2 Corinthiens 12:16

16 Soit! dites-vous. Je ne vous ai point été à charge, c'est qu'étant un homme artificieux, je vous ai pris par ruse.

2 Corinthiens 12:16 Meaning and Commentary

2 Corinthians 12:16

But be it so, I did not burden you
These words are not spoken by the apostle in his own person of himself, but in the person of his adversaries, and contain a concession and an objection of theirs, but be it so; they granted that he had not burdened the Corinthians, that he had took nothing of them himself for preaching the Gospel; they owned that he had preached it freely; this was so clear a point, and so flagrant a case, that they could not deny it; yet they insinuated to the Corinthians, and objected to the apostle, that though he did not receive anything from them with his own hands, yet he craftily and cunningly made use of others to drain their purses, and receive it for him; and which is suggested in the next clause:

nevertheless, being crafty, I caught you with guile;
so say the false apostles of me; for these are not the words of the apostle in his own person; nor to be understood of any spiritual craft, or lawful cunning and prudent artifices used by him, to allure and draw the Corinthians into a good liking and opinion of the Gospel and of his ministry, and so caught them, and was the happy means of their conversion; but they are spoken in the person of the false apostles, charging him with a wicked and criminal craftiness, by making use of other persons in a sly underhanded way, to get this church's money, when he pretended to preach the Gospel freely; to which he answers in the next verse.

2 Corinthiens 12:16 In-Context

14 Voici, pour la troisième fois je suis prêt à aller vers vous; et je ne vous serai point à charge, car ce ne sont pas vos biens que je cherche, c'est vous-mêmes; car ce n'est pas aux enfants à amasser pour leurs parents, mais c'est aux parents à amasser pour leurs enfants.
15 Et quant à moi, je dépenserai très volontiers, et je me dépenserai entièrement moi-même pour vos âmes; dussé-je en vous aimant toujours plus, être toujours moins aimé.
16 Soit! dites-vous. Je ne vous ai point été à charge, c'est qu'étant un homme artificieux, je vous ai pris par ruse.
17 Mais ai-je tiré du profit de vous par quelqu'un de ceux que je vous ai envoyés?
18 J'ai délégué Tite, et j'ai envoyé un des frères avec lui. Tite a-t-il retiré du profit de vous? N'avons-nous pas marché dans le même esprit, sur les mêmes traces?
The Ostervald translation is in the public domain.