Charles Ellicott Commentary


Charles Ellicott Commentary
"Therefore I endure all things for the elect`s sake, that they also may obtain the salvation which is in Christ Jesus with eternal glory." — 2 Timothy 2:10 (ASV)
Therefore I endure all things for the elect’s sakes.—Better rendered, For this cause I endure, and so on.—That is, I endure all things so that the “word of God”—which, unlike its preacher, I have just declared to be confined by no bonds—so that that “word” may be widely spread and disseminated.
For this reason, as a faithful soldier at my post, I bear up with quiet, patient courage against suffering; and I do it for the elect’s sakes—that is, for those whom, in His infinite mercy, God has been pleased to choose as His people, for those who, in His unfathomable love, are yet to be brought into the one fold.
And this brave and steadfast endurance on the part of St. Paul contributed to the furtherance of God’s projects for gathering these elect as follows:
The question has often been asked whether those “elect” for whom the Apostle endured these things were, when he wrote these words, believers. This point has already been touched upon; it may, however, be answered here with some certainty that the “elect” spoken of here include both believers and unbelievers.
The first—the believer—would in all ages be built up by the contemplation of St. Paul’s steadfastness under suffering; the second—the unbeliever—would be won to the faith by the divinely-inspired arguments and exhortations which the brave old man ceaselessly spoke or wrote down in prison, just as when free.
How could one like St. Paul, who was conscious that he himself had won the “salvation,” not patiently endure all things, if such endurance could help the elect to obtain that salvation which delivered those who obtained it from the misery of sin and death, and which, besides—O blessed thought!—had the sure prospect of eternal glory?