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THE FIRST EPISTLE
OF PAUL THE APOSTLE TO THE
THESSALONIANS
Commentary by A. R. FAUSSETT
[1]
[2]
[3]
[4]
[5]
INTRODUCTION
The AUTHENTICITY of this Epistle is attested by IRENÆUS [Against
Heresies, 5.6.1], quoting @1Th
5:23; CLEMENT OF ALEXANDRIA [The Instructor,
1.88], quoting @1Th
2:7; TERTULLIAN [On the Resurrection of the Flesh,
24], quoting @1Th
5:1; CAIUS in EUSEBIUS' Ecclesiastical History
[6.20]; ORIGEN [Against Celsus, 3].
The OBJECT OF THE EPISTLE.--Thessalonica was at this time
capital of the Roman second district of Macedonia [LIVY, Histories,
45.29]. It lay on the bay of Therme, and has always been,
and still is, under its modern name Saloniki, a place of
considerable commerce. After his imprisonment and
scourging at Philippi, Paul (@1Th
2:2) passed on to Thessalonica; and in company with
Silas (@Ac
17:1-9) and Timotheus (@Ac
16:3 17:14, compare with @1Th
1:1 3:1-6 2Th 1:1) founded the Church there. The Jews,
as a body, rejected the Gospel when preached for three
successive sabbaths (@Ac
17:2); but some few "believed and consorted with
Paul and Silas, and of the devout (that is, proselytes to
Judaism) Greeks a great multitude, and of the chief women
not a few." The believers received the word joyfully,
notwithstanding trials and persecutions (@1Th
1:6 2:13) from their own countrymen and from the Jews
(@1Th
2:14-16). His stay at Thessalonica was doubtless not
limited to the three weeks in which were the three
sabbaths specified in @Ac
17:2; for his laboring there with his hands for his
support (@1Th
2:9 2Th 3:8), his receiving supplies there more than
once from Philippi (@Php
4:16), his making many converts from the Gentiles (@1Th
1:9; and as two oldest manuscripts read, @Ac
17:4, "of the devout and of the Greeks a
great multitude," @Ac
17:4), and his appointing ministers--all imply a
longer residence. Probably as at Pisidian Antioch (@Ac
13:46), at Corinth (@Ac
18:6,7), and at Ephesus (@Ac
19:8,9), having preached the Gospel to the Jews, when
they rejected it, he turned to the Gentiles. He probably
thenceforth held the Christian meetings in the house of
Jason (@Ac
17:5), perhaps "the kinsman" of Paul
mentioned in @Ro
16:21. His great subject of teaching to them seems to
have been the coming and kingdom of Christ, as we may
infer from @1Th
1:10 2:12,19 3:13 4:13-18 5:1-11,23,24; and that they
should walk worthy of it (@1Th
2:12 4:1). And it is an undesigned coincidence between
the two Epistles and @Ac
17:5,9, that the very charge which the assailants of
Jason's house brought against him and other brethren was,
"These do contrary to the decrees of Cæsar, saying
that there is another king, one Jesus." As in
the case of the Lord Jesus Himself (@Joh
18:33-37 19:12; compare @Mt
26:64), they perverted the doctrine of the coming
kingdom of Christ into a ground for the charge of treason
against Cæsar. The result was, Paul and Silas were
obliged to flee under the cover of night to Berea; Timothy
had probably preceded him (@Ac
17:10,14). But the Church had been planted, and
ministers appointed; nay, more, they virtually became
missionaries themselves for which they possessed
facilities in the extensive commerce of their city, and
both by word and example were extending the Gospel in
Macedonia, Achaia, and elsewhere (@1Th
1:7,8). From Berea, also. Paul, after having planted a
Scripture-loving Church, was obliged to flee by the
Thessalonian Jews who followed him thither. Timothy (who
seems to have come to Berea separately from Paul and
Silas, compare @Ac
17:10, with @Ac
17:14) and Silas remained there still, when Paul
proceeded by sea to Athens. While there he more than once
longed to visit the Thessalonians again, and see
personally their spiritual state, and "perfect that
which was lacking in their faith" (@1Th
3:10); but (probably using the Thessalonian Jews as
his instruments, @Joh
13:27) "Satan hindered" him (@1Th
2:18; compare @Ac
17:13). He therefore sent Timotheus, who seems to have
followed him to Athens from Berea (@Ac
17:15), immediately on his arrival to Thessalonica (@1Th
3:1); glad as he would have been of Timothy's help in
the midst of the cavils of Athenian opponents, he felt he
must forego that help for the sake of the Thessalonian
Church. Silas does not seem to have come to Paul at
Athens at all, though Paul had desired him and Timothy
to "come to him with all speed" (@Ac
17:15); but seems with Timothy (who from Thessalonica
called for him at Berea) to have joined Paul at Corinth
first; compare @Ac
18:1,5, "When Silas and Timothy were come from Macedonia."
The Epistle makes no mention of Silas at Athens, as
it does of Timothy (@1Th
3:1).
Timothy's account of the Thessalonian Church was highly
favorable. They abounded in faith and charity and
reciprocated his desire to see them (@1Th
3:6-10). Still, as nothing human on earth is perfect,
there were some defects. Some had too exclusively dwelt on
the doctrine of Christ's coming kingdom, so as to neglect
the sober-minded discharge of present duties (@1Th
4:11,12). Some who had lost relatives by death, needed
comfort and instruction in their doubts as to whether they
who died before Christ's coming would have a share with
those found alive in His kingdom then to be revealed.
Moreover, also, there had been committed among them sins
against chastity and sobriety (@1Th
5:5-7), as also against charity (@1Th
4:3-10 5:13,15). There were, too, symptoms in some of
want of respectful love and subordination to their
ministers; others treated slightingly the manifestations
of the Spirit in those possessing His gifts (@1Th
5:19). To give spiritual admonition on these subjects,
and at the same time commend what deserved commendation,
and to testify his love to them, was the object of the
Epistle.
The PLACE OF WRITING IT was doubtless Corinth, where
Timothy and Silas rejoined him (@Ac
18:5) soon after he arrived there (compare @1Th
2:17) in the autumn of A.D. 52.
The TIME OF WRITING was evidently immediately after having
received from Timothy the tidings of their state (@1Th
3:6) in the winter of A.D. 52, or early in 53. For it
was written not long after the conversion of the
Thessalonians (@1Th
1:8,9), while Paul could speak of himself as only taken
from them for a short season (@1Th
2:17). Thus this Epistle was first in date of all
Paul's extant Epistles. The Epistle is written in the
joint names of Paul, Silas, and Timothy, the three
founders of the Thessalonian Church. The plural first
person "we," is used everywhere, except in @1Th
2:18 3:5 5:27. "We" is the true reading, @1Th
4:13. The English Version "I," in @1Th
4:9 @1Th
5:1,23, is not supported by the original [EDMUNDS].
The STYLE is calm and equable, in accordance with the
subject matter, which deals only with Christian duties in
general, taking for granted the great doctrinal truths
which were not as yet disputed. There was no deadly error
as yet to call forth his more vehement bursts of feeling
and impassioned argument. The earlier Epistles, as we
should expect, are moral and practical. It was not until
Judaistic and legalizing errors arose at a later period
that he wrote those Epistles (for example, Romans and
Galatians) which unfold the cardinal doctrines of grace
and justification by faith. Still, later the Epistles from
his Roman prison confirm the same truths. And last of all,
the Pastoral Epistles are suited to the more developed
ecclesiastical constitution of the Church, and give
directions as to bishops and deacons, and correct abuses
and errors of later growth.
The prevalence of the Gentile element in this Church is
shown by the fact that these two Epistles are among the
very few of Paul's writings in which no quotation occurs
from the Old Testament.
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