Evaluation
Overall Score: 8.4/10
A clear, steady guide to 2 Corinthians that unites careful exposition with honest reflection on weakness and ministry.
Summary
At a Glance
- Length
- 208 pages
- Type
- Application, Expositional, Homiletical
- Theo. Perspective
- Broadly Evangelical
- Overall score
- 8.4 / 10
- Strength
- Strong on linking Paul’s experience of weakness and conflict to the realities of modern Christian ministry.
- Limitation
- Limited technical engagement, so it benefits from being paired with a more detailed exegetical commentary.
Paul W. Barnett’s The Message of 2 Corinthians walks us patiently through one of Paul’s most personal and emotionally charged letters. He traces the movement from conflict and tension to restored relationship, and from apparent weakness to the display of God’s power in the apostle’s life and ministry. Barnett helps us see how Paul defends his apostleship, explains the nature of new covenant ministry, and calls the church to generous giving and sincere loyalty to Christ.
The commentary is written with pastors and serious Bible readers in view. Barnett keeps close to the text, explains background where it really helps, and then shows how the letter speaks into our own experience of hardship, opposition, and the pressures of ministry. The major themes of 2 Corinthians sit clearly in view: comfort in affliction, integrity in leadership, the glory of the new covenant, the grace of giving, and the strange beauty of strength made perfect in weakness.
Why Should I Own This Commentary?
For those preaching through 2 Corinthians, this volume offers a steady hand on some of the New Testament’s more demanding terrain. Barnett pays careful attention to the flow of the argument, helping us make sense of the shifts in tone and topic that can feel disjointed on a first reading. He gives enough historical and cultural background to clarify what was at stake in Corinth without allowing the commentary to become cluttered or academic in feel.
From a Reformed perspective, many will welcome the way Barnett reflects on grace, the cross shaped pattern of Christian ministry, and the work of God through suffering. He writes as a broadly evangelical scholar who takes Scripture as the word of God and handles the text with reverence. We may at points phrase things differently or press certain doctrines further, but there is nothing here that feels unsafe for the pulpit or the pastor’s desk.
Those involved in pastoral ministry will find particular help in Barnett’s treatment of Christian leadership and weakness. He does not romanticise suffering, yet he shows how Paul’s experience exposes shallow views of power and success. The commentary often prompts self examination, as it invites us to measure our ministries by the pattern of the crucified and risen Lord rather than by the standards of the age.
Closing Recommendation
We are glad to commend The Message of 2 Corinthians as a very useful companion for preachers, church leaders, and thoughtful lay readers. It will not replace a more technical commentary where detailed exegesis is needed, but as an expositional guide that joins careful reading with pastoral concern it serves the church well. For most pastors, it will be a trusted first or second pull from the shelf when planning a series in 2 Corinthians.
Classification
- Level: Mid-level
- Best For: Busy pastors, General readers, Pastors-in-training
- Priority: Strong recommendation