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2 Corinthians 11

The writer expresses his concern that the Corinthians may be led astray by false apostles who preach a different Christ, Spirit, or Gospel. He defends his own ministry, stating that he preached the Gospel freely and did not burden the Corinthians financially. The writer also boasts of his own sufferings and hardships, including imprisonments, beatings, and shipwrecks, as evidence of his devotion to Christ. He concludes by recounting his narrow escape from the governor of Damascus, who was trying to apprehend him.

1I wish that you would endure a small amount of my foolishness, so as to bear with me2For I am jealous toward you, with the jealousy of God. And I have espoused you to one husband, offering you as a chaste virgin to Christ3But I am afraid lest, as the serpent led astray Eve by his cleverness, so your minds might be corrupted and might fall away from the simplicity which is in Christ4For if anyone arrives preaching another Christ, one whom we have not preached; or if you receive another Spirit, one whom you have not received; or another Gospel, one which you have not been given: you might permit him to guide you5For I consider that I have done nothing less than the great Apostles6For although I may be unskilled in speech, yet I am not so in knowledge. But, in all things, we have been made manifest to you7Or did I commit a sin by humbling myself so that you would be exalted? For I preached the Gospel of God to you freely8I have taken from other churches, receiving a stipend from them to the benefit of your ministry9And when I was with you and in need, I was burdensome to no one. For the brothers who came from Macedonia supplied whatever was lacking to me. And in all things, I have kept myself, and I will keep myself, from being burdensome to you10The truth of Christ is in me, and so this glorying shall not be broken away from me in the regions of Achaia11Why so? Is it because I do not love you? God knows I do12But what I am doing, I will continue to do, so that I may take away an opportunity from those who desire an opportunity by which they may glory, so as to be considered to be like us13For false apostles, such as these deceitful workers, are presenting themselves as if they were Apostles of Christ14And no wonder, for even Satan presents himself as if he were an Angel of light15Therefore, it is no great thing if his ministers present themselves as if they were ministers of justice, for their end shall be according to their works16I say again. And let no one consider me to be foolish. Or, at least, accept me as if I were foolish, so that I also may glory a small amount17What I am saying is not said according to God, but as if in foolishness, in this matter of glorying18Since so many glory according to the flesh, I will glory also19For you freely accept the foolish, though you yourselves claim to be wise20For you permit it when someone guides you into servitude, even if he devours you, even if he takes from you, even if he is extolled, even if he strikes you repeatedly on the face21I speak according to disgrace, as if we had been weak in this regard. In this matter, (I speak in foolishness) if anyone dares, I dare also22They are Hebrews; so am I. They are Israelites; so am I. They are the offspring of Abraham; so am I23They are the ministers of Christ (I speak as if I were less wise); more so am I: with many more labors, with numerous imprisonments, with wounds beyond measure, with frequent mortifications24On five occasions, I received forty stripes, less one, from the Jews25Three times, I was beaten with rods. One time, I was stoned. Three times, I was shipwrecked. For a night and a day, I was in the depths of the sea26I have made frequent journeys, through dangerous waters, in danger of robbers, in danger from my own nation, in danger from the Gentiles, in danger in the city, in danger in the wilderness, in danger in the sea, in danger from false brothers27with hardships and difficulties, with much vigilance, in hunger and thirst, with frequent fasts, in cold and nakedness28and, in addition to these things, which are external: there is my daily earnestness and solicitude for all the churches29Who is weak, and I am not weak? Who is scandalized, and I am not being burned30If it is necessary to glory, I will glory of the things that concern my weaknesses31The God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who is blessed forever, knows that I am not lying32At Damascus, the governor of the nation under Aretas the king, watched over the city of the Damascenes, so as to apprehend me33And, through a window, I was let down along the wall in a basket; and so I escaped his hands
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