A. Paul’s Thanksgiving (1:3-5)
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v. 3
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“We are bound to thank God always for you, brethren, as it
is meet, because that your faith groweth exceedingly, and the charity of every
one of you all toward each other aboundeth;
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v. 4
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“so that we ourselves glory in you in the churches of God
for your patience and faith in all your persecutions and tribulations that ye
endure:
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v. 5
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“which is a manifest token of the righteous judgment of
God, that ye may be counted worthy of the kingdom of God, for which ye also
suffer.”
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NOTES ON TEXT
v. 3 “We are bound”: “Opheilo” — to owe (as money) in
Luke 7:41; to be under obligation (to love our wives) in Eph 5:28. The same
phrase, including “opheilo”, is found in 2Th 2:13, but not elsewhere in Paul’s
letters.
“As it is meet”: “Axios” — right, on the ground of
fitness, as for examples: that labor should be rewarded (Luke 10:7) and sin
punished (Luke 23:15).
“Your faith groweth exceedingly”: The superlative
“hyper” (English equivalent: “super!”) is prefixed to “auxano”, which described
organic growth, as the growth of that which lives, such as seed (Luke 13:14) or
flowers (Mat 6:28). Faith must be alive” and active before it can grow. There is
no such thing, really, as a passive “faith”, or a “nodding assent” to
that which is true. Paul had earlier expressed a desire to return and strengthen
the Thessalonians in faith (1Th 3:10); now he is thankful that, even in his
absence, their faith has grown.
“The charity of every one of you all toward each other
aboundeth”: “Charity” is of course “agape”, the full, self-sacrificing
Christian love (1Th 3:12). Such “love” was a quality for which the church had
already been commended (1Th 1:3, 4:9,10). “Aboundeth” is the same word
(“pleonazei”) used in 1Th 3:12, so that Paul is here recording the answer to his
prayer expressed there.
v. 4 “We ourselves glory in the churches of God”: The
ecclesias over a rather wide area (1Th 1:8,9) had heard of the practical faith
of the Thessalonians. Even Paul and Silas, in contrast to their normal practice,
are not embarrassed to speak in glowing terms of these new converts (cp 1Th
2:19,20).
“Patience”: “Hupomone” — literally, an abiding under,
or endurance. “Perseverance” in NIV, or “steadfastness.”
“Persecutions”: “Diogmos.” This generally refers to
sufferings endured on account of one’s faith.
“Tribulations”: “Thlipsesin”: means afflictions of a
more general nature (1Th 1:6, note). The Thessalonians had a faith strong enough
to remain steadfast under every form of trial (1Th 3:7). In this Paul commends
them as an example for other ecclesias to follow.
v. 5 “Which is a manifest token of the righteous judgment
of God”: Their heroic endurance in the face of sufferings was so unusual as
to indicate (“endeigma” — offer evidence or proof of) its divine source: God
was on their side, and they were strengthened by their faith and hope in Him.
Furthermore, it is part of God’s “righteous judgment” that trials are the means
by which His people may be brought to maturity or perfection (1Th 3:3; Acts
14:22; 1Co 11:31,32; Heb 12:5-8).
“That ye may be counted worthy of the kingdom of God”:
They were not worthy as a result of what they did, but rather they were
deemed to be worthy as a result of what God did righteously in and
through them. They were not justified by their works, but by their faith — once
it was put to the test by God.
ADDITIONAL NOTES
Paul’s prayer in these verses parallels closely his opening
prayer in the first letter (1Th 1:2,3).
The preservation and growth of the ecclesia at Thessalonica
was to be credited, not to those who preached in the first place, nor to those
who were converted by their preaching, nor to those who continued to labor in
their midst, but first and only to God Himself. So it must always be when men
evaluate even the best and most diligent and most sacrificial of their own works
— even then (especially then) does all the glory and honor belong to the
Father! Paul and his companions had worked strenuously in Thessalonica — as
elsewhere — on behalf of the Truth. But they fully recognized that nothing
could have been achieved without divine co-operation. “I have planted,
Apollos watered; but God gave the increase” (1Co 3:6).
The apostle Paul, driven by an urge which was both right and
proper, thanked God for his brothers and sisters. How easy it would be for us to
take such blessings for granted. The blessings of the Truth are not just to be
found in the future, but are present with us now, if we have eyes to see.
The faithful and loving examples we can find all around us, in our divine
family, can — if we allow them — produce an atmosphere of spiritual strength.
Those who are elderly, those who are battling against illness or marital trials,
those who are quietly laboring… for such as these we thank God, and from them
we take courage (Acts 28:15).
The Christian community should not be a comfortable club for
the conserving of the lives of a few believers. It should be a place of
striving, of enduring, of overcoming, where real “fruit” is produced to the
glory of God. It should be a place where faith and love are refined in the
crucible of trials and hardships. If it is not such a place, then why
not?
At first sight the apostle’s argument in v 5 is difficult.
Surely the presence of sufferings would deny, rather than prove, that God is
working to a righteous purpose. The fault is ours if we fail to understand the
divine message, if we see instead as the “world” sees. The Bible does not look
on sufferings in quite the same way as most modern people do. To us, accustomed
as we are to the conveniences of an affluent society, suffering may seem almost
an “evil” — something to be avoided at all costs. It is true that one need not
be a masochist — seeking pain out of some sense of perverted “pleasure.”
Nevertheless the true Bible message is that suffering, in all its varied forms,
is often the means of working out God’s eternal purpose. It develops in the
sufferer qualities of character. It teaches valuable lessons. In one form or
another, it is inevitable; the believer is ordained to it (1Th 3:3).
The faith of a believer is not some fragile thing, to be
wrapped in cotton, insulated from all shocks. It is robust, it is alive, it
grows and flourishes, and it needs both sunshine and rain. The very troubles
which the world heaps upon the believer become, under God’s hand, the means by
which he may grow into a fruitful vine, a productive plant. Suffering therefore
is no evidence that God has forsaken us; it is evidence that He is with
us.
B. Divine Judgment (1:6-10)
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v. 6
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“Seeing it is a righteous thing with God to recompense
tribulation to them that trouble you;
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v. 7
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“and to you who are troubled rest with us, when the Lord
Jesus shall be revealed from heaven with his mighty angels,
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v. 8
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“in flaming fire taking vengeance on them that know not
God, and that obey not the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ:
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v. 9
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“who shall be punished with everlasting destruction from
the presence of the Lord, and from the glory of his power;
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v. 10
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“when he shall come to be glorified in his saints, and to
be admired in all them that believe (because our testimony among you was
believed) in that day.”
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NOTES ON TEXT
v. 6 “Tribulation”: “Tribulation” (“thlipsin”) is the
present lot of believers (v 4; 1Th 1:6; 3:4). However, for the rest of the
world, tribulation will be future and far greater in intensity (Mat 24:21; Mark
9:47-50; Luke 13:3,5; Rom 1:18-32; Rev 3:10). Paul is preparing to give some of
the details (2Th 2) of those terrible tribulations.
v. 7 “And to you who are troubled (God will recompense)
rest with us”: The word “rest” (“anesin”) signifies a relaxation of
tension and is used by Paul with regard to relief from suffering, as in the
slackening of a taut bowstring (2Co 2:13; 7:5; 8:13). Such rest will be
experienced along with Paul and Silas and Timothy in the kingdom of God (2Th
1:5), accompanied by other, more positive and far-reaching, blessings. Since
Paul had experienced, and was continuing to experience, his own sufferings (2Th
3:2; 1Th 2:15; 3:7; 2Co 11:24-27), he knew what he was talking about! This was
no smooth “bedside manner” of one who had never known pain and anguish. Paul had
known God’s comfort even in tribulation; now he is in a position to dispense
that same comfort to others who suffer (2Co 1:3-7).
“When the Lord Jesus shall be revealed”: “Apokalupsis”:
the unveiling of that which is at present hidden (1Co 1:7; Rom 2:5; 8:18; 1Pe
1:7,13; 4:13; 5:1; etc). This word, with its air of mystery and suddenness and
surprise, offers a different aspect of the “parousia”, which had been discussed
earlier (see “Main Theme: The ‘Parousia'” in the Introduction). The two words
refer to the same event — that is, the literal return of Christ — but from
different perspectives.
“From heaven”: This is expressive not just of location
and direction (1Th 4:16) but also of authority. The “kingdom of heaven” is the
kingdom of God on earth, because it derives its power and authority from
God in heaven (Mat 5:3,5,10; 6:10).
“With his mighty angels”: The “angels of his power”
(Mat 16:27; 24:30,31; 25:31; 26:53). This is equivalent to his “saints” or “holy
ones” (NIV) in 1Th 3:13 (see note there). Christ does not come with his
saints (ie, his glorified brethren); he comes with his angels and
to his brethren. The angels are also involved with the Lord’s coming in
such passages as Mat 13:39,41,49 and Mark 8:38.
v. 8: “In flaming fire”: Most translations (NIV, RSV,
NASB, NEB) attach this phrase to v 7, as one of the aspects of Christ’s
appearance at his revelation. The “blazing fire” of his coming is reminiscent of
the glory and brightness of the special divine manifestations in the Old
Testament: Exo 3:2 (cp Acts 7:30); 19:18; 24:17; Deu 5:4; Psa 18:12; Isa
30:27-30; Dan 7:9,10. Fire may be associated with jealousy (Song 8:6), and
divine punishment (Lev 10:2; Num 16:35; Isa 65:15,16; Mal 4:1; Rev 20:9). God,
benevolent though He might wish to be, is also in certain circumstances a
“consuming fire” (Heb 12:29).
“Them that know not God”: The Gentiles, those who are
“without God (‘atheists’) in the world” (Eph 2:12; cp Gal 4:8; 1Th 4:5), being
estranged and alienated from Him (Rom 1:18-32; Eph 4:17,18). There is comparable
Old Testament language describing the “heathen”, or nations (Jer 10:25; Psa
79:6). Paul appropriately singles them out for special retribution, in view of
their special participation in the persecution of Gentile believers in
Thessalonica (Acts 17:5; 1Th 2:14).
“That obey not the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ”:
Paul here means the Jews, well-grounded in the Scriptures, who should have been
expected to obey the gospel preached by Jesus. These Jews were the indisputable
enlightened rejectors of the first century (John 3:18,19; 9:31; 12:48-50) —
Abraham’s natural descendants (Rom 10:3), who should have obeyed but did not (v
16; cp Isa 53:1; 66:4). Like the Gentiles — and with much less reason — the
Jews have been adamant in their opposition to believers in Thessalonica and its
vicinity (Acts 17:5,13).
v. 9 “Who shall be punished with everlasting
destruction”: The same word for “destruction” occurs also in 1Th 5:3.
“Everlasting destruction” is clearly the counterpart and contrast of
“everlasting life” (Rom 2:7; 5:21; 6:22,23; Gal 6:8), and therefore involves
death — literal and final. It is plain that everlasting punishment means
a punishment that is everlasting in its effect, though not in duration of actual
suffering. The ultimate wages of sin is literal death (Rom 6:23), in this case
the “second death” (Rev 21:8). The punishment of the wicked is annihilation: a
complete and final cutting off (Psa 37:9,10,20,34; Job 20:5-8; John 15:6; Mal
4:1,3). Death is a state of unconsciousness (Ecc 9:5,6; Psa 146:3,4), and so it
will be even for the wicked. Sodom is spoken of as “suffering the vengeance of
eternal fire”, yet Jeremiah speaks of Sodom being “overthrown in a
moment” (Lam 4:6).
“From the presence of the Lord”: An aspect of this
punishment is a dismissal “away from” the very presence of Jesus Christ (Mat
7:23; 8:12; 22:13; 25:30,41; Luke 13:27; Rev 22:15), echoing the fearful
language of Isa 2:10,19,21. Therefore Paul has in mind here those who, being
responsible by their knowledge, have appeared before Christ the Judge (Rom
14:10-12; 2Co 5:10,11) only to be rejected by him.
There is a link with 1Th 1:9: Believers had turned “away
from” (same word) idols, so that they might not be turned “away from”
the presence of Christ at his coming.
The language here is that of the Garden of Eden: As Adam and
Eve hid themselves from the presence of God (Gen 3:8), so He at last sent them
forth from His presence (v 23). Cain, as punishment for his crimes, was sent
even further from the presence of God (4:16). And so man, ever since, has
existed apart from, or away from, God. Jesus is the means by which God seeks to
bring man back into His presence (Psa 16:10,11), but for some who listened to
(and even accepted) His initial invitation, their fate will be the same as
Cain’s.
v. 10 “When he shall come to be glorified in his
saints”: The glorification of the saints (1Th 4:17; 2Th 1:7a; 2:1; Psa 89:7)
will occur at the same time as the everlasting destruction of the wicked. They
are the two aspects of the vindication of the righteousness of God. These
“saints” are — probably in contrast to 1Th 3:13 — the once-mortal believers
called to be “holy ones” (Rom 1:7; 1Co 1:2; 16:1; 2Co 1:1; 9:1; Phi 1:1; Col
1:2,4; etc).
Christ will be glorified — physically — in his saints, who
will be made “like him” when he appears (1Jo 3:2).
“And to be admired in all them that believe”:
“…saying with a loud voice, Worthy is the Lamb that was slain to receive
power, and riches, and wisdom, and strength, and honor, and glory, and blessing.
And every creature which is in heaven, and on the earth, and under the earth,
and such as are in the sea, and all that are in them, heard I saying, Blessing,
and honor, and glory, and power, be unto him that sitteth upon the throne, and
unto the Lamb for ever and ever” (Rev
5:12,13).
“Admire” in this verse has the connotations of praising, and
glorifying, and especially that of breath-taking wonder (Psa 68:35).
“Because our testimony among you was believed”: They
had not only accepted the facts, but they had acted, decisively and with
finality, upon what they believed. Even though their faith and actions had
brought sufferings upon them, it was that very action of believing and accepting
that will one day stand them in such glorious company at Christ’s coming. Thus
the present is always linked to the future.
ADDITIONAL NOTES
Paul expressly teaches that believers must not avenge
themselves on their enemies, because such vengeance belongs to God, who will
surely execute it (Rom 12:17-21). It may be objected, then, that if God forbids
His people to take vengeance, He ought also to act in the same way — showing
love for His enemies. In fact, He does! While we, for example,
were enemies of God He reconciled us to Himself through the death and
resurrection of His Son (Rom 5:8,10). Our God does offer reconciliation
and love and mercy to His enemies, but if they refuse that offer and continue in
opposition to His holiness and goodness, then it seems inevitable that they must
face His justice. The God who is three times “holy” (Isa 6:3) could scarcely be
expected forever to look the other way and “wink” at rebellion (Acts
17:30).
This chapter seems to draw heavily on Isaiah 66. Some of the
parallels are outlined below:
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2 Thessalonians 1
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Isaiah 66
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5. For which ye also suffer
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7,8. Travail… pain
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6. To recompense tribulation
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6. Recompense to His enemies
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7. Rest with us
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13. So will I comfort you
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8. Flaming fire
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15,16. Flames of fire
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Taking vengeance
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14. His indignation towards His enemies
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That obey not the gospel
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4. When I called, none did answer
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9. Everlasting destruction
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5. They shall be ashamed
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From the presence of the Lord
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24. The carcasses of the men that have transgressed against
me
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- To be glorified… admired
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5. He shall appear to your joy
18. they shall come and see thy glory
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12. That the name… may be glorified
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5. Let the LORD be glorified
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C. Paul’s Prayer for their Future Acceptance (1:11,12)
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v. 11
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“Wherefore also we pray always for you, that our God would
count you worthy of this calling, and fulfill all the good pleasure of his
goodness, and the work of faith with power:
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v. 12
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“that the name of our Lord Jesus Christ may be glorified in
you, and ye in him, according to the grace of our God and the Lord Jesus
Christ.”
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NOTES ON TEXT
v. 11 “That our God would count you worthy”: We cannot
be “worthy” by our own actions solely; every man sins and falls short of the
glory of God (Rom 3:19). However we may be deemed or reckoned
worthy by the One who created us, and Who has provided a covering and cleansing
for our sins (Eph 2:5,8; Rom 4:16).
“And fulfill all the good pleasure of his goodness”:
“That (God) may fulfill every good purpose (in you).” Paul’s words in Phi
2:12,13 express a similar thought:
“Wherefore, my beloved, as ye have always obeyed, not as in my presence only,
but now much more in my absence, work out your own salvation with fear and
trembling. For it is God which worketh in you both to will and to do of his good
pleasure.”
Compare also Col 1:9,10 and Eph 1:5-11. What they had already
attained was important, but there was still room for growth and improvement (1Th
3:10; 4:1).
“Work of faith”: See 1Th 1:3, note. Faith is never a
passive thing, but a ceaselessly active phenomenon — appropriating God’s
blessings and God’s power to our service of Him.
v. 12 “That the name of our Lord Jesus Christ may be
glorified in you”: In v 10 Paul stated that Christ at his coming will be
glorified in his people. Now he goes even further, to assert that Christ
may be glorified even now in his brethren.
“Name” in Scripture suggests more than a verbal designation:
it speaks of character (Exo 34:6,7; Psa 9,10; John 17:6), rank (Heb 1:4); and
power and authority (Mark 9:39; John 5:43; 17:11,12; Acts 4:10; 1Co 5:4); in
short, the whole personality. This was the “name” of God (whether
“Yahweh”, “Jehovah”, “Shaddai”, or “Theos” is a matter of lesser consequence) —
His character and His authority — which Jesus manifested to the disciples (John
17:24-26).