-
Verse 16. _BUT BE IT SO, I DID NOT BURDEN YOU_] That is: You grant
that I did not burden you, that I took nothing from you, but preached
to you the Gospel freely; but you say that, BEING CRAFTY, _I ca...
-
BUT BE IT SO - This is evidently a charge of his enemies; or at least
a charge which it might be supposed they would make. Whether they ever
in fact made it, or whether the apostle merely anticipates...
-
3. REVELATION IN WHICH HE MIGHT GLORY. HIS APOSTLESHIP.
CHAPTER 12
_ 1. Caught up to the Third Heaven. (2 Corinthians 12:1)_
2. The Thorn in the Flesh. (2 Corinthians 12:7)
3. The Marks of His Apos...
-
RETROSPECT OF THE BOASTING. This paragraph is marked by rapid
oscillation of feeling. Now that he has made and proved his claim, the
same doubt seizes him as when he began (2 Corinthians 11:1; 2
Corin...
-
THE THORN AND THE GRACE (2 Corinthians 12:1-10)...
-
I have become a fool--you forced me to it. I ought to have been
commended by you, not by myself. I am in no way inferior to the
super-apostles, even if I am nothing. The signs of an apostle have
been...
-
BURDEN. Greek. _katatareo._ Only here.
BEING. Greek. _huparcho._ It means being essentially, from the
beginning. See Luke 9:48.
CRAFTY. Greek. _panourgos:_ Only here. Compare Luke 20:23. These words...
-
Continuation of the Defence
11. _I am become a fool in glorying_ Or perhaps, with some, _Have_I
become a fool? The words in _glorying_are not in the best MSS. and
versions. Thus Wiclif, following the...
-
_But be it so_ St Paul returns to the charge in 2 Corinthians 12:13.
He supposes his antagonists to admit that, as far as he himself is
concerned, he has given it a satisfactory answer. But he is prep...
-
14–18. He changes from irony to affectionate earnestness, telling
them that he must continue the ἀδικία of working for nothing,
and explaining why this must be so. It is still quite evident that he
is...
-
ἜΣΤΩ ΔΈ. _But be it so_. ‘You will say, We grant all that: we
admit that you did not yourself take money from us, but you were
cunning enough to get it out of us through others.’ This use of
ἔστω is n...
-
_ PAUL'S CONCERN FOR CORINTH 2 CORINTHIANS 12:14-21:_ Paul planned a
third visit to Corinth. Even then he did not want to be a burden to
them. He said, "What I really want is you, and not what you hav...
-
ΈΣΤΩ _praes. imper. act. от_ ΕΊΜΊ (G1510) быть.
"Пусть будет". Предыдущее предложение
следует рассматривать как подлежащее
_imper._ (RG, 596).
ΚΑΤΕΒΆΡΗΣΑ _aor. ind. act. от_ ΚΑΤΑΒΑΡΈΩ (G2599)
тяготет...
-
BUT BE IT SO, I DID NOT BURDEN YOU, &C.— _But be it so that I did
not burden you, yet_ [perhaps it will be suggested] _that, being a
crafty deceiver, I circumvented you with guile._...
-
BUTLER'S COMMENTARY
SECTION 2
Weakness in Bearing (2 Corinthians 12:11-18)
11 I have been a fool! You forced me to it, for I ought to have been
commended by you. For I was not at all inferior to the...
-
APPLEBURY'S COMMENTS
_Paul's Intended Visit
Scripture_
2 Corinthians 12:14-21. Behold, this is the third time I am ready to
come to you; and I will not be a burden to you: for I seek not yours,
but y...
-
14 What a fund of fatherly affection is revealed in his protest, "I am
not seeking _ yours _ but _ you_!" And it must have humbled them to
think of their own lack of care and consideration. They deser...
-
12:16 guile. (a-17) The apostle is not saying that he did this, but is
answering a charge that he had kept up appearances by taking nothing
himself, but knew how to indemnify himself by using Titus in...
-
HIS PRIVILEGES AND TRIALS
The Apostle unwillingly resumes his boasting and tells of a revelation
he received from God; but returns again to dwell on his weaknesses,
and especially on his bodily infir...
-
PARAPHRASE. 'I am now about to pay you a third visit, and, as on
former occasions, I shall accept nothing for my support. It is not
your possessions but your very selves that I want; for you are my
sp...
-
BUT BE IT SO] He now meets another insinuation: this one is disposed
of....
-
GOD SHOWS HIS POWER WHEN WE ARE WEAK
2 CORINTHIANS
_PHILIP SMITH_
CHAPTER 12
V1 It is not good to be proud. But I need to tell you about *visions
and *revelations of the *Lord. V2 I know a man in...
-
BUT BE IT SO, I DID NOT BURDEN YOU. — The pronoun is again emphatic.
The word for “burden” is not the same as in 2 Corinthians 12:13,
but puts the fact less figuratively. The abruptness of the sentenc...
-
CHAPTER 27
NOT YOURS, BUT YOU.
2 Corinthians 12:11 (R.V)
EXPOSITORS differ widely in characterising the three or four brief
paragraphs into which this passage may be divided:
(1) 2 Corinthians 12:...
-
THAT HE DID NOT CLAIM MAINTENANCE AT CORINTH WAS DISINTERESTED ON HIS
PART....
-
ἔστω δὲ κ. τ. λ.: _but he it so! I did not myself burden
you_ (_cf._ 2 Corinthians 11:9 and 2 Corinthians 12:13). This the
Corinthians grant as indisputable, but they allege a sinister reason,
_viz.,...
-
“I SEEK NOT YOURS, BUT YOU”
2 Corinthians 12:11
“The long burst of passionate self-vindication has now at last
expended itself,” says Dean Stanley, and Paul returns to the point
whence he diverged at...
-
The boasting continues. However, it takes on a new and startling
characteristic. In his apostleship there had been something
supernatural, something not to be finally explained. Of this, he will
glory...
-
VERSE 16 Paul was willing that their love be lessened if they could
benefit. Yet, his accusers claim he tricked them into paying him....
-
(6) But be it so, I did not burden you: nevertheless, being crafty, I
caught you with guile.
(6) He sets aside another most grievous slander, that is, that he did
subtly and by others make his gain a...
-
I caught you by guile. He answers an objection or suspicion of his
adversaries, as if he took no presents himself, but employed others to
do it for him: he appeals to them, if Titus did not serve them...
-
2 Corinthians 1:1-24. It is impossible to read the two epistles to the
Corinthians with the smallest care without perceiving the strong
contrast between the wounded tone of the first epistle (the hear...
-
16._But be it so. _These words intimate, that Paul had been blamed by
malevolent persons, as though he had in a clandestine way procured,
through means of hired persons, what he had refused to receive...
-
Nevertheless, though forced to speak of himself, the apostle would
glory only in his infirmities. But he is, as it were, outside his
natural work. His past life unfolds before his eyes. The Corinthian...
-
BUT BE IT SO, I DID NOT BURDEN YOU,.... These words are not spoken by
the apostle in his own person of himself, but in the person of his
adversaries, and contain a concession and an objection of their...
-
But be it so, I did not burden you: nevertheless, being crafty, I
caught you with guile.
Ver. 16. _Being crafty I caught_] A blessed craft, a high point of
heavenly wisdom, Daniel 12:3. It is written...
-
_Be it so_, &c. But some may object; though _I did not burden you_
Though I did not take any thing of you myself; yet _being crafty, I
caught you with guile_ I did secretly by my messengers what I wou...
-
BE IT SO; his enemies said, if he did not openly receive support from
them, he did covertly, for he sent men among them to take up
contributions professedly for the poor, and then used the money
himse...
-
WHAT PAUL EXPECTS OF THE CORINTHIANS.
Their love should have commended him in his love for them:...
-
BUT BE IT SO, I DID NOT BURDEN YOU; NEVERTHELESS, BEING CRAFTY, I
CAUGHT YOU WITH GUILE.
Paul here turns the fact of his boasting against the Corinthians, to
their reproach, saying that his becoming f...
-
If in chapter 11 we have seen God's grace in sustaining the vessel
through all adversity, Paul now speaks of the other side of this, the
grace which gives unspeakable blessedness in being "caught up...
-
11-21 We owe it to good men, to stand up in the defence of their
reputation; and we are under special obligations to those from whom we
have received benefit, especially spiritual benefit, to own the...
-
I hear what some say: It is true, that when I was myself with you, I
laid no burden upon you, did not put upon you any collection for me;
but, like a crafty man, I set others to take money of you for...
-
But be it so, I did not myself burden you; but, being crafty, I caught
you with guile. [And as a doting parent I will gladly spend all that I
have and all that I am for your soul's sake. Gladly, as it...
-
2 Corinthians 12:16 But G1161 that G2077 (G5749) I G1473 did G2599 not
G3756 burden G2599 (G5656) you
-
‘But be it so, I did not myself burden you, but, being crafty, I
caught you with guile.'
And yet if it is to be so, it must be so. For he is aware of what they
are saying about him, of the accusations...
-
HE ASSURES THEM OF HIS CARE FOR THEM (2 CORINTHIANS 12:14).
He declares that he intends shortly to visit them for a third time.
But when he does he will again not be a burden on them. (This suggests
t...
-
2 Corinthians 12:16. BUT ME BEING CRAFTY, I CAUGHT YOU WITH GUILE.
‘True (ye say), you took no money from us yourself, but you were
crafty enough to get it through others.' The answer to this base
ins...
-
I DID NOT MYSELF BURDEN YOU
(εγω ου κατεβαρησα υμας). First aorist active of
late verb καταβαρεω, to press a burden down on one. Only here
in N.T.CRAFTY
(πανουργος). Old word from παν, all, and ε...
-
CONTENTS: God's dealing with Paul.
CHARACTERS: God, Christ, Holy Spirit, Paul, Titus, Satan.
CONCLUSION: The exalted experiences of the Spirit-filled Christian
overbalance all he is called upon to be...
-
2 Corinthians 12:1. _It is not expedient for me doubtless to glory. I
will come to visions and revelations of the Lord._ To disclosures of
the divine pleasure, which cannot be known by any researches...
-
YOU WILL AGREE, THEN. Paul asks them to take this as evidence of his
love for them! BUT, SOMEONE WILL SAY. The false teachers said he was
tricky enough to drain the treasury in other ways....
-
2 CORINTHIANS—NOTE ON 2 CORINTHIANS 12:16 CRAFTY... DECEIT... TAKE
ADVANTAGE. Paul rejects the idea that he used the collection to take
money from the Corinthians. There is no evidence for such a char...
-
CHAPTER 12
SYNOPSIS OF THE CHAPTER
i. That the Corinthians may esteem him above the false apostles, he
describes his being carried up into the third heaven.
II. He goes on to say (ver. 7) that to p...
-
_Being crafty, I caught you with guile._ S. Thomas (ii. ii. qu. 55,
art. 4, ad. 1) thinks that craftiness and guile are here used in a
good sense, as much as to say, with cunning, skill, and prudent
c...
-
_CRITICAL NOTES_
(_No break, except that of a new paragraph_.)
2 Corinthians 12:1.—Note _reading;_ probably, as in R.V. Remember
how full is Paul’s sense of “_expedient_” (1 Corinthians 6:12;...
-
EXPOSITION
The revelations vouchsafed to him (2 Corinthians 12:1). The
counteracting "thorn in the flesh" (2 Corinthians 12:7). One more
apology for glorying (2 Corinthians 12:11
-
It is not expedient [necessary] for me doubtless to glory. [But] I
will come to visions and revelations of the Lord. I knew a man in
Christ above [about] fourteen years ago (2 Corinthians 12:1-2),
Or...
-
1 Peter 2:3; 1 Thessalonians 2:3; 1 Thessalonians 2:5; 2 Corinthians
1:12;...
-
With guile. Alluding to a charge that he availed himself of the
collection for the poor to secure money for himself. He uses his
adversaries ' words....
-
But some may object, though I did not burden you, though I did not
take anything of you myself, yet being crafty I caught you with guile
— I did secretly by my messengers what I would not do openly, o...
-
Here the apostle answers an objection, which without any just cause
was made against him by some: it was suggested, "that though he was
not burdensome to the Corinthians himself, nor took any thing of...