| |
THE SECOND
EPISTLE OF PAUL THE APOSTLE TO THE
THESSALONIANS
Commentary by A. R. FAUSSETT
[1]
[2]
[3]
CHAPTER 1
@2Th
1:1-12. ADDRESS AND SALUTATION: INTRODUCTION:
THANKSGIVING FOR THEIR GROWTH IN FAITH AND LOVE, AND FOR
THEIR PATIENCE IN PERSECUTIONS, WHICH ARE A TOKEN FOR GOOD
EVERLASTING TO THEM, AND FOR PERDITION TO THEIR ADVERSARIES
AT CHRIST'S COMING: PRAYER FOR THEIR PERFECTION.
1. in God our Father--still more endearing than the address,
@1Th
1:1 "in God THE Father."
2. from God our Father--So some oldest manuscripts read.
Others omit "our."
3. We are bound--Greek, "We owe it as a debt" (@2Th
2:13). They had prayed for the Thessalonians (@1Th
3:12) that they might "increase and abound in
love"; their prayer having been heard, it is a small
but a bounden return for them to make, to thank God for it.
Thus, Paul and his fellow missionaries practice what they
preach (@1Th
5:18). In @1Th
1:3, their thanksgiving was for the Thessalonians'
faith, love, and patience"; here, for their exceeding
growth in faith, and for their charity abounding. "We
are bound" expresses the duty of thanksgiving from its
subjective side as an inward conviction. "As it is
meet," from the objective: side as something answering
to the state of circumstances [ALFORD]. Observe the exact
correspondence of the prayer (@1Th
3:12, "The Lord make you to abound in love")
and the answer, "The love of every one of you all
toward each other aboundeth" (compare @1Th
4:10).
meet--right.
4. glory in you--make our boast of you, literally, "in
your case." "Ourselves" implies that not
merely did they hear others speaking of the Thessalonians'
faith, but they, the missionaries themselves, boasted of it.
Compare @1Th
1:8, wherein the apostle said, their faith was so well
known in various places, that he and his fellow missionaries
had no need to speak of it; but here he says, so abounding
is their love, combined with faith and patience, that he and
his fellow missionaries themselves, make it a matter of
glorying in the various churches elsewhere (he was now at
Corinth in Achaia, and boasted there of the faith of the
Macedonian churches, @2Co
10:15-17 8:1, at the same time giving the glory to the
Lord), not only looking forward to glorying thereat at
Christ's coming (@1Th
2:19), but doing so even now.
patience--in @1Th
1:3, "patience of hope." Here hope is tacitly
implied as the ground of their patience; @2Th
1:5,7 state the object of their hope, namely, the
kingdom for which they suffer.
tribulations--literally,
"pressures." The Jews were the instigators of the
populace and of the magistrates against Christians (@Ac
17:6,8).
which ye endure--Greek,
"are (now) enduring."
5. Which--Your enduring these tribulations is a "token
of the righteous judgment of God," manifested in your
being enabled to endure them, and in your adversaries
thereby filling up the measure of their guilt. The judgment
is even now begun, but its consummation will be at the
Lord's coming. David (@Ps
73:1-14) and Jeremiah (@Jer
12:1-4) were perplexed at the wicked prospering and the
godly suffering. But Paul, by the light of the New
Testament, makes this fact a matter of consolation. It is a
proof (so the Greek) of the future judgment, which will set
to rights the anomalies of the present state, by rewarding
the now suffering saint, and by punishing the persecutor.
And even now "the Judge of all the earth does
right" (@Ge
18:25); for the godly are in themselves sinful and need
chastisement to amend them. What they suffer unjustly at the
hands of cruel men they suffer justly at the hands of God;
and they have their evil things here that they may escape
condemnation with the world and have their good things
hereafter (@Lu
16:25 1Co 11:32) [EDMUNDS].
that ye may be counted
worthy--expressing the purpose of God's "righteous
judgment" as regards you.
for which--Greek, "in
behalf of which ye are also suffering" (compare @Ac
5:41 9:16 Php 1:29). "Worthy" implies that,
though men are justified by faith, they shall be judged
"according to their works" (@Re
20:12; compare @1Th
2:12 1Pe 1:6,7 Re 20:4). The "also" implies
the connection between the suffering for the kingdom and
being counted worthy of it. Compare @Ro
8:17,18.
6. seeing it is a righteous thing--This justifies the
assertion above of there being a "righteous
judgment" (@2Th
1:5), namely, "seeing that it is (literally, 'if at
least,' 'if at all events it is') a righteous thing with
(that is, in the estimation of) God" (which, as we all
feel, it certainly is). Our own innate feeling of what is
just, in this confirms what is revealed.
recompense--requite in kind,
namely, tribulation to them that trouble you (affliction to
those that afflict you); and to you who are troubled, rest
from trouble.
7. rest--governed by "to recompense" (@2Th
1:6). The Greek is literally, "relaxation";
loosening of the tension which had preceded; relaxing of the
strings of endurance now so tightly drawn. The Greek word
for "rest," @Mt
11:28, is distinct, namely, cessation from labor. Also,
@Heb
4:9, "A keeping of sabbath."
with us--namely, Paul, Silas,
and Timothy, the writers, who are troubled like yourselves.
when--at the time when . . .
; not sooner, not later.
with his mighty
angels--rather as the Greek, "with the angels of His
might," or "power," that is, the angels who
are the ministers by whom He makes His might to be
recognized (@Mt
13:41,52). It is not their might, but HIS might, which
is the prominent thought.
8. In flaming fire--Greek, "In flame of fire"; or,
as other oldest manuscripts read, "in fire of
flame." This flame of fire accompanied His
manifestation in the bush (@Ex
3:2); also His giving of the law at Sinai (@Ex
19:18). Also it shall accompany His revelation at His
advent (@Da
7:9,10), symbolizing His own bright glory and His
consuming vengeance against His foes (@Heb
10:27 12:29 2Pe 3:7,10).
taking--literally,
"giving" them, as their portion,
"vengeance."
know not God--the Gentiles
primarily (@Ps
79:6 Ga 4:8 1Th 4:5); not of course those involuntarily
not knowing God, but those wilfully not knowing Him, as
Pharaoh, who might have known God if he would, but who
boasted "I know not the Lord" (@Ex
5:2); and as the heathen persecutors who might have
known God by the preaching of those whom they persecuted.
Secondarily, all who "profess to know God but in works
deny Him" (@Tit
1:16).
obey not the
gospel--primarily the unbelieving Jews (@Ro
10:3,16); secondarily, all who obey not the truth (@Ro
2:8).
Christ--omitted by some of
the oldest manuscripts, and retained by others.
9. Who--Greek, "persons who," &c.
destruction from the presence
of the Lord--driven far from His presence [ALFORD]. The
sentence emanating from Him in person, sitting as Judge [BENGEL],
and driving them far from Him (@Mt
25:41 Re 6:16 12:14; compare @1Pe
3:12 Isa 2:10,19). "The presence of the Lord"
is the source whence the sentence goes forth; "the
glory of His power" is the instrument whereby the
sentence is carried into execution [EDMUNDS]. But ALFORD
better interprets the latter clause (see @2Th
1:10), driven "from the manifestation of His power
in the glorification of His saints." Cast out from the
presence of the Lord is the idea at the root of eternal
death, the law of evil left to its unrestricted working,
without one counteracting influence of the presence of God,
who is the source of all light and holiness (@Isa
66:24 Mr 9:44).
10. "When He shall have come."
glorified in his saints--as
the element and mirror IN which His glory shall shine
brightly (@Joh
17:10).
admired in all them that
believe--Greek, "them that believed." Once they
believed, now they see: they had taken His word on trust.
Now His word is made good and they need faith no longer.
With wonder all celestial intelligences (@Eph
3:10) shall see and admire the Redeemer on account of
the excellencies which He has wrought in them.
because, &c.--Supply for
the sense, among whom (namely, those who shall be found to
have believed) you, too, shall be; "because our
testimony unto (so the Greek for 'among') you was
believed" (and was not rejected as by those "who
obey not the Gospel," @2Th
1:8). The early preaching of the Gospel was not abstract
discussions, but a testimony to facts and truths
experimentally known (@Lu
24:48 Ac 1:8). Faith is defined by BISHOP PEARSON as
"an assent unto truths, credible upon the testimony of
God, delivered unto us by the apostles and prophets"
(originally delivering their testimony orally, but now in
their writings). "Glorified in His saints" reminds
us that holiness is glory in the bud; glory is holiness
manifested.
11. Wherefore--Greek, "With a view to which,"
namely, His glorification in you as His saints.
also--We not only anticipate
the coming glorification of our Lord in His saints, but we
also pray concerning (so the Greek) YOU.
our God--whom we serve.
count you worthy--The
prominent position of the "You" in the Greek makes
it the emphatic word of the sentence. May you be found among
the saints whom God shall count worthy of their calling (@Eph
4:1)! There is no dignity in us independent of God's
calling of us (@2Ti
1:9). The calling here is not merely the first actual
call, but the whole of God's electing act, originating in
His "purpose of grace given us in Christ before the
world began," and having its consummation in glory.
the good pleasure of,
&c.--on the part of God [BENGEL].
faith--on your part. ALFORD
refers the former clause, "good pleasure of his
goodness," also to man, arguing that the Greek for
"goodness" is never applied to God, and
translates, "All [that is, every possible] right
purpose of goodness." WAHL, "All sweetness of
goodness," that is, impart in full to you all the
refreshing delights of goodness. I think that, as in the
previous and parallel clause, "calling" refers to
GOD'S purpose; and as the Greek for "good
pleasure" mostly is used of God, we ought to translate,
"fulfil (His) every gracious purpose of goodness (on
your part)," that is, fully perfect in you all goodness
according to His gracious purpose. Thus, "the grace of
our God," @2Th
1:12, corresponds to God's "good pleasure"
here, which confirms the English Version, just as "the
grace of the Lord Jesus Christ" is parallel to
"work of faith," as Christ especially is the
object of faith. "The work of faith"; Greek, (no
article; supply from the previous clause all) work of
faith"; faith manifested by work, which is its
perfected development (@Jas
1:4; compare Note, see on 1Th 1:3). Working reality of
faith.
with power--Greek, "in
power," that is, "powerfully fulfil in you"
(@Col
1:11).
12. the name of our Lord Jesus--Our Lord Jesus in His
manifested personality as the God-man.
in you, and ye in
him--reciprocal glorification; compare @Isa
28:5, "The Lord of hosts shall be . . . a
crown of glory and . . . a diadem of beauty unto . . .
His people," with @Isa
62:3, "Thou (Zion) shalt be a crown of glory in the
hand of the Lord, and a royal diadem," &c. (@Joh
21:10 Ga 1:24 1Pe 4:14). The believer's graces redound
to Christ's glory, and His glory, as their Head, reflects
glory on them as the members.
the grace of our God and the
Lord Jesus Christ--There is but one Greek article to both,
implying the inseparable unity of God and the Lord Jesus.
|
|