2nd Corinthians Chapter 6 verse 11 Holy Bible

ASV 2ndCorinthians 6:11

Our mouth is open unto you, O Corinthians, our heart is enlarged.
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BBE 2ndCorinthians 6:11

Our mouth is open to you, O Corinthians, our heart is wide.
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DARBY 2ndCorinthians 6:11

Our mouth is opened to you, Corinthians, our heart is expanded.
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KJV 2ndCorinthians 6:11

O ye Corinthians, our mouth is open unto you, our heart is enlarged.
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WBT 2ndCorinthians 6:11


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WEB 2ndCorinthians 6:11

Our mouth is open to you, Corinthians. Our heart is enlarged.
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YLT 2ndCorinthians 6:11

Our mouth hath been open unto you, O Corinthians, our heart hath been enlarged!
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2nd Corinthians 6 : 11 Bible Verse Songs

Pulpit Commentary

Pulpit CommentaryVerses 11-18. - An appeal to the Corinthians to reciprocate his love for them, and separate themselves from evil. Verse 11. - Corinthians! A rare and very personal form of loving appeal, which occurs nowhere else in these Epistles (comp. Philippians 4:15). Our mouth is open to you. St. Paul has evidently been writing in a mood of inspired eloquence. The fervour of his feelings has found vent in an unusual flow of beautiful and forcible language. He appeals to the unreserved freedom with which he has written as a reason why they should treat him with the same frank love. Our heart is enlarged. After writing the foregoing majestic appeal, he felt that he had disburdened his heart, and as it were made room in it to receive the Corinthians unreservedly, in spite of all the wrongs which some of them had done him (comp. 2 Corinthians 7:3, 27). On the antithesis of the mouth and the heart, see Matthew 12:34; Romans 10:10.

Ellicott's Commentary

Ellicott's Commentary for English Readers(11) O ye Corinthians.--There was manifestly a pause here as the letter was dictated. The rush of thoughts had reached its highest point. He rests, and feels almost as if some apology were needed for so vehement an outpouring of emotion. And now he writes as if personally pleading with them. Nowhere else in the whole range of his Epistles do we find any parallel to this form of speech--this "O ye Corinthians." He has to tell them that he speaks out of the fulness of his heart, that if his mouth has been opened with an unusual freedom it is because his heart has felt a more than common expansion.