2 CORINTHIANS CHAPTER 3.
VIEW
FOOTNOTES
The Glory of the New Testament Ministry. 2
Cor. 3, 1-18,
The
apostle’s letter of commendation: V.1. Do
we begin again to commend ourselves? Or need we, as some others,
epistles of
commendation to you or letters of commendation from you? V.2.
Ye are our epistle, written in our hearts, known and
read of all men, v.3.
forasmuch as ye are manifestly declared to be the
epistle of Christ
ministered by us, written not with ink, but with the Spirit of the
living God;
not in tables of stone, but in fleshy tables of the he art. The
apostle was often driven to self-defense, and therefore he also made
statements
concerning his work which his opponents, ever on the lookout for faults
and
flaws, maliciously explained as self-glorification, Cp. 1 Cor. 9, 15;
14, 18;
15, 10. Since, then, Paul had just written that his preaching of the
Gospel was
done in all sincerity and the opponents might take occasion to repeat
their
charge, he guards against their insinuation: Do we begin once more to
commend
ourselves? -of which he had been falsely accused. His question plainly
states
that there is not a grain of sinful presumption in the declarations
which he has
made. And he repeats, with emphasis: Or do we stand in need of
commending
letters to you or from you, like certain other people? This is a fine
bit of
irony directed against the false apostles and Judaizing teachers it
seems that
some of these, upon their arrival at Corinth, produced such letters
written by
prominent members of the older congregations, especially by men with
Judaizing
tendencies. But Paul scouts and scorns the idea that he “who first
brought the
Gospel to Corinth should need to present formal credentials to the
Corinthian
church; and it would lie equally anomalous that he should seek
recommendations
from them.” 7) The idea was preposterous, absurd. The witness of his
character
and office is far superior to any that could be given him by any
congregation.
With
winning tact the apostle now turns to the Corinthians with the
statement. You
are our letter, written in our hearts, known, acknowledged, and read by
all men
The believers at Corinth were a testimonial, a letter of
recommendation,
superior to any that the intruders were able to produce. Their whole
being in
Christ they owed to his work of planting and building, of teaching and
educating. What need had Paul of further letters? They were his
credentials,
written in his heart, he himself being writer, bearer, and receiver of
this
letter. The weal and woe, the welfare of the congregation at Corinth,
that was
the apostle’s continued concern; that he bore in his heart with loving
prayer.
And the letter which he thus bore as a continual testimony was open to
the
knowledge of the world as such, and it could be read without
difficulty: both
handwriting and contents could be recognized and appropriated by all
beholders
that cared to investigate. “Facts speak louder than words.”
The
apostle explains this more fully: Manifested that you are a letter of
Christ,
prepared by our service: Christ was the Author, Paul acted as His
secretary. And
the letter itself was not written with ink on long strips or pieces of
papyrus
after the manner of the time, but by the Spirit of the living God.
Through the
instrumentality of the Spirit the truth of the Gospel has been
imprinted upon
their hearts, as the apostle says: Not on stone tablets, but on tablets
that are
hearts of flesh. Christ the Author, the Holy Ghost the Transmitter of
divine
power, Paul the secretary and minister: in that way this wonderful
letter was
composed. The reference used by Paul reminds of an event in the history
of
Israel, when the Decalog was written by the finger of God upon stone
tablets.
But here the Gospel, the gracious news of the atonement through the
redemption
of Christ, is implanted into the heart as a lasting blessing: Christ
dwelling in
the heart by faith.
The
spirit contrasted with the letter: V.4. And
such trust have we through Christ to God-ward; v.5.
not that we are
sufficient of ourselves to think anything as of ourselves; but our
sufficiency
is of God, v.6. who
also hath made us able ministers of the New Testament, not of the
letter, but of
the Spirit; for the letter killeth, but the Spirit giveth life. The
work which Paul had done at Corinth as God’s servant was worthy of all
commendation. And yet he avoids even the suspicion of
self-glorification by
writing: But such confidence we have through Christ toward God. That
was the
confidence, the quiet certainty, which Paul had, that the Corinthian
congregation was his letter of commendation, that its condition in
doctrine and
life bore a continual testimony to his work. But this confidence was
not the
outgrowth of a false self-esteem, it was rather a persuasion to God, in
respect
to God, the Author of the work, and through Christ, in whose power he
accomplished such great things in Corinth. “This boasting every
preacher
should have, that he be certain and that his heart also stand in that
confidence
and be able to say: This confidence and courage I have toward God in
Christ that
my doctrine and preaching is truly God’s Word. Thus also when he serves
in
other offices in the Church, baptizes a child, absolves and comforts a
sinner,
that, too, must be done in the certain confidence that it is the
command of
Christ.” 8)
The
words of Paul concerning the ministry of the New Testament condemn all
pride,
presumption, self-conceit, and false confidence, as Luther says, and
ascribe all
honor and glory to God: Not that we are sufficient of ourselves to form
any
opinion as of ourselves, but our sufficiency is of God. The very
suggestion as
though he were praising himself and lauding his own efforts, commending
his
success in Corinth as due to his own ability, is here rejected. On the
contrary,
he says of himself and of all ministers of the Gospel, not only that
they lack
fitness for the service of the Word, but that they are not even able to
have the
right opinions, to form the proper judgments in anything connected with
the
office, whether it be great or small, as of themselves. If any preacher
of the
Gospel is depending upon his own natural ability, his own accumulated
wisdom,
his own practical shrewdness, then he is still lacking entirely in that
sufficiency which the Lord demands for the proper service of Him whose
unvarying
requirement is the acknowledgment of one’s own insufficiency and
unworthiness.
There is only one way in which a man may become sufficient, may gain
the proper
qualifications for the work of preaching the Gospel, and that is by the
free
gift of God. Everything that a preacher thinks, does, and carries out
successfully in his office is given to him by God, is performed through
him by
God, to whom therefore all glory and honor must at all times be given.
Incidentally,
however, God takes care of the work which He has entrusted to weak
human hands,
to infirm human minds: Who also made us sufficient, gave us the proper
qualifications, as ministers of the New Covenant, as ministers, namely,
not of
the letter, but of the spirit; for the letter kills, but the spirit
gives life.
God must and does truly give the ability, the necessary qualifications,
to those
that are ministers, that serve in the work of the Gospel, provided they
are
servants of the Gospel in truth, and not in name only. He enables them
to be
ministers of the New Covenant, to devote their time and energy to its
propagation, to the distribution of the New Testament gifts of grace.
For the
word “new” implies that the apostle is here contrasting the present
ministry
with that of the Old Covenant which was made with the children of
Israel on
Mount Sinai. Of the former covenant he says that it was a covenant of
the
letter; of the latter, that it is a covenant of the Spirit; Be
contrasts the Law
and the Gospel. “For he uses the word ‘letter’ somewhat contemptuously
of
the Law (which nevertheless is also the Word of God) over against the
office and
preaching of the Gospel.... For ‘letter’ is that which is called, and
is,
every form of commandment, doctrine, and preaching which remains only
in the
word or on the paper and in the letter, and nothing is done
afterwards.... Thus
also the command of God, since it is not kept, although the highest
doctrine and
God’s eternal will, must yet suffer that men make of it a mere letter
and
empty shell, since without heart and fruit it does not bring life and
salvation.... On the other hand, there is an altogether different
doctrine and
preaching, which he calls the ministry of the New Testament and of the
Spirit,
which does not teach what you should do (for that you have heard
before); but it
indicates to you what God wants to do and give to you, yea, has done
already, in
this way, that he gave His Son, Christ, for us, because on account of
our
disobedience to the Law, which no man fulfills, we were under God’s
wrath and
condemnation, that he paid for our sins, reconciled God, and gave us
His
righteousness.” 9) This contrast is brought out by the apostle in one
brief
sentence: The letter kills: the Law is the instrument of death, Rom. 5,
20; 7,
9; 8, 2, because no man is able to fulfill its demands, and therefore
every
person is under its condemnation of death; the Spirit gives life: the
Gospel
brings us the glorious news of the free grace of God in Christ Jesus,
of the
complete fulfillment of the Law, of the payment of all guilt, of the
appropriation of perfect righteousness, life, and salvation. And the
Gospel
brings the Holy Spirit into the hearts, its power is that of the
Spirit, who
works a new spiritual life in the sinner, gives him the joyful
confidence to
know God as his dear Father, and to live a life of thankfulness,
righteousness,
and purity.
The
glory of the ministry of righteousness: V.7. But
if the ministration of death, written and engraven in stones, was
glorious, so
that the children of Israel could not steadfastly behold the face of
Moses for
the glory of his countenance, which glory was to be done away, v.8.
how shall not the ministration of the Spirit be
rather glorious? V.9.
For if the ministration of condemnation be glory,
much more doth the
ministration of righteousness exceed in glory. V.10.
For even that which
was made glorious had no glory in this respect, by reason of the glory
which
excelleth. V.11. For
if that which is done away was glorious, much more that which remaineth
is
glorious. The contrast of v.6 is
here carried out in detail, probably on account of the Judaizing
opponents in
Corinth, whose aim was to exalt the preaching of the Law, to place it
by the
side of the Gospel as being necessary for salvation. The apostle
concedes: But
if the ministry of death, engraved in letters upon stones, was, or came
into
existence, in glory, so that the children of Israel could not look
steadily on
the face of Moses on account of the glory, the brightness, of his face,
transient as it was. The office and the preaching of the Law is an
office unto
death, for as conditions are here on earth, in the midst of fallen
mankind, no
man can keep the Law, and therefore all men are under its condemnation.
The Law
is and must remain to sinful men a dead letter, unable to give life. It
was
indeed, in the form of the Decalog, engraved upon tablets of stone by
the finger
of the Lord Himself, Ex. 32, 16. But that very fact indicates to the
apostle
that the Law, so far as all men are concerned, is and remains to them
something
external. It is a fixed letter, formed and engraved in stone; it cannot
transmit
to the sinner life and power to keep it, it cannot work spiritual
ability. It is
true, indeed, that the Law and its ministry came into existence in
glory; for
when the Lord had given to Moses the entire Law with all its
explanation, and
when Moses then returned to the camp of the children of Israel, the
skin of his
face had assumed such a degree of brightness on account of his having
been in
the presence of God’s glory, Ex. 34, 29. 30, that the children of
Israel found
themselves unable to look at Moses for any length of time, being
blinded by the
brightness of his face. Yet this brightness was of a transitory nature,
it was
visible when Moses came from the divine presence, and faded away when
the
occasion was past.
Now
Paul’s argument is: If even this ministry, as here described, was
connected
with divine glory, though of a transient character, how shall not
rather the
ministry of the Spirit be with glory? If the office that could not but
serve
death was glorious, surely the office which gives the Spirit of God,
that
transmits Him with all His gifts to the hearts of the believers, is
much rather
entitled to that distinction. The ministry of the New Testament is
indeed not
connected with an external, physical brightness of the face, but it
possesses a
spiritual glory, which far transcends any bodily brightness, a glory
which is
imparted to the mind, heart, and body of every believer, making his
life a
reflection of the divine, eternal glory. “The glory of the Lord is the
knowledge of God. Moses also has glory, that is, the knowledge and
understanding
of the Law. If I have the knowledge of the Law, I see in it His face
plainly, I
look into His bright light. But now we have gone through this and have
a higher
knowledge of Christ the Lord; whosoever knows Him as the man that
helps, that
gives the power to fulfill the Law, through whom we have received
forgiveness of
sins, there His glory is reflected in us, that is: As the brightness of
the sun
is reflected in water or in a mirror, thus Christ is reflected and
sheds His
brightness into the heart, that we are glorified from one glory to
another, that
we daily grow and know the Lord ever more clearly.” 10)
The
apostle repeats the same thought with a slightly different emphasis:
For if the
ministry of condemnation is glory, by a great deal more does the
ministry of
righteousness exceed in glory, The office of the Law is a ministry of
condemnation, it cannot but pronounce condemnation upon all men, since
all men
are transgressors of the Law; it must state that all men are under the
curse,
that they have all sinned and come short of the glory of God, that they
have
deserved His wrath and displeasure, temporal death, and eternal
damnation. If,
therefore, even this ministry has glory, with such inevitable results
accompanying its work, how much more glorious must the ministry of the
Gospel
be! For the preaching of the Gospel is a ministry of righteousness: it
shows us
how we may become righteous in the sight of God; it imputes to us the
perfect
righteousness earned for us by our Redeemer; it reveals to us the
righteousness
which comes by faith to all and upon all that believe, Rom. 3, 22. On
the one
hand, the sentence of condemnation, opening up before us death and
hell; on the
other hand, the sentence of mercy, giving us the assurance of eternal
salvation:
how much does the latter exceed the former!
So
emphatically does the apostle want to bring out the superiority of the
New
Testament ministry that he rises to a very climax: For that which was
made
glorious, the ministry of the Old Covenant, has not been made glorious
in this
respect, on account of the surpassing glory (of the ministry of the Sew
Testament); for if the transient thing was with glory, much more that
remaining
is in glory. The apostle means to say that when a person really carries
out the
comparison in all its features and from all sides, it will finally come
to this,
that there is really no glory left for the ministry of the Old
Covenant; its
glory disappears when held beside that of the New Testament ministry,
just as
the light of the stars fades before the majesty of the rising sun. “If
one
looks upon this brightness and sanctity properly which we have in
Christ through
the preaching of the Gospel, then that part of the glory, namely, that
of the
Law (which is only a small, temporary, passing glory), is really a
non-glory,
rather nothing but dark clouds beside the light of Christ, which now
illumines
the way for us out of sin, death, and hell to God and eternal life.”
11) For
if the transitory thing, the ministry of the Law, which was intended
for a short
apace of time only, had glory, then that which remains, the office of
the
Gospel, the ministry which is active as long as the world stands and
whose
fruits are eternal, will abide in glory. “It is also a particularly
comforting
word that he says, that the ministry and preaching of the Law is such a
ministry
as passes away; for if that were not the case, nothing but eternal
damnation
would be there. But the doing away happens when the Gospel’s preaching
of
Christ begins; to that Moses must yield and allow it to have supreme
sway, so
that he no longer shall rule with his terror in the conscience of the
believers,… that the glory of Christ may shine into the heart with His
sweet,
consoling light.” 12)
The
effect of the two ministries: V.12. Seeing,
the n, that we have such hope, we use great plainness of speech; v.13.
and not as Moses, which put a veil over his face
that the children of
Israel could not steadfastly look to the end of that which is
abolished. V.14.
But their minds were blinded; for until this day
remaineth the same veil
untaken away in the reading of the Old Testament; which veil is done
away in
Christ. V.15. But
even unto this day, when Moses is read, the veil is upon their heart. V.16.
Nevertheless, when it shall turn
to the Lord, the veil shall be taken away. V.17. Now, the Lord is that
spirit; and where the spirit of the Lord is, there is liberty. V.18.
But we all, with open face beholding, as in a glass,
the glory of the
Lord, are changed into the same image from glory to glory even as by
the Spirit
of the Lord. Although the apostle
did not actually describe the consummation of all Christian hope, but
showed
only the manner of its accomplishment, yet the final bliss was implied.
And
therefore he continues: Having therefore such hope, we make use of much
boldness
of speech. The hope which the ministers of the New Testament have
extends
forward to the future glorification of Christ and the believers in the
mansions
of heaven, when the spiritual gifts of the Gospel, righteousness and
life, will
be revealed before the whole world. And therefore the servants of the
Word make
use of great openness, much boldness of speech. Because Paul had before
his
mind’s eye the definite fulfillment of the certain promises of the
Gospel, he
could speak with all frank and unreserved confidence. There was nothing
to
conceal, nothing to suppress, with the utmost plainness he could preach
the
message of Christ and of the fullness of salvation contained in Him.
Just as he
did not hesitate to let the thunder of Sinai roll over the head of the
unrepentant sinner, so he withheld not a syllable of the saving truth
to the
poor sinner, whose self-righteousness and pride had been taken away by
such
frank preaching.
In
this respect he and the other teachers differed from Moses, who,
although vested
with the full official authority of a servant of God, yet placed a veil
upon his
face, and this for the purpose that the children of Israel should not
look
steadily on the end of that which was passing away. It was not only
that the
sight of the divine radiance on the face of Moses was withheld from the
children
of Israel because their previous conduct had made them unworthy of such
a favor
and rendered them unable to endure the splendor of such sinless
reflection, but
that the glory on the face of Moses, was fading away even while he was
speaking
with the people. Moses was aware of this transitoriness of the
phenomenon; he
realized that this fact symbolized the preparatory nature of the Old
Testament
ministry, and his action was in agreement with the will of God. A
continued
enjoyment of the divine reflection was denied the children of Israel on
account
of their refusal to accept the words of the prophet. In this way Moses
was
handicapped in his work and could not bring out the Gospel-news as it
is now
proclaimed by the ministers of the New Testament.
That
the people of Israel were the guilty ones, and not Moses, appears from
the next
words: But blinded were their minds; their power of thinking had become
callous,
hardened. It was impossible for them to gain a clear knowledge of the
important
matters which they should have known for their salvation. The entire
history of
the journey through the wilderness is an account of wonderful, patient
mercy on
the part of God and of stubborn resistance on the part of the children
of
Israel. And therefore, in a way, the sentence of hardening was carried
out in
its beginnings even in the wilderness. And that is not all: For to the
present
day the same veil remains unlifted at their reading of the Old
Testament, for it
is only done away in Christ. The apostle says of the Jews of his time
what has
remained practically unchanged to this day: there is still a veil upon
the
hearts of the children of Israel, which prevents their seeing the
evanescence of
the Old Testament. They will not acknowledge that the age before Christ
was one
of preparation, of type and prophecy only. They will not turn to the
Lord to be
granted an open vision, to recognize Christ as the Savior of the world.
To this
very day, whenever Moses is read in their synagogs, the veil lies upon
their
hearts. And get it remains true, and should be remembered in all the
missionary
work upon the children of Abraham according to the flesh, that at
whatever time
Israel shall turn to the Lord, the veil mill be taken away. If they
will but
turn to Christ in true conversion and accept Him as the promised
Messiah, then
they will be given the open vision to understand the entire Old
Testament in the
light of the New, prophecy in the light of fulfillment. The apostle is
not
speaking of a single event, as if all the Jews would at one time turn
to the
true Lord and their Savior Jesus Christ, but of the individual
instances, no
matter how often they occur in the time of the, New Covenant, Rom. 11,
26, when
God takes away the veil from the heart of some member of the Jewish
race, when
He takes away the pride of false understanding and of
self-righteousness and
brings about the right knowledge of sin, thus leading the way to Christ
the
Savior. “Paul teaches 2 Cor. 3, 15 f. the veil that covered the face of
Moses
cannot be removed except by faith in Christ, by which the Holy Ghost is
received.” 13) Note that the writings of Moses and the entire Old
Testament
are here referred to as a well-known collection, as a single book.
Just
what the removing of the veil signifies the apostle explains in
conclusion: But
the Lord, the Jehovah of Israel, Christ, the Redeemer of mankind, is
the Spirit;
He is the Author of the New Covenant of mercy and grace, He is the One
that is
given through the Gospel with all His blessings, with the fullness of
salvation.
But where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is liberty, there is no
longer the
bondage of the Law. Every person that will heed the Gospel-call is
assured of
free access to God, without any intervening veil, without the fear of
condemnation. The argument of the apostle has been formulated by one
commentator
as follows: Where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is freedom: as the
Lord is
the Spirit, whoever turns to the Lord has that Spirit; therefore such a
one must
be free, and mill no more he hindered by the veil which covers and
checks the
action of the soul. This is the effect which is bound to be brought
about in the
case of the Jews and of all who, like them, have their minds blinded to
the
glory of the Gospel.
But
as for the Christians: We all, with unveiled face, reflecting the glory
of the
Lord as in a mirror, to that same image are changed from one glory to
another,
as from the Lord the Spirit. Before the face of the believers of the
New
Testament the veil of Moses and of the children of Israel no longer
hangs; it
has been removed by the mercy of God. And not only that, but they also
reflect,
as in a mirror and therefore somewhat imperfectly, but none the less
surely, the
glory of the Lord Jesus Christ; there is evidence of its power and
brightness in
their whole life. And so they are transformed into His image, not at
once, but
by gradual stages, the process of sanctification occupying the entire
life. The
believers are renewed in knowledge as well as in righteousness and
holiness,
after the image of God and of Christ, their Savior. 1 John 3, 2; Col.
3, 10;
Eph. 4, 24. Thus the work of the Spirit will continue without ceasing
until the
perfection of the Kingdom of Grace becomes the perfection of the
Kingdom of
Glory, Rom. 8, 29, “that the Holy Spirit enlighten, cleanse, strengthen
our
hearts, that he work new light and life in the hearts, and the true
evangelical,
Christian perfection is that we daily increase in faith, in the fear of
God, in
faithful diligence in our calling and office which has been entrusted
to us.”
14)
Summary.
Paul states that the Corinthians are his letter of commendation, refers
his
sufficiency in the pastoral office to God, praises its glory, and
describes its
effects.