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												Verse 12 Corinthians 11:1. Would to God 
												— Rather, I wish; (for the word 
												God is not in the original 
												text;) you could bear a little 
												with me — So does he pave the 
												way for what might otherwise 
												have given offence; in my folly 
												— Of commending myself, which to 
												many may appear folly; and 
												really would be so if it were 
												not, on this occasion, 
												absolutely necessary for the 
												maintaining of my authority 
												among you. For, &c. — I 
												therefore do it because I am 
												jealous over you with a godly 
												jealousy — Jealousy is a passion 
												which renders a person impatient 
												of a rival or partner, with 
												respect to a thing or person 
												beloved. By telling them he was 
												jealous over them, the apostle 
												gives them to know he so 
												exceedingly loved them, that he 
												could not bear that any should 
												pretend to have more regard for 
												them than he had; and withal 
												that he feared lest their 
												affections should be alienated 
												not only from him, but also from 
												Christ, through the insinuations 
												of false teachers among them, 
												and they should be rendered 
												unfaithful to him here, and 
												unfit to be presented to him as 
												his spouse hereafter. For — By 
												successfully preaching the 
												gospel to you, and bringing you 
												into the engagements of the 
												Christian covenant; I have 
												espoused you to one husband — 
												Even to him whose servant and 
												ambassador I am, and have led 
												you into a holy contract with 
												him, which hath been mutually 
												scaled; that I may present you 
												as a chaste virgin to Christ — 
												Pure in affection, and spotless 
												in your conduct. “Here,” says 
												Whitby, “is thought to be an 
												allusion to the αρμοσυνοι of the 
												Lacedemonians,” a sort of 
												magistrates, whose office it was 
												to educate and form young women, 
												especially those of rank and 
												figure, designed for marriage, 
												and then to present them to 
												those who were to be their 
												husbands; and if this officer 
												permitted them, through 
												negligence, to be corrupted, 
												between the espousals and 
												consummation of the marriage, 
												great blame would naturally fall 
												upon him. “The Greek 
												commentators, however, agree 
												with our translation, rendering 
												ηρμοσαμην, here used, by 
												εμνηστευσα, I have espoused you. 
												As therefore the Jews say that 
												Moses espoused Israel to God in 
												mount Sinai, when he made them 
												enter into covenant with him; 
												so, saith the apostle here, by 
												converting you to the Christian 
												faith, I have espoused you to 
												one husband, even Christ.” The 
												betrothing of persons to Christ 
												is accomplished in the present 
												life, but their marriage is to 
												take place in the life to come; 
												when they shall be brought home 
												to their husband’s house, to 
												live with him for ever. And the 
												apostle, having betrothed the 
												Corinthian believers to Christ, 
												was anxious to preserve them 
												chaste or true to their future 
												spouse, that when the time of 
												their marriage came, they might 
												not be rejected by him.
 
 Verse 3
 2 Corinthians 11:3. But I fear — 
												Love is full of these fears; 
												lest by any means — By some 
												means or other; as the serpent — 
												A most apposite comparison; 
												deceived Eve — Simple, ignorant 
												of ill; by his subtlety — Which 
												is in the highest degree 
												dangerous to such a disposition; 
												so your minds — (We might 
												therefore be tempted, even if 
												there were no sin in us;) should 
												be corrupted — Losing their 
												virginal purity; from the 
												simplicity that is in Christ — 
												Namely, that simplicity which is 
												lovingly intent on him alone. 
												“That it was the devil who 
												beguiled Eve, our Lord hath 
												intimated, by calling him a 
												murderer from the beginning, and 
												a liar, John 8:44. The same also 
												St. John hath intimated, by 
												giving the name of the old 
												serpent to him who is called the 
												devil and Satan, who deceiveth 
												the whole world, Revelation 
												12:9; Revelation 20:2. Besides, 
												in the history of the fall, the 
												serpent is said to have been 
												punished, as a rational and 
												accountable agent. Wherefore, 
												what Moses hath written of the 
												fall, is not an apologue, or 
												fable, with a moral meaning, as 
												Middleton and others contend, 
												but a true history of things 
												really done, in which the devil 
												was the chief actor.” — 
												Macknight. See note on Genesis 
												3:1-15.
 
 Verses 4-6
 2 Corinthians 11:4-6. For if he 
												that cometh — After me, with 
												such extraordinary pretences; 
												preach another Jesus — Can point 
												out to you another Saviour; whom 
												we have not preached — Who shall 
												better or equally deserve your 
												attention and regard; or if ye 
												receive another spirit — By his 
												preaching, which ye have not 
												received — By ours, and which 
												can bestow upon you gifts 
												superior to those which you 
												received through our ministry; 
												or another gospel — Bringing you 
												tidings equally happy, evident, 
												and important, with those which 
												we brought you; ye might well 
												bear with him — In his 
												pretensions to exceed us, and 
												there would be some excuse for 
												your conduct; but how far this 
												is from being, or so much as 
												seeming to be, the case, I need 
												not say. For I suppose — 
												λογιζομαι, I reckon, or, I 
												conclude, upon most certain 
												knowledge; that I was not a whit 
												behind — I was in nothing 
												inferior to; the very chiefest 
												apostles — Either in spiritual 
												gifts, or the greatness of my 
												labours and sufferings, or in 
												the success of my ministry. By 
												the chiefest apostles, St. Paul 
												meant Peter, James, and John, 
												whom he called pillars, 
												Galatians 2:9. Let the Papists 
												reconcile this account which 
												Paul gives of himself as an 
												apostle, with their pretended 
												supremacy of Peter over all the 
												apostles. But, or for, though I 
												be rude, or unskilful, in speech 
												— Speaking in a plain, unadorned 
												way, like an unlearned person, 
												as the word ιδιωτης, here used, 
												properly signifies. “The 
												apostle,” says Macknight, 
												“called himself unlearned in 
												speech, because, in preaching, 
												he did not follow the rules of 
												the Grecian rhetoric. His 
												discourses were not composed 
												with that art which the Greeks 
												showed in the choice and 
												arrangement of their words, and 
												in the disposition of their 
												periods. Neither were they 
												delivered with those modulations 
												of voice, and with those studied 
												gestures, wherewith the Greeks 
												set off their orations. This 
												sort of eloquence the apostle 
												utterly disclaimed, for a reason 
												mentioned 1 Corinthians 1:17. It 
												seems the faction in Corinth had 
												objected to him his want of 
												these accomplishments.” Or, as 
												some think, the irony of the 
												faction was levelled, not 
												against the apostle’s style, but 
												against his pronunciation and 
												action in speaking, which, 
												through some bodily infirmity, 
												was ungraceful and unacceptable. 
												See on 2 Corinthians 10:10. 
												Probably the faction objected 
												both imperfections to him. Yet 
												not in knowledge — If I be 
												unskilful in speech, I am not so 
												in the knowledge of the gospel 
												of Christ, and of the 
												dispensations which were 
												introductory to it. But we have 
												been thoroughly made manifest, 
												&c. — You have had sufficient 
												proof of my acquaintance with 
												the great doctrines of 
												Christianity, and what my gifts 
												are, and therefore you ought not 
												to call in question my authority 
												as an apostle, or my ability to 
												teach, direct, and govern your 
												church, nor to prefer another in 
												opposition to me.
 
 Verses 7-9
 2 Corinthians 11:7-9. Have I 
												committed an offence — Will any 
												turn this into an objection; in 
												abasing myself — Stooping to 
												work at my trade; that ye might 
												be exalted — To the dignity of 
												being the children of God; 
												because I have preached the 
												gospel to you free of expense. 
												“This the apostle’s enemies said 
												was a presumption, that he knew 
												himself to be no apostle; or, if 
												he was an apostle, it showed 
												that he did not love the 
												Corinthians. The first of these 
												objections he had answered in 
												his former epistle, (1 
												Corinthians 9:3-19,) by proving 
												his right to a maintenance, and 
												by declaring that he declined 
												using that right, merely to make 
												his preaching the more 
												acceptable and successful. The 
												second objection he answers in 
												this chapter, 2 Corinthians 
												11:11-15.” I robbed — Greek, 
												εσολησα, I spoiled, as it were, 
												other churches — (It is a 
												military term;) taking wages — 
												οψωνιον, pay, (another military 
												word,) of them, when I first 
												came to you; to do you service — 
												To serve your best interests by 
												converting you to, and 
												instructing you in, the faith of 
												the gospel. It appears from 
												Philippians 4:15-16, that it was 
												from the church at Philippi that 
												he received the support here 
												spoken of. For the brethren 
												there, “being strongly impressed 
												with a sense of the advantages 
												which mankind derived from the 
												gospel, were so anxious to 
												render the apostle’s preaching 
												in Corinth successful, that, 
												during his residence there, they 
												sent him money, to prevent his 
												being burdensome to the 
												Corinthians. His acceptance of 
												these presents he called a 
												spoiling of the Philippians, 
												because, as he was not labouring 
												among them, he took their money 
												without giving them any thing in 
												return for it; and a taking of 
												wages: but it was for a service 
												performed, not to the 
												Philippians, but to the 
												Corinthians.” And when I was 
												present with you and wanted — 
												The gains of my labour not quite 
												supplying my necessities; I was 
												chargeable to no man — Of your 
												church, or of Corinth. The word 
												here used, κατεναρκησα, appears 
												to be derived from ναρκη, which, 
												Elian says, is the name of a 
												fish, called by the Latins 
												torpedo, because it deprives 
												those who touch it of the sense 
												of feeling. According to this 
												derivation of the word, the 
												apostle’s meaning is, I 
												benumbed, or oppressed, or hurt, 
												no one. See the notes of Joach. 
												Camerar. For what was lacking — 
												For my support; the brethren 
												from Macedonia supplied — Though 
												it seems the apostle generally 
												maintained himself by his own 
												labour, he was sometimes so 
												occupied in preaching, and in 
												the other functions of his 
												ministry, that he had little 
												time for working. This was the 
												case when he was first at 
												Corinth, at which time the 
												Philippians relieved him. For he 
												chose to receive help from the 
												poor of that place, rather than 
												from the rich Corinthians. In 
												all things I have kept myself 
												from being burdensome to you — 
												In any way whatever; and will 
												keep myself — So long as God 
												shall enable me.
 
 
 Verses 10-12
 2 Corinthians 11:10-12. As the 
												truth of Christ is in me — As 
												sure as I am a true Christian, 
												and an apostle. The expression 
												has the nature of an oath. See 
												on Romans 9:1. No man shall stop 
												me of this boasting — For I will 
												receive nothing from you. 
												Wherefore — For what reason have 
												I resolved on this? Is it, as my 
												enemies tell you, because I do 
												not love you, and will not be 
												obliged to you? God knoweth that 
												is not the case. But what I do, 
												&c. — As if he had said, The 
												true reason why I do so, and 
												resolve to continue the same 
												course, is this; that I may cut 
												off occasion, namely, of 
												reproaching me, or boasting of 
												themselves, from them which 
												desire occasion for so doing; 
												that wherein they glory — 
												Namely, of their preaching 
												freely, at least sometimes, or 
												some of them, or pretending to 
												do so; they may be found even as 
												we — To have no advantage over 
												me in this respect. It would 
												seem that the false teachers at 
												Corinth, in imitation of the 
												apostle, pretended to take 
												nothing for their preaching, and 
												boasted of their 
												disinterestedness. Nevertheless, 
												on other pretences they received 
												presents from their disciples in 
												private, nay, extorted them. See 
												2 Corinthians 11:20. Wherefore, 
												to put these impostors to shame, 
												and to oblige them really to 
												imitate him, the apostle 
												declared that he never had taken 
												any thing, nor ever would take 
												any thing from the Corinthians, 
												whether in public or in private, 
												on any account whatever.
 
 Verses 13-15
 2 Corinthians 11:13-15. For such 
												are false apostles — Whatever 
												they may pretend to the 
												contrary, being destitute of 
												that divine mission which all 
												the true apostles have; 
												deceitful workers — Pretending 
												to great disinterestedness in 
												their work, while their only 
												design is to promote their own 
												interest; transforming 
												themselves into the appearance 
												of apostles of Christ — By 
												pretending to preach the gospel 
												without reward. And no marvel 
												they assume that appearance; for 
												Satan himself — In subordination 
												to whom they act, can put on 
												such deceitful appearances, and 
												be transformed into an angel of 
												light — Wearing, on certain 
												occasions, a mask of sanctity 
												and religion, in his attempts to 
												deceive and insnare the souls of 
												men, so that one would imagine 
												his suggestions to be of a 
												celestial and divine original. 
												“In this manner, it may be 
												supposed, Satan transformed 
												himself, when he tempted our 
												Lord in the wilderness; and in 
												like manner also when he tempted 
												our first mother Eve. Evil 
												spirits are called angels of 
												darkness, because they employ 
												themselves in promoting error 
												and wickedness, which is 
												spiritual darkness. Whereas, 
												good angels are called angels of 
												light, because they employ 
												themselves in promoting truth 
												and virtue, which is spiritual 
												light.” Therefore, it is no 
												great thing — Nothing 
												extraordinary; if his ministers 
												also, under his influence, be 
												transformed — That is, make 
												themselves to appear; as 
												ministers of righteousness — 
												False teachers are justly called 
												ministers of Satan, because they 
												are employed in disseminating 
												error, whereby Satan’s kingdom 
												is supported in the world. And, 
												on the other hand, with equal 
												propriety are the teachers of 
												true doctrine called ministers 
												of righteousness, because of the 
												efficacy of true doctrine to 
												promote righteousness in them 
												who receive it: whose end — 
												Notwithstanding all their 
												disguises; shall be according to 
												their works — Here the end, as 
												in Romans 6:21, signifies the 
												final issue of a course of 
												action; consequently the 
												retribution which shall be made 
												to the actor.
 
 Verse 16-17
 2 Corinthians 11:16-17. I say 
												again — He premises a new 
												apology to this new commendation 
												of himself; let no man think me 
												a fool — In boasting thus of 
												myself; let no one think I take 
												any pleasure in doing it, or 
												that I do it without a very 
												strong reason. Let the 
												provocation I have received be 
												considered: let the necessity of 
												the circumstance, and the 
												importance of my character, be 
												duly weighed, and I shall surely 
												be excused. But if otherwise — 
												If any one do think me foolish 
												herein, yet bear with my folly, 
												and hear me patiently without 
												offence; that I may boast myself 
												a little — As well as others. 
												That which I speak — On this 
												head; I speak it not after the 
												Lord — Not by any immediate 
												direction or inspiration from 
												Christ; nor after his example, 
												and in such a way as seems 
												worthy of him; but as it were 
												foolishly, &c. — In such a 
												manner as many may think 
												foolish, and indeed would be 
												foolish, were I not compelled to 
												it in order that I may vindicate 
												my apostleship, and confirm you 
												in the truth.
 
 Verses 18-21
 2 Corinthians 11:18-21. Seeing 
												that many glory after the flesh 
												— In circumcision, Jewish 
												extraction, and other outward 
												privileges and qualifications; I 
												will glory also — In the same 
												manner; nor can my seeming folly 
												offend you; for ye — The 
												disciples of the false apostles; 
												suffer fools gladly, seeing ye 
												yourselves are wonderfully wise 
												— And in your extraordinary 
												wisdom can cherish that arrogant 
												temper in others. As if he had 
												said, Being such very wise men, 
												I hope you will bear with this 
												piece of folly in me as you bear 
												with it in others. This is 
												written in the highest strain of 
												ridicule, as is plain from the 
												next verse, where, in mockery, 
												he mentions their abjectly 
												bearing the contumelious and 
												injurious behaviour of the false 
												teachers, as an example of their 
												wisdom in bearing. But it was a 
												bearing, not with fools, but 
												with knaves, to their own cost. 
												By taking notice of that 
												circumstance, therefore, the 
												apostle placed their pretended 
												wisdom in a truly ridiculous 
												light. For, &c. — Your patience 
												in bearing is indeed very great; 
												for ye suffer — Not only the 
												folly, but the gross abuses of 
												those false teachers; ye take it 
												patiently if a man — Any of the 
												false teachers; bring you into 
												bondage — Lord it over you in 
												the most arbitrary manner. If a 
												man devour you — By his 
												exorbitant demands, 
												notwithstanding his boast of not 
												being burdensome; if he take of 
												you — Gifts and presents, 
												pretending to exact nothing as 
												due; if he exalt himself — By 
												the most unbounded self- 
												commendation; if he smite you on 
												the face — Treat you as 
												disgracefully as if he did so. I 
												speak — What I have now said; 
												concerning reproach — Namely, 
												the reproach which they cast 
												upon you Gentiles as 
												uncircumcised and profane, while 
												they are all of a holy nation: 
												or, I mean it of those 
												reproaches with which they load 
												me and my fellow-labourers; as 
												though we had been weak — Or 
												contemptible, in comparison of 
												them, and could have used no 
												such authority over you. 
												Howbeit, whereinsoever any is 
												bold — Thinks he may value and 
												extol himself; (I speak 
												foolishly — That is, in 
												appearance;) I am bold also — I 
												have as much to say for myself, 
												as he has for himself.
 
 Verse 22
 2 Corinthians 11:22. Are they 
												Hebrews? — Descended from Heber, 
												(see Genesis 11:14,) and 
												speaking the Hebrew language, 
												though with some variation; so 
												am I — Paul indeed was a native 
												of Tarsus in Cilicia, but his 
												father and mother were Hebrews, 
												Philippians 3:5. And having been 
												sent to Jerusalem when young, he 
												was instructed by Gamaliel, a 
												noted Jewish doctor, Acts 22:3. 
												So that in Jerusalem he 
												perfected himself both in the 
												language and religion of his 
												nation, on all which accounts he 
												was truly a Hebrew descended of 
												Hebrews. Are they Israelites? — 
												Descended from Jacob, who, in 
												preference to his brother Esau, 
												was chosen to be the root of the 
												visible church of God in that 
												early age, and was called Israel 
												for the reason mentioned Genesis 
												32:28. This appellation, 
												therefore, signified that the 
												persons to whom it was given 
												were members of God’s visible 
												church by their descent from 
												Jacob, and consequently were 
												distinguished from proselytes 
												who were members by 
												circumcision, and not by 
												descent. Are they the seed of 
												Abraham? — Inasmuch as Abraham, 
												being constituted a father of 
												many nations, had two kinds of 
												seed; the one by natural 
												descent, called his seed by the 
												law; the other by faith, called 
												that which is of the faith of 
												Abraham, see Romans 4:13; Romans 
												4:16. Macknight thinks, that by 
												the seed of Abraham, the apostle 
												intended here his seed by faith, 
												or his spiritual seed; because 
												if he had meant his natural 
												seed, this question would have 
												been the same with the 
												preceding: a tautology, he 
												thinks, not to be imputed to the 
												apostle.
 
 
 Verses 23-25
 2 Corinthians 11:23-25. Are they 
												ministers of Christ? — “St. Paul 
												does not compare himself with 
												the false teachers as an 
												apostle, but as a minister of 
												Christ simply. And to show how 
												much he exceeded them in that 
												inferior character, he mentions 
												his labours in the ministry, and 
												his sufferings undergone in his 
												many journeys and voyages, for 
												the sake of spreading the 
												gospel. And from his account it 
												appears, that none of the heroes 
												of antiquity, however vehemently 
												actuated by the love of fame, or 
												of military glory or power, 
												either did or suffered as much 
												in the pursuit of their objects, 
												as the Apostle Paul did and 
												suffered for Christ and his 
												gospel.” I am more so than they; 
												in labours more abundant — 
												Sustained for a long series of 
												years; in stripes above measure 
												— All endured for Christ and his 
												cause. In prisons more frequent 
												— In the narrative of Paul’s 
												travels and sufferings, 
												contained in the Acts, we only 
												read of his being imprisoned 
												once, before this epistle was 
												written, namely, at Philippi. 
												But doubtless many particulars 
												of his life, besides the 
												imprisonments here referred to, 
												were omitted in that history, 
												for the sake of brevity. In 
												deaths oft — Surrounding me in 
												the most dreadful forms. Of the 
												Jews five times received I — In 
												their synagogues, and before 
												their courts of judgment; forty 
												stripes, save one — According to 
												the law, punishment by stripes 
												was restricted to forty, at one 
												beating, Deuteronomy 25:3; but 
												the whip with which these 
												stripes were given, consisting 
												of three separate cords, and 
												each stroke being counted as 
												three stripes, thirteen strokes 
												made thirty-nine stripes, beyond 
												which they never went. See 
												Whitby. As the apostle, before 
												his conversion, had been very 
												active in inflicting this 
												punishment on the disciples of 
												Christ, he could not complain 
												when he himself was treated in 
												the same manner by the zealots 
												for the law. Thrice was I beaten 
												with rods — By the Roman lictors 
												or beadles, at the command of 
												their superior magistrates. In 
												his history, contained in the 
												Acts, we find no mention made of 
												his being punished with stripes, 
												and only one instance occurs 
												there of his being beaten with 
												rods. See the margin. Once was I 
												stoned — Namely, at Lystra, at 
												which time he was left for dead. 
												Thrice I suffered shipwreck — 
												Before his voyage to Rome, in 
												which he was shipwrecked at 
												Malta; of these we have no 
												account in the Acts. A night and 
												a day I have been in the deep — 
												Probably floating on some part 
												of a shipwrecked vessel, by 
												which, possibly, he escaped to 
												shore. This, it is likely, 
												happened in one of the three 
												shipwrecks mentioned in the 
												preceding clause.
 
 Verse 26-27
 2 Corinthians 11:26-27. In 
												journeyings — For the sake of 
												preaching the gospel; often — In 
												which I have been exposed to a 
												variety of dangers, from waters, 
												robbers, my own countrymen, and 
												the heathen. In perils in the 
												city — From tumults. Of these 
												dangers, frequent mention is 
												made in the Acts: as in 
												Damascus; after that, in 
												Jerusalem; then in Antioch, in 
												Pisidia, Iconium, Thessalonica, 
												Berea, Corinth, and Ephesus; all 
												before the writing of this 
												epistle. In dangers in the 
												wilderness — Of perishing by 
												want, or by wild beasts; in the 
												sea — From storms and pirates; 
												among false brethren — Who, 
												amidst specious pretensions of 
												love and affection, secretly 
												watched, if not to destroy me, 
												at least to injure my character, 
												and ruin my usefulness. In 
												weariness — Through my incessant 
												labours; and painfulness — Or 
												fatiguing toil. The latter of 
												the words here used, μοχθος, 
												implies more than κοπος, the 
												former, namely, such hard labour 
												as caused great fatigue. In 
												watchings often — Continuing 
												many nights without sleep, which 
												might happen from various 
												causes, besides that mentioned 
												Acts 20:11, when he continued 
												his discourse till break of day. 
												In hunger and thirst — Not 
												having the necessaries of life 
												at hand. In cold and nakedness — 
												Having no place where to lay my 
												head, and no convenient raiment 
												to cover me; and yet appearing 
												before noblemen, governors, and 
												kings, and not being ashamed.
 
 Verses 28-31
 2 Corinthians 11:28-31. Besides 
												those things that are without — 
												These external troubles which I 
												have mentioned; that which 
												cometh upon me daily — Greek, η 
												επισυστασις μου η καθ’ ημεραν, 
												that which rusheth upon me 
												daily, or that which is my daily 
												pressure. The expression denotes 
												a crowd of people surrounding 
												and pressing upon a person, in 
												order to bear him down, and 
												trample upon him; an idea which 
												is elegantly applied to his 
												cares respecting the churches; 
												crowding in upon his mind, and 
												ready to overwhelm it. And this 
												is very properly mentioned here 
												among his sufferings, being 
												certainly not one of the least 
												of them, as may be easily 
												inferred from the account which 
												he has given in this and in his 
												former epistle, of the exceeding 
												grief which the errors and 
												irregularities of the single 
												church of Corinth caused him. In 
												saying, the care of all the 
												churches, he signified he was 
												deeply concerned for the 
												prosperity, even of those which 
												he had not seen in the flesh. 
												St. Peter himself could not have 
												said this in so strong a sense. 
												Who is weak — Namely, in grace, 
												and therefore oppressed with a 
												variety of doubts and fears, and 
												cast down; and I am not weak — 
												By sympathy, as well as by 
												condescension, manifested in 
												complying with their weakness. 
												Who is offended — Hindered in or 
												turned out of the good way; and 
												I burn not — With zeal and 
												desire to restore him: or am not 
												pained, as though I had fire in 
												my bosom? So that he had not 
												only the care of the churches, 
												but every person therein. If I 
												must needs glory — And I am 
												heartily sorry that any such 
												necessity is laid upon me; I 
												will glory of the things that 
												concern my infirmities — In my 
												sufferings for Christ, of 
												various kinds, such as I have 
												specified, (see 2 Corinthians 
												12:10,) sufferings which show my 
												weakness, and his strength, and 
												therefore humble me, and exalt 
												him. And in what I have said, I 
												have only spoken the exact 
												truth, without reigning or 
												aggravating any one 
												circumstance; for God knoweth 
												that I lie not — Even that 
												eternal Majesty of heaven and 
												earth; who is blessed for 
												evermore. This clause is added 
												to increase the solemnity of his 
												appeal to God for the truth of 
												what he had said, and was going 
												further to say; and that not 
												only concerning his deliverance 
												at Damascus, but concerning the 
												visions and revelations of the 
												Lord, to be mentioned in the 
												next chapter.
 
 Verse 32-33
 2 Corinthians 11:32-33. In 
												Damascus, &c. — As if he had 
												said, I must be permitted to add 
												one circumstance more to 
												illustrate the dangers to which 
												I was exposed, as soon as I 
												engaged in the Christian cause, 
												and the remarkable interposition 
												of Divine Providence for my 
												preservation: the governor under 
												Aretas — King of Arabia and 
												Syria, of which Damascus was a 
												chief city, willing to oblige 
												the Jews, kept the city of the 
												Damascenes with a garrison — 
												That is, setting guards at all 
												the gates, day and night; 
												desirous, or, determining, to 
												apprehend me — And to deliver me 
												to them. And in such a danger, 
												where even the form of a trial 
												was not to be expected, what 
												could I do but flee? Through a 
												window — Therefore, of a house 
												which stood on the city wall; I 
												was let down in a basket — With 
												ropes; and escaped his hands — 
												The assistance of good men 
												co-operating with the care of 
												God. Now, who that considers and 
												credits the above brief account, 
												though of but a part of the 
												labours and sufferings which the 
												apostle voluntarily sustained, 
												that he might testify to mankind 
												the gospel of the grace of God, 
												can for a moment question his 
												certain knowledge of the truth 
												and importance of that gospel; 
												especially as he neither reaped, 
												nor could expect to reap, any 
												worldly benefit whatever from 
												preaching it? Did he do and 
												suffer all these things to 
												spread a doctrine which, for any 
												thing he knew to the contrary, 
												might be false; or if true, was 
												not important to the salvation 
												of the human race? Surely no man 
												can suppose it, without first 
												supposing that the apostle was 
												destitute of common sense. 
												Consider this, reader, and 
												remember, at the same time, how 
												the Lord sanctioned and 
												confirmed his testimony, by 
												signs and wonders, and divers 
												miracles, and gifts of the Holy 
												Ghost, according to his own 
												will, and then think how thou 
												shalt escape if thou reject or 
												neglect such a gospel, or the 
												great salvation revealed in and 
												by it.
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