1._Having this ministry. _He now returns to a commendation of himself
personally, from which he had digressed into a general discussion, in
reference to the dignity of the gospel. As, therefore, he has been
treating of the nature of the gospel, so he now shows how faithful and
upright a minister of... [ Continue Reading ]
2._But renounce the hidden things. _While he commends his own
sincerity, (425) he, on the other hand, indirectly reproves the false
Apostles, who, while they corrupted by their ambition the genuine
excellence of the gospel, were, nevertheless, desirous of exclusive
distinction. Hence the faults, fro... [ Continue Reading ]
3._But if our gospel is hid _It might have been an easy thing to pour
calumny upon what he had said as to the clearness of his preaching,
because he had many adversaries. That calumny he repels with stern
authority, for he threatens all who do not acknowledge the power of
his gospel, and warns them... [ Continue Reading ]
4._Whose minds the god of this world _He intimates, that no account
should be made of their perverse obstinacy. “They do not see,”
says he, “the sun at mid-day, because _the devil has blinded their
understandings.” _No one that judges rightly can have any doubt,
that it is of Satan that the Apostle... [ Continue Reading ]
5._For we preach not ourselves _Some make this to be an instance of
_Zeugma, _(449) in this manner: We preach not ourselves to be lords,
but God’s only Son, whom the Father has set over all things, to be
the one Lord. (450) I do not, indeed, find fault with that
interpretation, but as the expression... [ Continue Reading ]
6._God who commanded light to shine out of darkness. _I see that this
passage may be explained in four different ways. In the _first _place
thus: “God has _commanded light to shine forth out of darkness:
_that is, by the ministry of men, who are in their own nature
_darkness, _He has brought forward... [ Continue Reading ]
7._But we have this treasure. _Those that heard Paul glorying in such
a magnificent strain as to the excellence of his ministry, and beheld,
on the other hand, his person, contemptible and abject in the eyes of
the world, might be apt to think that he was a silly and ridiculous
person, and might loo... [ Continue Reading ]
8._While we are pressed on every side. _This is added by way of
explanation, for he shows, that his abject condition is so far from
detracting from the glory of God, that it is the occasion of advancing
it. “We are reduced,” says he, “to straits, but the Lord at
length opens up for us an outlet; (46... [ Continue Reading ]
10._The mortification of Jesus _(470) He says more than he had done
previously, for he shows, that the very thing that the false apostles
used as a pretext for despising the gospel, was so far from bringing
any degree of contempt upon the gospel, that it tended even to render
it glorious. For he emp... [ Continue Reading ]
12._Hence death indeed. _This is said ironically, because it was
unseemly that the Corinthians should live happily, and in accordance
with their desire, and that they should, free from anxiety, take their
ease, while in the mean time Paul was struggling with incessant
hardships. (477) Such an allotm... [ Continue Reading ]
13._Having the same spirit. _This is a correction of the foregoing
irony. He had represented the condition of the Corinthians as widely
different from his own, (not according to his own judgment, but
according to _their _erroneous view,) inasmuch as they were desirous
of a gospel that was pleasant a... [ Continue Reading ]
15._For all things are for your sakes _He now associates himself with
the Corinthians, not merely in the hope of future blessedness, but
also in these very afflictions, in which they might seem to differ
from him most widely, for he lets them know, that, if he is afflicted,
it is for their benefit.... [ Continue Reading ]
16._For which cause we faint not _(491) He now, as having carried his
point, rises to a higher confidence than before. “There is no
cause,” says he, _“ _why we should lose heart, or sink down under
the burden of the cross, the issue of which is not merely so desirable
to myself, but is also salutary... [ Continue Reading ]
17._Momentary lightness. _As our flesh always shrinks back from its
own destruction, whatever reward may be presented to our view, and as
we are influenced much more by present feeling than by the hope of
heavenly blessings, Paul on that account admonishes us, that the
afflictions and vexations of t... [ Continue Reading ]
_While we look not. _Mark what it is, that will make all the miseries
of this world easy to be endured, — if we carry forward our thoughts
to the eternity of the heavenly kingdom. For a moment is long, if we
look around us on this side and on that; but, when we have once raised
our minds heavenward,... [ Continue Reading ]