Calvin's Commentary on the Bible
17.
What I speak, I speak not after the Lord His disposition, it is true, had an eye to God, but the outward appearance (838) might seem unsuitable to a servant of the Lord. At the same time, the things that Paul confesses respecting himself, he, on the other hand, condemns in the false Apostles. (839) For it was not his intention to praise himself, but simply to contrast himself with them, with the view of humbling them. (840) Hence he transfers to his own person what belonged to them, that he may thus open the eyes of the Corinthians. What I have rendered
boldness, is in the Greek ὑπόστασις
, as to the meaning of which term we have spoken in the ninth chapter. (2 Corinthians 9:4.)
Subject-matter (841) or
substance, unquestionably, would not be at all suitable here. (842)