Whose Name Is Written Beneath Yours on Today’s Blessing?

Inspirational image of blessings shared with others based on 2 Corinthians 9:8

Imagine that every morning a letter arrives at your door, sealed with the seal of heaven. Most of us open the envelope, take out the gift, and place it on the shelf of our own keeping. But beneath our own name, in the same careful hand, the Lord has written a second address.

Read 2 Corinthians 9:8 slowly. The abundance is given. The sufficiency is promised. But the purpose of the abundance is named in the same breath, and the purpose is not your enjoyment. The purpose is the good works you will be able to do for others.

The core message shared in this post is :

“God blesses us not merely to increase our comfort, but to increase our capacity to bless others.”

The Address on Every Blessing

A Reflection on 2 Corinthians 9:8

God is able to provide you with every blessing in abundance, so that by always having enough of everything, you may share abundantly in every good work.

2 Corinthians 9:8

നിങ്ങള്‍ക്ക്‌ ആവശ്യമുള്ളതെല്ലാം സദാ സമൃദ്‌ധമായി ഉണ്ടാകാനും സത്‌കൃത്യങ്ങള്‍ ധാരാളമായി ചെയ്യാനും വേണ്ടഎല്ലാ അനുഗ്രഹങ്ങളും സമൃദ്‌ധമായി നല്‍കാന്‍ കഴിവുറ്റവനാണ്‌ ദൈവം.

2 കോറിന്തോസ്‌ 9:8

A Blessing Arrives in the Morning Post

Imagine, beloved, that every morning a letter arrives at your door. It is sealed with the seal of heaven, and inside the envelope is some good thing the Lord has chosen to send into your life that day. The good thing may be small. It may be ordinary. It may be the unexpected kindness of a stranger, the answered prayer you had almost stopped praying, the small bonus, the recovered health, the friend’s voice on the telephone at exactly the right hour, the peace that settled on your heart while you were washing the dishes. The envelope is delivered without fanfare, and most of us open it without ceremony, take out the gift, and place it on the shelf of our own keeping.

But there is something we have not noticed about the envelope. Most of us see only the first line of the address. Our own name, written in the careful hand of heaven. The blessing is for us. The morning is good. We are grateful. We close the door and go on with our day.

Friend, today’s verse asks us to look more carefully at the envelope. Because beneath our own name, in the same careful hand, the Lord has written a second address. Some other name. Some other soul who is meant to receive, through us, the very blessing we have just unwrapped. And many of us have been opening our blessings for years without ever reading the second line of the address.

The Two Names on the Envelope

Read the verse again, slowly. ‘God is able to provide you with every blessing in abundance, so that by always having enough of everything, you may share abundantly in every good work.’ Notice the architecture of the sentence. The abundance is given. The sufficiency is promised. But the purpose of the abundance is named in the same breath, and the purpose is not your enjoyment. The purpose is the good works you will be able to do for others. The blessing flows into your life so that the blessing may flow out again. The envelope has two names because the gift has two destinations.

This is not a small grammatical observation. It is the heart of the verse. The Greek Paul uses for ‘share abundantly’ is perisseuete eis, literally ‘that you may overflow toward.’ The picture is of a vessel filled to its capacity and then filled some more, so that the overflow runs over the lip and reaches everything around the vessel. The believer is not finally a reservoir. The believer is a fountain. The water is given so that the water may rise and pour over.

And the context confirms what the grammar suggests. This verse does not stand alone. It sits in the middle of one of the longest passages in the New Testament about Christian generosity. Throughout chapters 8 and 9 of this letter, Paul is writing to the Corinthian believers about a specific collection. He is raising money for the famine-stricken church in Jerusalem, hundreds of miles away, made up of believers most of the Corinthians have never met. The verse we are reading this morning was written, originally, to assure the Corinthians that if they gave generously to those distant brothers and sisters, God would not leave them poor. He would provide. He would supply. He would make sufficient. And the supply would itself become the next overflow. The verse is therefore not a promise of personal wealth. It is a promise of replenished generosity.

Learning to Read the Second Address

So how, beloved, does one learn to read the second address on the envelope? It is a habit of the soul, and like all habits of the soul, it grows with practice. Let me suggest, gently, a few simple steps.

When a blessing arrives in your life today, before you place it on the shelf of your own keeping, pause and ask the small question — for whom else might this be? The unexpected money you received. Is there a friend whose rent is due this week, a relative whose medical bill is mounting, a charity whose work you have been meaning to support? The free hour that opened in your calendar. Is there a lonely soul whose phone has not rung in days? The recipe that came out unusually well at dinner. Is there a neighbour whose kitchen is silent? The piece of insight you gained while reading. Is there someone in your circle who needs to hear it? Almost every blessing, beloved, comes with a second name on the envelope, if we develop the eyes to see it.

Notice that this is not a counsel of poverty. The verse does not ask us to give everything away. Paul says we are to have ‘enough of everything’ for ourselves. The biblical word he uses is autarkeia, sufficiency, the having of what is enough. God is not asking us to live in want. He is asking us to receive in such a way that what we receive flows naturally onward. The believer with the open hand keeps enough. The believer with the closed fist often loses what he was trying to hold. This is the strange arithmetic of the kingdom, and Paul has spent the better part of two chapters trying to teach it to the Corinthians.

How God Has Always Sent His Blessings

And this, friend, is not a new pattern in the economy of God. Read Scripture from beginning to end and you will discover that the Lord has always sent his blessings with two addresses on the envelope. He blessed Abraham, in Genesis 12, with the explicit purpose that ‘in you all the families of the earth shall be blessed.’ Abraham was not the destination of his own blessing. He was the postman. The blessing was passing through him to a world he could not yet see.

He filled Joseph with the wisdom to interpret dreams not so that Joseph could enjoy palace life, but so that, through him, Egypt and the wider famine-struck Near East might be fed. He gave Esther her royal position not for her own comfort but, as Mordecai told her, ‘for such a time as this’ — for the salvation of her people. He sent Mary the most extraordinary blessing in human history, the conception of the Son of God, and her own song in response was that the blessing was for ‘all generations,’ for those who fear him from age to age. The Magnificat is the song of a woman who has just looked at the envelope and read the second address.

And the supreme example, beloved, is the Son himself. Christ did not consider equality with God a thing to be grasped, Paul writes elsewhere, but emptied himself, took the form of a servant, and gave himself away for the salvation of the world. The greatest blessing heaven ever sent into time arrived with the whole human race written as its second address. If the Lord himself models this economy with his own Son, who are we to think our smaller blessings are exempt?

A Wake-Up Call for Today

So here, beloved, is the bold word for this morning. Do not close the door without checking the envelope. Today’s blessing has already arrived in some form — perhaps small, perhaps large, perhaps so familiar that you have stopped noticing it. The health you woke with. The roof above you. The bread on your table. The mind that can still read these words. The faith that has carried you to another Wednesday morning. Each of these is a letter sealed with the seal of heaven, and each carries the same handwritten request — please look beneath your own name and read the second address.

And then, having read it, do what an honest postman does. Deliver the gift. Pass on the blessing. Open the hand that was about to close around what you had received, and let it flow onward to the soul whose name is also on the envelope. You will lose nothing in the doing. You will gain everything. For God, Paul promises us, is able to make all grace abound to you, so that having all sufficiency in all things at all times, you may abound in every good work. The supply will not fail. The fountain will keep rising. The arithmetic of the kingdom is not subtraction but multiplication, and the one who learns to read the second address discovers that every letter received becomes the seed of the next letter sent.

Take this verse, friend, into your working week. And let it teach you, one envelope at a time, to read more carefully the post that heaven has been delivering to your door.

✦ ✦ ✦

A Prayer

Generous Lord of every good gift, you who have sent your blessings into our lives more often than we have remembered to thank you for them, forgive us for opening so many of your letters and reading only the first line of the address. Teach us, gently and steadily, to look for the second name you have written beneath our own. Make us postmen and not hoarders, fountains and not cisterns, conduits of your overflowing kindness rather than reservoirs of what you have lent us. And give us, this very day, the eyes to recognise the blessing that has been placed in our hands for someone else’s sake. In the name of Jesus Christ, your supreme gift, who came into the world with the whole human race written on his envelope. Amen.

✦ ✦ ✦

Johnbritto Kurusumuthu

From the Envelope to the Collection

(Integrating Pastoral Wisdom with Scholarly Perspective)

If you have walked with us through the image of the morning envelope, dear reader, with its careful handwriting and its two addresses, you have already glimpsed the heart of today’s verse. Every blessing the Lord sends comes with a second name written beneath our own. The reflection has carried us through the form of that truth in a single sustained image. The Scholarly Companion that follows will take us into the historical occasion in which Paul first wrote these words, and show us how the apostle himself read the envelopes that arrived at the Corinthian church.

Because, beloved, this verse was not written in a quiet study for a generic readership. It was written in the middle of one of the most carefully organised acts of Christian charity recorded in the New Testament. Paul was raising money for the famine-stricken believers in Jerusalem. He had travelled across the Greek-speaking world soliciting contributions. He had appointed trustworthy delegates from multiple churches to accompany the collection. He had written, in chapter 8, of the extraordinary generosity of the Macedonian churches, who had given out of their own poverty. And in chapter 9, the chapter that contains our verse, he was urging the Corinthians to follow the Macedonians’ example and complete the offering they had pledged a year earlier but had not yet finished gathering.

Why does this matter for a working soul on a Wednesday morning? Because the verse has been lifted from this context more often than from almost any other in the New Testament. It has been printed on cards promising material wealth to the faithful. It has been quoted out of season by preachers who have never once mentioned the Jerusalem collection. It has been used as the scriptural warrant for a theology of personal enrichment that Paul would have found unrecognisable. The Scholarly Companion will help us see what Paul actually wrote, so that we can carry the verse with us into our own week without the distortions that have been welded to its surface.

The companion will walk us through the historical setting of the Corinthian correspondence and the great collection for Jerusalem that occupied Paul for several years of his ministry. It will unfold the Greek vocabulary of the verse with special attention to autarkeia (sufficiency, contentment) and perisseuein (to overflow, to abound). It will trace the verse’s place in 2 Corinthians 8 and 9 as the centre of one of the New Testament’s most sustained passages on Christian generosity. It will set the verse alongside its scriptural relatives — Malachi 3, Proverbs 11, Luke 6:38, Philippians 4:11 to 19 — where the same theology of abundance-through-giving is sung in different keys. And it will hear how the Fathers of the Church and the great teachers of the Christian tradition have read this verse, and where they have warned us against its misuse.

So read on, friend. Keep the image of the morning envelope still in your mind as you turn the page. The handwriting of heaven is about to be examined more carefully, and you will discover that the second address has been there all along, in every blessing the Lord has ever sent to the people he has chosen to love.

The Collection and Its Theology

(A Scholarly Guide to 2 Corinthians 9:8)

God is able to provide you with every blessing in abundance, so that… you may share abundantly in every good work.

2 Corinthians 9:8

1.  The Historical Setting

2 Corinthians was written from Macedonia in roughly the year 56 of our era, perhaps a year after the first letter and after a painful interim visit and a now-lost severe letter that had wounded the Corinthian community. The letter is, in many respects, the most personal of Paul’s epistles, opening with the great consolation hymn of chapter 1, working through the apostle’s defence of his ministry, climaxing in the appeal for reconciliation in chapters 5 and 6, and turning at chapter 8 to a different but equally urgent pastoral matter — the collection for the saints in Jerusalem.

This collection occupied Paul for nearly a decade of his ministry. It is mentioned in 1 Corinthians 16:1 to 4, where Paul gives instructions for the weekly setting aside of small amounts. It surfaces in Romans 15:25 to 28, where Paul describes his impending journey to Jerusalem to deliver the gathered funds. It dominates 2 Corinthians 8 and 9, where Paul devotes two entire chapters to encouraging the Corinthians to complete their pledged contribution. And it appears in Acts 24:17, where Paul, on trial before Felix, defends his return to Jerusalem partly on the grounds of having come to bring ‘alms to my people.’ For Paul, this collection was not a minor administrative matter. It was a theological gesture of the first importance — the visible sign that the largely Gentile churches he had planted across the Mediterranean were united in love with the largely Jewish mother church in Jerusalem.

2.  The Argument of Chapters 8 and 9

Chapters 8 and 9 of 2 Corinthians form a single sustained appeal divided into three movements. Chapter 8 opens with the example of the Macedonian churches, who had given out of their own deep poverty with extraordinary generosity (verses 1 to 5). It then exhorts the Corinthians to complete what they had begun a year earlier (verses 6 to 12), grounds the appeal in the supreme example of Christ ‘who though he was rich, yet for your sake became poor, so that by his poverty you might become rich’ (verse 9), and ends with a passage on the practical arrangements for the collection’s safe delivery (verses 13 to 24).

Chapter 9 then renews the appeal with a different rhetorical strategy. Paul has boasted to the Macedonians of Corinth’s readiness, and he wants them not to be embarrassed by failing to deliver. He explains the spiritual logic of generous giving in verses 6 to 11 — the one who sows sparingly will reap sparingly, but God loves a cheerful giver. And the verse we are reading today sits at the very heart of this argument, in verse 8, as the theological warrant for the whole chapter’s appeal. God is able to make all grace abound to the giver, so that the giver, always having all sufficiency in everything, may abound in every good work. The chapter then closes with verses 12 to 15, where Paul names the twofold result of the collection — material need supplied, and corporate thanksgiving overflowing to God.

Verse 8 is therefore not a free-standing promise of personal prosperity. It is the central theological assurance that lets Paul ask the Corinthians to give. The verse promises that God will not leave the generous giver depleted. The verse does not promise that God will make the generous giver wealthy. The difference is the difference between Pauline theology and prosperity teaching.

3.  A Walk Through the Greek

δυνατός (dunatos) — ‘Able,’ from the same root as dunamis, power. The opening word of the verse anchors the entire promise in the divine capacity. The God Paul is describing has not the goodwill alone, but the actual power, to do what the verse goes on to describe. This is important pastorally, because it grounds Christian generosity not in the giver’s resources but in God’s. The believer does not give from a position of certainty about his own future supply. He gives from a position of certainty about God’s future supply.

πᾶσαν χάριν (pasan charin) — ‘All grace,’ or ‘every grace.’ The word charis is the standard New Testament word for grace, divine favour, undeserved kindness. Paul does not say God is able to give us all things, in the sense of material wealth. He says God is able to make every grace abound. The vocabulary is theological before it is material. The grace includes whatever material provision is necessary for our genuine flourishing, but it cannot be reduced to that. Grace is broader, richer, and more eternal than mere material plenty.

περισσεῦσαι (perisseusai) — ‘To make abound, to make overflow,’ aorist infinitive of perisseuo. This is one of Paul’s favourite verbs, used some twenty-six times in his letters and especially concentrated in 2 Corinthians, where it occurs ten times. The verb names the divine economy of excess — the grace that does not merely supply what is needed but overflows beyond it. Notice that Paul uses the same verb twice in our verse, once of God’s action toward us (he makes grace abound to us) and once of our action toward others (that we may abound in every good work). The verb describes a divine circulation. The grace flows in. The grace flows out. The believer who tries to stop the circulation discovers, sooner or later, that the flow itself was the gift.

πᾶσαν αὐτάρκειαν (pasan autarkeian) — ‘All sufficiency.’ This is the crucial word that the prosperity reading ignores. Autarkeia is a classical Greek philosophical term, central to Stoic ethics, meaning self-sufficiency, contentment, the having of what is enough without lack. It is the opposite of greed and the cousin of contentment. Paul uses the same root in Philippians 4:11 when he writes, ‘I have learned, in whatever state I am, to be content (autarkes).’ The promise of our verse is therefore not that God will give us abundance for ourselves, but that God will give us sufficiency for ourselves — enough, with peace, without anxiety, without the grasping that mars so much human life. The abundance of the verse is reserved for the next clause, where it describes our outward-flowing generosity, not our inward-flowing wealth.

εἰς πᾶν ἔργον ἀγαθόν (eis pan ergon agathon) — ‘For every good work.’ The preposition eis is purposive — for the sake of, toward. The good works are the destination of the abundance. Paul is not saying that the believer may both be wealthy and do good works. He is saying that the abundance God supplies is precisely for the good works, oriented toward them, ordered by them. The agathon (good) is the same word used in Galatians 6:10 — ‘let us do good to all people, especially to those who are of the household of faith.’ The good works in view here are not vague pieties; they are the concrete kindnesses that supply the needs of brothers and sisters in distress.

4.  The Theology of Autarkeia

The word autarkeia deserves its own brief paragraph because it sits at the very centre of the verse’s right reading. In the classical philosophical world of Paul’s day, autarkeia was the great Stoic ideal — the soul’s freedom from dependence on external goods, the capacity to be at peace whether one had much or little. The Stoic taught that one achieved autarkeia through detachment, through inner discipline, through the suppression of desire. Paul takes the same word and gives it a Christian transfiguration. Christian autarkeia is not achieved through detachment but received through dependence. The believer is content not because he has trained himself to need nothing, but because he has come to trust that the Father knows what he needs and will supply it.

In Philippians 4:11 to 13 Paul gives us his fullest statement of this Christian autarkeia. ‘I have learned, in whatever state I am, to be content. I know how to be brought low, and I know how to abound. In any and all circumstances I have learned the secret of facing plenty and hunger, abundance and need. I can do all things through him who strengthens me.’ This is the sufficiency Paul has in mind in our verse. The believer who has learned this autarkeia is no longer captive to the question of whether he has enough. He has trusted that question to God. And from that place of trusted sufficiency, he is freed for the abundance of good works that the rest of the verse describes.

The prosperity reading of 2 Corinthians 9:8 inverts this entirely. It treats autarkeia as if it meant abundance for the self, and treats ‘every good work’ as a footnote rather than as the verse’s destination. The biblical autarkeia is humbler and more wonderful. It is the contentment that lets the believer be a fountain rather than a cistern, because the believer has learned that his own thirst will be looked after by the One who is filling him.

5.  Canonical Resonances

The theology of 2 Corinthians 9:8 stands inside a wider biblical river. The Old Testament establishes the foundational pattern in Genesis 12:2 to 3, where God blesses Abraham with the explicit purpose that ‘in you all the families of the earth shall be blessed’ — the blessing flows through Abraham rather than terminating in him. Proverbs 11:24 to 25 sings, ‘One gives freely, yet grows all the richer; another withholds what he should give, and only suffers want. Whoever brings blessing will be enriched, and one who waters will himself be watered.’ Malachi 3:10 invites Israel to test the Lord with their tithes and discover whether he will not open the windows of heaven and pour out a blessing too great to receive.

In the gospels, Luke 6:38 has Jesus declare, ‘Give, and it will be given to you. Good measure, pressed down, shaken together, running over, will be put into your lap. For with the measure you use, it will be measured back to you.’ The grammar of this verse is identical to Paul’s — the giving precedes the receiving, and the receiving becomes the next giving. Luke 16, the parable of the unjust steward, ends with Jesus’s striking counsel to ‘make friends for yourselves by means of unrighteous mammon, so that when it fails they may receive you into the eternal dwellings’ — a parable about the second address on every blessing if ever there was one.

In the New Testament letters, Philippians 4:19 promises that ‘my God will supply every need of yours according to his riches in glory in Christ Jesus’ — but Paul makes this promise specifically to the Philippians because they had supported him generously in his ministry. The supply is the answer to their giving. 1 Timothy 6:17 to 19 instructs the rich ‘not to be haughty, nor to set their hopes on the uncertainty of riches, but on God, who richly provides us with everything to enjoy. They are to do good, to be rich in good works, to be generous and ready to share, thus storing up treasure for themselves as a good foundation for the future, so that they may take hold of that which is truly life.’ This is 2 Corinthians 9:8 written in pastoral instruction to a young bishop.

6.  A Note from the Fathers and the Tradition

Saint John Chrysostom, in his nineteenth Homily on 2 Corinthians, drew out the verse with characteristic warmth. ‘See how the apostle does not promise that you shall be rich, but that you shall have what is sufficient. And the abundance, you shall pour out upon others.’ Saint Augustine, preaching to a Carthage churched troubled by ostentatious wealth, observed that ‘the rich man who is generous is no longer rich in his possessions but rich in his soul; the rich man who is mean is no longer rich at all, for what is held with closed fist is not had but only feared.’

Saint Basil the Great, in his famous homily ‘I Will Tear Down My Barns,’ delivered around the year 368 during a famine in Cappadocia, used precisely the theology of our verse to call the wealthy of his diocese to share their grain. ‘The bread which you do not use is the bread of the hungry. The garment hanging in your closet is the garment of the naked. The shoe you do not wear is the shoe of the barefoot. The money you keep locked away is the money of the poor.’ Basil knew, as Paul knew, that every blessing arrives with a second address. The Fathers were, in this respect, simply the apostle’s commentators.

Saint Thomas Aquinas, in his Commentary on the Second Letter to the Corinthians (Reportatio on chapter 9), drew out the spiritual logic with scholastic precision. The grace God supplies to the giver, he taught, is of two kinds — the material grace by which the giver remains in sufficiency, and the spiritual grace by which the giver grows in charity. The first sustains the giver. The second transforms him. Both flow from the same divine generosity, and both are designed to overflow into the good works that the giver is enabled to do.

7.  The Modern Misuse of the Verse

It must be said plainly that this verse has, in our own age, been one of the most misused single sentences in all of Paul. The prosperity gospel, in its various forms, has lifted the verse from its setting and pressed it into service as the scriptural warrant for a theology of personal enrichment. Cards have been printed quoting the verse alongside images of wealth. Sermons have been preached promising that those who give to particular ministries will receive material abundance from God in return. Whole television empires have been built on the implicit promise that 2 Corinthians 9:8 is a contract for personal prosperity.

Three corrections are necessary, and the verse itself supplies all three. First, the word autarkeia means sufficiency, not abundance for the self. The Greek will not bear the prosperity reading. Second, the abundance the verse does promise is explicitly for ‘every good work,’ a phrase that names the outward flow rather than the inward accumulation. Third, the entire chapter in which the verse appears is about a specific charitable collection for famine-struck believers, not about personal financial growth. To read the verse without these three correctives is to read the verse against its own grammar, its own immediate context, and its own apostolic purpose.

This said, the right reading is not a counsel of poverty. Paul nowhere asks the Corinthians to impoverish themselves. He uses the word autarkeia precisely because he wants them to have enough. The Christian who lives the right reading of this verse does not despise material provision. He receives it with thanksgiving, uses it for his proper needs, and remains alert to the second address on every envelope. The cure for prosperity teaching is not poverty teaching but stewardship teaching, and our verse is one of the New Testament’s clearest charters for it.

8.  For Today’s Reader

The believer who closes this companion and returns to ordinary life carries, I hope, a clearer hand on the verse. 2 Corinthians 9:8 is not a promise of personal wealth. It is a promise of replenished generosity. The God who gives the believer enough is also the God who supplies what the believer is to give away. The supply does not fail. The fountain keeps rising. The arithmetic of the kingdom is multiplicative, and the multiplication happens in the outflow, not in the storage.

Carry the verse with you, beloved, into the small economies of your own daily life. The blessing in your morning. The kindness you can extend. The financial gift you can offer. The hour you can give. The recipe, the recommendation, the prayer, the word, the visit. Read the second address on each. And let Paul’s promise be the warrant that what you give away will not leave you wanting. God is able. He is able to provide every blessing in abundance, so that always having all sufficiency in everything, you may abound in every good work.

“Look at the blessings that have arrived in your life this week. Whose names have been written beneath yours on those envelopes?”

One verse. One reflection. One steady beginning. Join the Wake-Up Calls newsletter from Rise & Inspire.

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Johnbritto Kurusumuthu

Founder & Principal Author

RISE & INSPIRE

Inspired by the verse shared this morning, 20 May 2026, by His Excellency, Rt. Rev. Dr. Selvister Ponnumuthan, Bishop of the Diocese of Punalur, a cherished practice he has faithfully continued for over three years.

Wake-Up Calls   •   Reflection 135   •   Post Streak 1031

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