Ephesians 3:13

13 propter quod peto ne deficiatis in tribulationibus meis pro vobis quae est gloria vestra

Ephesians 3:13 Meaning and Commentary

Ephesians 3:13

Wherefore I desire that ye faint not at my tribulations for
you
The apostle was a man attended with many tribulations, and great afflictions, which he did not suffer as an evildoer, either from God or men; wherefore he was not ashamed of them, but gloried in them; yea, he took pleasure in them, having much of the presence of God in them; they did not come to him unawares, he always expected them, and was helped to look to the glory which should follow them, the view of which greatly supported him under them; and these tribulations were endured for the sake of the elect, for Christ's body's sake; the church, and among others, for the Ephesians, for the sake of preaching the Gospel among them, and for the confirmation of their faith in it; and yet they were a stumbling to them, they were ready to faint at them; but he desires they would not, since they were on account of the Gospel, which he had such a distinct knowledge of, and so clear a call to; and since they were for their sakes, and since he and they had such nearness of access to God by the faith of Christ, with so much boldness and confidence; and seeing also they turned to their account: which is your glory; meaning either that it was matter of glorying to them, and what they might boast of, that the apostle's afflictions were not for any crime that was found in him, but for preaching the Gospel to them, and that it was an honour to suffer in such a cause; or that their perseverance and constancy in the doctrines of the Gospel, notwithstanding the scandal of the cross, would be an honour to them.

Ephesians 3:13 In-Context

11 secundum praefinitionem saeculorum quam fecit in Christo Iesu Domino nostro
12 in quo habemus fiduciam et accessum in confidentia per fidem eius
13 propter quod peto ne deficiatis in tribulationibus meis pro vobis quae est gloria vestra
14 huius rei gratia flecto genua mea ad Patrem Domini nostri Iesu Christi
15 ex quo omnis paternitas in caelis et in terra nominatur
The Latin Vulgate is in the public domain.