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Read it. Pray it. Share it. Live it.
Paul turns to the collection for the struggling believers in Jerusalem and calls the Corinthians to finish what they started (vv. 1–6; cf. 1 Corinthians 16:1–4). He first points to the churches in Macedonia as an example: even in “severe test of affliction” and “extreme poverty,” they overflowed in rich generosity because God’s grace was at work in them (vv. 1–2). They gave “according to their means” and even “beyond their means,” entirely of their own accord, begging for the privilege of sharing in this ministry to the saints (vv. 3–4). Before they gave their money, they first gave themselves to the Lord and then to Paul and his team, showing that generous giving flows out of a heart fully surrendered to God (v. 5).
Paul urges the Corinthians—who already excel in faith, speech, knowledge, earnestness, and love—to also excel in this grace of giving (v. 7). He doesn’t command them but tests the sincerity of their love, grounding everything in the grace of Jesus: though He was rich, yet for our sake He became poor, so that by His poverty we might become rich in salvation and every spiritual blessing (vv. 8–9). Since they were eager to begin this collection a year ago, Paul now urges them to finish it, giving willingly according to what they have, not what they do not have (vv. 10–12). His goal is not to burden them, but that there would be a fair sharing—those who have more now can supply the needs of others, just as God supplied manna so that no one had too much and no one too little (vv. 13–15; cf. Exodus 16:18). Finally, Paul commends Titus and the other trusted brothers who will help carry the gift; everything is arranged in a way that honors the Lord and avoids any hint of mishandling, because they “aim at what is honorable not only in the Lord’s sight but also in the sight of man” (vv. 16–23, 21).
🌀 Reflection:
When you think about generosity, do you mainly think in terms of extra money—or in terms of grace? Paul shows that real giving starts when we “first” give ourselves to the Lord (v. 5). The Macedonians gave joyfully in hard times because they were captured by Christ’s grace, and Paul wants the Corinthians (and us) to see that our giving is one way we reflect the self-giving heart of Jesus (vv. 2–4, 9). Ask the Lord to show you where your heart might be holding back—whether in money, time, or attention—and to make your generosity an overflow of joy in what Christ has already given you.
💬 Mission Challenge:
Identify one concrete way this week to share your resources with a believer in need or with gospel ministry—then do it intentionally, “according to what you have,” and as an act of worship, not pressure (vv. 11–12).

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