| |
THE SECOND
EPISTLE OF PAUL THE APOSTLE TO
TIMOTHY
Commentary by A. R. FAUSSETT
[1]
[2]
[3]
[4]
INTRODUCTION
PLACE OF WRITING.--Paul, in the interval between his first
and second imprisonment, after having written First
Timothy from Macedonia or Corinth [BIRKS] (if we are to
adopt the opinion that First Timothy was written after his
first imprisonment), returned to Ephesus, as he intended,
by way of Troas, where he left the books, &c.
(mentioned in @2Ti
4:13), with Carpus. From Ephesus he went to Crete for
a short visit and returned, and then wrote to Titus. Next
he went by Miletus to Corinth (@2Ti
4:20), and thence to Nicopolis (@Tit
3:12), whence he proceeded to Rome. From his prison
there he wrote the Second Epistle to Timothy, shortly
before his martyrdom. It is not certain where Timothy was
at this time. Some of the internal evidences favor the
view of his having been then at Ephesus; thus the
salutation of Priscilla and Aquila, who generally resided
there (@2Ti
4:19); also that of the household of Onesiphorus, who
is stated in @2Ti
1:16-18 to have ministered to Paul at Ephesus,
a circumstance implying his residence there. Also, the
Hymenæus of @2Ti
2:17 seems to be the same as the Hymenæus at Ephesus
(@1Ti
1:20); and probably "Alexander the
coppersmith" (@2Ti
4:14) is the same as the Alexander joined with Hymenæus
(@1Ti
1:20), and possibly the same as the Alexander put
forward by the Jews to clear themselves, not to befriend
Paul, at the riot in Ephesus (@Ac
19:33,34). The difficulty is, on this supposition, how
to account for @2Ti
4:12,20: if Timothy was at Ephesus, why did he need to
be told that Paul had sent Tychicus to Ephesus? or
that Paul had left Trophimus, himself an Ephesian
(@Ac
21:29), sick at Miletus, which was only thirty
miles from Ephesus? However, see on 2Ti 4:12; 2Ti 4:20.
Troas lay on the road to Rome from either Ephesus or
Pontus, so that @2Ti
4:13 will accord with the theory of either Ephesus or
any other place in the northwest of Asia Minor, being
Timothy's place of sojourn at the time. Probably, he had
the general superintendence of the Pauline churches in
Asia Minor, in accordance with his mission combining the
office of evangelist, or itinerant missionary,
with that of presiding overseer. Ephesus was
probably his headquarters.
TIME OF WRITING.--(1) Paul's first imprisonment, described
in @Ac
28:17-31, was much milder than that in which he was
when writing Second Timothy. In the former, he had liberty
to lodge in his own hired house, and to receive all
comers, guarded only by a single soldier; in the latter,
he was so closely confined that Onesiphorus with
difficulty found him; he was chained, his friends had
forsaken him, and he had narrowly escaped sentence of
execution from the Roman emperor. Medieval legends
represent the Mamertine prison, or Tullianum, as the scene
of his incarceration with Peter. But this is
irreconcilable with the fact of Onesiphorus, Linus, Pudens,
&c., having access to him. He was probably under
military custody, as in his former imprisonment, though of
a severer kind (@2Ti
1:16-18 2:9 4:6-8,16,17). (2) The visit to Troas (@2Ti
4:13) can hardly have been that mentioned in @Ac
20:5-7, the last before his first imprisonment; for,
if it were, the interval between that visit and the first
imprisonment would be seven or eight years, a period most
unlikely for him to have allowed to pass without sending
for his cloak and parchments, when they might have been of
service to him in the interim. (3) Paul's leaving
Trophimus sick at Miletus (@2Ti
4:20), could not have been on the occasion mentioned
in @Ac
20:15; for, subsequent to that, Trophimus was with
Paul in Jerusalem (@Ac
21:29). (4) The words (@2Ti
4:20), "Erastus abode at Corinth," imply
that Paul had shortly before been at Corinth, where he
left Erastus. But before his first imprisonment, Paul had
not been at Corinth for several years; and in the interval
Timothy had been with him, so that Timothy did not need at
a later period to be told about that visit (@Ac
20:2,4). For all these reasons the imprisonment,
during which he wrote Second Timothy, is shown to be his
second imprisonment. Moreover, @Heb
13:23,24, represents the writer (who was probably
Paul) as in Italy, and at liberty. So
CLEMENT OF ROME [First Epistle to the Corinthians,
1.5], the disciple of Paul, explicitly states, "In
the east and west, Paul as a preacher instructed the
whole world (that is, the Roman empire) in
righteousness, and having gone to the extremity of the
west, and having borne witness before the rulers (of
Rome), he so was removed from the world." This
plainly implies that he fulfilled his design (@Ro
15:24-28) of a missionary journey into Spain.
The canon of the New Testament, compiled about A.D. 170
(called MURATORI'S Canon), also mentions "the
journey of Paul from Rome to Spain." See ROUTH [Sacred
Fragments, vol. 4, p. 1-12].
His martyrdom is universally said to have occurred in
Nero's reign [EUSEBIUS, Ecclesiastical History,
2.22; JEROME, On Illustrious Men]. Five years thus
seem to have elapsed between the first imprisonment, A.D.
63 (@Ac
28:17-31), and his martyrdom, June A.D. 68, the last
year of Nero's reign. He was probably arrested by the
magistrates in Nicopolis (@Tit
3:12) in Epirus, in the winter, on a double charge,
first, of being one of the Christians who had conspired,
it was alleged by Nero's partisans, to set fire to Rome,
A.D. 64; secondly, of introducing a novel and unlawful
religion. His friends all left him, except Luke: Demas
from "love of this present world": the others
from various causes (@2Ti
4:10,11). On the first charge he seems to have been
acquitted. His liberation from his first imprisonment took
place in A.D. 63, the year before the great fire at Rome,
which Nero made the pretext for his persecution of the
Christians. Every cruelty was heaped on them; some were
crucified; some were arrayed in the skins of wild beasts
and hunted to death by dogs; some were wrapped in
pitch-robes and set on fire by night to illuminate the
circus of the Vatican and gardens of Nero, while that
monster mixed among the spectators in the garb of a
charioteer. But now (A.D. 67 or 68) some years had elapsed
since the first excitement which followed the fire. Hence,
Paul, being a Roman citizen, was treated in his trial with
a greater respect for the forms of the law, and hence was
acquitted (@2Ti
4:17) on the first charge of having instigated the
Christians to their supposed acts of incendiarism before
his last departure from Rome. Alexander the coppersmith
seems to have been a witness against him (@2Ti
4:14). Had he been condemned on the first charge, he
would probably have been burnt alive, as the preceding
martyrs were, for arson. His judge was the city Præfect.
CLEMENT OF ROME specifies that his trial was (not before
the emperor, but) "before the rulers." No
advocate ventured to plead his cause, no patron appeared
for him, such as under ordinary circumstances might have
aided him; for instance, one of the powerful Æmilian
house, under which his family possibly enjoyed clientship
(@2Ti
4:16,17), whence he may have taken his name Paul. The
place of trial was, probably, one of the great basilicas
in the Forum, two of which were called the Pauline
Basilicas, from L. Æmilius Paulus, who had built one and
restored the other. He was remanded for the second stage
of his trial. He did not expect this to come on until the
following "winter" (@2Ti
4:21), whereas it took place about midsummer; if in
Nero's reign, not later than June. In the interim Luke was
his only constant companion; but one friend from Asia,
Onesiphorus, had diligently sought him and visited him in
prison, undeterred by the danger. Linus, too, the future
bishop of Rome, Pudens, the son of a senator, and Claudia,
his bride, perhaps the daughter of a British king (see on 2Ti
4:21), were among his visitors; and Tychicus, before
he was sent by Paul to Ephesus (@2Ti
4:12; perhaps bearing with him this Epistle).
OBJECT OF THE EPISTLE.--He was anxious to see his disciple
Timothy, before his death, and that Timothy should bring
Mark with him (@2Ti
1:4 4:9,11,21). But feeling how uncertain it was
whether Timothy should arrive in time, he felt it
necessary, also, to give him by letter a last warning as
to the heresies, the germs of which were then being
scattered in the Churches. Hence he writes a series of
exhortations to faithfulness, and zeal for sound doctrine,
and patience amidst trials: a charge which Timothy seems
to have needed, if we are to judge from the apostle's
earnestness in urging him to boldness in Christ's cause,
as though Paul thought he saw in him some signs of
constitutional timidity (@2Ti
2:2-8 4:1-5 1Ti 5:22,23).
PAUL'S DEATH.--DIOYSIUS, bishop of Corinth (quoted in
EUSEBIUS [Ecclesiastical History, 2.25]) about A.D.
170, is the earliest authority for the tradition that
Peter suffered martyrdom at Rome "about the same
time" as Paul, after having labored for some time
there. He calls Peter and Paul "the founders of the
Corinthian and Roman Churches." The Roman presbyter,
CAIUS (about A.D. 200), mentions the tradition that Peter
suffered martyrdom in the Vatican. But (1) Peter's work
was among the Jews (@Ga
2:9), whereas Rome was a Gentile Church (@Ro
1:13. Moreover, (2) the First Epistle of Peter (@1Pe
1:1 5:13) represents him as laboring in Babylon
in Mesopotamia. (3) The silence concerning Peter of Paul's
Epistles written in Rome, negatives the tradition of his
having founded, or labored long at Rome; though it is possible
he may have endured martyrdom there. His martyrdom,
certainly, was not, as JEROME says, "on the same
day" with that of Paul, else Paul would have
mentioned Peter's being at Rome in @2Ti
4:11. The legend says that Peter, through fear, was
fleeing from Rome at early dawn by the Appian Way, when he
met our Lord, and falling at His feet, asked, Lord,
whither goest thou? to which the Lord replied, I go again
to be crucified. The disciple returned penitent and
ashamed, and was martyred. The Church of Domine quo
vadis, on the Appian Way, commemorates the supposed
fact. Paul, according to CAIUS (quoted in EUSEBIUS [Ecclesiastical
History, 2.25]), suffered martyrdom on the Ostian
Way. So also JEROME, who gives the date, the
fourteenth year of Nero. It was common to send prisoners,
whose death might attract too much notice at Rome, to some
distance from the city, under a military escort, for
execution; hence the soldier's sword, not the
executioner's axe, was the instrument of his
decapitation [OROSIUS, The Seven Books of History
against the Pagans, 7.7]. Paul appears, from @Php
1:12-30, to have had his partisans even in the palace,
and certainly must have exercised such an influence as
would excite sympathy in his behalf, to avoid which the
execution was ordered outside the city. Compare TACITUS [Histories,
4.11]. The Basilica of St. Paul, first built by
Constantine, now stands outside Rome on the road to Ostia:
before the Reformation it was under the protection of the
kings of England, and the emblem of the order of the
Garter is still to be seen among its decorations. The
traditional spot of the martyrdom is the Tre Fontane,
not far from the Basilica [CONYBEARE and HOWSON].
@2Ti
1:1-18. ADDRESS: THANKFUL EXPRESSION OF LOVE AND
DESIRE TO SEE HIM: REMEMBRANCE OF HIS FAITH AND THAT OF
HIS MOTHER AND GRANDMOTHER. EXHORTATION TO STIR UP THE
GIFT OF GOD IN HIM, AND NOT SHRINK FROM AFFLICTION,
ENFORCED BY THE CONSIDERATION OF THE FREENESS OF GOD'S
GRACE IN OUR GOSPEL CALLING, AND BY THE APOSTLE'S EXAMPLE.
THE DEFECTION OF MANY: THE STEADFASTNESS OF ONESIPHORUS.
|
|