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THE SECOND
EPISTLE OF PAUL THE APOSTLE TO THE
THESSALONIANS
Commentary by A. R. FAUSSETT
[1]
[2]
[3]
INTRODUCTION
Its GENUINENESS is attested by POLYCARP [Epistle to the
Philippians, 11], who alludes to @2Th
3:15. JUSTIN MARTYR [Dialogue with Trypho, p.
193.32], alludes to @2Th
2:3. IRENĈUS [Against Heresies, 7.2] quotes @2Th
2:8. CLEMENT OF ALEXANDRIA [Miscellanies, 1.5,
p. 554; The Instructor, 1.17], quotes @2Th
3:2, as Paul's words. TERTULLIAN [On the
Resurrection of the Flesh, 24] quotes @2Th
2:1,2, as part of Paul's Epistle.
DESIGN.--The accounts from Thessalonica, after the sending
of the first Epistle, represented the faith and love of
the Christians there as on the increase; and their
constancy amidst persecutions unshaken. One error of
doctrine, however, resulting in practical evil, had sprung
up among them. The apostle's description of Christ's
sudden second coming (@1Th
4:13, &c., and @1Th
5:2), and the possibility of its being at any
time, led them to believe it was actually at hand.
Some professed to know by "the Spirit" (@2Th
2:2) that it was so; and others alleged that Paul had
said so when with them. A letter, too, purporting to be
from the apostle to that effect, seems to have been
circulated among them. (That @2Th
2:2 refers to such a spurious letter, rather than to
Paul's first Epistle, appears likely from the statement, @2Th
3:17, as to his autograph salutation being the mark
whereby his genuine letters might be known). Hence some
neglected their daily business and threw themselves on the
charity of others, as if their sole duty was to wait for
the coming of the Lord. This error, therefore, needed
rectifying, and forms a leading topic of the second
Epistle. He in it tells them (@2Th
2:1-17), that before the Lord shall come, there must
first be a great apostasy, and the Man of Sin
must be revealed; and that the Lord's sudden coming is no
ground for neglecting daily business; that to do so would
only bring scandal on the Church, and was contrary to his
own practice among them (@2Th
3:7-9), and that the faithful must withdraw themselves
from such disorderly professors (@2Th
3:6,10-15). Thus, there are three divisions of
the Epistle: (1) @2Th
1:1-12. Commendat ions of the Thessalonians' faith,
love, and patience, amidst persecutions. (2) @2Th
2:1-17. The error as to the immediate coming of Christ
corrected, and the previous rise and downfall of the Man
of Sin foretold. (3) @2Th
3:1-16. Exhortations to orderly conduct in their whole
walk, with prayers for them to the God of peace, followed
by his autograph salutation and benediction.
DATE OF WRITING.--AS the Epistle is written in the joint
names of Timothy and Silas, as well as his own, and as
these were with him while at Corinth, and not with him for
a long time subsequently to his having left that city
(compare @Ac
18:18, with @Ac
19:22; indeed, as to Silas, it is doubtful whether he
was ever subsequently with Paul), it follows, the place
of writing must have been Corinth, and the date,
during the one "year and six months" of his stay
there, @Ac
18:11 (namely, beginning with the autumn of A.D. 52,
and ending with the spring of A.D. 54), say about six
months after his first Epistle, early in A.D. 53.
STYLE.--The style is not different from that of most of
Paul's other writings, except in the prophetic portion of
it (@2Th
2:1-12), which is distinguished from them in subject
matter. As is usual in his more solemn passages (for
instance, in the denunciatory and prophetic portions of
his Epistles, for example, compare @Col
2:8,16, with @2Th
2:3; @1Co
15:24-28, with @2Th
2:8,9; @Ro
1:18, with @2Th
2:8,10), his diction here is more lofty, abrupt, and
elliptical. As the former Epistle dwells mostly on the
second Advent in its aspect of glory to the sleeping and
the living saints (@1Th
4:1-5:28), so this Epistle dwells mostly on it in its
aspect of everlasting destruction to the wicked and him
who shall be the final consummation of wickedness, the Man
of Sin. So far was Paul from laboring under an erroneous
impression as to Christ's speedy coming, when he wrote his
first Epistle (which rationalists impute to him), that he
had distinctly told them, when he was with them, the same
truths as to the apostasy being about first to arise,
which he now insists upon in this second Epistle (@2Th
2:5). Several points of coincidence occur between the
two Epistles, confirming the genuineness of the latter.
Thus, compare @2Th
3:2, with @1Th
2:15,16; again, @2Th
2:9, the Man of Sin "coming after the working of
Satan," with @1Th
2:18 3:5, where Satan's incipient work as the hinderer
of the Gospel, and the tempter, appears; again,
mild warning is enjoined, @1Th
5:14; but, in this second Epistle, when the evil had
grown worse, stricter discipline (@2Th
3:6,14): "withdraw from" the
"company" of such.
Paul probably visited Thessalonica on his way to Asia
subsequently (@Ac
20:4), and took with him thence Aristarchus and
Secundus: the former became his "companion in
travel" and shared with him his perils at Ephesus,
also those of his shipwreck, and was his "fellow
prisoner" at Rome (@Ac
27:2 Col 4:10 Phm 1:24). According to tradition he
became bishop of Apamea.
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