but we can encourage them.

9 iIf you look to the God who heals the sick, it is because you are sick; if you look to the God who raises the dead, it is because you are facing death. Paul evidently figured he had been pretty close.

11 jPrayer makes a difference.

11 kThey will get a return on their ‘investment’, the time they spent in prayer. Some 25% of the Greek manuscripts have ‘our behalf’, as in most versions.

13 lI take it that Paul is saying that he never writes with the intention of obfuscating an issue. That would be a good example for everyone to follow.

14 mPaul seems to be speaking of a reciprocal boasting, and that before Christ's Judgment Seat! We probably all know a father and son who are proud of each other; the idea may be similar.

16 nThe “benefit” is presumably spiritual; Paul seems to be saying that he imparts such benefit wherever he goes. I would like to be able to say the same thing.

16 oHere Paul is probably referring to financial help.

18 pPaul took a clear stand on things; he was not ambiguous.

19 qPaul gives credit to his associates.

20 rAs we take advantage of the promises, God gets the glory. God's promises are positive, with the ‘yes’.

21 sThe anointing is in the past, but the establishing is an ongoing process—note that it is “into” Christ.

22 tThe Holy Spirit in us is like God's brand on us, but is also our guarantee that we have been regenerated. Verses 21-22 refer to all three persons of the Godhead.

24 uThis is an important point: in Matthew 23:8-10 the Lord Jesus forbids any attempt to dominate someone else's faith or conscience. As He said to the Samaritan woman, the Father wants worship in spirit and truth (John 4:23-24)—the worship must not be faked, forced or controlled.