-
Verse 2 Corinthians 1:13. _THAN WHAT YE READ_] Viz. In the first
epistle which he had sent them.
_OR ACKNOWLEDGE_] To be the truth of God; and which he hoped they
would continue to acknowledge, and n...
-
FOR WE WRITE NONE OTHER THINGS ... - There has been much variety in
the interpretation of this passage; and much difficulty felt in
determining what it means. The sense seems to me to be this. Paul ha...
-
2. PAUL'S EXPERIENCE AND EXPLANATIONS.
CHAPTER 1:8-24
_ 1. His Experience. (2 Corinthians 1:8)_
2. His Explanations. (2 Corinthians 1:15)
The Apostle speaks, first of all, of the trouble he had whe...
-
2 Corinthians 1:12 to 2 Corinthians 2:17. PAUL SEEKS TO REMOVE
MISUNDERSTANDINGS BETWEEN HIMSELF AND THE CORINTHIANS.
2 Corinthians 1:12. He has no hesitation in thus asking for their
prayer
-
The only boast we make is this--and it is backed by the witness of our
conscience--that in the world we have behaved ourselves with the
holiness and the purity of God, not with a wisdom dominated by h...
-
COMFORTED TO COMFORT (2 Corinthians 1:1-7)...
-
NONE. not (Greek. _ou)_.
OTHER. Greek. _allos_ App-124.
ACKNOWLEDGE. Greek. _epiginosko_. App-132.
EVEN. The texts omit....
-
_For we write none other things unto yon_ i.e. for we are not writing
to you about anything with which you have not had the opportunity of
being fully acquainted.
_than what you read or acknowledge_ I...
-
The mutual interdependence of St Paul and the Corinthian Church
3. _Blessed be God, even the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ_ Two
feelings rise at once in the Apostle's mind. The first is an
overwhel...
-
ΟΥ̓ ΓᾺΡ ἌΛΛΑ ΓΡΆΦΟΜΕΝ. ‘Do not say, Ah, but your
letters are not sincere, _for_ I write nothing that is inconsistent
with what you read in my other letters, or with your experience of my
life and cond...
-
_ PAUL'S CHANGE OF PLANS 2 CORINTHIANS 1:12-18:_ Paul could rejoice
because he had a clear conscience. He lived a simple, honest life with
godly sincerity. His desire in all things was to be controlle...
-
ΆΛΛΑ (G243) другие вещи,
ΓΡΆΦΟΜΕΝ _praes. ind. act. от_ ΓΡΆΦΩ (G1125)
писать. _Praes._ относится ко всем письмам
Павла (Hering).
άλλ' Ή (G235; G2228) кроме (BD, 233).
ΆΝΑΓΙΝΏΣΚΕΤΕ _praes. ind. act....
-
DISCOURSE: 2000
THE CHURCHMAN’S CONFESSION, OR AN APPEAL TO THE LITURGY
2 Corinthians 1:13. _We write none other things unto you, than what ye
read or acknowledge_.
AS the testimony of one’s own cons...
-
WHAT YE READ OR ACKNOWLEDGE;— _What ye know and acknowledge._
Doddridge. _Than what, when you read, you acknowledge._ Wale's Critic,
notes. "I take the sense to be," says Dr. Heylin, "that he meant no...
-
BUTLER'S COMMENTS
SECTION 2
Acrimony (2 Corinthians 1:12-24)
12 For our boast is this, the testimony of our conscience that we have
behaved in the world, and still more toward you, with holiness and...
-
APPLEBURY'S COMMENTS
_Paul's defense of His Conduct and Writing
Scripture_
2 Corinthians 1:12-14. For our glorying is this, the testimony of our
conscience, that in holiness and sincerity of God, not...
-
For we write none other things unto you, than what ye read or
acknowledge; and I trust ye shall acknowledge even to the end;
WE WRITE NONE OTHER THINGS (IN THIS LETTER) ... THAN WHAT YE READ (in
my...
-
1 Timothy is associated with Paul in this introduction, as Sosthenes
is in the former epistle, yet it is evident that Paul himself wrote
both epistles, for he continually refers to himself in them, an...
-
1:13 know (e-14) Or 'own' (personally). Some would render this 'but
what ye read.' The word has this sense also; but it refers here, I
think, to what they knew and had learnt of him by his being among...
-
INTRODUCTORY SECTION
2 Corinthians 1:1. Salutation and Thanksgiving
After the usual epistolary introduction, St. Paul makes pointed
reference to a severe trouble he has lately endured, and gives tha...
-
NONE OTHER THINGS] St. Paul seems to have been suspected of writing to
individual members of the Church that he was not so satisfied with
their conduct and attitude as he professed to be in his public...
-
GOD SHOWS HIS POWER WHEN WE ARE WEAK
2 CORINTHIANS
_PHILIP SMITH_
ABOUT 2 CORINTHIANS
AUTHOR
Paul wrote the letter called 2 Corinthians. See 2 Corinthians 1:1 and
2 Corinthians 10:1. The letter...
-
FOR WE WRITE NONE OTHER THINGS... — The Greek presents a play on the
two words “read” (_ana-ginoskein_) and “acknowledge,” or
“know fully” (_epiginoskein_)_,_ which it is impossible to
reproduce in En...
-
CHAPTER 2
FAITH BORN OF DESPAIR.
2 Corinthians 1:8 (R.V)
PAUL seems to have felt that the thanksgiving with which he opens this
letter to the Corinthians was so peculiar as to require explanation.
I...
-
THEY MUST ACKNOWLEDGE HIS SINCERITY OF PURPOSE. He claims that he has
always been frank and open in his dealings with the Corinthian
Christians: _cf._ 1 Thessalonians 2:3. ἡ γὰρ καύχησις
κ. τ. λ.: _fo...
-
οὐ γὰρ ἄλλα κ. τ. λ.: _for we write none other things
unto you than what ye read_ (ἀναγινώσκειν always means
“to read” in St. Paul's Epp. and throughout the N.T.) _or even
acknowledge; i.e._, there is...
-
SINCERE LIKE HIS MASTER
2 Corinthians 1:12
The Apostle laid great emphasis on the witness of his conscience. See
Acts 23:1; Acts 24:16. As we pass out of this life, and stand in the
revealing dawn of...
-
The second letter to the Corinthians was evidently the outcome of the
first. The apostle opened with the usual introduction, laying emphasis
on his apostleship by the will of God, coupled with the sal...
-
For we write (k) none other things unto you, than what ye read or
acknowledge; and I trust ye shall acknowledge even to the (l) end;
(k) He says that he writes plainly and simply: for he that writes...
-
_What you have read, in my former letter, or letters, and known by my
preaching: this he says, to clear himself from the accusation of his
adversaries, that his words, preaching, and promises were not...
-
(12) For our rejoicing is this, the testimony of our conscience, that
in simplicity and godly sincerity, not with fleshly wisdom, but by the
grace of God, we have had our conversation in the world, an...
-
13._For we write no other things _Here he indirectly reproves the
false apostles, who recommended themselves by immoderate boastings,
while they had little or no ground for it; and at the same time he...
-
The apostle writes the second Epistle to the Corinthians under the
influence of the consolations of Christ consolations experienced when
the troubles which came upon him in Asia were at their height;...
-
FOR WE WRITE NONE OTHER THINGS TO YOU,.... The things we write unto
you concerning our conduct; and behaviour, are no other
THAN WHAT YOU READ; not in our letters to you, but in our lives and
convers...
-
For we write none other things unto you, than what ye read or
acknowledge; and I trust ye shall acknowledge even to the end;
Ver. 13. _Than what ye read, &c._] Or, than what you can both
recognize an...
-
_For_, &c. I am more imboldened to look for this, because I am
conscious of my integrity; seeing _our rejoicing is this_ Even in the
deepest adversity, a rejoicing which no external calamities can
imp...
-
THAN WHAT YE READ; the opponents of Paul in Corinth had probably
accused him of insincerity in his former epistle. He assures them that
he has no hidden end, but that what they read is precisely what...
-
It is again with apostolic authority that Paul writes, the will of
God, a predominant matter in the epistle. While Paul uses his
authority in lowliness, yet he must assert God's authority in writing....
-
12-14 Though, as a sinner, the apostle could only rejoice and glory
in Christ Jesus, yet, as a believer, he might rejoice and glory in
being really what he professed. Conscience witnesses concerning...
-
I do not tell you stories; the things which I write, and which you
read, either in my Epistles to you, or to other churches of Christ,
are what you know, must own and acknowledge, to be truth; and I h...
-
For we write no other things unto you, than what ye read [literally,
read aloud] _or even acknowledge, and I hope ye will acknowledge unto
the end:_...
-
2 Corinthians 1:13 For G1063 not G3756 writing G1125 (G5719) things
G243 you G5213 than G235 G2228 what...
-
‘For we write no other things to you than what you read (anaginosko)
or even understand (epignosko), and I hope you will understand
(epiginosko) to the end (or ‘completely'), as also you understood
(e...
-
2 Corinthians 1:13. FOR WE WRITE NONE OTHER THINGS UNTO YOU, THAN WHAT
YE READ (in this Letter), OR EVEN ACKNOWLEDGE (without the need of our
writing it), AND I HOPE YE WILL ACKNOWLEDGE UNTO THE END;...
-
THAN WHAT YE READ
(αλλ' η α αναγινωσκετε). Note comparative conjunction
η (than) after αλλ' and that after αλλα (other things, same
word in reality), "other than." Read in Greek (αναγινωσκω)
is kno...
-
2 Corinthians 1:1. _Paul, an apostle of Jesus Christ by the will of
God,_
Paul is very careful to remind the Corinthians of that fact, since
some of them had gone the length of denying his apostleshi...
-
2 Corinthians 1:1. _Paul, an apostle of Jesus Christ by the will of
God, and Timothy our brother, unto the church of God which is at
Corinth, with all the saints which are in all Achaia:_
Paul is ver...
-
CONTENTS: Paul's interest in the Corinthian Christians and his
encouragement to them in Christ.
CHARACTERS: God, Christ, Holy Spirit, Paul, Timothy, Silvanus.
CONCLUSION: Man's extremity is God's op...
-
2 Corinthians 1:1. _Paul and Timothy our brother._ It was proper that
Timothy should be named, he having been specially sent to Corinth.
_With all the saints which are in Achaia;_ in which peninsula t...
-
ONLY WHAT YOU CAN READ AND UNDERSTAND. The false teacher must have
said that Paul spoke one thing and did another (2 Corinthians 1:17).
Paul does not want any misunderstanding, so he explains in the n...
-
2 CORINTHIANS—NOTE ON 2 CORINTHIANS 1:12 Paul offers a detailed
defense of why he had changed his mind more than once about returning
to Corinth. The process included: (1) an initial plan to visit
Mac...
-
2 CORINTHIANS—NOTE ON 2 CORINTHIANS 1:1 Paul’s Defense of His
Ministry as an Apostle. Paul’s ministry reflects the work of the
Holy Spirit.
⇐
-
SECOND EPISTLE TO THE
CORINTHIANS
CHAPTER 1
CONTENTS
He consoles the Corinthians, whom in the First Epistle he had sharply
rebuked, and absolves the excommunicated fornicator, who was now
penitent....
-
_CRITICAL NOTES_
2 Corinthians 1:12. REJOICING.—stronger and more correct. Cognate
word in Romans 5:2; Romans 5:11, where notice the varying translation;
an exultant, sometimes defiantly exultant, joy...
-
EXPOSITION
Address and greeting (2 Corinthians 1:1, 2 Corinthians 1:2).
Thanksgiving for the comfort sent to him by God, wherein, as in his
affliction which rendered it necessary, they sympathetically...
-
Tonight let's turn to 2 Corinthians, chapter 1.
The church of Corinth had been a divided church. There was a lot of
carnality, a lot of problems in their doctrines that prompted Paul's
first epistle,...
-
2 Corinthians 13:6; 2 Corinthians 4:2; 2 Corinthians 5:11; Philemon
1:6...
-
Read - acknowledge [α ν α γ ι ν ω σ κ ε τ ε - ε π ι γ
ι ν ω σ κ ε τ ε]. The word - play cannot be reproduced in
English....
-
The apostle having asserted his own sincerity and upright conversation
in the former verse, he doth in this verse make his appeal to the
consciences of the Corinthians for his justification. It is. go...