Chapter Sixty-four:
Paul writes 2 Corinthians - Part one
From the NKJV Bible - Personal Study Edition - Nelson publishers 1990 and 1995 In 2 Corinthians Paul continues his attempt to correct errors of unchristian practice, worship, and doctrine which had arisen in the Corinthian church. The book's major themes are consolation, glory, generosity, and reconciliation - all from God and in Christ. AUTHOR AND DATE Second Corinthians was written by Paul in A.D.56, at the end of his two-to-three-year ministry in Ephesus (see Acts 19:8-10; 20:31). The letter was written perhaps six months to a year after he wrote I Corinthians (compare 8:10; 9:2 with 1 Cor.16:1). BACKGROUND The Corinthian church required Paul's repeated care. Shortly after his founding mission in Corinth he sent a letter, now lost, instructing the church "not to keep company with sexually immoral people" (1 Cor.5:9). Later, a delegation from Corinth came to Ephesus asking for Paul's guidance: they returned, possibly carrying 1 Corinthians with them (see 1 Cor.16:17-19). Timothy visited Corinth (1 Cor.4:17; 16:10,11) and probably returned to Paul in Ephesus with news of both opposition to Paul and continued division in the church. Paul made a "sorrowful" visit (2 Cor.1:23-2:1), which did not resolve these problems. He then sent a severe letter by Titus (2:3). Meanwhile, Paul went to Troas to preach, but anxious to hear from Titus, he moved on to Macedonia, where he received the joyful news regarding the Corinthians' contrition and repentance (2:12, 13:7:5-7; 1:3-16). Immediately he sent this reconciling letter known as 2 Corinthians, possibly by Titus, with instructions to complete the offering for the church at Jerusalem (8:6-18). Thus 1 Corinthians appears to be the second letter Paul wrote to the Corinthians; and 2 Corinthians, the fourth. Some speculate that the first letter and his third "severe" letter are a part of 2 Corinthians. But it is much more likely that they have been lost. (For more information on the church at Corinth see Introduction to 1 Corinthians: Background). Paul probably passed through Corinth again when be visited "Greece" (Acts 20:1-3), the province of Achaia in which Corinth was located. See 1:1. PURPOSE Paul was concerned that false apostles were leading the Corinthians away from the gospel. They were taking selfish advantage of the Corinthians by claiming apostolic authority and by boasting of human abilities and achievements. Paul defends his own authority as God's apostle by referring to what God had done through him, especially in the conversion of the Corinthians. He uses his authority as their founder to defend the true gospel. Yet Paul's primary purpose in the letter is not confrontation but reconciliation. He would present every man and woman "complete" in Christ (13:11; see Col.1:28). CONTENTS The letter contains three clearly defined sections. In chapters 1-7 Paul looks back to the church's refusal to acknowledge his authority and deal with the flagrant immorality of one of its members. He tells them of his great relief and joy that the issue has been resolved by their obedience and the offender's repentance. He also pleads that they continue to be reconciled to him and to God. In chapters 8 and 9 Paul seeks to motivate the Corinthians to be generous in gifts to an offering that he is sponsoring for the needy Christians in Jerusalem. Chapters 10-13 deal with teachers at Corinth who challenged Paul's authority and falsely claimed to be apostles. Paul defends his authority as Christ's apostle by showing how God's power has been effective through him. Because Paul is involved so deeply in all of these issues, the letter is filled with emotion. We see the heartbeat of the apostle in his concern for the struggling churches under his care. OUTLINE OF 2 CORINTHIANS 1. Salutation and thanksgiving 1:1-11 A. Salutation 1:1,2 B. Thanksgiving to the "God" of all comfort" 1:3-11 2. The integrity of Paul's actions 1:12-2:17 A. A cancelled visit 1:12-24 B. An effective letter 2:1-4 C. Forgiveness for the offender 2:5-11 D. A triumphant ministry 2:12-17 3. The ministry of the Spirit 3:1-4:6 A. Changed hearts 3:1-6 B. Continued transformation 3:7-18 C. Ministers of integrity 4:1-6 4. God's power in earthen vessels 4:7-5:10 A. Strength in our present suffering 4:7-15 B. Assurance of future glory 4:16-5:10 5. The ministry of reconciliation 5:11-7:16 A. A plea for reconciliation 5:11-7:1 1. Be reconciled to God 5:11-21 2. Be reconciled to Paul 6:1-13 3. Be separate from the world 6:14-7:1 B. Joy over Christian reconciliation 7:2-16 6. An offering to demonstrate your conversion and love 8:1-9:15 A. An example of generosity 8:1-7 B. Reasons for generosity 8:8-15 C. Provision for accountability 8:16-24 D. The shame of failing in generosity 9:1-5 E. The blessings of generosity 9:6-11 F. Thanksgiving for generosity 9:11-15 7. A defense of Paul's apostleship 10:1-12:13 A. Objections by the false apostles 10:1-11:15 1. An unimpressive presence 10:1-11 2. Failure to boast in his achievements 10:12-18 3. Failure to collect money from the Corinthians 11:1-15 B. Christ's power in Paul's life 11:16-12:13 1. Attested by his sufferings 11:16-23 2. Shown by his thorn in the flesh 12:1-10 3. Confirmed by signs 12:11-13 8. Preparation for Paul's visit 12:14-13:10 A. Concern for the Corinthians 12:14-21 B. A challenge to self-examination 13:1-10 9. Concluding benediction 13:11-14 End of quotes PERTINENT COMMENTS CHAPTER ONE Paul talks about suffering and troubles, even to near death, but that God sees us through, gives us strength to endue and comforts us as we battle along in the Christian life. Through it all we learn to trust in God and not in yourselves. He appreciates the prayers offered for himself and others with him. Paul rejoices in the simplicity and godly sincerity they had their conduct in the world and towards them, they (he and those with him) write to them what they live, and he trusts they will acknowledge this to the end. They did rejoice in them, just they rejoice in the Corinthians. With this in mind Paul was mindful to come to them. He was quite serious about it all, it was not "I say but do not do." Paul had told them he would come to them, he was in Christ, and Christ's word is yes, not yes but no. We do have the seal of God's Spirit, the "earnest" or "down-payment" of the Spirit. As God is witness he tells them, he wanted to come to them, but to spare them from coming with correction and rebuke he did not come. He wanted to come not as one like a dictator over their faith, but as a helping servant (verses 1-24). CHAPTER TWO Paul had determined not to come to them in the heaviness of attitude and speech. He had written to them so he would not have to come in a harsh way, so he could rejoice in them for moving forward into the truth. He had written to them with anguish and tears. It was not easy for him to have to correct and rebuke, but he had to do it, yet it was done with great love towards them (verses 1-4). Paul has heard that they did obey his judgment concerning the man who was practicing immoral sexual sin (1 Cor.5), they had put him away from their fellowship. He had repented. Now Paul instructs them that they did indeed then have to be willing to forgive him. If they have forgiven then it really went without saying, that Paul also had forgiven. The man was to be restored to fellowship in the church once more (verses 5-11). Paul speaks about his triumphant ministry in verses 12-17. To some, those that are perishing, at least in this physical life, such preaching of the Gospel was like a death to them, they rejected it or thought of it as something not good, but to those whom were being called to be saved, as well of course to God Himself, their teaching of the Gospel, was a sweet cent of life itself. He finishes by reminding them that he and those with him like Timothy and Silvanus (chap.1:19), are not like the many which twist and corrupt the word of God, but in the sight of God they testify the truth in Christ (verses 12-17). CHAPTER THREE Paul goes on to confirm their credentials in the ministry of God and Christ. It is really proven by the fact that the Corinthian church was founded by themselves, through the very Spirit of God, not anything physical, or just the workings of men. Paul's fellow co-workers, all of his company, were able ministers of the NEW Testament, not of the letter of the Old Testament, but the very live giving Spirit of the New Testament (verses 1-6). The he contrasts the Old from the New. The Old Testament, even with the glory of the Ten Commandments written in stone, and which Moses' face shone as he carried them in his arms, has no comparison in glory, for the magnificent glory of the New Testament through and by the Holy Spirit that gives LIFE. He declares the two "glories" - one Old and one New, really have no comparison, for the glory of the New Testament is so much more glory than the Old Testament (verses 7-11). Even the facial glory that Moses had when carrying the Ten Commandments, the children of Israel could not view. They were blinded spiritually speaking, they did not have the heart, and in Romans chapters 9 through 11, Paul makes it abundantly clear that the vast majority in Israel were never given, never called to salvation, they were blinded and that by God. We also see this in the books of Moses, in such passages as Deut. 5:29; 29:4; and Num.11 where the Spirit of God was only given to but a few, to the "election of grace" as Paul put it in Romans 9 to 11, while the rest were blinded, as he also says here in verse 14. In all this then the Old Covenant was basically an administration of death. It was not the design of the Old Covenant to save to salvation the majority. Most under that administration would live and die their physical life and never be called to salvation. Just like the majority of the Gentiles before the Gospel age, had no hope, no calling, were without God in the world (see Eph.2:11-12), so was the majority in Israel. The Old Covenant then was, which ever way you looked at it, not the spiritual Covenant that led to eternal life, for the vast majority of people. The New Covenant of the Spirit was much more glorious in that its design was to lead people, both Jew and gentile, to salvation. God will grant a chance of salvation to the millions who were never called to salvation under the old administration, and those not called under the new administration. We explained a lot of that when we went through the Gospels. God does have a plan of salvation for everyone who has ever lived, as Paul made abundantly clear in Romans chapters 9 through 11. The working of the New Covenant by the Spirit, is the working of the Lord, for Paul says "Now the Lord is that Spirit, and where the Spirit of the Lord is there is liberty" (verse 17). The "Spirit" is not a separate bodied being walking around heaven, the Holy Spirit is the Lord, that is it emanates, flows out from the Lord, like an invisible electrical power, hence can be in all the universe at the same time, doing the Lord's will. And Paul ends his thought by saying it is the very Spirit of the Lord that had CHANGED us from the type of glory under the Old to the type of glory (which is far mare glory) under the New Covenant (verses 7-18). CHAPTER FOUR The ministry of Christ, the Gospel of Christ, is not of men, it is not something Paul and others made up, but it is the very truth of Christ, and God commanded that light and that truth to be proclaimed, by men, who preach then not about themselves but about Jesus the Lord. And if many do not understand the truth of the Gospel, it is because the god of this world (we know him by the names Satan the Devil) has blinded their minds to the light of the Gospel. Of course we know from other passages like, Romans 9 to 11, that it is God who allows all this blindness to continue, and so we here find that Paul says that blindness is in a large part having to do with Satan (and his demon helpers), who go about blinding the minds of so many (verses 1-6). Then Paul tells them that the Gospel has been commissioned to be preached by himself and others, who at times have to endure many hardships, troubles, trials, persecutions, but not forsaken, cast down, even to close to physical death, but not destroyed or killed. They are often as Jesus was, physically mistreated, but as they go through all this that brings them closer to death, life eternal is brought to them and others that accept the Gospel of Jesus. Through it all they all know that He which raised Christ from the dead will also raise us up by Jesus, and shall present all of us together with Jesus. Paul talked, as we have seen, all about the glorious resurrection of the saints to the Corinthians in the fifteenth chapter of 1 Corinthians. Here it is time he believes to mention it once more. The great sure hope for the Christian is the resurrection, the raising up of life from death, just as Jesus was raised to life from death, and so it will be for Paul, his companions, the Corinthians, and for all saints of all ages. And though life can have its trials, tests, and troubles, it is really only for a short, very short, time span, when looked at from the point of all eternity. So as Paul said to them, "We look not at the things which are seen, but at the things which are not seen; for the things which are seen are temporal; but the things which are not seen are eternal" (verses 7-18). CHAPTER FIVE Paul continues his thought of the resurrection and being raised to immortal life. We are now physical, our body is physical, but we shall have in that resurrection day, a new body, one from heaven. Paul had explained all this in some detail to them in chapter 15 of 1 Corinthians, yet he feels he needs to expound it again. The body we now have will not be the body we shall have. We long for, he said, that time when we shall be clothed with our new body, the time when our mortal body will be swallowed up with eternal life, glorified immortal life as he said to them in his previous epistle. While we are in this earthy physical body we cannot be with the Lord. He had told them that in 1 Corinthians 15, when he told them that flesh and blood cannot inherit the Kingdom of God, and that a change was needed, a change from moral to immortal, from corruption to incorruption. Paul said there was a want to be with the Lord, verse 8. He had a desire to die this physical death for then in his resting in sleep, the very next instant he would be with Christ in his glorified form (something like you and me going to sleep say at 10 p.m. and the next second it seems to us, we are awake at 6 ot 7 a.m. to start a new day). So it is with physical death and the resurrection. There is no knowledge of the time from death to the resurrection at Christ's coming. With all that Paul had to go through in the way of trials, troubles, and physical persecutions at times, it is no wonder he often wanted to be out of this world in death, and so the next second for him would be the resurrection and so he would be with the Lord. But he would do God's work as long as he was present in this physical life and in this physical world. There was work to do in this life, and it had to be done, for there was coming a day that all would have to give an accountability as to what they did in this physical body of life. And doing God's work, in truth, had little to do with the physical outward appearance of people, though some wanted to try and say it was of some importance, it was not. And so the Corinthians could stand up against those who would make outward appearance something to take into account. It is the heart that is important, the true mind-set, not the outward form of some who brag about their showy spectacular ministry. Paul tells them he is not trying to give a pat on the back to himself and those with him, but he's giving them the truth as to their presentation of the Gospel, not outwardly "showy" but truth in sincerity. We work as Christ's love controls us. And it was Jesus who died for us, so those who accept him as Lord and Savior will live to please God, not themselves. He tells them that he once thought of Jesus as just a "person" like all other persons. But not any more, he thinks of Him now MUCH differently. And those who think like he now thinks, will become a new person. They will have put away the old sinful life and will be living God's way - the life that is pleasing to Him. God bought us back to Himself through Jesus, and has given us the responsibility and task to bring others into reconciliation to Himself. God was in Christ reconciling the world to Himself. And that massage He has given to us so we can tells others about it. Paul tells them that God is using himself and those with him to speak to them, and he urges them to be reconciled to God, to admit their errors and sins, for God made Christ, who never sinned, to be our sin bearer, so we can be forgiven, be at one with God through Christ (verses 1-21). CHAPTER SIX Paul proceeds now to PLEAD with them, and not to receive the grace of God in vain. .................................... TO BE CONTINUED |