For behold this selfsame thing, that ye sorrowed after a godly sort, what
carefulness it wrought in you, yea, what clearing of yourselves, yea,
what indignation, yea, what fear, yea, what vehement
desire, yea, what zeal, yea, what revenge! In all things ye
have approved yourselves to be clear in this matter.
2 Corinthians 7:11
For behold this self-same thing - For see in your own case the happy effects
of godly sorrow. See the effects which it produced; see an illustration of what
it is suited to produce. The construction is, "For lo! this very thing, to wit,
your sorrowing after a godly manner, wrought carefulness, clearing of
yourselves," etc. The object of Paul is to illustrate the effects of godly
sorrow, to which he had referred in 2 Corinthians 7:10. He
appeals, therefore, to their own case, and says that it was beautifully
illustrated among themselves.
What carefulness - (σπουδήν spoudēn). This word properly denotes "speed,
haste;" then diligence, earnest effort, forwardness. Here it is evidently used
to denote the diligence and the great anxiety which they manifested to remove
the evils which existed among them. They went to work to remove them. They did
not sit down to mourn over them merely, nor did they wait for God to remove
them, nor did they plead that they could do nothing, but they set about the work
as though they believed it might be done. When people are thoroughly convinced
of sin, they will set about removing it with the utmost diligence. They will
feel that this can be done, and must be done, or that the soul will be lost.
What clearing of yourselves - (ἀπολογίαν apologian). Apology. This word
properly means a plea or defense before a tribunal or elsewhere; Acts 22:1; 2 Timothy 4:16. Tyndale renders
it, "Yea, it caused you to clear yourselves." The word here properly means
"apology" for what had been done; and it probably refers here to the effort
which would be made by the sounder part of the church to clear themselves from
blame in what had occurred. It does not mean that the guilty, when convicted of
sin, will attempt to vindicate themselves and to apologize to God for what they
had done; but it means that the church at Corinth were anxious to state to Titus
all the mitigating circumstances of the case: they showed great solicitude to
free themselves, as far as could be done, from blame; they were anxious, as far
as could be, to show that they had not approved of what had occurred, and
perhaps that it had occurred only because it could not have been prevented. We
are not to suppose that all the things here referred to occurred in the same
individuals, and that the same persons precisely evinced diligence, and made the
apology, etc. It was done by the church; all evinced deep feeling; but some
manifested it in one way, and some in another. The whole church was roused, and
all felt, and all endeavored in the proper way to free themselves from the
blame, and to remove the evil from among them.
Yea, what indignation - Indignation against the sin, and perhaps against the
persons who had drawn down the censure of the apostle. One effect of true
repentance is to produce decided hatred of sin. It is not mere regret, or
sorrow, it is positive hatred. There is a deep indignation against it as an evil
and a bitter thing.
Yea, what fear - Fear lest the thing should be repeated. Fear lest it should
not be entirely removed. Or it may possibly mean fear of the displeasure of
Paul, and of the punishment which would be inflicted if the evil were not
removed. But it more probably refers to the anxious state of mind that the whole
evil might be corrected, and to the dread of having any vestige of the evil
remaining among them.
Yea, what vehement desire - This may either mean their fervent wish to remove
the cause of complaint, or their anxious desire to see the apostle. It is used
in the latter sense in 2 Corinthians 7:7,
and according to Doddridge and Bloomfield this is the meaning here. Locke
renders it, "desire of satisfying me." It seems to me more probable that Paul
refers to their anxious wish to remove the sin, since this is the topic under
consideration. The point of his remarks in this verse is not so much their
affection for him as their indignation against their sin, and their deep grief
that sin had existed and had been tolerated among them.
Yea, what zeal - Zeal to remove the sin, and to show your attachment to me.
They set about the work of reformation in great earnest.
Yea, what revenge! - Tyndale renders this: "it caused punishment." The idea
is, that they immediately set about the work of inflicting punishment on the
offender. The word used here (ἐκδίκησις ekdikēsis) probably denotes
"maintenance of right, protection;" then it is used in the sense of avengement,
or vengeance; and then of penal retribution or punishment; see Luke 21:22; 2 Thessalonians 1:8; 1 Peter 2:14.
In all things ... - The sense of this is, "You have entirely acquitted
yourselves of blame in this business." The apostle does not mean that none of
them had been to blame, or that the church had been free from fault, for a large
part of his former Epistle is occupied in reproving them for their faults in
this business, but he means that by their zeal and their readiness to take away
the cause of complaint, they had removed all necessity of further blame, and had
pursued such a course as entirely to meet his approbation. They had cleared
themselves of any further blame in this business, and had become, so far as this
was concerned, "clear" (ἁγνοὺς hagnous) or pure.
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