9:15Meaning
A concluding thank-you directed to God Paul opens with a direct expression of gratitude: “Thanks be to God.” It is a closing response to everything he has just described—money, service, and the resulting gratitude among recipients.
Preparing Context
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Book
World Stage
Structure
Historical Setting
2 Corinthians 9:15
He ends the section with a brief outburst of gratitude, summing up the motivation behind the entire giving appeal.
Meaning in context
He ends the section with a brief outburst of gratitude, summing up the motivation behind the entire giving appeal.
Section 6 of 6
Closing thanks for God’s great gift
He ends the section with a brief outburst of gratitude, summing up the motivation behind the entire giving appeal.
Movement
Strength made known in weakness
Artifact
Apostolic defense and comfort
Biblical Timeline
Apostolic Age
2 Corinthians context: AD 33 - AD 100
Biblical Timeline
Apostolic Age
2 Corinthians context
Apostolic Age / AD 33 - AD 100
2 Corinthians context is set in the apostolic age, where The early church and the writing of the New Testament.
Scripture Text
Thesis
He ends the section with a brief outburst of gratitude, summing up the motivation behind the entire giving appeal.
Verse by Verse
A concluding thank-you directed to God Paul opens with a direct expression of gratitude: “Thanks be to God.” It is a closing response to everything he has just described—money, service, and the resulting gratitude among recipients.
The reason—God’s “gift” that exceeds description Paul gives a reason for the thanks: God’s “gift” (gift). He qualifies it as “unspeakable,” meaning it cannot be fully put into words. The sentence ends without explaining the gift in detail, letting the weight fall on God’s generosity as the ultimate source behind the Corinthians’ generosity.
Literary Context
This verse closes the section where Paul encourages the Corinthians to complete their promised contribution for believers in need (2 Corinthians 8–9). Just beforehand, he describes how generous giving leads to practical relief, increased gratitude to God, and strengthened bonds between givers and receivers (see 2 Corinthians 9:11–14). The final line, then, is not a new topic but a summary ending: the outcome Paul wants—thanksgiving directed to God—gets voiced directly. It also places the entire project under God’s initiative rather than human pride.
Historical Context
In the mid-first century, assemblies of Jesus-followers were spread across major Roman cities and often connected through travel and letters. Paul coordinated a multi-church relief effort for believers facing hardship, and he pressed communities like Corinth to follow through on earlier commitments. Such gift-giving carried social meaning in the Greco-Roman world, where generosity could create status or obligations. Paul’s closing thanks works to redirect attention away from competition or self-display, framing the collection as participation in what God has already provided to all.
Theological Significance
Questions
Keep Studying
Paul ends the collection section by redirecting attention to God: “Thanks be to God” (v. 15). The verse is not another instruction about giving but a closing statement that gathers the whole discussion into gratitude.
The explicit reason for this thanks is “his gift” (gift). Paul describes it as “unspeakable” (indescribable), meaning it is beyond adequate wording. Whatever human generosity accomplishes, Paul frames it as flowing from something God has already given.
What is “the gift”? Paul does not specify. Some read the “gift” as God’s gift in Christ (God’s saving action and the benefits that come with it), and see this as Paul’s final word under the whole letter’s message. Others read it more narrowly as God’s generous provision that makes the Corinthian gift and the Jerusalem relief possible (including the grace that produces generosity).
What does “unspeakable” emphasize? Some take it mainly as “so great no one can fully describe it.” Others stress “so rich and complex it cannot be fully explained,” highlighting mystery and depth more than sheer size.
The verse is very short and contains no clarifying details. In the immediate context (2 Corinthians 8–9), Paul has been describing practical giving, thanksgiving, and the way God supplies generosity. At the same time, Paul often uses “gift” language for God’s definitive giving in Christ elsewhere. The text itself does not settle which reference is primary.
This verse contributes a final theological framing for the collection: gratitude is directed to God as the ultimate giver. It also emphasizes that God’s giving exceeds human language. The passage does not explicitly define the “gift,” but it clearly portrays God’s generosity as the source and climax of the entire appeal.
indescribable (anekdiēgētō)