Father Antonio Mendoza's Commentary on 1 Corinthians 2:1-5
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1 Cor 2:1–5.
1 Cor 2:1-2 And I also, therefore, brothers, when I came to you—having been sent by Christ—did not approach you equipped with human eloquence, nor with the apparatus of rhetoric, nor trained in an affected wisdom, when I undertook to announce to you the mystery of the Gospel, by which God willed that His wisdom and majesty should be made manifest. For I resolved to single out nothing in which I might profess outstanding knowledge among you except Jesus Christ alone, and Him crucified for mankind.
1 Cor 2:3-4 This true knowledge I judged should be set forth simply and without embellishment, so that its dignity, power, and majesty might shine forth more clearly, freed from all foreign ornament. For truth, when naked, is its own adornment; its innate beauty has no need of cosmetic coloring.
And indeed I was among you in weakness—that is, in great humility of spirit—and with much fear, on account of the persecution of the Jews and the severe hardships which I endured at Corinth (see Acts 18). And my discourse, or the manner of speech which I employed in preaching the Gospel, did not consist of finely chosen words of human wisdom or eloquence designed to persuade, but in a demonstration of Spirit and power—that is, in solid arguments which both established the truth of the matter and displayed divine power.
1 Cor 2:5 This was so that your faith and conversion might not be founded upon human wisdom, nor attributed to it, but rather to the power of God—that is, to the efficacy of the divine word and of the Gospel itself.
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