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Commentary on First and Second Thessalonians (Commentary on the New Testament Book #13)
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eBook - ePub
Commentary on First and Second Thessalonians (Commentary on the New Testament Book #13)
About this book
Delve Deeper into God's Word
In this verse-by-verse commentary, Robert Gundry offers a fresh, literal translation and a reliable exposition of Scripture for today's readers.
In these two letters Paul compliments Christians living in Thessalonica and assures them that they will be delivered from persecution. He exhorts them to live Christianly in anticipation of Jesus' return on the Day of the Lord.
Pastors, Sunday school teachers, small group leaders, and laypeople will welcome Gundry's nontechnical explanations and clarifications. And Bible students at all levels will appreciate his sparkling interpretations.
This selection is from Gundry's Commentary on the New Testament.
In this verse-by-verse commentary, Robert Gundry offers a fresh, literal translation and a reliable exposition of Scripture for today's readers.
In these two letters Paul compliments Christians living in Thessalonica and assures them that they will be delivered from persecution. He exhorts them to live Christianly in anticipation of Jesus' return on the Day of the Lord.
Pastors, Sunday school teachers, small group leaders, and laypeople will welcome Gundry's nontechnical explanations and clarifications. And Bible students at all levels will appreciate his sparkling interpretations.
This selection is from Gundry's Commentary on the New Testament.
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Yes, you can access Commentary on First and Second Thessalonians (Commentary on the New Testament Book #13) by Robert H. Gundry in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Theology & Religion & Biblical Commentary. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
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First Thessalonians
In this letter Paul compliments Christian believers in the city of Thessalonica on their progress in faith and then exhorts them to live christianly in anticipation of Jesusâ return on the Day of the Lord.
ADDRESS AND GREETING
1 Thessalonians 1:1
1:1: Paul and Silvanus and Timothy to the church of the Thessalonians [which is] in God, the Father, and the Lord, Jesus Christ: Grace and peace to you. Paul, Silvanus, and Timothy cofounded the Thessalonian church (see Acts 15:22, 32, 40â41; 16:1â3 with 17:1â9, âSilasâ being the Aramaic form of the Latinized âSilvanusâ). But the apostle Paul counts as leader of the other two and therefore as the author of this letter (see 2:18; 2 Thessalonians 3:17). By adding weight to the letter, his inclusion of Silvanus and Timothy with himself aims for a wholeheartedly favorable reception on the Thessaloniansâ part. âThe church of the Thessaloniansâ means âthe assembly of the Thessalonians.â But since an assembly could consist of non-Christians, Paul adds âin God, the Father, and the Lord, Jesus Christâ and thus limits the address to Christians, whose assembly the word âchurchâ connotes. The letter will be read to them when they assemble. They lived in Thessalonica, a major city in what is now northern Greece but was then Macedonia. Instead of saying âthe church in Thessalonica,â though, Paul says (as just noted) âthe church of the Thessalonians in God, the Father, and the Lord, Jesus Christ.â Thus a theological address trumps a geographical address and thereby encourages the addressees. For dwelling physically in the city of Thessalonica, where they suffer persecution (2:14; 2 Thessalonians 1:4â7), doesnât determine their destiny. Dwelling through the Holy Spirit in God and Jesus Christ does (see 1:5â6; 4:8; 5:19 for the Thessaloniansâ having the Holy Spirit).
âThe Fatherâ designates God but leaves it unspecified whose Father he is. It will come out soon enough, however, that heâs âour Father,â the Father of Christians such as Paul and company (1:3; 3:11, 13), as well as of Jesus Christ (1:10). âThe Lordâ designates Jesus Christ. This term can refer to human beingsâmasters of slaves, owners of property, and rulers, for exampleâas well as to pagan deities. But the present conjunction with âGod, the Fatherâ in an indication of the Christiansâ sphere of existence points to Jesusâ deity, especially in opposition to pagan deities and the emperor cult. âJesusâ is a personal name, âChristâ a title (meaning âAnointed Oneâ) that has evolved into a second personal name. Putting a comma between âthe Lordâ and âJesus Christâ underscores the true lordship of Jesus Christ over against the untrue lordship of pagan deities and deified emperors. For the meaning of âGrace and peace to youâ see the comments on 1 Peter 1:2; 2 John 3.
A COMPLIMENTARY THANKS FOR THE THESSALONIAN BELIEVERS
1 Thessalonians 1:2â5
1:2â5: Weâre always thanking God for all of you, constantly making remembrance [of you] in our prayers, 3remembering your work of faith and labor of love and endurance in hope of our Lord, Jesus Christ, in the presence of God, even our Father, 4knowingâbrothers loved by Godâ[his] selection of you, 5in that our gospel didnât get to you only with a [spoken] wordârather, also with power and with the Holy Spirit and with much full assurance, just as you know what kind of [men] we proved to be among you because of you. As distinguished from âyouâ and âyour,â âweâ and âourâ refer to Paul and company. Which isnât to say, however, that âour Lord,â âour Father,â and âour gospelâ exclude the addressees from the same relationships to Jesus, God, and the gospel. Thanks go to God for the Thessalonian Christians because of his seeing to their conversion, which made the evangelization of Thessalonica successful. âAlways thanking Godâ stresses the extent of thanksgiving, and âfor all of youâ stresses the extent of his making the evangelization successful. âPrayersâ provide the occasion for thanking God. âMaking remembranceâ means making mention. âConstantlyâ joins the plural of âprayersâ to stress the regularity of mentioning the Thessalonian Christians thankfully in prayer.
âRemembering your work . . . and labor . . . and enduranceâ means mentioning in prayer these activities of the Thessalonian Christians as what in particular Paul and company thank God for. The âworkâ stems from âfaithââthat is, from belief in Jesusâand means the doing of good deeds (see 2 Thessalonians 1:11; 2:17), especially for fellow Christians (4:9â12). The âlaborâ stems from âloveâ and connotes affectionate exertion for othersâ benefit (3:12 [compare the combination of work, labor, and love in 5:12â13]). The âenduranceâ stems from âhope,â which means a confident expectation, not an uncertain wish. (An even more literal translation, âendurance of hope,â would sound as though hope was being endured, whereas the less literal translation, âendurance in hope,â allows hope to be the source of endurance.) âOf our Lord, Jesus Christâ defines the hope as a confident expectation of his second coming, and this expectation enables the endurance of persecution (2:14; 3:3â4; 2 Thessalonians 1:4â7; Acts 17:5â9). Hope comes last in this trio of Christian virtues because it looks forward to the second coming (so too in 5:8; Colossians 1:4â5), whereas in 1 Corinthians 13:13 love comes last as the highest virtue (compare Romans 5:1â5). âIn the presence of Godâ goes with ârememberingâ and thus indicates that âprayers,â in which the remembrance occurs, put us in his presence (3:9â10 [compare Hebrews 4:16; 7:19, 25; 10:1, 22]).
Knowledge that God selected the addressees for salvation leads Paul to address them with âbrothers loved by God.â Theyâre Christian brothers in relation to Paul and company as well as to one another (Matthew 23:8). Calling attention to this relationship makes for a favorable reception of the letter, and calling attention to Godâs love for the addressees both encourages them in their hopeful endurance of persecution and contrasts sharply with pagan godsâ usual lack of love for their devotees, who therefore needed to placate them. âKnowing . . . the selectionâ provides the basis for thanksgiving, and providing the basis of this knowledge is Godâs seeing to it that the gospel got to them not only verbally but also powerfully. Since by definition miracles are âpowerful actsâ or, more literally, âpowers,â the phrase âwith powerâ indicates that the performance of miracles accompanied the spoken word. âWith the Holy Spiritâ indicates the source of this power. And âwith . . . full assuranceâ indicates its effect on the Thessalonians. In conjunction with the spoken word the power converted them. âMuchâ raises their âfull assuranceâ to the nth degree (compare Romans 15:18â19; 1 Corinthians 2:4â5; 2 Corinthians 6:7; 12:12; Galatians 3:5). Their knowledge of âwhat kind of [men]â Paul and company âproved to beâ among them balances Paulâs knowledge that God lovingly selected the Thessalonians, and also prepares for a description in 2:1â12 of the way Paul and company evangelized Thessalonica. This very appeal to the Thessaloniansâ knowledge of their behavior among them, plus the description of that behavior as âbecause of you,â forecasts a favorable description in the upcoming passage and means that Paul and company behaved so as to benefit the Thessalonians with the gospel. All in all, the extended thanksgiving for the Thessalonians in 1:2â5 compliments them for the purposes of gaining their ready acceptance of the letterâs further contents and of encouraging their further progress in faith-filled work, love-filled labor, and hope-filled endurance.
A COMPLIMENTARY DESCRIPTION OF THE THESSALONIAN BELIEVERS
1 Thessalonians 1:6â10
1:6â10: And you proved to be imitators of us and of the Lord by having welcomed the word in much affliction with the joy of the Holy Spirit, 7so that you became a role model to all the believers in Macedonia and in Achaia. 8For from you the word about the Lord reverberated forth not only in Macedonia and in Achaia; rather, your faith toward God has gone forth in every place, so that we have no need to say anything. 9For people themselves are reporting about us in reference to what kind of entrance to you we had, even how you turned to God from idols to slave for the living and true God 10and to await his Son from the heavens, whom he [God] raised from among the dead, [namely] Jesus, the one who rescues us from the coming wrath. As Paul and company proved to be good for the addressees (1:5), so the addressees have proved to be imitators of them and of the Lord, who has twice been identified as Jesus Christ (1:1, 3). Like the compliment in 1:2â5, this compliment has the purpose of gaining a ready acceptance of the letter and of encouraging its recipients. They became imitators of Paul and company and of the Lord by âhaving welcomed the word.â The word of the gospel called on the Thessalonians âto slave for the living and true Godâ as Paul and company were doing and as the Lord, Jesus Christ, did. So welcoming this word meant âturn[ing] to God from idolsâ to slave for him, and welcoming it âin . . . afflictionâ adds an element to the imitation in that both Paul and company and the Lord suffered afflictionâthat is, persecutionâin slaving for God. The Lord suffered it in his crucifixion, they in their evangelistic labors (Acts 16:16â17:15).
âMuchâ magnifies the like affliction suffered by the addressees. Likewise, âwith the joy of the Holy Spiritâ magnifies the compliment in that they welcomed the word joyfully despite the suffering of much affliction. Mention of the Holy Spirit as the source of this unnatural or, rather, supernatural joy balances the preceding mention of the Holy Spirit as the source of the power with which the word came to them (1:5) and implies by way of a further compliment that this joy gives evidence of their having received the Holy Spirit. Their joyful welcome of the word despite much affliction has made them âa role modelâ to be imitated just as they imitated Paul and company and the Lord. âTo all the believers in Macedonia [roughly the northern part of modern Greece] and in Achaia [roughly the southern part]â enhances the compliment by displaying the extent to which the Thessalonian believers became a role model, and âForâ introduces an explanation of the way they became such a model: the gospel, called âthe word about the Lord,â had âreverberated forthâ from them as some of them traveled out of Thessalonica into Macedonia and Achaia and even elsewhere (âin every place,â a deliberate exaggeration for emphasis on their far-flung evangelism [for some Thessalonian believers as Paulâs traveling coevangelists see Acts 19:29; 20:4; 27:2; Colossians 4:10; Philemon 24]). âNot only . . . rather,â where weâd expect ânot only . . . but also,â is a particularly emphatic way of stating the hyperbole; and âyour faith toward Godâ restates âthe word about the Lordâ in terms of personal testimonies. These testimonies made them role models to be imitated.
We might have expected âyour faith in Jesus,â but âyour faith toward Godâ prepares for a description of the addresseesâ having âturned to God from idols.â The addresseesâ own testimonies of faith toward God made it unnecessary for Paul and company to report their convertsâ faith. Because of those testimonies, in fact, people who heard them were reporting âwhat kind of entranceâ Paul and company had to the addressees. âEven how you turned to God from idolsâ defines the entrance in terms of evangelism so successful as to be comparable to a triumphal entry such as victorious generals and celebrated orators, philosophers, and teachers enjoyed when entering a city. âFrom idolsâ also implies both that the Thessalonian believers didnât merely add God to the gods represented by idols, as pagans often multiplied their gods in a fashion similar to diversifying investments nowadays for the sake of economic safety (see Acts 17:1â4), and that most of the Thessalonian believers were Gentiles, for few Jews worshiped idols after their Assyrian and Babylonian exiles during the Old Testament period. âTo slaveâ for God means to work for himâevangelistically in this contextâand counts as an honor and privilege because heâs âthe living and true Godâ in contrast with âidols,â dead and undivine as they are. Godâs having âraised [âhis Sonâ] from among the deadâ has made it possible for him (Jesus the Son) to come back âfrom the heavensâ and rescue âusâ (now including the addressees as well as Paul and company) âfrom the coming wrathâ (that is, from the future cataclysm of Godâs final judgment on unbelievers). Since this wrath is coming and therefore not yet here, the present tense of ârescuesâ implies that the rescue is so certain that it might as well be happening alr...
Table of contents
- Cover
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- First Thessalonians
- Second Thessalonians
- Notes
- Back Cover