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Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of 2 Corinthians 4:10

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of 2 Corinthians 4:10

Always bearing about in the body the dying of the Lord Jesus, that the life also of Jesus might be made manifest in our body.

10. always bearing about in the body the dying of the Lord Jesus ] Rather, the slaying (Vulg. mortificatio) of the Lord Jesus. So Wiclif. The word is only to be found in Rom 4:19, where it signifies the process by which a thing became dead, i.e. age. The same spirit of hostility to good which put Jesus to death is still at work in the world against His servants. Their sufferings, therefore, for His sake, are a kind of slaying Him anew. Cf. Col 1:24.

that the life also of Jesus might be made manifest in our body ] The life of Jesus dwelling in the hearts of His saints is shewn in the power they possess of enduring, in their often feeble frames, sufferings and toils such as might daunt the strongest men, as well as in the unselfishness which welcomes such sufferings and toils for the glory of God and the well-being of man. Meyer cites Ignatius ad Magnes. 6, “If we do not of our own accord accept death after the manner of His Passion, His Life is not in us.”

Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges

Always bearing about in the body – The expression used here is designed to show the great perils to which Paul was exposed. And the idea is, that he had on his body the marks, the stripes and marks of punishment and persecution, which showed that he was exposed to the same violent death which the Lord Jesus himself endured; compare Gal 6:17; I bear in my body the marks of the Lord Jesus. It is a strong energetic mode of expression, to denote the severity of the trials to which he was exposed, and the meaning is, that his body bore the marks of his being exposed to the same treatment as the Lord Jesus was; and evidence that he was probably yet to die in a similar manner under the hands of persecutors; compare Col 1:24.

The dying of the Lord Jesus – The death; the violent death. A death similar to that of the Lord Jesus. The idea is, that he was always exposed to death, and always suffering in a manner that was equivalent to dying. The expression is parallel to what he says in 1Co 15:31. I die daily; and in 2Co 11:23, where he says, in deaths oft. It does not mean that he bore about literally the dying of the Lord Jesus, but that he was exposed to a similar death. and had marks on his person which showed that he was always exposed to the same violent death. This did not occur once only, or at distant intervals, but it occurred constantly, and wherever he was it was still true that he was exposed to violence, and liable to suffer in the same manner that the Lord Jesus did.

That the life also of Jesus … – This passage has received a considerable variety of interpretation. Grotius renders it, such a life as was that of Christ, immortal, blessed, heavenly. Locke, That also the life of Jesus, risen from the dead, may be made manifest by the energy that accompanies my preaching in this frail body. Clarke supposes that it means, that he might be able in this manner to show that Christ was risen from the dead. But perhaps, Paul does not refer to one single thing in the life of the Lord Jesus, but means that he did this in order that in all things the same life, the same kind of living which characterized the Lord Jesus might be manifested in him; or that he resembled him in his sufferings and trials, in order that in all things he might have the same life in his body. Perhaps, therefore, it may include the following things as objects at which the apostle aimed:

(1) A desire that his life might resemble that of the Lord Jesus. That there might be the same self-denial; the same readiness to suffer; the same patience in trials; the same meekness, gentleness, zeal, ardor, love to God, and love to people evinced in his body which was in that of the Lord Jesus. Thus understood, it means that he placed the Lord Jesus before him as the model of his life, and deemed it an object to be attained even by great self-denial and sufferings to be conformed to him.

(2) A desire to attain to the same life in the resurrection which the Lord Jesus had attained to. A desire to be made like him, and that in his body which bore about the dying of the Lord Jesus, he might again live after death as the Lord Jesus did. Thus understood, it implies an earnest wish to attain to the resurrection of the dead, and accords with what he says in Phi 3:8-11, which may perhaps be considered as Pauls own commentary on this passage, which has been so variously, and so little understood by expositors. Yea, doubtless, and I count all things but loss, for the excellency of the knowledge of Jesus Christ my Lord; for whom I have suffered the loss of all things, and do count them but dung that I may win Christ. That I may know him, and the power of his resurrection, and the fellowship of his sufferings, being made conformable unto his death; if by any means I might attain unto the resurrection of the dead; compare Col 1:24. It intimates Pauls earnest desire and longing to be made like Christ in the resurrection (compare Phi 3:21); his longing to rise again in the last day (compare Act 26:7); his sense of the importance of the doctrine of the resurrection and his readiness to suffer anything if he might at last attain to the resurrection of the just, and be ready to enter with the Redeemer into a world of glory. The attainment of this is the high object before the Christian, and to be made like the Redeemer in heaven, to have a body like his, is the grand purpose for which they should live; and sustained by this hope they should be willing to endure any trials, and meet any sufferings, if they may come to that same life and blessedness above.

Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible

2Co 4:10-12

Always bearing about in the body the dying of the Lord Jesus.

Bearing about the dying of Christ

The first and literal meaning of these words is that Paul and his friends were in daily peril of such a death as Christs was, and that their trials left sorrowful trace upon form and feature. It is not so that we are called to be conformable to the death of our Redeemer. The days of martyrdom are gone. There are those who think to exemplify the text by bearing about with them the material representation of the Redeemers death–the crucifix. Ah! you may do that, and yet be hundreds of miles away from any compliance with the spirit of the text. Our Lord requires of us the devotion of the heart; it is spiritually that we are to bear about our Saviours dying.


I.
We may bear about the memory of it.

1. Nothing can be more plain than that we ought never to forget our Redeemers death. When some one very near to you died, even after the first shock was past, and you could once more with some measure of calmness set yourself to your common duties again, did you not still feel, in the greater sympathy with the sorrows of others, in the quieter mood, that you had not quite got over your trial, that you were still bearing about with you the dying of the dear one that was gone?

2. The remembrance of our Lords death should influence all our views and doings. The kind mother who wore out her life in toiling for her child might well think that the child might sometimes come and stand by her grave, and remember her living kindness and her dying words when she was far away. And oh! when we think what our Saviour Christ has done for us by His dying–when we think that every hope, every blessing, was won for us by that great sacrifice–surely we might well determine that we never shall live as if that death had never been! You hear people say–truly enough, perhaps–that this world has never been the same to them since such a loved one died–that their whole life has been changed since then. It is sad to see a Christian living in such a fashion as to show plainly that he has quite forgot how his Redeemer died!

(1) When we think of sin, let us see it in the light of Christs death, and hate it because it nailed Him to the tree.

(2) Or is it suffering and sorrow that come to us, and are we ready to repine and to rebel? Then let us call to mind the dying of our Redeemer, and it will not seem so hard that the servant should fare no better than the Master.

(3) Or are we pressed with the sense of our sinfulness and the fear of Gods wrath for sin? Then let us remember how Jesus died for us, the just for the unjust–how His blood can take all sin away.


II.
We may show in our daily life its transforming power. Our whole life, changed and affected in its every deed by the fact that Christ died, may be a standing testimony that there is a real power to affect the character in the death of the Saviour; and thus we may, in a very true and solemn sense, be always bearing about with us His death by bearing about with us a soul which is what it is mainly because He died.

1. When in the view of the Cross we see how bitterly and mysteriously evil and ruinous sin is, surely the practical lesson is plain that we should resolutely tread it down, and earnestly seek for deliverance from the curse of that fearful thing which brought such unutterable agony upon our Redeemer, and constantly pray for that blessed Spirit who will breathe new life into every good resolution, and vivify into sunlight clearness every sound and true belief.

2. When sorrow and suffering come, think of them as in the presence of the Redeemers death, and you will learn the lesson of practical resignation.

3. And in days of fear and anxiety, when you do not know how it will go with you, look to Jesus on the Cross, and learn the lesson of practical confidence in Gods disposing love and wisdom.

4. And, to sum up all, let us daily bear about His dying by dying to sin and living to holiness. That is the grand conformity which is open to all of us–that is the fashion in which we may be crucified with Christ. Conclusion: Always. Yes, always bear it; never lay that burden down. Always bear it; not in sourness–not in that hard, severe type of religion which we may see in some mistaken and narrow-hearted believers. Bear it in humility, kindness, charity, hopefulness, and cheerfulness. (A. K. H. Boyd, D. D.)

The Christians fellowship in the death of Christ

How do we bear about daily the dying of the Lord Jesus?


I.
By cherishing faith in a crucified saviour.

1. The death of Christ is–

(1) The most wonderful of all facts, and we should not be warranted to believe it unless it were authenticated to us by Divine testimony.

(2) The most interesting. It is the foundation of all that is dear to man. It is the most interesting of all the facts that are recorded, not only in human narrative, but in the Book of God and in the annals of the universe.

(3) The most influential. It spreads itself through the whole revelation and economy of God, and pervades the moral government of the Most High. It is in the Book of God the first, if not in point of order, yet of importance. I delivered to you, first of all, how that Christ died for our sins, etc.

2. To cherish faith in this fact, then, is the first duty of man, and by so doing we become partakers of the sufferings of Christ.


II.
By a continued remembrance of this great event. That which we believe most assuredly, in which we feel the deepest interest, and to which we give the highest placed will be best remembered by us; and the death of Christ, possessing all those requisites, with a good man will impress itself deeply on his mind. To help us in this great exercise is the most obvious design of the Lords Supper. If we forget Jesus who died for us, whom and what shall we rationally and religiously remember?


III.
By a progressive improvement of this great event. The decease of our Lord is set forth in the Word of God and in the Lords Supper, not merely for contemplation, or for curious inquiry, but for deep meditation and practical improvement. Now, a good man is anxious to improve this death for all the purposes for which it was appointed of God and endured by Christ. Others may gaze upon the Cross; he glories in it. Others may cast a passing glance upon the Divine Sufferer; he hangs upon the Cross–he lives by it.


IV.
By imbibing more and more of his spirit. And what was this spirit? It was a spirit–

1. Of holy love. He loved us with an everlasting love, and thence gave Himself for us.

2. Of holy submission to the Divine appointment. Lo, I come to do Thy will, O My God; and He well knew all that that involved.

3. Of determined decision in His great work. I have a baptism to he, baptized with, and how am I straitened till it be accomplished!

4. Of holy purity. He was the Lamb of God, without blemish and without spot.

5. Of invincible faith. My God, My God! He cried, claiming an interest in Him when the waters overwhelmed His soul.

6. Of entire resignation to God amid the agonies of death and the prospect of dying. Father, into Thy hands I commend My spirit. Now, a good man bears about the dying of the Lord Jesus by seeking to drink continually into Christs spirit, and by exemplifying it more and more.


V.
By a practical illustration of that great decease, of its character and power. Although it was not the only, or even the main, end of His coming in the flesh to exhibit a sublime example of perfect morality, yet doubtless He came to present to us a pattern of all goodness and godliness. Hence we are told that He hath set us an example that we should follow His steps.


VI.
By a frequent solemn commemoration of him. (J. Mitchell, D. D.)

That the life also of Jesus might be made manifest in our body.

The manifestation of the life of Christ

1. There is something beautifully emphatic in the idea that it is the life of Jesus that is manifested in the Christian. Century after century hath rolled away, and He who won to Himself, by agony and death, the lordship of this lower creation hath not visibly interfered with the administration of its concerns. The time, indeed, will come when sensible proof shall be given, and every eye shall gaze on the Son of Man seated on the clouds and summoning to judgment. But we are free to own that, since under the present dispensation there are no visible exhibitions of the kingship of Christ, it is not easy, if the authority of Scripture be questioned, to bring forward satisfactory proof that Jesus is alive.

2. Yet we are not ready to admit the total absence of direct, positive, practical witness. We thus bring the statement of our text, that there is such a thing as the manifestation of the life of the Redeemer. It was possible enough that the malice of persecutors might wear down to the wreck the body of the apostle; but there were such continued miracles in his being sustained in the battle with principalities and powers that, if challenged to prove that his Lord was alive, he could point to the shattered tabernacle, and answer triumphantly, the life also of Jesus, as well as the death, was made manifest in that his body.

3. The doctrine of Christs living for us is every whir as closely bound up with our salvation as that of His having died for us. The resurrection was Gods attestation to the worth of the atonement.


I.
The persecutions which the apostles underwent, as well as the proclamations which they uttered, went to the proving that Jesus was alive.

1. The rulers said the body was stolen; the apostles said the body was quickened. Who sees not that, by persecuting the apostles in place of proving them liars, the rulers themselves bore witness to the fact that Jesus was alive? They had no evidence to produce of the truth of their own statement, and they set themselves therefore to get rid by force of the counter-statement. Power was substituted for proof, cruelty for argument. We therefore contend that no stronger attestation could have been given to the fact of Christs life than the persecutions to which the apostles were subjected for maintaining that fact.

2. We may yet further argue that by submitting to persecutions the apostles showed their own belief that Jesus was alive. There is a limit which enthusiasm cannot pass. Had not the apostles believed Christ alive they would not have joyfully exposed themselves to peril and death.


II.
The grand manifestation of the life of jesus lies in the supports and consolations vouchsafed to the persecuted.

1. When the malice of the ungodly was allowed to do its worst, there was administered so much of supernatural assistance that all but the reprobate must have seen that the power of the Lord was sustaining the martyrs. They went out of the world with gladness in the eye and with triumph on the lip, confident that their Master lived to welcome them, and therefore able to cry out with Stephen, Lord Jesus, receive my spirit.

2. Now, we maintain that, whenever God directly interposes to preserve an individual while publishing a doctrine, God virtually gives testimony to the truth of that doctrine. If the published doctrine were the reverse of truth He would never mark the publisher with His approval; and thus we have a decisive and vivid manifestation of the life of Christ in the sufferings of the apostles.

3. Whilst Christ sojourned on earth He told His disciples that persecution would be their lot, but also that He would be alive to act as their protector. When, therefore, all occurred as Christ had predicted, when the supports were administered which He had pointed out as the result of His life, what can be fairer than maintaining that the supports were a proof of the life?


III.
We would not have you think that the manifestation of the life of the redeemer was confined to the apostles. Take any one who now is walking by faith, and not by sight. He will tell you that his whole conduct is ordered on the supposition that he has a Saviour ever living to intercede in his behalf. He will tell you, further, that never has he found the supposition falsified by experience. He goes to Christ sorrowful, believing that He lives; he comes away comforted, and thus proves that He lives. He carries his burdens to Christ, supposing Him alive; he finds them taken away, and thus demonstrates Him alive. All, in short, that is promised as the result of Christs life comes into his possession, and is, therefore, an evidence of Christs life. If I am a believer, I look to Christ as living for me; I go and pray to Christ as living for me; and, if I am never disappointed in my reference to Christ as living for me, is there no strong testimony in my own experience that Jesus lives? In short, if the Christian live only by faith in the living Saviour, his life must be the manifestation of the life of the Saviour. If Christ be not alive, how comes it that they who act upon the supposition that He is alive find the supposition perpetually verified and in no instance falsified–verified by the assistance vouchsafed, by the promises fulfilled, by the consolations enjoyed in these mortal bodies, which are the theatres of truceless warfare with a corrupt nature and apostate spirits? Conclusion: What we wish for you is that you might manifest the life of the Redeemer–manifest it in the vigour with which you resist the devil, break loose from the world, and set yourself to the culture of holiness. (H. Melvill, B. D.)

Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell

Verse 10. Always bearing about in the body, c.] Being every moment in danger of losing our lives in the cause of truth, as Jesus Christ was. We, in a word, bear his cross, and are ready to offer up our lives for him. There is probably an allusion here to the marks, wounds, and bruises which the contenders in those games got, and continued to carry throughout life.

That the life also of Jesus might be made manifest] That in our preservation, the success of our ministry, and the miracles we work, we might be able to give the fullest demonstration that Jesus is risen again from the dead and that we are strengthened by him to do all these mighty works.

Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible

A Christian beareth about with him the dying of the Lord Jesus in his mind and soul, while he fetches strength from it to deaden his heart unto sin; being buried with Christ into death, and planted in the likeness of his death; having his old man crucified with him, that the body of sin might be destroyed, that henceforth he may not serve sin, Rom 6:4-6. He also beareth about with him the dying of the Lord Jesus in his body; either in a representation, while in his sufferings he is made conformable to the death of Christ, Phi 3:10; or in his own real sufferings, which he calleth the dying of the Lord Jesus, because they were for Christs sake, and because Christ sympathizeth with them therein, he being afflicted in all their afflictions; yea, and Christ (as the apostle expresseth it, Phi 1:20), is magnified in their body, by death, as well as by life. This the apostle tells us he did, that the life also of Jesus might be made manifest in his body: by the life of Christ must be here understood, either the resurrection of Christ, and that life which he now liveth in heaven with his Father; or that quickening power of the Spirit of Christ, which then mightily showeth itself in believers, when they are not overwhelmed by the waters of affliction, nor conquered by their sufferings; but in, and over all, are more than conquerors, through that mighty power of Christ which showeth forth itself in them: or (as some think) that lively virtue and power of Christ, which showeth itself in the efficacy of the apostles ministry; by which so many thousands of souls were brought in to Christ, which was not the effect of their own virtue, but of the life of Christ manifested in their body. But the apostle having before spoken of his sufferings, it seems best interpreted of that living power put forth by Christ, in upholding the earthly vessels of his apostles, notwithstanding all the knocks they met with, to carry about that heavenly treasure with which God had intrusted them.

Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole

10. bearing about in the body thedying of the Lord Jesusthat is, having my body exposed tobeing put to death in the cause of Jesus (the oldest manuscripts omit”the Lord”), and having in it the marks of such sufferings,I thus bear about wheresoever I go, an image of the suffering Saviourin my own person (2Co 4:11;2Co 1:5; compare 1Co15:31). Doubtless, Paul was exposed to more dangers than arerecorded in Acts (compare 2Co 7:5;2Co 11:26). The Greek for”the dying” is literally, “the being made a corpse,“such Paul regarded his body, yet a corpse which shares in thelife-giving power of Christ’s resurrection, as it has shared in Hisdying and death.

that the life also of Jesusmight be made manifest in our bodyrather, “may be.”The name “Jesus,” by itself is often repeated here as Paulseems, amidst sufferings, peculiarly to have felt its sweetness. In2Co 4:11 the same words occurwith the variation, “in our mortal flesh. The fact of adying, corpse-like body being sustained amidst such trials, manifeststhat “the (resurrection) life also,” as well as the dying,”of Jesus,” exerts its power in us. I thus bear about in myown person an image of the risen and living, as well as of thesuffering, Saviour. The “our” is added here to “body,”though not in the beginning of the verse. “For the body is oursnot so much in death, as in life” [BENGEL].

Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible

Always bearing about in the body,…. The Vulgate Latin, Arabic, and Ethiopic versions, read, “in our body”; and the Syriac version, in this and the next clause, reads, “in our bodies”, and some copies in this read, “bodies”; continually carrying about with us, in these mortal bodies of ours, wherever we go,

the dying of the Lord Jesus; by which is meant, not the doctrine of the sufferings and death of Christ, and of salvation by a crucified Saviour, which they bore and carried about with them in a ministerial way, wherever they came and preached, but the sufferings they themselves underwent: so called, because of the likeness there is between the sufferings of Christ, and theirs; as he was traduced as a wicked man, a deceiver, and a stirrer up of sedition, so were they; as he was persecuted, so were they; as he was liable to death, and at last was delivered up to it, so were they: and also because of the union and sympathy which were between them; Christ and they were one body and one Spirit; so that what was endured by the members, the head had a fellow feeling of, and sympathy with; and reckoned what was done to them, as done to himself: and besides, the sufferings they underwent, and death they were exposed unto, were for his sake, as it is explained in the next verse:

for we which live; who are still in the land of the living, though it is almost a miracle we are, considering the circumstances we are in:

are always delivered; that is, continually exposed

to death for Jesus’ sake: and the end of all these sufferings, which is expressed alike in both verses is,

that the life also of Jesus might be made manifest in our body, or “mortal flesh”; the meaning of which is, that it might appear that Jesus, though he died, is risen again from the dead, and lives at the Father’s right hand, and ever lives to make intercession for us; of which there is a full proof, inasmuch as we are supported by him under all the trials and sufferings we endure for his sake; for because he lives, we live also, amidst so many dangers and deaths, which attend us.

Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible

Bearing about (). Ignatius was called , God-bearer. See 1Co 15:31 where Paul says “I die daily” and Phil 3:10; Col 1:24.

The dying of Jesus ( ). Late word from , to put to death. In Galen. In N.T. only here and Ro 4:19.

Fuente: Robertson’s Word Pictures in the New Testament

Bearing about. Ignatius, addressing the Ephesians, says : “Ye are God – bearers, shrine – bearers, Christ – bearers” (” Epistle to Ephesians, “9.). In the Antiochene Acts, Trajan alludes to Ignatius as” the one who declares that he bears about the crucified. ” Ignatius was known as Qeoforov God bearer, and so styles himself in the introductions of his epistles.

Dying [] . Only here and Rom 4:19. Primarily a putting to death, and thence the state of deadness, as Rom 4:19. Here in the former sense. Paul says, in effect, “our body is constantly exposed to the same putting to death which Jesus suffered. The daily liability to a violent death is something, which we carry about with us.” Compare 1Co 14:31; Rom 8:36. This parallel with Christ ‘s death is offset by the parallel with Christ ‘s triumph – life through resurrection.

That the life also [] . In order that. The purport, according to God ‘s purpose, of this daily dying is to set forth the resurrection – life through Christ in us. Compare Rom 5:10.

Fuente: Vincent’s Word Studies in the New Testament

1) “Always bearing about in the body,” (pantote en to somati peripherontes) “always, actively, bearing about in the body,” in keeping the body under subjection to the spirit, 1Co 6:19-20; 1Co 9:26-27.

2) “The dying of the Lord Jesus,” (ten nekrosin tou leosou) “The dying of Jesus,” the putting to death, emptiness, barrenness, the deeds and fruits of the flesh on account of which Christ died, Col 3:1-3.

3) “That the life also of Jesus,” (hina kai he zoe tou lesou) “in order that also the (real) life of Jesus,” Rom 6:2; Gal 2:20.

4) “Might be made manifest in our body,” (en to somati hemon phanorothe) “in our body might be manifested,” by the very way we reside or live in our bodies. If one lives in Christ, in the Spirit, he is called upon to walk that way, Gal 5:25; Col 2:20; 1Co 10:31; Rom 8:36.

Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary

10. The mortification of Jesus (470) He says more than he had done previously, for he shows, that the very thing that the false apostles used as a pretext for despising the gospel, was so far from bringing any degree of contempt upon the gospel, that it tended even to render it glorious. For he employs the expression — the mortification of Jesus Christ — to denote everything that rendered him contemptible in the eyes of the world, with the view of preparing him for participating in a blessed resurrection. In the first place, the sufferings of Christ, (471) however ignominious they may be in the eyes of men, have, nevertheless, more of honor in the sight of God, than all the triumphs of emperors, and all the pomp of kings. The end, however, must also be kept in view, that we suffer with him, that we may be glorified together with him. (Rom 8:17.) Hence he elegantly reproves the madness of those, who made his peculiar fellowship with Christ a matter of reproach. At the same time, the Corinthians are admonished to take heed, lest they should, while haughtily despising Paul’s mean and abject appearance, do an injury to Christ himself, by seeking an occasion of reproach (472) in his sufferings, which it becomes us to hold in the highest honor.

The word rendered mortification, (473) is taken here in a different sense from what it bears in many passages of Scripture. For it often means self-denial, when we renounce the lusts of the flesh, and are renewed unto obedience to God. Here, however, it means the afflictions by which we are stirred up to meditate on the termination of the present life. To make the matter more plain, let us call the former the inward mortification, and the latter the outward. Both make us conformed to Christ, the one directly, the other indirectly, so to speak. Paul speaks of the former in Col 3:5, and in Rom 6:6, where he teaches that

our old man is crucified, that we may walk in newness of life

He treats of the second in Rom 8:29, where he teaches, that we were predestinated by God to this end — that we might be conformed to the image of his Son. It is called, however, a mortification of Christ only in the case of believers, because the wicked, in the endurance of the afflictions of this present life, share with Adam, but the elect have participation with the Son of God, so that all those miseries that are in their own nature accursed, are helpful to their salvation. All the sons of God, it is true, have this in common, that they bear about the mortification, of Christ; (474) but, according as any one is distinguished by a larger measure of gifts, he, in that proportion, comes so much the nearer to conformity with Christ in this respect.

That the life of Jesus. Here is the best antidote to adversity — that as Christ’s death is the gate of life, so we know that a blessed resurrection will be to us the termination of all miseries, (475) inasmuch as Christ has associated us with himself on this condition, that we shall be partakers of his life, if in this world we submit to die with him.

The sentence that immediately follows may be explained in two ways. If you understand the expression delivered unto death as meaning to be incessantly harassed with persecutions and exposed to dangers, this would be more particularly applicable to Paul, and those like him, who were openly assailed by the fury of the wicked. And thus the expression, for Jesus’ sake, will be equivalent to for the testimony of Christ. (Rev 1:9.) As, however, the expression to be daily delivered unto death, means otherwise — to have death constantly before our eyes, and to live in such a manner, that our life is rather a shadow of death, (476) I have no objection, that this passage, also, should be expounded in such a way as to be applicable to all believers, and that, too, to every one in his order. Paul himself, in Rom 8:36, explains in this manner Psa 44:22. In this way for Christ’s sake would mean — because this condition is imposed upon all his members. Erasmus, however, has rendered it, with not. so much propriety, we who live. The rendering that I have given is more suitable — while we live. For Paul means that, so long as we are in the world, we resemble the dead rather than the living.

(470) “ Mortificationem .” — Such is Calvin’s rendering of the original term νέκρωσιν, and it is evidently employed to convey the idea of putting to death, the main idea intended to be expressed being, as our author shows, that the apostles were, for the sake of Christ, subjected to humiliating and painful sufferings, which gave them, in a manner, an outward conformity to their Divine Master in the violent death inflicted upon him. The term mortification, when taken in strict accordance with its etymology, in the sense of putting to death, appears to bring out more fully the apostle’s meaning, than the word “dying,” made use of in our authorized version. Beza, who gives the same rendering as Calvin, subjoins the following valuable observations: — “ Mortificationem τὴν νέκρωσιν — Sic vocat Paulus miseram illam conditionem fidelium, ac pr’sertim ministrorum (de his enim proprie agitur) qui quotidie (ut ait David) occiduntur, quasi destinationem ad coedem dicas: additurque Domini Iesu, vel, (ut legit vetus interpres) Iesu Christi, tum ut declaretur causa propter quam mundus illos ita persequitur; tum etiam quia hac quoque in parte Christo capiti sunt conformes, Christusque adeo ipse quodammodo in iis morte afficitur. Ambrosius maluit mortem interpretari, nempe quia in altero membro sit mentio vitoe Christi. At ego, si libuisset a Pauli verbis discedere, coedem potius exposuissem: quia non temere Paulus ςέκρωσιν maluit scribere quam θάνατον, quoniam etiam Christus hic considerandus nobis est non ut simpliciter mortuus, sed ut interemptus. Verum ut modo dixi νέκρωσις nec mortem nec coedem hic significat, sed conditionem illam quotidianis mortibus obnoxiam, qualis etiam fuit Christi ad tempus;” — “ Mortification τὴν νέκρωσιν This term Paul makes use of to denote that miserable condition of believers, and more especially of ministers, (for it is of them properly that he speaks,) who are, as David says, killed every day — as though you should say a setting apart for slaughter; and it is added — of the Lord Jesus, or (as the old interpreter renders it) of Jesus Christ, partly with the view of explaining the reason why the world thus persecutes them, and partly because in this respect also they are conformed to Christ, the Head, and even Christ himself is, in them, in a manner put to death. Ambrose has preferred to render it death, for this reason, that in the other clause mention is made of the life of Christ. For my own part, however, were I to depart from Paul’s words, I would rather render it slaughter, inasmuch as Paul did not rashly make use of νέκρωσιν rather than θάνατον, since Christ also is to be viewed by us here, not simply as having died, but as having been put to death. But, as I said a little ago, νέκρωσις here does not mean death nor slaughter, but a condition which exposed every day to deaths, such as Christ’s, also, was for a time.” — Ed.

(471) By the “sufferings of Christ,” here, Calvin obviously means — not the sufferings of our Redeemer personally, but sufferings endured for Christ in the persons of his members, as in Col 1:24. — Ed.

(472) “ Matiere d’opprobre et deshonneur;” — “Matter of reproach and dishonor.”

(473) Wiclif (1380) renders the expression as follows: “euermore we beren aboute the sleyng of Ihesus in oure bodi.” — Ed.

(474) “Here we have a strong mode of expressing the mortal peril to which he was continually exposed; (as in 1Co 15:31, καθ ᾿ ἡμέραν ἀποθνήσκω, I die daily,) together with an indirect comparison of the sufferings endured by himself and the other apostles, with those endured by the Lord Jesus even unto death. The genitive τοῦ Κυριου ( of the Lord,) is, as Grotius remarks, a genitive of likeness. The sense is — ‘bearing about — continually sustaining, perils and sufferings, like those of the Lord Jesus.’” — Bloomfield, — Ed.

(475) “ La fin et l’issue de toutes miseres et calamitez;” — “The end and issue of all miseries and calamities.”

(476) Calvin manifestly alludes to the expression which occurs in Psa 23:4, the valley of the shadow of death, which he explains in a metaphorical sense, as denoting deep afflication. — See Calvin on the Psalms, vol. 1, pp. 394-396. — Ed.

Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary

(10) Always bearing about in the body the dying of the Lord Jesus.The word for dying (again, probably, a distinctly medical term) is literally deadness, the state of a corpse. Comp. Rom. 4:19 for the word itself, and Rom. 4:19, Col. 3:5 (mortify), Heb. 11:12 (as good as dead) for the cognate verb. The word describes, as by a bold hyperbole, the condition of one whose life was one long conflict with disease: dying daily (1Co. 15:31); having in himself the sentence, or, possibly, the very symptoms, of death (2Co. 1:8-9). He was, as it were, dragging about with him what it was scarcely an exaggeration to call a living corpse; and this he describes as the dying (or death-state) of the Lord Jesus. The thought implied in these words is not formally defined. What seems implied is that it brought him nearer to the likeness of the Crucified; he was thus made a sharer in the sufferings of Christ, filling up what was lacking in the measure of those sufferings (Col. 1:24), dying as He died, crucified with Him (Gal. 2:20). It may be noted that Philo (2 Alleg. p. 73) uses almost the same word to express the natural frailty and weakness of mans bodyWhat, then, is our life but the daily carrying about of a corpse?

That the life also of Jesus . . .The life of Jesus is the life of the new man, created in righteousness and true holiness (Eph. 4:24). It is not that the Apostle is merely looking forward to the resurrection life, when we shall bear the image of the heavenly; he feels that the purpose of his sufferings now is that the higher life may, even in this present state, be manifested in and through them; and accordingly, as if to guard against the possibility of any other interpretation, he changes the phrase in the next verse, and for our body substitutes our mortal flesh.

Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)

10. Always bearing a virtual martyrdom in the body; which martyrdom is truly one with the dying of the Lord; that the death-defying life of Jesus might be made manifest.

Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments

2Co 4:10. Always bearing about in the body, &c. “So that the cruelties which were exercised in putting Christ to death, seem to be acted over again upon us by the rage of the enemy. Yet all this is, in effect, not that an immediate period should be put to our life and ministry, as they desire, but that the life also of Jesus, now triumphant above all hostile power, may be more evidently manifested in the preservation of this our feeble body, which enemies, so many and so mighty, are continually endeavouring to destroy.”

Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke

2Co 4:10 . Extreme concentration of all suffering, as of all victory through the power of God. In this , corresponding to the of 2Co 4:8 and the of 2Co 4:11 , is with great emphasis placed first. The is the putting to death , like the classic (Thucyd. v. 9. 7). In this case the context decides whether it is to be taken in a literal or, as in Rom 4:19 , in a figurative sense. Comp. Astrampsychus in Suidas: , Porphyr. de Abstin . iv. p. 418; Aret. pp. 23, 48; also in Arrian, Epict. i. 5. Here it stands, as 2Co 4:11 proves, in a literal sense: At all times we bear about the putting to death of Jesus in our body , i.e. at all times, in our apostolic movements, our body is exposed to the same putting to death which Jesus suffered , i.e. to violent deprivation of life for the gospel’s sake . The constant supreme danger of this death, and the constant actual persecutions and maltreatments, make the , in the conception of the sufferer as of the observer, appear as something clinging to the body of the person concerned, which he carries about with it, although, till the final actual martyrdom, it remains incomplete and, in so far, resting on a prolepsis of the conception. On the subject-matter , comp. Rom 8:35 f.; 1Co 15:31 ; Phi 3:10 . The gen. , however, is not to be taken as propter Jesum (Vatablus and others, including Emmerling), nor ad exemplum Christi (Grotius, Flatt), but quite as in , 2Co 1:5 ; and it is altogether arbitrary to understand anything more special than the great danger to life generally involved in the continual persecutions and afflictions (2Co 11:23 ff.), as e.g . Eichhorn takes it to refer to wounds received in the apostolic ministry (Gal 6:17 ), and Rckert, here again (see on 2Co 1:8 ), to the alleged sickness, from which Paul had not yet fully recovered. The right view is already given in Chrysostom: , . Comp. Pelagius. But . is chosen (not . ), because Paul has in mind the course of events leading to the death suffered by Jesus, which is mirrored in his own sufferings for Christ’s sak.

. . .] in order that also the life of Jesus , etc. This is the blessed relation supervening according to God’s purpose. Just as, namely, the continual sufferings and peril of death appear as the of Jesus in the body of those persecuted, so, in keeping with that view, their rescued life appears as the same , which, in the case of Jesus, followed after His dying, through the resurrection from death (Rom 5:10 ). The victorious surmounting of the sufferings and perils of death , from which one emerges saved as regards the body, is, according to the analogy of the conception of the , resurrection ; and thus there becomes manifest, in the body of him that is rescued, the same life which Jesus entered on at His bodily resurrection. If, with Chrysostom, Cajetanus, Estius, Mosheim, and others (comp. Flatt and also Hofmann), we should regard the preservation and rescuing as evincing the effectual operation of the bodily glorified Jesus , there would be unnecessarily introduced a different position of matters in the two parts of the verse; as the itself is thought of in the one case, we must in the other also understand the itself (not an effect of it). According to de Wette and Osiander, the thought of the apostle is, that in his ineradicable energy of spirit in suffering there is revealed Christ’s power of suffering, in virtue of which He has risen and lives for ever; comp. Beza. In that case a moral revelation of life would be meant, and to this (comp. 2Co 4:11 ) would not be suitable.

Notice, further, how, in 2Co 4:10 f., Paul names only the name , and how repeatedly he uses it. “Singulariter sensit dulcedinem ejus,” Bengel. As bearer of the dying and living of the Lord in his body, he has before his eyes and in his heart, with the deepest feeling of fellowship, the concrete human manifestation, Jesus . Even the exalted One is, and remains to him, Jesus . A contrast between the earthly Jesus and the heavenly Christ, for whom the former is again deprived of life (Holsten), is, as the clause of purpose shows, not to be thought of.

Fuente: Heinrich August Wilhelm Meyer’s New Testament Commentary

10 Always bearing about in the body the dying of the Lord Jesus, that the life also of Jesus might be made manifest in our body.

Ver. 10. The dying of the Lord ] A condition obnoxious to daily deaths and dangers.

Might be made manifest ] As it was in Paul, when being stoned, he started up with a Sic, sic oportet intrare, So so proper to enter. Thus, thus must heaven be had, and no otherwise.

Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)

10. ] always carrying about in our body (i.e. ever in our apostolic work having our body exposed to and an example of: or perhaps even, as Stanley, “bearing with us, wherever we go, the burden of the dead body.” But see below) the killing (the word seems only to occur besides, in ref. Rom., where it signifies, figuratively, utter lack of strength and vital power, in a fragment of the Oneirocritica of Astrampsychus (Meyer), , , where the sense is also figurative, and in its primary physical sense in the medical works of Aretus and Galen. But here the literal sense, ‘ the being put to death ,’ must evidently be kept, and the expression understood as 1Co 15:31 , and as Chrys.: , Hom. ix. p. 498. The rendering, ‘the deadness of Jesus to the flesh, as opposed to the vitality, below,’ see Dr. Peile’s Annotations on the Epistles, i. 383, is beside the present purpose, and altogether inconsistent with , 2Co 4:11 . See Stanley’s note) of Jesus (as , ch. 2Co 1:5 : not ‘ad exemplum Christi,’ as Grot., al.), in order that also the life of Jesus may be manifested in our body: i.e. ‘that in our bodies, holding up against such troubles and preserved in such dangers, may be shewn forth that mighty power of God which is a testimony that Jesus lives and is exalted to be a Prince and a Saviour:’ not, ‘that our repeated deliverances might resemble His Resurrection, as our sufferings His Death,’ as Meyer, who argues that the literal meaning must be retained, as in the other member of the comparison, owing . But, as De W. justly observes, the bodily deliverance is manifestly a subordinate consideration, and the of far higher significance, testified indeed by the body’s preservation, but extending far beyond it.

Fuente: Henry Alford’s Greek Testament

2Co 4:10-11 . The climax of the preceding antithesis is now reached: “Dying, yet living” ( cf. 2Co 6:9 ). . . .: always bearing about in the body the dying of Jesus, that the Life also of Jesus may be manifested in our body; for we which live are ever being delivered over to death ( cf. 2Co 11:23 below) for Jesus’ sake, that the Life also of Jesus may be manifested in our mortal flesh . The key to the interpretation of 2Co 4:10 is to observe that 2Co 4:11 is the explanation of it ( . . .); the two verses are strictly parallel: “our mortal flesh” of 2Co 4:11 is only a more emphatic and literal way of describing “our body” of 2Co 4:10 . Hence the bearing about of the of Jesus must be identical with the continual deliverance to death for His sake. Now the form (see reff.) is descriptive of the process of “mortification”; and the must mean the to which He was subject while on earth ( gen. subjecti ). The phrase conveys, then, an idea comparable to that involved in other Pauline phrases, e.g. , “to die daily” (1Co 15:31 ), “to be killed all the day long” (Rom 8:36 , a quotation from Ps. 43:22), “to know the fellowship of His sufferings, becoming conformed unto His death” (Phi 3:10 ), “to fill up that which is lacking of the afflictions of Christ in my flesh” (Col 1:24 ), the conception of the intimate union in suffering between Christ and the Christian having been already touched on in 2Co 1:5 . And such union in suffering involves a present manifestation in us of the Life of Christ, as well as ultimate union with Him in glory (Rom 8:17 , cf. Joh 14:19 ). The phrases “if we have become united with Him by the likeness of His death, we shall be also by the likeness of His resurrection,” and “if we died with Christ, we believe that we shall also live with Him” (Rom 6:5 ; Rom 6:8 ), though verbally similar, are not really parallel to the verse before us, for they speak of a death to sin in baptism, while this has reference to actual bodily suffering in the flesh. And the inspiring thought of 2Co 4:10-11 of the present chapter is that Union with Christ, unto death, in life, has as its joyful consequence Union with Christ, unto life, in death. It is the paradox of the Gospel over again, (Mat 10:39 ). It will be observed that the best MSS. give in 2Co 4:10 . It is worth noticing that while in the Gospels the proper name’ generally takes the article, in the Epistles it is generally anarthrous. In addition to the example before us, the only other passage where St. Paul writes is Eph 4:21 ( cf. Blass, Gram. of N.T. Greek , 46. 10).

Fuente: The Expositors Greek Testament by Robertson

Always. App-151. to. i.

bearing about. Greek. periphero. Mar 6:55. Eph 4:14, Heb 13:9. Jud 1:12.

dying. Greek. nekrosis. Only here and Rom 4:19. It means the condition of a corpse. It was his constant experience. See next verse.

Lord. The texts omit,

life. Greek. zoe. App-170.

made manifest. Greek. phaneroo. App-106.

Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics

10.] always carrying about in our body (i.e. ever in our apostolic work having our body exposed to and an example of: or perhaps even, as Stanley, bearing with us, wherever we go, the burden of the dead body. But see below) the killing (the word seems only to occur besides, in ref. Rom., where it signifies, figuratively, utter lack of strength and vital power, in a fragment of the Oneirocritica of Astrampsychus (Meyer), , , where the sense is also figurative, and in its primary physical sense in the medical works of Aretus and Galen. But here the literal sense, the being put to death, must evidently be kept, and the expression understood as 1Co 15:31, and as Chrys.: , Hom. ix. p. 498. The rendering, the deadness of Jesus to the flesh, as opposed to the vitality, below,-see Dr. Peiles Annotations on the Epistles, i. 383,-is beside the present purpose, and altogether inconsistent with , 2Co 4:11. See Stanleys note) of Jesus (as , ch. 2Co 1:5 :-not ad exemplum Christi, as Grot., al.), in order that also the life of Jesus may be manifested in our body: i.e. that in our bodies, holding up against such troubles and preserved in such dangers, may be shewn forth that mighty power of God which is a testimony that Jesus lives and is exalted to be a Prince and a Saviour:-not, that our repeated deliverances might resemble His Resurrection, as our sufferings His Death, as Meyer, who argues that the literal meaning must be retained, as in the other member of the comparison, owing . But, as De W. justly observes, the bodily deliverance is manifestly a subordinate consideration, and the of far higher significance, testified indeed by the bodys preservation, but extending far beyond it.

Fuente: The Greek Testament

2Co 4:10. , always) in the next verse differs from this word. , throughout the whole time; , any time whatever [at every time]: comp. Mar 15:8. The words, bearing about, we are delivered, in this ver. and in 2Co 4:11 agree.- , the dying) This is as it were the act, life the habit.- , of the Lord) This name must be thrice supplied in this and the following verse,[24] and advantageously softens in this first passage the mention of dying. It is called the dying of the Lord, and the genitive intimates communion, [joint participation of Christ and believers in mutual suffering] as 2Co 1:5.-, of Jesus) Paul employs this name alone [without or accompanying it] more frequently in this whole passage, 2Co 4:5, than is his wont elsewhere; therefore here he seems peculiarly to have felt its sweetness.-, carrying about) in all lands.- , that also) Consolation here takes an increase. Just before [2Co 4:8-9], we had, but, four times.- , in our body might be made manifest) might be made manifest in our mortal [dead] flesh, in the next verse. In the one passage the noun, in the other the verb is put first, for the sake of emphasis. In 2Co 4:10, glorification is referred to; in 2Co 4:9, preservation in this life, and strengthening: the word, our, is added here [ ], rather than at the beginning of the verse [ without .] The body is ours, not so much in death as in life. May be made manifest is explained, 2Co 4:14; 2Co 4:17-18.

[24] Comp. marginal note on 2Co 4:6.-E. B.

Fuente: Gnomon of the New Testament

2Co 4:10

2Co 4:10

always bearing about in the body the dying of Jesus,-He was always in his body exposed to, and in a manner suffering, the death that Jesus died. [Wherever he went among Jews or Gentiles, in all his journeyings, he met everywhere the same kind of treatment which Jesus himself received, and as his sufferings and deaths were in Jesus service and for Jesus sake, he had no hesitancy in saying that it was the putting to death of Jesus which was the burden his body always imposed upon him. He identifies himself with Jesus in his sufferings and death elsewhere in terms as strong as he uses here: I protest by that glorying in you, brethren, which I have in Christ Jesus our Lord, I die daily (1Co 15:31), Even as it is written, For thy sake we are killed all the day long; we were accounted as sheep for the slaughter (Rom 8:36), That I may know him, and the power of his resurrection, and the fellowship of his sufferings, becoming conformed unto his death (Php 3:10), and Now I rejoice in my sufferings for your sake, and fill up on my part that which is lacking of the afflictions of Christ in my flesh for his bodys sake, which is the church (Col 1:24). By using another figure he expresses the same thought: I bear branded on my body the marks of Jesus. (Gal 6:17). The scars which he bore in his body marked him as a soldier of Jesus Christ, and as belonging to him as his Master, and as suffering in his cause.]

that the life also of Jesus may be manifested in our body.-That the life that Jesus lived might be reproduced and declared in his body. [Just as Jesus sufferings and death had as their purpose life, so Paul thinks of his own sufferings as serving the purpose of manifesting-making known-the life which Jesus lives and which he gives.]

Fuente: Old and New Testaments Restoration Commentary

dying

Lit. putting to death, i.e. crucifixion. 11 1Co 15:31.

Fuente: Scofield Reference Bible Notes

bearing: 2Co 1:5, 2Co 1:9, Rom 8:17, Rom 8:18, Gal 6:17, Phi 3:10, Phi 3:11, Col 1:24

that: 2Co 13:4, Joh 14:19, Act 18:9, Act 18:10, Rom 8:17, 2Ti 2:11, 1Pe 4:13, Rev 1:17

Reciprocal: 1Sa 2:4 – stumbled Act 14:19 – supposing Act 21:13 – for Rom 5:10 – we shall Rom 6:8 – we believe 1Co 15:13 – General 1Co 15:31 – die 1Co 15:49 – we shall 2Co 6:9 – behold Gal 2:20 – but Phi 1:20 – whether

Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge

THE MARKS OF A CHRISTIAN

Always bearing about in the body the dying of the Lord Jesus, that the life also of Jesus might be made manifest in our body.

2Co 4:10

We cannot reasonably suppose that it is necessary or desirable to aim at a literal interpretation of these words, as far as we are concerned. The modern Christian need not seek to make a martyr of himself, yet he may still bear about in the body the dying of the Lord Jesus in other ways.

I. By bearing about the remembrance of what the Lord Jesus did, and how He died for us, so that the thought of it may unconsciously affect our views of things, and may give a tone and colour to all our thoughts and ideas and opinions. Most of us know what it is to mourn over relatives and friends. Some of us can never quite forget father or mother, child or brother or sister who has gone. We always carry in our secret hearts a fond and loving remembrance of all that they were to us when they were herea reverent and affectionate regard for the carrying out of their wishes.

II. We may show in our daily life the transforming power of His death.Our whole life ought to be changed and affected by the fact that Christ died for us. This carrying about with us the dying of the Lord Jesus should make us have

(a) A decided horror of sin.

(b) Trust in His love.

III. We will show the dying of the Lord Jesus in that daily dying to sin and living unto holiness which is so essential to the Christian, and in the mortifying, killing, and extinguishing the evil thoughts, the bad desires, the crooked, perverse ways, and the aggravating temper which are to-day our inheritance from the first Adam.

IV. Always bear it, never lay it down.Always bear it, not in discontent, but in humility. There need be no change in our outward position or circumstances, but amidst the busy occupations and the multitude of little things to be thought of and done every dayletters to be written, business to be attended to, work to be got through, household affairs to be looked after, family and domestic concerns to be seen towe may preserve in the inmost depth of the heart the secret of success and of happiness, the sacred remembrance of the dying of the Lord Jesus, in the light of which every anxiety, every trouble, every worrying detail, and the little trials of daily life will become easy to be borne.

Rev. Dacre Craven.

Illustration

The old librarian at the Bodleian used every morning to look up at the portrait of John Bodley at the top of the staircase and say to himself, I will try to do to-day all that I am sure you would wish me to do.

(SECOND OUTLINE)

THE DYING OF THE LORD JESUS

The world does not ask so much for Christ to be preached as it does for Christ to be lived. That is the meaning of our text.

What does it mean, and how is it to be done? We must now die the death that Christ died in order that we may live again here and now, and be ourselves proofs of the truth of this resurrection.

Consider what the death of Christ means.

I. It was an act of complete self-renunciationthe voluntary death of self. There was no thought of self in the death of Jesus. What a large place self occupies in our hearts! Self must die and Christ must reign in its place. That is one way in which we may bear about in the body the dying of the Lord Jesus, that His life may be made manifest, that men may know that self indeed is dead in us and that Jesus lives instead.

II. It was a death to the world.Christ might have been an earthly king surrounded with all pomp and power, but His Kingdom was not on this earth. It is as hard to die to the world as it is to die to self, and yet if we are to bear about in our bodies the dying of the Lord Jesus we must die to the world as He did. It takes time for people to say that the business and pleasures of the world cannot satisfy, and yet it is perfectly plain that any man serving Jesus Christ properly must put Him first in all things.

III. The death of Christ was an act of completion.For some of us this struggle goes on through all our life, and is only ended with actual, physical death, yet this death to self and the world should take place now and here. Jesus Christ did not remain in death, and as He rose so we must rise to a new life altogether.

Rev. Martin Shewell.

Illustration

There can be no difficulty in understanding what St. Paul meant by these words. He and his fellow Apostles and preachers of the Gospel literally bore about in the body the dying of the Lord Jesus, in stripes, in imprisonments, in watchings, in fastings, in hunger and thirst, in cold and nakedness, and every conceivable privation; in perilous journeys amongst savage tribes, in shipwreck and exposure to the storm and tempest. These experiences had a marked effect on their health, and left behind them unmistakable traces. We know how in past days men, and women too, have literally followed their example, and experienced the privations and bodily sufferings of the Apostles, some voluntarily and some by force of circumstances.

Fuente: Church Pulpit Commentary

2Co 4:10-11. A man does not literally die but once, yet Paul was constantly in danger of death. (See 1Co 15:30-31.) The apostle was willing to face all this threat of death, that he might display the kind of life Jesus led on the earth.

Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary

2Co 4:10. always bearing about in the body the dying (Gr. the putting to death) of Jesus,[1]as virtually dying with Him in our daily exposures to death in His cause: compare 2Co 4:11; 2Co 4:16; Rom 8:36; 1Co 4:9; 1Co 15:31; 2Ti 2:11-13,that the life also of Jesus might be made manifest in our body.

[1] The received reading the Lord Jesus has scarcely any support.

Fuente: A Popular Commentary on the New Testament

always bearing about in the body the dying of Jesus, that the life also of Jesus may be manifested in our body.

Fuente: McGarvey and Pendleton Commentaries (New Testament)

Verse 10

Bearing about in the body, &c.; continually exemplifying in our lives that endurance of suffering which characterized the life of the Savior. The word dying is put for suffering, in antithesis to the word life. Cases of this kind often occur among the sacred writers, where words are used in one or the other of the parallel clauses of a sentence, with some latitude of meaning, in order to preserve a contrast of expression in the two clauses. For examples, see the word hate, in and in Rom. 9:13.

Fuente: Abbott’s Illustrated New Testament

4:10 {6} Always bearing about in the body the {i} dying of the Lord Jesus, that the life also of Jesus might be made manifest in our body.

(6) An amplification of the former sentence, in which he compares his afflictions to a daily death, and the power of the Spirit of God in Christ to life, who oppresses that death.

(i) So Paul calls that miserable estate and condition that the faithful, but especially the minsters, are in.

Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes

Paul summarized the four preceding contrasts with another paradox. He was in one sense always dying but in another sense never lifeless. Paul’s use of nekrosis ("dying," 2Co 4:10) rather than thanatos ("death") shows that what he had in mind was not our identification with Jesus in His death. It was rather our sharing in His sufferings by being exposed to danger and death for His sake daily (cf. 2Co 1:5-6; 1Co 15:31; Php 3:10). The next verse makes this clearer.

Fuente: Expository Notes of Dr. Constable (Old and New Testaments)