Day 99, Acts 20:1-6 & 2 Corinthians 1 
It is helpful to know
something of the occasion of this letter in order to understand the
letter itself. Everything, however, is not so clear. I suspect that Paul had no
idea that his letters would be studied for hundreds of years by future
Christians, otherwise he would have worked harder at making them easier to
understand by those of us who were not part of his intended readership.
After his three-year
sojourn in Ephesus, where he penned 1 Corinthians, Paul traveled along the
coast of the Aegean Sea back to Macedonia and Greece. At some point
he briefly visited the Corinthian believers. That visit didn't go as well as he
had hoped, and after his departure, he wrote a letter to the Corinthians
that was quite severe, penned "with many tears" (2:3-4). Fearing
that his severe letter may have done more damage than good, Paul headed back
towards Corinth. On the way there, he eventually met up with Titus who informed
him that his letter had, for the most part, accomplished the intended result.
Paul wrote 2 Corinthians after receiving Titus' encouraging report (2:12-13;
7:6, 13). This means, of course, that 2 Corinthians is actually 3 Corinthians!
(Actually, 2 Corinthians is at least 4 Corinthians, because Paul wrote a letter
to the Corinthians that predated 1 Corinthians; see 1 Cor. 5:9).
Paul began this letter
by focusing on God's mercy and comfort. Because of Titus' good report, he had
been comforted, and he wanted to comfort the Corinthians who were no doubt
troubled about their relationship with him. In keeping with that theme, Paul
related his experience with God's comfort when he was recently in Asia, where
he and his band "despaired even of life" (1:8). Paul must have been
referring to the uproar and riot in Ephesus, of which his ministry was the
cause, that we read about in Acts 19:23-40. Apparently there was more danger
that surrounded that incident than Luke's account in Acts reveals. Regardless,
Paul enjoyed "the peace that surpasses all understanding" (Phil. 4:7)
in the midst of a very stressful situation. That comfort is available to you,
but faith is what activates it.
Paul credited the Lord
with his deliverance from those who would have killed him, but he also credited
the prayers of the Corinthian believers (1:9-11). It is encouraging to know
that our prayers help keep God's front-line servants safe from harm.
There was apparently
some misunderstanding on the part of the Corinthians regarding Paul's intended
traveling schedule as it related to his coming to visit them. We don't know all
the details so it isn't easy for us to sort out. We do know that when Paul was
in Ephesus, he "purposed in the spirit" to journey to Macedonia and
Achaia and then on to Jerusalem and Rome (Acts 19:21). That is the exact course
he ultimately followed. According to what we read today, he intended to go
through Corinth twice, but the second visit never occurred, and so Paul
explained why.
He did not want the
Corinthian believers to think that he was charting his own course
or vacillating in his intentions, an indication that he was
"purposing according the flesh" (1:17). It seems Paul was even more
concerned that his loss of credibility regarding his traveling intentions might
cause the Corinthian believers to doubt his message about Christ. So he first
addressed that issue, affirming that the message preached by himself, Silvanus
and Timothy was fully trustworthy. And then---without resorting to swearing
with an oath, but calling on God as a "witness to his soul"
(1:23)---Paul explained why he didn't visit Corinth the second time as he had
intended. It was to spare them. Rather than visit, he decided to send a letter
instead.
Perhaps you've found
yourself in a similar situation, when writing a letter to someone seemed like a
better thing to do than speaking to them face-to-face. A letter gives them time
to think about their reaction before they respond. A letter rather than a
face-to-face encounter can be an act of wisdom and love. But not always! Every
situation requires its own evaluation.
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