2nd Thessalonians Chapter 2 verse 12 Holy Bible

ASV 2ndThessalonians 2:12

that they all might be judged who believed not the truth, but had pleasure in unrighteousness.
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BBE 2ndThessalonians 2:12

So that they all may be judged, who had no faith in what is true, but took pleasure in evil.
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DARBY 2ndThessalonians 2:12

that all might be judged who have not believed the truth, but have found pleasure in unrighteousness.
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KJV 2ndThessalonians 2:12

That they all might be damned who believed not the truth, but had pleasure in unrighteousness.
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WBT 2ndThessalonians 2:12


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WEB 2ndThessalonians 2:12

that they all might be judged who didn't believe the truth, but had pleasure in unrighteousness.
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YLT 2ndThessalonians 2:12

that they may be judged -- all who did not believe the truth, but were well pleased in the unrighteousness.
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Pulpit Commentary

Pulpit CommentaryVerse 12. - That; in order that. The statement of purpose depending, not upon "that they should believe a lie," but upon "God sends them a strong delusion" - denoting a still more remote purpose of God. God, as the moral Ruler of the universe, will pronounce sentence of condemnation against them, this sentence being the necessary result of their receiving not the love of the truth. Its reception would have been the cause of their salvation; its rejection results in their condemnation. They all might be damned; or rather, judged (R.V.). The verb employed does not here, or elsewhere, express the idea of condemnation, though this is implied by the context. Who believed not the truth; namely, the Christian truth; their unbelief of it was the consequence of their want of love of the truth, and was the cause of their being judged. But had pleasure in unrighteousness. Their delight in unrighteousness was wholly incompatible with their belief in the truth; their want of faith arose, not from any defect in their understanding, but from the perversion of their moral nature. Here the description of the man of sin concludes, and hence the second division of the Epistle closes. The succeeding verses should have been attached to a new paragraph, being the commencement of the third or hortatory portion of the Epistle.

Ellicott's Commentary

Ellicott's Commentary for English Readers(12) That they all.--This is God's purpose in making them believe the lie--"in order that, one and all, they might be judged." He who desireth not the death of a sinner, now is said actually to lay plans with the intention of judging him: such are the bold self-contradictions of the Bible! It must not, however, be forgotten for a moment that God did not begin to will the sinner's judgment till after He had offered him freely the love of His own blessed truth, and had been rejected. When once the sinner is incurable, the only way to vindicate truth and righteousness is by hastening on his condemnation, whatever that condemnation may mean.Who believed not the truth. . . .--Once more the offence for which they are condemned is insisted upon. Theirs is no fancy sin. What God wanted them to believe was not some fantastical dogma, some fiction between which and the fictions of the Man of Sin there was nothing morally to choose, but the inviolable truth by which God Himself is bound. But had pleasure in the unrighteousness (so runs the Greek): i.e., consciously gave their moral consent to the unrighteousness of 2Thessalonians 2:10, the unrighteousness which sought to impose itself upon them, and which they would never have been led into had they loved the truth.