This is the best commentary I've read so far. It's was my third in the PTW series and I read it alongside the M'cheyne bible reading plan. Kent provides great context and is able to get into Pauls head to drag out what the text was meant to be teaching. I learnt a lot. I started taking notes, but ended up underlining half the book. Will certainly be pulling this one out again. A few memorable/convicting quotes:
"For Paul, the church was central to Christian existence. He never concieved of Christians living apart from the visible church. Rather, Christians lived in such profound relationship that the pain of one was truely felt by all."
Prayer is indeed a mystery, but it is stressed over and over again in the New Testament as a vital prerequisite for the release and experience of Gods power.
God comforted Paul in ALL his afflictions, not some, all. Affliction is essential, it was the key to Pauls effective ministry
God can achieve his purpose through the absence of human power and resources, or the abandonment of reliance on them. All through history God has chosen and used nobodies, because their unusual dependence on him made possible the unique display of his power and grace. He chose and used somebodies only when they renounced dependence on their natural abilities and resources. Oswald Chambers