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Read the Bible

THE MESSAGE

2 Corinthians 11:24

This verse is not available in the MSG!

Bible Study Resources

Concordances:

- Nave's Topical Bible - Afflictions and Adversities;   Forty;   Minister, Christian;   Paul;   Persecution;   Prisoners;   Scourging;   Zeal, Religious;   Thompson Chain Reference - Church;   Forty Stripes;   Jews;   Nation, the;   Paul;   Persecution;   Punishments;   Stripes;   Suffering for Righteousness' S;   Torrey's Topical Textbook - Punishments;  

Dictionaries:

- American Tract Society Bible Dictionary - Punishments;   Scourge;   Synagogue;   Bridgeway Bible Dictionary - Boasting;   Ephesus;   Evangelist;   Paul;   Persecution;   Work;   Baker Evangelical Dictionary of Biblical Theology - Corinthians, First and Second, Theology of;   Discipline;   Persecution;   Perseverance;   Suffering;   Thessalonians, First and Second, Theology of;   Wealth;   Easton Bible Dictionary - Pashur;   Scourging;   Stripes;   Fausset Bible Dictionary - Council;   Fasting;   Paul;   Punishments;   Holman Bible Dictionary - Crimes and Punishments;   Flogging;   Life;   Persecution in the Bible;   Thorn in the Flesh;   Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible - Corinthians, Second Epistle to;   Crimes and Punishments;   Paul the Apostle;   Hastings' Dictionary of the New Testament - Beating;   Dispersion;   Evil;   Marks Stigmata;   Roads and Travel;   Roman Law in the Nt;   Sabbath;   Scourge, Scourging;   Scourging;   Stigmata ;   Synagogue;   Synagogue (2);   Morrish Bible Dictionary - Paul;   Punishment;   Synagogue;   People's Dictionary of the Bible - Scourge;   Smith Bible Dictionary - Punishments;   Watson's Biblical & Theological Dictionary - Justice;   Scourge;   Synagogue;  

Encyclopedias:

- Condensed Biblical Cyclopedia - Saul of Tarsus;   International Standard Bible Encyclopedia - Citizenship;   Corinthians, First Epistle to the;   Mark;   Punishments;   Scourge;   The Jewish Encyclopedia - Capital Punishment;  

Devotionals:

- Chip Shots from the Ruff of Life - Devotion for April 7;   Every Day Light - Devotion for April 7;  

Parallel Translations

New American Standard Bible (1995)
Five times I received from the Jews thirty-nine lashes.
Legacy Standard Bible
Five times I received from the Jews forty lashes less one.
Simplified Cowboy Version
Five different times, the Jews have given me the maximum punishment of thirty-nine lashes with a stock whip.
Bible in Basic English
Five times the Jews gave me forty blows but one.
Darby Translation
From the Jews five times have I received forty [stripes], save one.
Christian Standard Bible®
Five times I received 39 lashes from Jews.
World English Bible
Five times from the Jews I received forty stripes minus one.
Wesley's New Testament (1755)
Five times I received from the Jews forty stripes save one.
Weymouth's New Testament
From the Jews I five times have received forty lashes all but one.
King James Version (1611)
Of the Iewes fiue times receiued I forty stripes saue one.
Literal Translation
Five times I received forty stripes minus one from the Jews.
Miles Coverdale Bible (1535)
Of the Iewes receaued I fyue tymes fortye strypes, one lesse.
Mace New Testament (1729)
from the Jews I have five times received forty stripes save one.
Amplified Bible
Five times I received from the Jews thirty-nine lashes.
American Standard Version
Of the Jews five times received I forty stripes save one.
Revised Standard Version
Five times I have received at the hands of the Jews the forty lashes less one.
Tyndale New Testament (1525)
Of the Iewes five tymes receaved I every tyme .xl. strypes saue one.
Update Bible Version
Of the Jews five times I received forty [stripes] save one.
Webster's Bible Translation
From the Jews five times I received forty [stripes] save one.
Young's Literal Translation
from Jews five times forty [stripes] save one I did receive;
New Century Version
Five times the Jews have given me their punishment of thirty-nine lashes with a whip.
New English Translation
Five times I received from the Jews forty lashes less one.
Berean Standard Bible
Five times I received from the Jews the forty lashes minus one.
Contemporary English Version
Five times the Jews gave me thirty-nine lashes with a whip.
Complete Jewish Bible
Five times I received "forty lashes less one" from the Jews.
English Standard Version
Five times I received at the hands of the Jews the forty lashes less one.
Geneva Bible (1587)
Of the Iewes fiue times receiued I fourtie stripes saue one.
George Lamsa Translation
By the Jews I was scourged five times, each time forty stripes less one.
Hebrew Names Version
Five times from the Yehudim I received forty stripes minus one.
International Standard Version
Five times I received from the Jews forty lashes minus one.Deuteronomy 25:3;">[xr]
Etheridge Translation
From the Jihudoyee, five times, forty (stripes) wanting one have I devoured;
Murdock Translation
By the Jews, five times was I scourged, each time with forty stripes save one.
New King James Version
From the Jews five times I received forty stripes minus one.
New Living Translation
Five different times the Jewish leaders gave me thirty-nine lashes.
New Life Bible
Five different times the Jews whipped me across my back thirty-nine times.
English Revised Version
Of the Jews five times received I forty [stripes] save one.
New Revised Standard
Five times I have received from the Jews the forty lashes minus one.
J.B. Rotherham Emphasized Bible
From Jews, five times, forty-save-one, have I received,
Douay-Rheims Bible
Of the Jews five times did I receive forty stripes save one.
King James Version
Of the Jews five times received I forty stripes save one.
Lexham English Bible
Five times I received at the hands of the Jews forty lashes less one.
Bishop's Bible (1568)
Of the Iewes fyue tymes receaued I fourtie [stripes] saue one.
Easy-to-Read Version
Five times the Jews have given me their punishment of 39 lashes with a whip.
New American Standard Bible
Five times I received from the Jews thirty-nine lashes.
Good News Translation
Five times I was given the thirty-nine lashes by the Jews;
Wycliffe Bible (1395)
Y resseyuede of the Jewis fyue sithis fourti strokis oon lesse;

Contextual Overview

22Pseudo-Servants of God Will you put up with a little foolish aside from me? Please, just for a moment. The thing that has me so upset is that I care about you so much—this is the passion of God burning inside me! I promised your hand in marriage to Christ, presented you as a pure virgin to her husband. And now I'm afraid that exactly as the Snake seduced Eve with his smooth patter, you are being lured away from the simple purity of your love for Christ. It seems that if someone shows up preaching quite another Jesus than we preached—different spirit, different message—you put up with him quite nicely. But if you put up with these big-shot "apostles," why can't you put up with simple me? I'm as good as they are. It's true that I don't have their voice, haven't mastered that smooth eloquence that impresses you so much. But when I do open my mouth, I at least know what I'm talking about. We haven't kept anything back. We let you in on everything. I wonder, did I make a bad mistake in proclaiming God's Message to you without asking for something in return, serving you free of charge so that you wouldn't be inconvenienced by me? It turns out that the other churches paid my way so that you could have a free ride. Not once during the time I lived among you did anyone have to lift a finger to help me out. My needs were always supplied by the believers from Macedonia province. I was careful never to be a burden to you, and I never will be, you can count on it. With Christ as my witness, it's a point of honor with me, and I'm not going to keep it quiet just to protect you from what the neighbors will think. It's not that I don't love you; God knows I do. I'm just trying to keep things open and honest between us. And I'm not changing my position on this. I'd die before taking your money. I'm giving nobody grounds for lumping me in with those money-grubbing "preachers," vaunting themselves as something special. They're a sorry bunch—pseudo-apostles, lying preachers, crooked workers—posing as Christ's agents but sham to the core. And no wonder! Satan does it all the time, dressing up as a beautiful angel of light. So it shouldn't surprise us when his servants masquerade as servants of God. But they're not getting by with anything. They'll pay for it in the end. Let me come back to where I started—and don't hold it against me if I continue to sound a little foolish. Or if you'd rather, just accept that I am a fool and let me rant on a little. I didn't learn this kind of talk from Christ. Oh, no, it's a bad habit I picked up from the three-ring preachers that are so popular these days. Since you sit there in the judgment seat observing all these shenanigans, you can afford to humor an occasional fool who happens along. You have such admirable tolerance for impostors who rob your freedom, rip you off, steal you blind, put you down—even slap your face! I shouldn't admit it to you, but our stomachs aren't strong enough to tolerate that kind of stuff. Since you admire the egomaniacs of the pulpit so much (remember, this is your old friend, the fool, talking), let me try my hand at it. Do they brag of being Hebrews, Israelites, the pure race of Abraham? I'm their match. Are they servants of Christ? I can go them one better. (I can't believe I'm saying these things. It's crazy to talk this way! But I started, and I'm going to finish.) 23I've worked much harder, been jailed more often, beaten up more times than I can count, and at death's door time after time. I've been flogged five times with the Jews' thirty-nine lashes, beaten by Roman rods three times, pummeled with rocks once. I've been shipwrecked three times, and immersed in the open sea for a night and a day. In hard traveling year in and year out, I've had to ford rivers, fend off robbers, struggle with friends, struggle with foes. I've been at risk in the city, at risk in the country, endangered by desert sun and sea storm, and betrayed by those I thought were my brothers. I've known drudgery and hard labor, many a long and lonely night without sleep, many a missed meal, blasted by the cold, naked to the weather. 28And that's not the half of it, when you throw in the daily pressures and anxieties of all the churches. When someone gets to the end of his rope, I feel the desperation in my bones. When someone is duped into sin, an angry fire burns in my gut. 30If I have to "brag" about myself, I'll brag about the humiliations that make me like Jesus. The eternal and blessed God and Father of our Master Jesus knows I'm not lying. Remember the time I was in Damascus and the governor of King Aretas posted guards at the city gates to arrest me? I crawled through a window in the wall, was let down in a basket, and had to run for my life.

Bible Verse Review
  from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge

forty: Deuteronomy 25:2, Deuteronomy 25:3, Matthew 10:17, Mark 13:9

Reciprocal: Matthew 23:34 - ye Luke 11:49 - and some John 19:1 - scourged Acts 5:40 - beaten 2 Corinthians 11:23 - in stripes Hebrews 11:36 - and scourgings

Gill's Notes on the Bible

Of the Jews five times received I forty stripes save one. We have no account in the Acts of the Apostles, or elsewhere, of any one of these five scourgings, which the apostle underwent from the Jews; but there is no doubt to be made of them. The number of stripes he received at each time agrees with the traditions and customs of the Jews. The original law for scourging a delinquent is in Deuteronomy 25:2 where it is said, "forty stripes he may give him, and not exceed"; according to the nature of the case, forty stripes and no more might be inflicted, but fewer might suffice in some cases; the apostle's having but thirty nine at a time was not because the Jews thought his crime did not require full forty; or that they out of tenderness and compassion to him abated him one; but they proceeded with him to the utmost rigour of this law, according to their interpretation of it; for so runs their tradition i,

"with how many stripes do they beat him? (a criminal,) it is answered, ארבעים חסר אחת, "with forty save one"; as it is said, "with the number forty"; that is, which is next to forty; R. Judah says, with full forty is he to be beaten;''

but the decision is not according to R. Judah, as the commentators say k; and this is the general sense of their l interpreters of that law, and what they take to be the genuine meaning of it; so that the apostle was punished according to the extremity of it, in their account. This is a settled rule and point with them, חסר אחת

מלקות תורה ארבעים m, "that scourging according to the law is with forty stripes save one"; Maimonides n observes, that

"they did not add to forty, if a man was as strong and robust as Samson, but they lessen the number to a man that is weak; for if a weak man should be beaten with many stripes, he may die; wherefore the wise men say, that if he be never so robust, they scourge him but with "thirty nine";''

so that no mercy shown to Paul, or any regard had to his weak constitution, for it was the utmost they ever inflicted; besides, according to their manner of scourging, Deuteronomy 25:2- :, they could not have given him another stroke, without giving him three stripes more, which would have made it forty two, and so have exceeded, which the law forbids; for they whipped with a scourge of three cords, and every stroke went for three; so that by thirteen strokes, thirty nine stripes were given, and if a fourteenth had been added, there would have been forty two stripes; agreeably to which they say o,

"when they condemn a delinquent to how many stripes he is able to receive, they do not count but by stripes that are fit to be trebled; if they reckon he is able to bear twenty, they do not say he is to be beaten with twenty one, so that they may be able to treble, but he is to be beaten with eighteen; they condemn to receive forty, and after he begins to be beaten, they see he is weak, and they say he cannot receive more than these nine or "twelve" with which he is beaten, lo, this is free; they condemn him to receive twelve, and after he is scourged they see he is strong and able to receive more, lo, he is free, and is not to be beaten any more upon the estimation:''

so that you see that, according to their own canons, they could if they would have mitigated this punishment of the apostle's; but such was their cruelty and malice, that they carried it to the utmost height they could.

i Misn. Maccot. c. 3. sect. 10. k Maimon. & Bartenora in ib. l Targum Jon. & Jarchi in Deut. xxv. 3. Zohar in Deut. fol. 119. 3. Joseph Antiqu. l. 4. c. 8. sect. 23. Moses Kotsensis Mitzvot Tora, pr. Affirm. 105. m T. Hieros. Nazir, fol. 53. 1. n Hilchot Sanhedrin, c. 17. 1. o Ib. sect. 2. Misn. Maccot, c. 3. sect. 11.

Barnes' Notes on the Bible

Of the Jews ... - On this verse and the following verse it is of importance to make a few remarks preliminary to the explanation of the phrases:

(1) It is admitted that the particulars here referred to cannot be extracted out of the Acts of the Apostles. A few can be identified, but there are many more trials referred to here than are specified there.

(2) This proves that this Epistle was not framed from the history, but that they are written independently of one another - Paley.

(3) Yet they are not inconsistent one with the other. For there is no article in the enumeration here which is contradicted by the history, and the history, though silent with respect to many of these transactions, has left space enough to suppose that they may have occurred.

(a) There is no contradiction between the accounts. Where it is said by Paul that he was thrice beaten with rods, though in the Acts but one beating is mentioned, yet there is no contradiction. It is only the omission to record all that occurred to Paul. But had the history, says Paley, contained an account of four beatings with rods, while Paul mentions here but three, there would have been a contradiction. And so of the other particulars.

(b) Though the Acts of the Apostles be silent concerning many of the instances referred to, yet that silence may be accounted for on the plan and design of the history. The date of the Epistle synchronizes with the beginning of Acts 20:0. The part, therefore, which precedes the twentieth chapter is the only place in which can be found any notice of the transactions to which Paul here refers. And it is evident from the Acts that the author of that history was not with Paul until his departure from Troas, as related in 1 Corinthians 16:10; see the note on that place. From that time Luke attended Paul in his travels. From that period to the time when this Epistle was written occupies but four chapters of the history, and it is here if anywhere that we are to look for the minute account of the life of Paul. But here much may have occurred to Paul before Luke joined him. And as it was the design of Luke to give an account of Paul mainly after he had joined him, it is not to be wondered at that many things may have been omitted of his previous life.

(c) The period of time after the conversion of Paul to the time when Luke joined him at Troas is very succinctly given. That period embraced 16 years, and is comprised in a few chapters. Yet in that time Paul was constantly traveling. He went to Arabia, returned to Damascus, went to Jerusalem, and then to Tarsus, and from Tarsus to Antioch, and thence to Cyprus, and then through Asia Minor, etc. In this time he must have made many voyages, and been exposed to many perils. Yet all this is comprised in a few chapters, and a considerable portion of them is occupied with an account of public discourses. In that period of sixteen years, therefore, there was ample opportunity for all the occurrences which are here referred to by Paul; see Paley’s Horse Paulinae on 2 Corinthians, No. 9:

(d) I may add, that from the account which follows the time when Luke joined him at Troas (from Acts 16:10), it is altogether probable that he had endured much before. After that time there is mention of just such transactions of scourging, stoning, etc., as are here specified, and it is altogether probable that he had been called to suffer them before. When Paul says “of the Jews,” etc., he refers to this because this was a Jewish mode of punishment. It was usual with them to inflict but 39 blows. The Gentiles were not limited by law in the number which they inflicted.

Five times - This was doubtless in their synagogues and before their courts of justice. They had not the power of capital punishment, but they had the power of inflicting minor punishments. And though the instances are not specified by Luke in the Acts , yet the statement here by Paul has every degree of probability. We know that he often preached in their synagogues Acts 9:20; Acts 13:5, Acts 13:14-15; Acts 14:1; Acts 17:17; Acts 18:4; and nothing is more probable than that they would be enraged against him, and would vent their malice in every way possible. They regarded him as an apostate, and a ringleader of the Nazarenes, and they would not fail to inflict on him the severest punishment which they were permitted to inflict.

Forty stripes save one - The word “stripes” does not occur in the original, but is necessarily understood. The Law of Moses Deuteronomy 25:3 expressly limited the number of stripes that might be inflicted to 40. In no case might this number be exceeded. This was a humane provision, and one that was not found among the pagan, who inflicted any number of blows at discretion. Unhappily it is not observed among professedly Christian nations where the practice of whipping prevails, and particularly in slave countries, where the master inflicts any number of blows at his pleasure. In practice among the Hebrews, the number of blows inflicted was in fact limited to 39, lest by any accident in counting, the criminal should receive more than the number prescribed in the Law. There was another reason still for limiting it to 39. They usually made use of a scourge with three thongs, and this was struck 13 times. That it was usual to inflict but 39 lashes is apparent from Josephus, Ant. 4. viii, section 21.

Clarke's Notes on the Bible

Verse 24. Of the Jews five times received I forty stripes save one. — That is, he was five times scourged by the Jews, whose law (Deuteronomy 25:3) allowed forty stripes; but they, pretending to be lenient, and to act within the letter of the law, inflicted but thirty-nine.

To except one stripe from the forty was a very ancient canon among the Jews, as we learn from Josephus, Antiq. lib. iv. ch. viii. sec. 21, who mentions the same thing: πληγας μιας λειπουσης τεσσαπακοντα· forty stripes, excepting one.

The Mishna gives this as a rule, MISH., Maccoth, fol. 22, 10: "How often shall he, the culprit, be smitten? Ans. ארבעים תמר אתר forty stripes, wanting one; i.e. with the number which is highest to forty."

Frequently a man was scourged according to his ability to bear the punishment; and it is a canon in the Mishna, "That he who cannot bear forty stripes should receive only eighteen, and yet be considered as having suffered the whole punishment."

They also thought it right to stop under forty, lest the person who counted should make a mistake, and the criminal get more than forty stripes, which would be injustice, as the law required only forty.

The manner in which this punishment was inflicted is described in the Mishna, fol. 22, 2: "The two hands of the criminal are bound to a post, and then the servant of the synagogue either pulls or tears off his clothes till he leaves his breast and shoulders bare. A stone or block is placed behind him on which the servant stands; he holds in his hands a scourge made of leather, divided into four tails. He who scourges lays one third on the criminal's breast, another third on his right shoulder, and another on his left. The man who receives the punishment is neither sitting nor standing, but all the while stooping; and the man smites with all his strength, with one hand." The severity of this punishment depends on the nature of the scourge, and the strength of the executioner.

It is also observed that the Jews did not repeat scourgings except for enormous offences. But they had scourged the apostle five times; for with those murderers no quarter would be given to the disciples, as none was given to the Master. See Schoettgen.


 
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