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Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of 2 Corinthians 8:11

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of 2 Corinthians 8:11

Now therefore perform the doing [of it]; that as [there was] a readiness to will, so [there may be] a performance also out of that which ye have.

11. Now therefore perform the doing of it ] The words perform, performance, in this verse should rather be rendered complete, completion. See ch. 2Co 7:1, where the participle of the same verb is rendered perfecting, also 2Co 8:6 of this chapter. The sense is, ‘you made a resolution last year to do a certain work. Carry out that resolution now, and let the completion of the task bear witness, as far as your ability goes, to the genuineness of the resolution you then made.’

out of that which you have ] i.e. according to your means. See note on 2Co 8:2.

Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges

As there was a readiness to will – Now accomplish the thing, and be not satisfied with having begun it. Do not suppose that the intention was sufficient, or that you are now released from the obligation. A year indeed has elapsed; but the necessity of the aid for the poor has not ceased. The sentiment here is, that if we have felt it our duty to aid in a cause of benevolence, and have commenced it, and have then been interrupted in executing our purpose, we should seize the first favorable opportunity to accomplish what we had designed. We should not regard ourselves as released from our obligation, but should, from a regard to consistency and our obligation to God, accomplish what we had intended.

Out of that which ye have – According to your ability; see 2Co 8:12. It should be in proportion to your means.

Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible

Verse 11. A readiness to will, so there may be a performance] Ye have willed and purposed this; now perform it.

Out of that which ye have.] Give as God has enabled you; and give as God has disposed you. He requires each man to do as he can; and accepts the will where the means are wanting to perform the deed.

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

Ye showed yourselves some time since free to will the thing which I am now pressing you unto, you have now opportunity to do it, and the example of other churches going before you in the doing of it; show yourselves now constant by

the doing of it; that seeing God hath given you something of this worlds goods, and that in proportions beyond your poor brethren, as you pretended a great readiness a great while since to relieve them, so you may by your performance justify that it was not all a mere pretence.

Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole

11. perform“complete thedoing also” (see on 2Co 8:10).

a readiness to willGreek,the readiness of will”; referring to 2Co8:10, where the Greek for “to be forward,” oughtto be translated as here, “to will.”

performance“completion”[ALFORD], The godly shouldshow the same zeal to finish, as well as to begin well, which theworldly exhibit in their undertakings (Jer44:25).

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

Now therefore perform the doing of it,…. This is a conclusion from the former advice, to finish what was readily willed; for as it is not enough to do a thing, unless it is done cheerfully and willingly, so it is not sufficient to express a good will to such service as is here called to, without doing it; both should go together:

that as there was a readiness to will, so there may be a performance also; in some cases there is neither power nor will to do good; in others there is will, when there is not a power; but in this case of beneficence to the poor saints, as there was a willingness declared, there was an ability in the Corinthians to perform; they had it in the power of their hands, more or less, to act: and the apostle in the last clause of this verse points out the rule and measure of their liberality,

out of that which you have; according to your abilities, and as God has prospered you; and with which he shuts up the mouths of all objectors, rich and poor: should the rich say, would you have us give away all we have? the answer is, no; but “out of that which you have”, something of it, according as you are able; should the poorer sort say, we are in mean circumstances, we have families to provide for, and can spare little, and what we can do is so trifling, that it is not worth giving or accepting; the reply is, give “out of that which you have”, be it less or more; it follows,

Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible

The readiness to will ( ). Old word from (, ), forwardness, eagerness (Ac 17:11). They were quick to pledge.

The completion also ( ). The finishing also (articular first aorist active infinitive).

Out of your ability ( ). “Out of the having,” literally, and so, “out of what you can give” (verse 12).

Fuente: Robertson’s Word Pictures in the New Testament

Out of that which ye have [ ] . Wrong. Meyer justly remarks that it would be an indelicate compliment to the inclination of the readers, that it had originated from their possession. Render, according to your ability; better than Rev. out of your ability.

Fuente: Vincent’s Word Studies in the New Testament

1) “Now therefore perform the doing of it,” (nuni de kai to poiesai epitelesate) “But now and hereafter complete ye or finish doing it,” the collection, make up of a gift of charitable kind to send to the Jerusalem church in her hour of dire poverty, drought; carry through with your pledge, faith promise to make this charitable gift, Mat 10:42; Pro 19:17.

2) “That as there was a readiness to will,” (hopos kathaper he prothumia tou thelein) “Just as (there was) an eagerness of the will (to will),” a year ago; Joh 7:17; Eph 5:17.

3) “So there may be a performance also,” (houtos kai to epitelesai) “Thus also there may be a completion;” Luk 6:38.

4) “Out of which ye have,” (ek tou echein) “out of what you have or hold,” – This is the real giving anyone can give – that which they have or hold, according to ability, according to their wealth. 2Co 9:7.

Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary

11. Now what ye have begun to do. It is probable, that the ardor of the Corinthians had quickly cooled down: otherwise they would, without any delay, have prosecuted their purpose. The Apostle, however, as though no fault had as yet been committed, gently admonishes them to complete, what had been well begun.

When he adds — from what you have, he anticipates an objection; for the flesh is always ingenious in finding out subterfuges. Some plead that they have families, which it were inhuman to neglect; others, on the ground that they cannot give much, make use of this as a pretext for entire exemption. Could I give so small a sum? All excuses of this nature Paul removes, when he commands every one to contribute according to the measure of his ability. He adds, also, the reason: that God looks to the heart — not to what is given, for when he says, that readiness of mind is acceptable to God, according to the individual’s ability, his meaning is this — “If from slender resources you present some small sum, your disposition is not less esteemed in the sight of God, than in the case of a rich man’s giving a large sum from his abundance. (Mar 12:44.) For the disposition is not estimated according to what you have not, that is, God does by no means require of thee, that thou coldest contribute more than thy resources allow.” In this way none are excused; for the rich, on the one hand, owe to God a larger offering, and the poor, on the other hand, ought not to be ashamed of their slender resources.

Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary

(11) Now therefore perform the doing.Better, complete the doing: to perform the doing being open, in the modern use of the word, to the charge of tautology. All the English versions, however, have perform. The three stages are distinctly marked out in St. Pauls mind:(1) Willing the purpose to give; in this they had shown readiness. (2) Setting about the work of giving; this Titus had reported, (3) Completing the work; this he now urged upon them, so that it might answer to the beginning.

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

11. Perform Finish, complete the actual doing. Let not the performance merge into a mere readiness to will. There are a great many who are always ready to do good, but somehow their good never gets done. Paul wants not the readiness but the money.

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

‘But now complete the doing also; that as there was the readiness to will, so there may be the completion also out of your ability. For if the readiness is there, it is acceptable according as a man has, not according as he has not.’

So let them now complete what they had begun. Let them complete ‘the doing’ of it, just as they had previously demonstrated that they had the readiness of will to do it. Let their readiness of will result in their finally completing their set task in accordance with their ability to give.

For what is being required is not extreme sacrifice, but a giving on the basis of what can genuinely be afforded. Readiness to give is proved by giving what one can afford, not by giving what one cannot afford. (The latter would indicate sacrificial love like that of the Macedonians, which goes one step further).

Fuente: Commentary Series on the Bible by Peter Pett

The principle of equality:

v. 11. Now, therefore, perform the doing of it, that, as there was a readiness to will, so there may be a performance also out of that which ye have.

v. 12. For if there be first a willing mind, it is accepted according to that a man hath, and not according to that he hath not.

v. 13. For I mean not that other men be eased and ye burdened;

v. 14. but by an equality, that now, at this time, your abundance may be a supply for their want, that their abundance also may be a supply for your want; that there may be equality,

v. 15. as it is written, he that had gathered much had nothing over, and he that had gathered little had no lack.

Paul’s advice is no less effective because it lacks the force of a definite commandment; it rather gains in power by that very fact. For he points out to the Corinthian Christians that they had expressed their willingness to participate in the collection; they had made the necessary preliminary arrangements: what more logical than to expect, then, that they give evidence of their good intentions in a more substantial manner. Therefore Paul says: But now complete the doing also, that, as there was the readiness to will, so there may be a finishing also from that which you have. The matter of the collection was becoming more pressing and urgent every day, and since they were undoubtedly sincere in their intention of doing their share toward the alleviation of suffering in Jerusalem, they should make all speed in bringing forth concrete evidence of their purpose. They should bring the matter to an end by quick and definite action, and their performance should correspond with their willingness: they should contribute freely according to their ability; for God accepts the good will where the means are wanting to perform the deed. Or, as Paul himself explains it: For if the readiness is present, in accordance with what a man has is he acceptable, not in accordance to what he has not. God looks upon the willingness of the heart, Mar 12:43, and gauges the gift by that standard. The princely sum which a wealthy man gives from his abundance may be relatively smaller than the copper coin which may mean hardship and sacrifice to a poor widow.

This idea is now further illustrated: For it is not that there may be a relief to others and pressure to you, but to obtain equality, your plentiful supply at the present time being for their want, in order that their plentiful supply may prove to be for your want, that there may be equality. This sentence is added principally for the sake of the unwilling, grumbling contributor, whose complaint usually is that he is becoming poor in giving for others, whom he presumes to be rolling in wealth on account of his contributions. Paul’s purpose was not at all to have the congregation at Jerusalem sit back in carelessness and enjoy the gifts which poured in from the congregations in Asia, Macedonia, and Achaia, while the latter should be oppressed with care as a result of giving beyond their means. He was simply advocating the principle of equality, of reciprocity. As things were, the congregations that were engaged in this collection were able to provide help for the poor at Jerusalem, and therefore they should be willing to offer such assistance; the time might come when matters would be reversed, and then he would expect the Christians of Jerusalem and Judea to make a return in kind. The same principle is followed to this day. If a failure of crops strikes certain congregations, or if they are visited by destructive storms and find themselves unable either to sustain life or to rebuild their church property by their own efforts, it is proper that the other congregations should come to their assistance.

Paul illustrates this principle by a quotation from the Scriptural account of the collection of the manna in the wilderness: As it is written, He [that gathered] much had nothing over, and he [that gathered] little was not wanting, Exo 16:18. When the Lord gave the children of Israel manna to eat in the wilderness, the more energetic gathered a larger supply, while others were not able to bring so much back to camp. And yet the needs of the individual families differed with their size. But the difference was straightened out upon their return to camp, with the result that every family had enough manna for its needs till the next day. Just so within the congregations the Lord wants the surplus of the one to assist the lack in the other, and whenever there is need in any one section of the country, or wherever the work of the Gospel is being carried on, the congregations in the other sections should show their willingness to heed the principle here laid down for their guidance.

Fuente: The Popular Commentary on the Bible by Kretzmann

2Co 8:11 . The before can only belong to it, and not to . also (de Wette, Hofmann). It is the simple accessory also ; as in 2Co 8:10 the thought proceeded backwards from doing to willing, now it proceeds forwards from willing to doing, so that at the bottom of there lies the conception: Now, however, bring not merely the willing, but also the doing to completion. This is an analysis of the elements, which in reality coincide (for the of the willing is the actual execution ), occasioned, however, very naturally by the juxtaposition in 2Co 8:10 , and giving rise to no misconception her.

. . .] in order that as the inclination of the willing, so also the completion (of that, which ye will) may be according to means, i.e. in order that the actual execution of that, which you will, may not remain out of proportion to the inclination of your will, but, like the latter, may be accordant with your means. As it is the inclination of your will to contribute according to the standard of your possessing, the execution of this willingness should take place according to the same standar.

] sc. . The supplying the subjunctive of is not linguistically inadmissible (Rckert), and is found already in Homer ( Il. i. 547, and Ngelsb. in loc. ), but it is certainly rare in Greek writers. Comp. 2Co 8:13 . See Bernhardy, p. 330 f.; Buttmann, neut. Gramm. p. 120 [E. T. 137].

] belongs to both subjects of the clause of purpose: in pursuance of the having , according to your means. See Fritzsche, Quaest. Luc . p. 179 f. Comp. expressions like , , and the like. is not to be taken in the sense of the origin, as Hofmann wishes; for it would, in fact, be an indelicate and bad compliment to the inclination of the readers, that it had “originated” from their possession. Paul himself indicates afterwards by in what meaning he uses .

Fuente: Heinrich August Wilhelm Meyer’s New Testament Commentary

11 Now therefore perform the doing of it ; that as there was a readiness to will, so there may be a performance also out of that which ye have.

Ver. 11. Now therefore perform ] Unless our willing of good be seconded with endeavour, it is nothing worth. Balaam wished well to heaven; so did he that came kneeling to our Saviour with Good master, &c.; but; they stuck at the hardship of holiness, without which there is no heaven to be had; they would not come off here, and therefore got nothing by their short winded wishes. Solomon compares such sluggards to the door that turns on the hinges, but yet hangs still upon them, it comes not off for all the turnings. Their purposes without performances are like a cloud without rain; and not unlike Hercules’ club in the tragedy, of a great bulk, but stuffed with moss and rubbish. Virtutem expotant contabescuntque relicta. (Peri.)

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

11. ] But (contrast of your former zeal with your present need to be reminded of it) now complete the act itself also ( can hardly apply to the whole . ., as De Wette, but must be taken with ; now shew not only the completion of a ready will in the act begun, but complete the act also , as Meyer), that, as (there was) (with you) readiness of will, so (there may) also (be) completion according to your means ( , not ‘out of that which ye have ,’ as E. V., but ‘after the measure of your property,’ as in ref. The verbs substantive must be supplied, as in 2Co 8:13 ).

Fuente: Henry Alford’s Greek Testament

2Co 8:11 . . . .: but now complete the doing also, that as there was the readiness to will, so there may be also the completion in accordance with your ability : = of 2Co 8:12 = pro facultatibus ( cf. Joh 3:34 , ), and not, as A.V., “out of that which ye have”.

Fuente: The Expositors Greek Testament by Robertson

2 Corinthians

WILLING AND NOT DOING

2Co 8:11

The Revised Version reads: ‘But now complete the doing also; that as there was the readiness to will, so there may be the completion also out of your ability.’ A collection of money for the almost pauper church at Jerusalem bulked very largely in the Apostle’s mind at the date of the writing of the two letters to the Corinthian church. We learn that that church had been the first to agree to the project, and then had very distinctly hung back from implementing its promises and fulfilling its good intentions. So the Apostle, in the chapter from which my text is taken, with wonderful delicacy, dignity, and profundity, sets forth the true principle, not only of Christian giving, but of Christian asking. The text advises that the gushing sentiments of brotherly sympathy and liberality which had inspired the Corinthians a year ago should now bear some fruit in action. So Paul is going to send Titus, his right-hand man at the time, to hurry up and finish off the collection and have done with it. The text is in effect the message which Titus was to carry; but it has a far wider application than that. It is a needful advice for us all about a great many other things: ‘As there was a readiness to will, so let there be a performance also.’

Resolutions, noble and good and Christlike, have a strange knack of cheating the people who make them. So we all need the exhortation not to be befooled by fancying that we have done, when we have only willed. Of course we shall not do unless we will. But there is a wide gap, as our experience witnesses, between the two things. We all know what place it is to which, according to the old proverb, the road is paved with good intentions; and the only way to pull up that paving is to take Paul’s advice here and always, and immediately to put into action the resolves of our hearts. Now I desire to say two or three very plain and simple things about this matter.

I. I would have you consider the necessity of this commandment.

Consider that the fault here warned against is a universal one. What different men we should be if our resolutions had fruited in conduct! In all regions of life that is true, but most emphatically is it true in regard to religion. The damning tragedy of many lives, and I dare say of those of some of my hearers, is that men have over and over again determined that they would be Christians, and they are not Christians yet; just because they have let ‘the native hue of resolution be sicklied over’ by some paleness or other, and so have resolved and resolved and resolved till every nerve of action is rotted away, and they will die unchristian. I dare say that there are men or women listening to me now, perhaps with grey hairs upon them, who can remember times, in the springtide of their youth, when they said, ‘I will give my heart to Jesus Christ, and set my faith upon Him’; and they have not done it yet. Now, therefore, ‘as there was a readiness to will, let there be also the performance.’

But it is not only in regard to that most important of all resolves that I wish to say a word. All Christians, I am sure, know what it is, over and over again, to have had stirrings in their hearts which they have been able to consolidate into determination, but have not been able to carry into act. ‘The children have come to the birth, and there is not strength to bring them forth.’ That is true about all of us, more or less, and it is very solemnly true of a great many of us professing Christians. We have tried to cure–we have determined that we will cure–manifest and flagrant defects or faults in our Christian life. We have resolved, and some nipping frost has come, and the blossoms have dropped on the grass before they have ever set into fruit. I know that is so about you, because I know that it is so about myself. And therefore, dear brethren, I appeal to you, and ask you whether the exhortation of my text has not a sharp point for every one of us–whether the universality of this defect does not demand that we all should gravely consider the exhortation here before us?

Then, again, let me remind you how this injunction is borne in upon us by the consideration of the strength of the opposition with which we have always to contend, in every honest attempt to bring to act our best resolutions. Did you ever try to cure some little habit, some mere trifle, a trick of manner or twist of the finger, or some attitude or tone that might be ugly and awkward, and that people told you that it would be better to get rid of? You know how hard it is. There is always a tremendous gulf between the ideal and its realisation in life. As long as we are moving in vacuo we move without any friction or difficulty; but as soon as we come out into a world where there are an atmosphere and opposing forces, then friction comes in, and speed diminishes; and we never become what we aim to be. We begin with grand purposes, and we end with very poor results. We all start, in our early days, with the notion that our lives are going to be radiant and beautiful, and all unlike what the limitations of power and the antagonisms that we have to meet make of them at last. The tree of our life’s doings has to grow, like those contorted pines on the slopes of the Alps, in many storms, with heavy weights of snow on its branches, and beaten about by tempests from every quarter of the heavens; and so it gets gnarled and knotted and very unlike the symmetrical beauty that we dreamed would adorn it. We begin with saying: ‘Come! Let us build a tower whose top shall reach to heaven’; and we are contented at last, if we have put up some little tumble-down shed where we can get shelter for our heads from the blast.

And the difficulty in bringing into action our best selves besets us in the matter of translating our resolutions into practice. What are arrayed against it? A feeble will, enslaved too often by passions and flesh and habits, and all about us lie obstacles to our carrying into action our conscientious convictions, our deepest resolutions; obstacles to our being true to our true selves; to which obstacles, alas, far too many of us habitually, and all of us occasionally, succumb. That being the case, do not we all need to ponder in our deepest hearts, and to pray for grace to make the motto of our lives, ‘As there was a readiness to will, let there be a performance’?

II. Consider the importance of this counsel.

That is borne in upon mind and conscience by looking at the disastrous effects of letting resolutions remain sterile. Consider how apt we are to deceive ourselves with unfulfilled purposes. The quick response which an easily-moved nature may make to some appeal of noble thought or lofty principle is mistaken for action, and we are tempted to think that willing is almost as good as if we had done what we half resolved on. And there is a kind of glow of satisfaction that comes when such a man thinks, ‘I have done well in that I have determined.’ The Devil will let you resolve as much as you like–the more the better; only the more easily you resolve, the more certainly he will block the realisation. Let us take care of that seducing temptation which is apt to lead us all to plume ourselves on good resolutions, and to fancy that they are almost equivalent to their own fulfilment. Cheques are all very well if there be bullion in the bank cellars to pay them with when they fall due, but if that be not so, then the issuing of them is crime and fraud. Our resolutions, made and forgotten as so many of our good resolutions are, are very little better.

Note, too, how rapidly the habit of substituting lightly-made resolutions for seriously-endeavoured acts grows.

And mark, further, how miserable and debilitating it is to carry the dead weight of such unaccomplished intentions.

Nothing so certainly weakens a man as a multitude of resolves that he knows he has never fulfilled. They weaken his will, burden his conscience, stand in the way of his hopes, make him feel as if the entail of evil was too firm and strong to be ever broken. ‘O wretched man that I am!’ said one who had made experience of what it was to will what was good, and not to find how to perform, ‘who shall deliver me from the body of this death?’ It is an awful thing to have to carry a corpse about on your back. And that was what Paul thought the man did who loaded his own shoulders with abortive resolutions, that perished in the birth, and never grew up to maturity. Weak and miserable is always the man who is swift to resolve and slow to carry out his resolutions.

III. And now let me say a word before I close about how this universal and grave disease is to be coped with.

Well, I should say to begin with, let us take very soberly and continually into our consciousness the recognition of the fact that the disease is there. And then may I say, let us be rather slower to resolve than we often are. ‘Better is it that thou shouldest not vow than that thou shouldest vow and not pay.’ The man who has never had the determination to give up some criminal indulgence–say, drink–is possibly less criminal, and certainly less weak, than the man who, when his head aches, and the consequences of his self-indulgence are vividly realised by him, makes up his mind to be a teetotaller, and soon stumbles into the first dram-shop that is open, and then reels out a drunkard. Do not vow until you have made up your minds to pay. Remember that it is a solemn act to determine anything, especially anything bearing on moral and religious life; and that you had far better keep your will in suspense than spring to the resolution with thoughtless levity and leave it with the same.

Further, the habit of promptly carrying out our resolves is one that, like all other habits, can be cultivated. And we can cultivate it in little things, in the smallest trifles of daily life, which by their myriads make up life itself, in order that it may be a fixed custom of our minds when great resolves have to be made. The man who has trained himself day in and day out, in regard to the insignificances of daily life, to let act follow resolve as the thunder peal succeeds the lightning flash, is the man who, if he is moved to make a great resolve about his religion, or about his conduct, will be most likely to carry it out. Get the magical influence of habit on your side, and you will have done much to conquer the evil of abortive resolutions.

But then there is something a great deal more than that to be said. The Apostle did not content himself, in the passage already referred to, with bewailing the wretchedness of the condition in which to will was present, but how to perform he found not. He asked, and he triumphantly answered, the question, ‘Who shall deliver me?’ with the great words, ‘I thank God through Jesus Christ our Lord.’ There is the secret; keep near Him, trust Him, open your hearts to the influences of that Divine Spirit who makes us free from the law of sin and death. And if thus, knowing our weakness, recognising our danger, humbly trying to cultivate the habit of prompt discharge of all discerned duty, we leave ourselves in Jesus Christ’s hands, and wait, and ask, and believe that we possess, His cleansing Spirit, then we shall not ask and wait in vain. ‘Work out your own salvation, . . . for it is God that worketh in you, both the willing and the doing.’

Fuente: Expositions Of Holy Scripture by Alexander MacLaren

perform. Samaritan Pentateuch word as “finish”, 2Co 8:6.

doing = doing also.

readiness. Greek. prothumia. See Act 17:11.

will. Greek. thelo, as 2Co 8:10

performance = performing, as above.

out of. Greek. ek. App-104.

Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics

11.] But (contrast of your former zeal with your present need to be reminded of it) now complete the act itself also ( can hardly apply to the whole . ., as De Wette, but must be taken with ; now shew not only the completion of a ready will in the act begun, but complete the act also,-as Meyer), that, as (there was) (with you) readiness of will, so (there may) also (be) completion according to your means ( , not out of that which ye have, as E. V., but after the measure of your property, as in ref. The verbs substantive must be supplied, as in 2Co 8:13).

Fuente: The Greek Testament

2Co 8:11. , the doing) that you may do again.-, perform) The beginning and especially the end of actions lays the foundation of praise or else blame, Gen 11:6; Jos 6:26; Jer 44:25.-, that) namely, it may be.- , out of that which you have) not more. The proposition [theme for discussion] in relation to what follows.

Fuente: Gnomon of the New Testament

2Co 8:11

2Co 8:11

But now complete the doing also;-As there was a readiness to will-as they were forward to begin-let there be a continuance in the work until it is completed.

that as there was the readiness to will, so there may be the completion also out of your ability.-This is an admonition that the completion should correspond to the promise. It often occurs that when an earnest advocate of a cause goes before the people, lays the needs before them, stirs their feelings, they promise great things; but when the excitement subsides, they grow cold and indifferent and fail to fulfil their promise.

Fuente: Old and New Testaments Restoration Commentary

Reciprocal: Exo 35:5 – whosoever Pro 3:28 – General 1Co 16:2 – that

Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge

2Co 8:11. Paul urges the brethren to “speed up” the program so earnestly begun before, carrying their readiness of mind into action or actual performance, by contributing out of their possessions.

Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary

2Co 8:11. But now complete the doing also; that as there was the readiness to will, so there may be the completion also out of your abilityaccording to your means.

Fuente: A Popular Commentary on the New Testament

Verse 11 They had promised to do a certain work and Paul was pleading with them to keep that promise.

Fuente: Gary Hampton Commentary on Selected Books

But now complete the doing also; that as there was the readiness to will, so there may be the completion also out of your ability.

Fuente: McGarvey and Pendleton Commentaries (New Testament)