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Text -- 2 Corinthians 9:8 (NET)

Strongs On/Off
Context
9:8 And God is able to make all grace overflow to you so that because you have enough of everything in every way at all times, you will overflow in every good work.
Parallel   Cross Reference (TSK)   ITL  

Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Dictionary Themes and Topics: Works | WORK; WORKS | Power | Poor | Philippians, Epistle to | PAUL, THE APOSTLE, 4 | Liberality | JAMES, EPISTLE OF | God | GRACE | Corinth | Contentment | Blessing | Beneficence | ALMS; ALMSGIVING | 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 , Maclaren , MHCC , Matthew Henry , Barclay , Constable , College , McGarvey , Lapide

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Robertson: 2Co 9:8 - -- Is able ( dunatei ). Late verb, not found except here; 2Co 13:3; Rom 14:4. So far a Pauline word made from dunatos , able.

Is able ( dunatei ).

Late verb, not found except here; 2Co 13:3; Rom 14:4. So far a Pauline word made from dunatos , able.

Robertson: 2Co 9:8 - -- All sufficiency ( pāsan autarkeian ). Old word from autarkēs (Phi 4:11), common word, in N.T. only here and 1Ti 6:6). The use of this word show...

All sufficiency ( pāsan autarkeian ).

Old word from autarkēs (Phi 4:11), common word, in N.T. only here and 1Ti 6:6). The use of this word shows Paul’ s acquaintance with Stoicism. Paul takes this word of Greek philosophy and applies it to the Christian view of life as independent of circumstances. But he does not accept the view of the Cynics in the avoidance of society. Note threefold use of "all"here (en panti , pantote , pāsan , in everything, always, all sufficiency).

Vincent: 2Co 9:8 - -- Always - all - in everything Nearly reproducing the play on the word all in the Greek.

Always - all - in everything

Nearly reproducing the play on the word all in the Greek.

Vincent: 2Co 9:8 - -- Sufficiency ( αὐτάρκειαν ) Only here and 1Ti 6:6. The kindred adjective αὐταρκης A.V., content , occurs Phi 4:11 (see n...

Sufficiency ( αὐτάρκειαν )

Only here and 1Ti 6:6. The kindred adjective αὐταρκης A.V., content , occurs Phi 4:11 (see note). The word properly means self-sufficiency , and is one of those which show Paul's acquaintance with Stoicism, and the influence of its vocabulary upon his own. It expressed the Stoic conception of the wise man as being sufficient in himself, wanting nothing and possessing everything. Here, not in the sense of sufficiency of worldly goods, but of that moral quality, bound up with self-consecration and faith, which renders the new self in Christ independent of external circumstances.

Wesley: 2Co 9:8 - -- How remarkable are these words! Each is loaded with matter and increases all the way it goes.

How remarkable are these words! Each is loaded with matter and increases all the way it goes.

Wesley: 2Co 9:8 - -- Every kind of blessing.

Every kind of blessing.

Wesley: 2Co 9:8 - -- God gives us everything, that we may do good therewith, and so receive more blessings. All things in this life, even rewards, are, to the faithful, se...

God gives us everything, that we may do good therewith, and so receive more blessings. All things in this life, even rewards, are, to the faithful, seeds in order to a future harvest. Pro 22:9

JFB: 2Co 9:8 - -- Even in external goods, and even while ye bestow on others [BENGEL].

Even in external goods, and even while ye bestow on others [BENGEL].

JFB: 2Co 9:8 - -- "in order that." God's gifts are bestowed on us, not that we may have them to ourselves, but that we may the more "abound in good works" to others.

"in order that." God's gifts are bestowed on us, not that we may have them to ourselves, but that we may the more "abound in good works" to others.

JFB: 2Co 9:8 - -- So as not to need the help of others, having yourselves from God "bread for your food" (2Co 9:10).

So as not to need the help of others, having yourselves from God "bread for your food" (2Co 9:10).

JFB: 2Co 9:8 - -- Greek, "in everything."

Greek, "in everything."

JFB: 2Co 9:8 - -- Of charity to others, which will be "your seed sown" (2Co 9:10).

Of charity to others, which will be "your seed sown" (2Co 9:10).

Clarke: 2Co 9:8 - -- God is able to make all grace abound - We have already seen, 2Co 8:1 that the word χαρις, in the connection in which the apostle uses it in th...

God is able to make all grace abound - We have already seen, 2Co 8:1 that the word χαρις, in the connection in which the apostle uses it in these chapters, signifies a charitable gift; here it certainly has the same meaning: God is able to give you, in his mercy, abundance of temporal good; that, having a sufficiency, ye may abound in every good work. This refers to the sowing plenteously: those who do so shall reap plenteously - they shall have an abundance of God’ s blessings.

Calvin: 2Co 9:8 - -- 8.And God is able Again he provides against the base thought, which our infidelity constantly suggests to us. “What! will you not rather have a reg...

8.And God is able Again he provides against the base thought, which our infidelity constantly suggests to us. “What! will you not rather have a regard to your own interest? Do you not consider, that when this is taken away, there will be so much the less left for yourself?” With the view of driving away this, Paul arms us with a choice promise — that whatever we give away will turn out to our advantage. I have said already, that we are by nature excessively niggardly — because we are prone to distrust, which tempts every one to retain with eager grasp what belongs to him. For correcting this fault, we must lay hold of this promise — that those that do good to the poor do no less provide for their own interests than if they were watering their lands. For by alms-givings, like so many canals, they make the blessing of God flow forth towards themselves, so as to be enriched by it. What Paul means is this: “Such liberality will deprive you of nothing, but God will make it return to you in much greater abundance.” For he speaks of the power of God, not as the Poets do, but after the manner of Scripture, which ascribes to him a power put forth in action, the present efficacy of which we ourselves feel — not any inactive power that we merely imagine.

That having all sufficiency in all things He mentions a twofold advantage arising from that grace, which he had promised to the Corinthians — that they should have what is enough for themselves, and would have something over and above for doing good. By the term sufficiency he points out the measure which the Lord knows to be useful for us, for it is not always profitable for us, to be filled to satiety. The Lord therefore, ministers to us according to the measure of our advantage, sometimes more, sometimes less, but in such a way that we are satisfied — which is much more, than if one had the whole world to luxuriate upon. In this sufficiency we must abound, for the purpose of doing good to others, for the reason why God does us good is — not that every one may keep to himself what he has received, but that there may be a mutual participation among us, according as necessity may require.

Defender: 2Co 9:8 - -- God promises an abundance of "all grace" to those who learn the grace of giving and exercise it "cheerfully" (the Greek word in 2Co 9:7 is that from w...

God promises an abundance of "all grace" to those who learn the grace of giving and exercise it "cheerfully" (the Greek word in 2Co 9:7 is that from which we derive our word "hilarious"). Note the frequent use of superlatives in this verse - "all grace," "always," "all sufficiency," "all things," "every good work," with "abound" occurring twice."

TSK: 2Co 9:8 - -- God : 2Ch 25:9; Psa 84:11; Pro 3:9, Pro 10:22, Pro 11:24, Pro 28:27; Hag 2:8; Mal 3:10; Phi 4:18 all grace : 2Co 8:19; 1Pe 4:10 always : 2Co 9:11; 1Ch...

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: 2Co 9:8 - -- And God is able ... - Do not suppose that by giving liberally you will be impoverished and reduced to want. You should rather confide in God, w...

And God is able ... - Do not suppose that by giving liberally you will be impoverished and reduced to want. You should rather confide in God, who is able to furnish you abundantly with what is needful for the supply of your necessities. Few persons are ever reduced to poverty by liberality. Perhaps in the whole circle of his acquaintance it would be difficult for an individual to point out one who has been impoverished or made the poorer in this way. Our selfishness is generally a sufficient guard against this; but it is also to be added, that the divine blessing rests upon the liberal man, and that God keeps him from want. But in the meantime there are multitudes who are made poor by the lack of liberality. They are parsimonious in giving but they are extravagant in dress, and luxury, and in expenses for amusement or vice, and the consequence is poverty and want. "There is that withholdeth more than is meet, and it tendeth to poverty;"Pro 11:24. The divine blessing rests upon the liberal: and while every person should make a proper provision for his family, every one should give liberally, confiding in God that he will furnish the supplies for our future needs. Let this maxim be borne in mind, that no one is usually made the poorer by being liberal.

All grace - All kinds of favor. He is able to impart to you those things which are needful for your welfare.

That ye always ... - The sense is, "If you give liberally you are to expect that God will furnish you with the means, so that you will be able to abound more and more in it."You are to expect that he will abundantly qualify you for doing good in every way, and that he will furnish you with all that is needful for this. The man who gives, therefore, should have faith in God. He should expect that God will bless him in it; and the experience of the Christian world may be appealed to in proof that people are not made poor by liberality.

Poole: 2Co 9:8 - -- Having made God, in the verse before, a debtor to those who, by giving to poor distressed saints, would make him their creditor, he here proveth him...

Having made God, in the verse before, a debtor to those who, by giving to poor distressed saints, would make him their creditor, he here proveth him to be no insolvent debtor, but able to do much more for them, than they in this thing should do at his command out of love to him.

He is (saith he)

able to make all grace to abound toward you: the word translated

grace signifieth all sorts of gifts, whether of a temporal or spiritual nature; and being here applied to God, (who is the Author of all gifts), it may very properly be interpreted concerning both. God is able to repay you in temporal things what you thus lend him, and so to pay you in specie; and he is able to pay you in value, by spiritual habits and influences.

That ye, always having all sufficieney in all things, may abound to every good work that you may have a sufficieney in all things, so as that you may abound to and in every good work.

Haydock: 2Co 9:8 - -- God is generous to the liberally disposed Christian; filling such as relieve the poor with every species of good, and returning their charities a hund...

God is generous to the liberally disposed Christian; filling such as relieve the poor with every species of good, and returning their charities a hundred-fold. (Menochius)

Gill: 2Co 9:8 - -- And God is able to make all grace abound towards you,.... By "all grace" is meant, not the love and favour of God, the source of all blessings enjoyed...

And God is able to make all grace abound towards you,.... By "all grace" is meant, not the love and favour of God, the source of all blessings enjoyed in time and eternity; nor the blessings of grace, the fruits of it; nor the Gospel which reveals them; nor the various graces of the Spirit implanted in regeneration; nor gifts of grace, fitting men for ministerial service; all which God is able to make to abound, and does, when he gives enlarged discoveries of his love, makes fresh applications of covenant grace, leads more fully into the knowledge of his Gospel, carries on the work of his grace in the soul, and calls forth grace into act and exercise, and increases gifts bestowed; nor even merely temporal blessings of every sort, which men are unworthy of, are all the gifts of his goodness, and are given to his people in a covenant way; and which he can, and often does increase: but by it is meant all that goodness, beneficence, and liberality exercised towards the poor members of Christ; God is able, and he will, and it ought to be believed that he will, cause to return with an increase, all that which is expended in relieving the necessities of the saints; that is not thrown away and lost, which is communicated to them, but shall be repaid with use and interest, be restored with abundance, any more than the seed which the husbandman casts into the earth; for as God is able, and has promised, and will, and does cause that to spring up again, and bring forth an abundant increase, so will he multiply the seed of beneficence, and increase the fruits of righteousness. This now contains a new argument to move to liberality, and an antidote against the fears of want, which persons are sometimes pressed with, and tend to prevent their bountiful acts of charity:

that ye always having all sufficiency in all things: that is, God is able to increase, and will so increase your worldly substance, that you shall have a sufficiency, a perfect and entire sufficiency; enough for yourselves and families, for the entertainment of your friends, and the relief of the poor; which shall give you satisfaction and contentment, and that at all times, and with respect to everything necessary for you, as to food and raiment, that so ye may abound to every good work; as to all good works, so to this of beneficence in particular, and to every branch of it, as feeding the hungry, clothing the naked, and the like.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: 2Co 9:8 Or “abound.”

Geneva Bible: 2Co 9:8 And God [is] able to make ( f ) all grace abound toward you; that ye, always having all sufficiency in all [things], may abound to ( g ) every good wo...

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: 2Co 9:1-15 - --1 He yields the reason why, though he knew their forwardness, yet he sent Titus and his brethren beforehand.6 And he proceeds in stirring them up to a...

Maclaren: 2Co 9:8 - --All Grace Abounding God Is able to make all grace abound toward you; that ye, always having all sufficiency in all things, may abound to every good w...

MHCC: 2Co 9:6-15 - --Money bestowed in charity, may to the carnal mind seem thrown away, but when given from proper principles, it is seed sown, from which a valuable incr...

Matthew Henry: 2Co 9:6-15 - -- Here we have, I. Proper directions to be observed about the right and acceptable manner of bestowing charity; and it is of great concernment that we...

Barclay: 2Co 9:6-15 - --This passage gives us an outline of the principles of generous giving. (i) Paul insists that no man was ever the loser because he was generous. Givin...

Constable: 2Co 8:1--10:1 - --III. INSTRUCTIONS CONCERNING THE COLLECTION FOR THE POOR SAINTS IN JUDEA 8:1--9:15 The New Testament reveals tha...

Constable: 2Co 9:6-15 - --E. The benefits of generous giving 9:6-15 Paul concluded his exhortation regarding the collection by reminding his readers of the benefits God inevita...

College: 2Co 9:1-15 - --2 CORINTHIANS 9 3. Follow Through on What Was Begun (9:1-5) 9:1 There is no need for me to write to you about this service to the saints. Many ver...

McGarvey: 2Co 9:8 - --And God is able to make all grace abound unto you; that ye, having always all sufficiency in everything, may abound unto every good work:

Lapide: 2Co 9:1-15 - --CHAPTER 9 SYNOPSIS OF THE CHAPTER i. He proceeds to stimulate the Corinthians to almsgiving by motives of human shame and praise; he bids them not ...

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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 9 (Chapter Introduction) Overview 2Co 9:1, He yields the reason why, though he knew their forwardness, yet he sent Titus and his brethren beforehand; 2Co 9:6, And he proce...

Poole: 2 Corinthians 9 (Chapter Introduction) CORINTHIANS CHAPTER 9

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 9 (Chapter Introduction) (2Co 9:1-5) The reason for sending Titus to collect their alms. (2Co 9:6-15) The Corinthians to be liberal and cheerful, The apostle thanks God for h...

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 9 (Chapter Introduction) In this chapter the apostle seems to excuse his earnestness in pressing the Corinthians to the duty of charity (2Co 9:1-5), and proceeds to give di...

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 9 (Chapter Introduction) The Willing Giver (2Co_9:1-5) The Principles Of Generosity (2Co_9:6-15)

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 9 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO 2 CORINTHIANS 9 The apostle proceeds in this chapter upon the same subject, the making a collection for the poor saints; gives the ...

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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