2 Timothy 2:5 - Ellicott's Commentary On The Whole Bible

Bible Comments

And if a man also strive for masteries. — More accurately translated, again, if a man strive in the games. Another picture is drawn, and the picture is, as before, a well-known one to all the dwellers in the great cities of the empire. An athlete is chosen to represent the professed servant of Christ, one of those who, after long and careful training, contends in the public games, then so popular, so entirely a part of the life of every city — in the games of wrestling or running, or in the chariot-racing, or in the hand-to-hand contests. Again, this one — as in the case of the soldier — if he aspired to victory and success, must “endure hardness.”

Except he strive lawfully. — “Lawfully” — i.e. according to the prescribed conditions of the contest. He must, of course, submit himself to the strict rules of the theatre where the games are held, and (for this is also included in the “lawfully”) must besides — if he hopes for a prize — go through all the long and severe training and discipline necessary before engaging in such a contest. Galen uses the same phrase, in the sense of complying with the recognised rules of training as regarding diet.

2 Timothy 2:5

5 And if a man also strive for masteries, yet is he not crowned, except he strive lawfully.