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Paul prepares for his third visit to Corinth not with polished rhetoric, but with the resolve of a father willing to spend and be spent for his children. He refuses to burden them, even as he warns that he will not spare unrepentant sin. The Corinthians want proof of Christ’s power in Paul—but Paul turns the question back on them. Do they see the evidence of Christ in themselves?
In this passage (2 Corinthians 12:14–13:14), Paul dismantles the illusion that strength is found in appearances. Christ was crucified in weakness, yet lives by the power of God—and the same pattern marks His people. The call is not to project strength, but to examine ourselves, to pursue restoration, and to embrace the kind of weakness through which God’s power is made known.
By FOUR OAKS CHURCH MIDTOWN4.9
2323 ratings
Paul prepares for his third visit to Corinth not with polished rhetoric, but with the resolve of a father willing to spend and be spent for his children. He refuses to burden them, even as he warns that he will not spare unrepentant sin. The Corinthians want proof of Christ’s power in Paul—but Paul turns the question back on them. Do they see the evidence of Christ in themselves?
In this passage (2 Corinthians 12:14–13:14), Paul dismantles the illusion that strength is found in appearances. Christ was crucified in weakness, yet lives by the power of God—and the same pattern marks His people. The call is not to project strength, but to examine ourselves, to pursue restoration, and to embrace the kind of weakness through which God’s power is made known.

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