2nd Timothy Chapter 3 verse 9 Holy Bible

ASV 2ndTimothy 3:9

But they shall proceed no further. For their folly shall be evident unto all men, as theirs also came to be.
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BBE 2ndTimothy 3:9

But they will go no farther: for their foolish behaviour will be clear to all men, as theirs was in the end.
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DARBY 2ndTimothy 3:9

But they shall not advance farther; for their folly shall be completely manifest to all, as that of those also became.
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KJV 2ndTimothy 3:9

But they shall proceed no further: for their folly shall be manifest unto all men, as their's also was.
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WBT 2ndTimothy 3:9


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WEB 2ndTimothy 3:9

But they will proceed no further. For their folly will be evident to all men, as theirs also came to be.
read chapter 3 in WEB

YLT 2ndTimothy 3:9

but they shall not advance any further, for their folly shall be manifest to all, as theirs also did become.
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Pulpit Commentary

Pulpit CommentaryVerse 9. - Evident for manifest, A.V.; came to be for was, A.V. Shall proceed (proko/yousin); as ch. 2:16 (where see note) and ver. 13. The apostle's meaning here is, as explained by the example of the magicians, that heresies shall not prevail against the truth. Απὶ πλεῖον means beyond the point indicated in his description of their future progressive evil. They would "proceed further in ungodliness," as he said in 2 Timothy 2:16, but not up to the point of destroying the gospel, as history has shown. The various forms of Gnosticism have perished. The gospel remains. As theirs also came to be (Exodus 8:18, 19). Surely the A.V. "was" is better.

Ellicott's Commentary

Ellicott's Commentary for English Readers(9) But they shall proceed no further.--After that St. Paul, with no gentle hand, had torn aside the veil which was hiding apparently from Timothy the real state of his great charge at Ephesus, and had pointed out what fearful ravages among his flock had been committed by these ambitious and evil men, the Apostle proceeds to comfort his friend and disciple with the assurance that, great though the mischief already accomplished was, still it should proceed no further. To human eyes, such a state of things as here pictured by the Apostle would appear desperate. It would seem as though a deadly and incurable cancer was eating away the whole life of the community; but Timothy need not despair: the evil would only be allowed to advance to a certain point; and since St. Paul thus wrote, the same prophecy, not only in Ephesus but in a thousand churches, has been fulfilled to the very letter. Still, the same old foes under new faces make havoc of the Church. But they never seem to advance beyond a certain point, and after all these centuries the Church is still full of faith and life, bright, too, in spite of discouragements, in spite of the perpetual presence of these treacherous, deceitful men, with promise for the future.For their folly shall be manifest.--Men and women would be led away for a season by the plausible words of such deceivers, but one school of error after another would fall into disrepute, then into neglect, then into the silent darkness of utter oblivion (the event in numberless instances has shown the truth of this prophecy); and Timothy might take comfort, by considering what Holy Scripture had placed on record respecting the Egyptian sorcerers, whose folly was manifest unto all men (Exodus 8:18-19; Exodus 9:11). Their folly was yet more manifest when men considered their latter end. (See Note above on Jannes and Jambres, 2Timothy 3:8.)