2 Corinthians 11:1-7
Context11:1 I wish that you would be patient with me in a little foolishness, but indeed you are being patient with me! 11:2 For I am jealous for you with godly jealousy, because I promised you in marriage to one husband, 1 to present you as a pure 2 virgin to Christ. 11:3 But I am afraid that 3 just as the serpent 4 deceived Eve by his treachery, 5 your minds may be led astray 6 from a sincere and pure 7 devotion to Christ. 11:4 For if someone comes and proclaims 8 another Jesus different from the one we proclaimed, 9 or if you receive a different spirit than the one you received, 10 or a different gospel than the one you accepted, 11 you put up with it well enough! 12 11:5 For I consider myself not at all inferior to those “super-apostles.” 13 11:6 And even if I am unskilled 14 in speaking, yet I am certainly not so in knowledge. Indeed, we have made this plain to you in everything in every way. 11:7 Or did I commit a sin by humbling myself 15 so that you could be exalted, because I proclaimed 16 the gospel of God to you free of charge?
[11:2] 1 tn That is, to Christ.
[11:3] 3 tn Grk “I fear lest somehow.”
[11:3] 6 tn Or “corrupted,” “seduced.”
[11:3] 7 tc Although most
[11:4] 9 tn Grk “another Jesus whom we have not proclaimed.”
[11:4] 10 tn Grk “a different spirit which you did not receive.”
[11:4] 11 tn Grk “a different gospel which you did not accept.”
[11:4] 12 tn Or “you endure it very well.”
[11:5] 13 tn The implicit irony in Paul’s remark is brought out well by the TEV: “I do not think that I am the least bit inferior to those very special so-called ‘apostles’ of yours!”
[11:6] 14 sn Unskilled in speaking means not professionally trained as a rhetorician.
[11:7] 15 sn Paul is referring to humbling himself to the point of doing manual labor to support himself.