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Text -- 2 Corinthians 5:3 (NET)

Strongs On/Off
Context
5:3 if indeed, after we have put on our heavenly house, we will not be found naked.
Parallel   Cross Reference (TSK)   ITL  

Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Dictionary Themes and Topics: WISDOM, THE, OF SOLOMON | Resurrection | PAUL, THE APOSTLE, 6 | Nakedness | Mankind | Man | Immortality | Garment | ESCHATOLOGY OF THE NEW TESTAMENT, VI-X | Death | Corinthians, Second Epistle to the | more
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
Robertson , Vincent , Wesley , JFB , Clarke , Calvin , Defender , TSK

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , Haydock , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes , Geneva Bible

Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis , MHCC , Matthew Henry , Barclay , Constable , College , McGarvey , Lapide

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Robertson: 2Co 5:3 - -- Being clothed ( endusamenoi ). First aorist middle participle, having put on the garment.

Being clothed ( endusamenoi ).

First aorist middle participle, having put on the garment.

Robertson: 2Co 5:3 - -- Naked ( gumnoi ). That is, disembodied spirits, "like the souls in Sheol, without form, and void of all power of activity"(Plummer).

Naked ( gumnoi ).

That is, disembodied spirits, "like the souls in Sheol, without form, and void of all power of activity"(Plummer).

Vincent: 2Co 5:3 - -- If so be ( εἴ γε ) Assuming that.

If so be ( εἴ γε )

Assuming that.

Vincent: 2Co 5:3 - -- Being clothed Compare Job 10:11.

Being clothed

Compare Job 10:11.

Vincent: 2Co 5:3 - -- Naked ( γυμνοὶ ) Without a body. The word was used by Greek writers of disembodied spirits. See the quotation from Plato's " Gorgias" in...

Naked ( γυμνοὶ )

Without a body. The word was used by Greek writers of disembodied spirits. See the quotation from Plato's " Gorgias" in note on Luk 12:20; also " Cratylus," 403, where, speaking of Pluto, Socrates says: " The foolish fears which people have of him, such as the fear of being always with him after death, and of the soul denuded (γυμνὴ ) of the body going to him." Stanley cites Herodotus' story of Melissa, the Corinthian queen, who appeared to her husband after death, entreating him to burn dresses for her as a covering for her disembodied spirit (v., 92). The whole expression, being clothed - naked is equivalent to we shall not be found naked because we shall be clothed .

Wesley: 2Co 5:3 - -- That is, with the image of God, while we are in the body.

That is, with the image of God, while we are in the body.

Wesley: 2Co 5:3 - -- Of the wedding garment.

Of the wedding garment.

JFB: 2Co 5:3 - -- Our "desire" holds good, should the Lord's coming find us alive. Translate, "If so be that having ourselves clothed (with our natural body, compare 2C...

Our "desire" holds good, should the Lord's coming find us alive. Translate, "If so be that having ourselves clothed (with our natural body, compare 2Co 5:4) we shall not be found naked (stripped of our present body)."

Clarke: 2Co 5:3 - -- If so be that being clothed - That is, fully prepared in this life for the glory of God

If so be that being clothed - That is, fully prepared in this life for the glory of God

Clarke: 2Co 5:3 - -- We shall not be found naked - Destitute in that future state of that Divine image which shall render us capable of enjoying an endless glory.

We shall not be found naked - Destitute in that future state of that Divine image which shall render us capable of enjoying an endless glory.

Calvin: 2Co 5:3 - -- 3.Since clothed He restricts to believers, what he had stated respecting the certainty of a future life, as it is a thing peculiar to them. For the w...

3.Since clothed He restricts to believers, what he had stated respecting the certainty of a future life, as it is a thing peculiar to them. For the wicked, too, are stripped of the body, but as they bring nothing within the view of God, but a disgraceful nakedness, they are, consequently, not clothed with a glorious body. Believers, on the other hand, who appear in the view of God, clothed with Christ, and adorned with His image, receive the glorious robe of immortality. For I am inclined to take this view, rather than that of Chrysostom and others, who think that nothing new is here stated, but that Paul simply repeats here, what he had previously said as to putting on an eternal habitation. The Apostle, therefore, makes mention here of a twofold clothing, with which God invests us — the righteousness of Christ, and sanctification of the Spirit in this life; and, after death, immortality and glory. The first is the cause of the second, because

those whom God has determined to glorify, he first justifies. (Rom 8:30.)

This meaning, too, is elicited from the particle also, which is without doubt introduced for the purpose of amplifying — as if Paul had said, that a new robe will be prepared for believers after death, since they have been clothed in this life also.

Defender: 2Co 5:3 - -- The period between one's death and resurrection, even though a time of blessed fellowship with the Lord (2Co 5:8), is compared to a state of nakedness...

The period between one's death and resurrection, even though a time of blessed fellowship with the Lord (2Co 5:8), is compared to a state of nakedness, since the spirit/soul system, without its body or "spiritual clothing," is awaiting Christ's return to earth."

TSK: 2Co 5:3 - -- being : Gen 3:7-11; Exo 32:25; Rev 3:18, Rev 16:15

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: 2Co 5:3 - -- If so be that being clothed - This passage has been interpreted in a great many different ways. The view of Locke is given above. Rosenmuller r...

If so be that being clothed - This passage has been interpreted in a great many different ways. The view of Locke is given above. Rosenmuller renders it, "For in the other life we shall not be wholly destitute of a body, but we shall have a body."Tyndale renders it, "If it happen that we be found clothed, and not naked."Doddridge supposes it to mean, "since being so clothed upon, we shall not be found naked, and exposed to any evil and inconvenience, how entirely soever we may be stripped of everything we can call our own here below."Hammond explains it to mean, "If, indeed, we shall, happily, be among the number of those faithful Christians, who will be found clothed upon, not naked."Various other expositions may be seen in the larger commentaries. The meaning is probably this:

(1) The word "clothed"refers to the future spiritual body of believers; the eternal habitation in which they shall reside.

\caps1 (2) t\caps0 he expression implies an earnest desire of Paul to be thus invested with that body.

\caps1 (3) i\caps0 t is the language of humility and of deep solicitude, as if it were possible that they might fail, and as if it demanded their utmost care and anxiety that they might thus be clothed with the spiritual body in heaven.

\caps1 (4) i\caps0 t means that in that future state, the soul will not be naked; that is, destitute of any body, or covering. The present body will be laid aside. It will return to corruption, and the disembodied Spirit will ascend to God and to heaven. It will be disencumbered of the body with which it has been so long clothed. But we are not thence to infer that it will be destitute of a body; that it will remain a naked soul. It will be clothed there in its appropriate glorified body; and will have an appropriate habitation there. This does not imply, as Bloomfield supposes, that the souls of the wicked will be destitute of any such habitation as the glorified body of the saints; which may be true - but it means simply that the soul shall not be destitute of an appropriate body in heaven, but that the union of body and soul there shall be known as well as on earth.

Poole: 2Co 5:3 - -- Some make the clothing here spoken of different from the clothing before mentioned; and make this verse restrictive of what the apostle had before s...

Some make the clothing here spoken of different from the clothing before mentioned; and make this verse restrictive of what the apostle had before said, of the certainty which some have of being clothed upon with a glorious body.

If so be (saith the apostle) we shall not be found naked but clothed i.e. with the wedding garment of Christ’ s righteousness; for concerning those that do not die in the Lord, that do not watch, and keep their garments, it is said, Rev 16:15 , they shall walk naked, and men shall see their shame. But considering the clothing before mentioned was not this clothing, but the superinducing of an immortal, incorruptible, glorious state of body, upon our mortal, corruptible state, some judicious interpreters think, that the clothing here mentioned is the clothing of the soul with the body. It is manifest that the apostles apprehended Christ’ s second coming much nearer than it hath proved. Therefore he saith, 1Th 4:15 : We that are alive (supposing that generation might live) to Christ’ s second coming; and 1Co 15:51 : We shall not all sleep, but we shall all be changed. This some think (and that not improbably) is the cause of this passage; the sense of which they judge to be this: If so be that we be, at the resurrection, found in the flesh, clothed still with our bodies, and shall not be found naked, that is, stripped of our flesh, and dead before that time.

Haydock: 2Co 5:3 - -- that we any be found clothed, not naked, [2] not divested of the body, as before; i.e. we desire immortal happiness without dying: though some expound...

that we any be found clothed, not naked, [2] not divested of the body, as before; i.e. we desire immortal happiness without dying: though some expound it, not naked; i.e. not deprived of the glory we hope for. (Witham)

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[BIBLIOGRAPHY]

Si tamen vestiti, non nudi inveniamur, Greek: eige kai endusamenoi: some read, Greek: ekdusamenoi. See St. John Chrysostom.

Gill: 2Co 5:3 - -- If so be that being clothed,.... This supposition is made with respect to the saints who shall be alive at Christ's second coming, who will not be str...

If so be that being clothed,.... This supposition is made with respect to the saints who shall be alive at Christ's second coming, who will not be stripped of their bodies, and so will "not be found naked", or disembodied, and shall have a glory at once put upon them, both soul and body; or these words are an inference from the saints' present clothing, to their future clothing, thus; "seeing we are clothed", have not only put on the new man, and are clothed and adorned with the graces of the Spirit, but are arrayed with the best robe, the wedding garment, the robe of Christ's righteousness,

we shall not be found naked; but shall be clothed upon with the heavenly glory, as soon as we are dismissed from hence. Some read these words as a wish, "O that we were clothed, that we might not be found naked!" and so is expressive of one of the sighs, and groans, and earnest desires of the saints in their present situation after the glories of another world.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: 2Co 5:3 Grk “it”; the referent (the “heavenly dwelling” of the previous verse) has been specified in the translation for clarity.

Geneva Bible: 2Co 5:3 ( 2 ) If so be that being clothed we shall not be found naked. ( 2 ) An exposition of the former saying: we do not without reason desire to be clad w...

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: 2Co 5:1-21 - --1 That in his assured hope of immortal glory,9 and in expectation of it, and of the general judgment, he labours to keep a good conscience;12 not that...

MHCC: 2Co 5:1-8 - --The believer not only is well assured by faith that there is another and a happy life after this is ended, but he has good hope, through grace, of hea...

Matthew Henry: 2Co 5:1-11 - -- The apostle in these verses pursues the argument of the former chapter, concerning the grounds of their courage and patience under afflictions. And,...

Barclay: 2Co 5:1-10 - --There is a very significant progression of thought in this passage, a progression which gives us the very essence of the thought of Paul. (i) To him ...

Constable: 2Co 1:12--8:1 - --II. ANSWERS TO INSINUATIONS ABOUT THE SINCERITY OF PAUL'S COMMITMENT TO THE CORINTHIANS AND TO THE MINISTRY 1:12--7:16 ...

Constable: 2Co 3:1--6:11 - --B. Exposition of Paul's view of the ministry 3:1-6:10 The apostle proceeded to explain his view of Chris...

Constable: 2Co 4:7--5:11 - --3. The sufferings and supports of a minister of the gospel 4:7-5:10 Paul proceeded to explain fu...

Constable: 2Co 5:1-10 - --The contrast between our present and our future dwellings 5:1-10 Paul continued to give reasons why we need not lose heart. The themes of life in the ...

College: 2Co 5:1-21 - --2 CORINTHIANS 5 5. Confident in Eternal Home (5:1-10) This entire section of 2 Cor 5:1-10 is something of an anomaly in its context. It certainly in...

McGarvey: 2Co 5:3 - -- if so be that being clothed we shall not be found naked .

Lapide: 2Co 5:1-21 - --CHAPTIER 5 SYNOPSIS OF THE CHAPTER i. The Apostle goes on to remind the Corinthians of the glories of heaven, saying that in exile here and in the ...

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Introduction / Outline

Robertson: 2 Corinthians (Book Introduction) Second Corinthians From Macedonia a.d. 54 Or 55 By Way of Introduction The Pauline authorship is admitted by all real scholars, though there is ...

JFB: 2 Corinthians (Book Introduction) THE following reasons seem to have induced Paul to write this Second Epistle to the Corinthians: (1) That he might explain the reasons for his having ...

JFB: 2 Corinthians (Outline) THE HEADING; PAUL'S CONSOLATIONS IN RECENT TRIALS IN ASIA; HIS SINCERITY TOWARDS THE CORINTHIANS; EXPLANATION OF HIS NOT HAVING VISITED THEM AS HE HA...

TSK: 2 Corinthians (Book Introduction) The most remarkable circumstance in this Epistle, observes Mr. Scott, is the confidence of the Apostle in the goodness of his cause, and in the power ...

TSK: 2 Corinthians 5 (Chapter Introduction) Overview 2Co 5:1, That in his assured hope of immortal glory, 2Co 5:9, and in expectation of it, and of the general judgment, he labours to keep a...

Poole: 2 Corinthians 5 (Chapter Introduction) CORINTHIANS CHAPTER 5

MHCC: 2 Corinthians (Book Introduction) The second epistle to the Corinthians probably was written about a year after the first. Its contents are closely connected with those of the former e...

MHCC: 2 Corinthians 5 (Chapter Introduction) (2Co 5:1-8) The apostle's hope and desire of heavenly glory. (2Co 5:9-15) This excited to diligence. The reasons of his being affected with zeal for ...

Matthew Henry: 2 Corinthians (Book Introduction) An Exposition, with Practical Observations, of The Second Epistle of St. Paul to the Corinthians In his former epistle the apostle had signified his i...

Matthew Henry: 2 Corinthians 5 (Chapter Introduction) The apostle proceeds in showing the reasons why they did not faint under their afflictions, namely, their expectation, desire, and assurance of hap...

Barclay: 2 Corinthians (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO THE LETTERS TO THE CORINTHIANS The Greatness Of Corinth A glance at the map will show that Corinth was made for greatness. The south...

Barclay: 2 Corinthians 5 (Chapter Introduction) Joy And Judgment To Come (2Co_5:1-10) The New Creation (2Co_5:11-19) Ambassador For Christ (2Co_5:20-21; 2Co_6:1-2)

Constable: 2 Corinthians (Book Introduction) Introduction Historical background First Corinthians did not dispel the problems in th...

Constable: 2 Corinthians (Outline) Outline I. Introduction 1:1-11 A. Salutation 1:1-2 B. Thanksgiving for c...

Constable: 2 Corinthians 2 Corinthians Bibliography Alford, Henry. The Greek Testament. 4 vols. Reprint ed. Grand Rapids: Baker Book Hou...

Haydock: 2 Corinthians (Book Introduction) THE SECOND EPISTLE OF ST. PAUL, THE APOSTLE, TO THE CORINTHIANS. INTRODUCTION. The subject and design of this second Epistle to the Corinthian...

Gill: 2 Corinthians (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO 2 CORINTHIANS This epistle, according to the subscription at the end of it, was written from Philippi of Macedonia; and though the ...

Gill: 2 Corinthians 5 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO 2 CORINTHIANS 5 The apostle, in this chapter, enlarges upon the saints' comfortable assurance, expectation, and desire of the heave...

College: 2 Corinthians (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION Studying 2 Corinthians plunges the modern reader back to the real, tumultuous world of early Christianity. The simple ideals of sharing ...

College: 2 Corinthians (Outline) OUTLINE I. OPENING - 1:1-2 II. THANKSGIVING - 1:3-11 A. GOD COMFORTS - 1:3-7 B. GOD DELIVERS - 1:8-11 III. DEFENSE OF INTEGRITY - 1:12...

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