2 Corinthians 12
2 Corinthians 12 is the twelfth chapter of the Second Epistle to the Corinthians in the New Testament of the Christian Bible. It was written by Paul the Apostle and Timothy in Macedonia in 55–56 CE. Paul continues "speaking like a fool" in this chapter.
Text
The original text was written in Koine Greek. This chapter is divided into 21 verses.Textual witnesses
Some early manuscripts containing the text of this chapter are:- Papyrus 46
- Codex Vaticanus
- Codex Sinaiticus
- Codex Alexandrinus
- Codex Freerianus
- Codex Claromontanus.
Verse 1
Margaret MacDonald notes an impression here that Paul is ready, but reluctant, to move on to a discussion of a final contentious issue, his visions and revelations of the.Verse 2
- John Gill argues that in "I know a man in Christ", Paul refers to himself, as he speaks in the first person in 2 Corinthians 12:7. Paul speaks in the third person to show his humility and modesty. He says himself a "man", not to distinguish from an angel or any other creature; maybe only to express his gender or just to denote a person.
- "Fourteen years ago" could refer either to the time of Paul's conversion or the time of his rapture, which could be in the period of the three days after the conversion, when he was blind, didn't eat nor drink, or many years after the conversion. Most probably, it was not in Damascus, but when Paul was again in Jerusalem, while praying in the temple, and was in a trance. Lightfoot places Paul's conversion in 34 AD, the rapture into the third heaven in 43, at the time of the famine during the reign of Claudius, when he was in a trance in Jerusalem, and the writing of this epistle in 57. Bishop Usher puts the conversion in 35, his rapture in 46, and the writing of this epistle in 60.
- "The third heaven": that is so-called "the seat of the divine Majesty, and the residence of the holy angels", in comparison to the "airy" and "starry" heavens. Paul refers to a distinction in the Jewish belief of "the supreme heaven, the middle heaven, and the lower heaven".
- "Whether in the body, I cannot tell; or whether out of the body, I cannot tell: God knoweth": Either similar to Elijah who was carried with soul and body in a chariot with horses of fire; or as Moses was disembodied for a time, or in a visionary way, as John was "in the Spirit" on the Lord's day, and Ezekiel was taken by a lock of his head, lifted up by the Spirit between earth and heaven, and brought "in the visions of God to Jerusalem", it cannot be ascertained as Paul himself did not know.