2 Corinthians 7:16

Authorized King James Version

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I rejoice therefore that I have confidence in you in all things.

Original Language Analysis

χαίρω I rejoice G5463
χαίρω I rejoice
Strong's: G5463
Word #: 1 of 7
to be "cheer"ful, i.e., calmly happy or well-off; impersonally, especially as salutation (on meeting or parting), be well
ὅτι therefore that G3754
ὅτι therefore that
Strong's: G3754
Word #: 2 of 7
demonstrative, that (sometimes redundant); causative, because
ἐν in G1722
ἐν in
Strong's: G1722
Word #: 3 of 7
"in," at, (up-)on, by, etc
παντὶ all G3956
παντὶ all
Strong's: G3956
Word #: 4 of 7
all, any, every, the whole
θαῤῥῶ I have confidence G2292
θαῤῥῶ I have confidence
Strong's: G2292
Word #: 5 of 7
to exercise courage
ἐν in G1722
ἐν in
Strong's: G1722
Word #: 6 of 7
"in," at, (up-)on, by, etc
ὑμῖν you G5213
ὑμῖν you
Strong's: G5213
Word #: 7 of 7
to (with or by) you

Analysis & Commentary

I rejoice therefore that I have confidence in you in all thingsChairō hoti en panti tharrō en hymin (χαίρω ὅτι ἐν παντὶ θαρρῶ ἐν ὑμῖν, "I rejoice that in everything I have confidence in you"). Tharreō (θαρρέω, "to be confident/courageous") appears in 5:6, 8 regarding confidence before God. Here Paul expresses restored confidence in the Corinthians after their repentance. En panti (ἐν παντὶ, "in everything/in all things")—not partial but comprehensive trust.

This verse concludes the emotional arc of chapters 1-7: from Paul's anguish (2:1-4), anxiety (2:13, 7:5), and severe letter (7:8), through Titus's report (7:6-7), to vindicated joy (7:9-13) and restored confidence (7:16). The chapter models pastoral ministry: confronting sin courageously, enduring anxiety faithfully, rejoicing in repentance genuinely, and restoring relationship fully. Paul's 'confidence in all things' isn't naivety—it's eschatological hope grounded in God's transforming work. The Corinthians proved that even deeply compromised churches can repent and return to gospel faithfulness.

Historical Context

Paul's restored confidence positioned him to address the Jerusalem collection (chapters 8-9) and confront remaining opposition (chapters 10-13). The successful reconciliation validated his apostolic authority and methodology: truth spoken in love, discipline exercised in hope, patience with process, joy in repentance. This concluding verse transitions from defensive apologetics (chapters 1-7) to constructive exhortation (chapters 8-13).

Questions for Reflection

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