Albert Barnes Commentary


Albert Barnes Commentary
"not glorying beyond [our] measure, [that is,] in other men`s labors; but having hope that, as your faith groweth, we shall be magnified in you according to our province unto [further] abundance," — 2 Corinthians 10:15 (ASV)
Not boasting of things without our measure. There is here probably an allusion to the false teachers at Corinth. They had come after Paul had been there and had entered into his labors. When he had founded the church, when he had endured trials and persecutions in order to reach Corinth, and when he had labored there for a year and a half (Acts 18:11), they came and entered the quiet and easy field, formed parties, and claimed the field as their own. Paul says that he did not have the courage to do that.
That required a kind of boldness to which he could lay no claim, and he did not assume honor to himself like that.
That is, of other men's labors. This means not intruding into churches that we did not establish, not claiming the right to direct their affairs and to exclude the founders from all proper honors and all influence, and not endeavoring to alienate the affections of Christians from their spiritual father and guide.
But having hope, etc. So far from this—so far from a desire to enter into the labors of others and quietly enjoy the benefits of their industry, and so far even from a desire to sit down ourselves and enjoy the fruit of our own labors—I desire to penetrate other untrodden regions, to encounter new dangers, to go where the gospel has not been planted, and to establish other churches there.
Therefore, I do not make these remarks as if I wished even to dispossess the teachers who have entered into my labors. I make them because I wish to be aided by you in extending the gospel further, and I look for your assistance so that I may have the means of going into the regions where I have not yet made known the name of the Redeemer.
When your faith is increased. This means when you become so strong as not to need my presence and my constant care, and when you will be able to speed me on my way and to aid me on my journey. He expected to be assisted by them in his efforts to carry the gospel to other countries.
That we shall be enlarged. The marginal reading is, Magnified in you. Bloomfield supposes that this means, "to gain fame and glory by you"—that is, as a teacher may justly by his pupils. So Robinson renders it, "to make great, to praise."
But to me, the idea seems to be that he wished them to enlarge or magnify him by introducing him to larger fields of action, by giving him a wider sphere of labor.
It was not that he wished to be magnified by obtaining a wider reputation—not as a matter of praise or ambition—but he wished to have his work and success greatly enlarged. This he hoped to be able to do partly by the aid of the church at Corinth.
When they became able to manage their own affairs, when his time was not demanded to superintend them, when their faith became so strong that his presence was not needed, and when they would assist him in his preparations for travel, then he would enter on his wider field of labor. He had no intention of sitting down in ease, as the false teachers in Corinth seem to have been disposed to do.
According to our rule. In Greek, this is "According to our canon."
The sense is, according to the rule by which the sphere of his labors had been marked out. His rule was to carry the gospel as far as possible to the Gentile world. He regarded the regions lying far beyond Corinth as coming properly within his limits, and he desired to occupy that field.
Abundantly. In Greek, this means "Unto abundance." This signifies to abound, that is, to occupy the assigned field as far as possible.
An alternative for "boasting" is "glorying." For "other men's labors," compare to Romans 15:20. An alternative for "enlarged" is "magnified in you." An alternative for "rule" is "line."