CCB
2 Corinthians
2 Corinthians:Chapter 6

1Being God’s helpers we beg you: let it not be in vain that you received this grace of God. 2Scripture says: At the favorable time I listened to you, on the day of salvation I helped you. This is the favorable time, this is the day of salvation.

The trials of an apostle


3We are concerned not to give anyone an occasion to stumble or criticize our mission. 4Instead we prove we are true ministers of God in every way by our endurance in so many trials, in hardships, afflictions, 5floggings, imprisonment, riots, fatigue, sleepless nights and days of hunger.

6People can notice in our upright life, knowledge, patience and kindness, action of the Holy Spirit, sincere love, 7words of truth and power of God. So we fight with the weapons of justice, to attack as well as to defend.

8Sometimes we are honored, at other times insulted; we receive criticism as well as praise. We are regarded as liars although we speak the truth; 9as unknown though we are well known; as dead and yet we live. Punishments come upon us but we have not, as yet, been put to death. 10We appear to be afflicted, yet always joyful; we seem to be poor, but we enrich many; we have nothing, but we possess everything!

11Corinthians! I have spoken to you frankly and I have uncovered my inner thought. 12My heart is wide open to you, but you feel uneasy because of your closed heart: 13repay us with the same measure – I speak to you as to my children – open wide your hearts also.

Have nothing to do with evil


14Do not make unsuitable covenants with those who do not believe: can justice walk with wickedness? Or can light coexist with darkness, 15and can there be harmony between Christ and Satan? What union can there be between one who believes and one who does not believe? 16God’s temple must have no room for idols, and we are the temple of the living God. As Scripture says; I will dwell and live in their midst, I will be their God and they shall be my people.

17Therefore: come out from their midst and separate from them, says the Lord. Do not touch anything unclean 18and I will be gracious to you. I will be a father to you, that you may become my sons and daughters, says the all-powerful God.

  1. 2 Cor 6,3 A distinctive sign of the apostle of Christ: the contrast between the treasure entrusted to him for others, and his own existence hardly enviable and truly unenvied. Like Jesus, he is a sign of contradiction. Paul recalls what he must endure, but does not hide his pride and his conviction: we enrich many, and we possess everything. The eloquent appeal beginning in verses 11-13 continues in 7:2-16. It is there we find the commentary. 2 Cor 6,14 This passage interrupts the flow of the discourse 6:13 continued in 7:2. What is the meaning of this sudden invitation not to have anything to do with bad people? In the first letter to the Corinthians (1 Cor 5:9) Paul recalled a previous message in which he was asking them not to mix with people of immoral behavior. It is quite possible that the present passage comes from that message. Paul himself explains how we should understand these lines when he says in 1 Cor 5:10: I did not tell you to stay away from the sinners of this world (if it were so, you would have to leave this world), but from the believers who went back to their pagan customs.
  2. 2 Cor 6,3 A distinctive sign of the apostle of Christ: the contrast between the treasure entrusted to him for others, and his own existence hardly enviable and truly unenvied. Like Jesus, he is a sign of contradiction. Paul recalls what he must endure, but does not hide his pride and his conviction: we enrich many, and we possess everything. The eloquent appeal beginning in verses 11-13 continues in 7:2-16. It is there we find the commentary. 2 Cor 6,14 This passage interrupts the flow of the discourse 6:13 continued in 7:2. What is the meaning of this sudden invitation not to have anything to do with bad people? In the first letter to the Corinthians (1 Cor 5:9) Paul recalled a previous message in which he was asking them not to mix with people of immoral behavior. It is quite possible that the present passage comes from that message. Paul himself explains how we should understand these lines when he says in 1 Cor 5:10: I did not tell you to stay away from the sinners of this world (if it were so, you would have to leave this world), but from the believers who went back to their pagan customs.