Now we beseech you, brethren, by the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ, and by our gathering together unto him,
Now we beseech you, brethren, by the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ, and by our gathering together unto him,
1. Now—rather, "But";
marking the transition from his prayers for them to entreaties
to them.
we beseech you—or
"entreat you." He uses affectionate entreaty, rather than
stern reproof, to win them over to the right view.
by—rather, "with
respect to"; as the Greek for "of" ().
our gathering together unto
him—the consummating or final gathering together of the saints
to Him at His coming, as announced, Matthew 24:31;
1 Thessalonians 4:17. The Greek noun
is nowhere else found except in 1 Thessalonians 4:17, said of the assembling together of believers for
congregational worship. Our instinctive fears of the judgment
are dispelled by the thought of being gathered together UNTO
HIM ("even as the hen
gathereth her chickens under her wings"), which ensures our
safety.
That ye be not soon shaken in mind, or be troubled, neither by spirit, nor by word, nor by letter as from us, as that the day of Christ is at hand.
2. soon—on trifling grounds,
without due consideration.
shaken—literally,
"tossed" as ships tossed by an agitated sea. Compare for
the same image, Ephesians 4:14.
in mind—rather as the
Greek, "from your mind," that is, from your
mental steadfastness on the subject.
troubled—This verb
applies to emotional agitation; as "shaken" to
intellectual.
by spirit—by a person
professing to have the spirit of prophecy (1 Corinthians 12:8-10;
1 John 4:1-3). The
Thessalonians had been warned (1 Thessalonians 5:20;
1 Thessalonians 5:21) to "prove"
such professed prophesyings, and to "hold fast (only) that which
is good."
by word—of mouth
(compare 2 Thessalonians 2:5; 2 Thessalonians 2:15);
some word or saying alleged to be that of Paul, orally communicated.
If oral tradition was liable to such perversion in the apostolic age
(compare a similar instance, 2 Thessalonians 2:15), how much more in our age!
by letter as from
us—purporting to be from us, whereas it is a forgery. Hence he
gives a test by which to know his genuine letters (2 Thessalonians 2:15).
day of Christ—The
oldest manuscripts read, "day of the Lord."
is at hand—rather, "is
immediately imminent," literally, "is present";
"is instantly coming." Christ and His apostles
always taught that the day of the Lord's coming is at hand;
and it is not likely that Paul would imply anything contrary here;
what he denies is, that it is so immediately imminent, instant,
or present, as to justify the neglect of everyday worldly
duties. CHRYSOSTOM, and
after him ALFORD,
translates, "is (already) present" (compare 2 Thessalonians 2:15), a kindred error. But in 2 Thessalonians 2:15, the same Greek verb is translated "come."
WAHL supports this view.
The Greek is usually used of actual presence; but is quite
susceptible of the translation, "is all but present."
Let no man deceive you by any means: for that day shall not come, except there come a falling away first, and that man of sin be revealed, the son of perdition;
3. by any means—Greek,
"in any manner." Christ, in , gives the same warning in connection with the same event.
He had indicated three ways () in which they might be deceived (compare other ways, 2 Thessalonians 2:9;
Matthew 24:5; Matthew 24:24).
a falling away—rather
as the Greek, "the falling away," or
"apostasy," namely, the one of which "I told
you" before (2 Thessalonians 2:5),
"when I was yet with you," and of which the Lord gave some
intimation (Matthew 24:10-12;
John 5:43).
that man of sin be
revealed—The Greek order is, "And there have been
revealed the man of sin." As Christ was first in mystery,
and afterwards revealed (John 5:43), so Antichrist (the term used 1 John 2:18;
1 John 4:3) is first in mystery, and
afterwards shall be developed and revealed (1 John 4:3). As righteousness found its embodiment in Christ, "the
Lord our righteousness," so "sin" shall have its
embodiment in "the man of sin." The hindering power
meanwhile restrains its manifestation; when that shall be removed,
then this manifestation shall take place. The articles, "the
apostasy," and "the man of sin," may also refer
to their being well known as foretold in Daniel 7:8;
Daniel 7:25, "the little horn
speaking great words against the Most High, and thinking to change
times and laws"; and Daniel 7:25, the wilful king who "shall exalt and magnify himself
above every god, and shall speak marvellous things against the God of
gods; neither shall he regard any god."
the son of perdition—a
title applied besides to Judas (the traitor, Daniel 7:25), and to none else. Antichrist (the second "beast"
coming up out of the earth); therefore he shall at first be "like
a lamb, while he speaks as a dragon" (Daniel 7:25); "coming in peaceably and by flatteries,"
"working deceitfully," but "his heart shall be against
the holy covenant" (Daniel 11:21;
Daniel 11:23; Daniel 11:28;
Daniel 11:30). Seeds of "the
falling away" soon appear (Daniel 11:30), but the full development and concentration of these
anti-Christian elements in one person are still to appear. Contrast
the King of Zion's coming as JESUS:
(1) righteous or just; (2) having salvation; (3) lowly;
whereas Antichrist is: (1) "the man of (the embodiment of) sin;
(2) the son of perdition; (3) exalting himself above
all that is worshipped. He is the son of perdition, as
consigning many to it, and finally doomed to it himself (Revelation 17:8;
Revelation 17:11). "He whose
essence and inheritance is perdition" [ALFORD].
As "the kingdom of heaven" is first brought before
us in the abstract, then in the concrete, the King, the Lord
Jesus; so here, first we have (Revelation 17:11) "the mystery of iniquity," then "the
iniquitous one" (Revelation 17:11). Doubtless "the apostasy" of Romanism (the
abstract) is one of the greatest instances of the working of the
mystery of iniquity, and its blasphemous claims for the Pope (the
concrete) are forerunners of the final concentration of blasphemy in
the man of sin, who shall not merely, as the Pope, usurp God's
honor as vicegerent of God, but oppose God openly at
last.
Who opposeth and exalteth himself above all that is called God, or that is worshipped; so that he as God sitteth in the temple of God, shewing himself that he is God.
4. Daniel 11:36;
Daniel 11:37 is here referred to.
The words used there as to Antiochus Epiphanes, Paul implies, shall
even be more applicable to the man of sin, who is the New Testament
actual Antichrist, as Antiochus was the Old Testament typical
Antichrist. The previous world kingdoms had each one extraordinary
person as its representative head and embodiment (thus Babylon had
Nebuchadnezzar, Daniel 2:38, end;
Medo-Persia had Cyrus; Greece had Alexander, and Antiochus Epiphanes,
the forerunner of Antichrist); so the fourth and last world kingdom,
under which we now live, shall have one final head, the concentrated
embodiment of all the sin and lawless iniquity which
have been in pagan and papal Rome. Rome's final phase will probably
be an unholy alliance between idolatrous superstition and godless
infidelity.
Who opposeth and exalteth
himself—There is but one Greek article to both
participles, implying that the reason why he opposeth himself
is in order that he may exalt himself above, c. ALFORD
takes the former clause absolutely, "He that withstands
(CHRIST)," that is,
Antichrist (1 John 2:18). As at
the conclusion of the Old Testament period, Israel apostate allied
itself with the heathen world power against Jesus and His apostles
(Luke 23:12 and at Thessalonica,
Acts 17:5-9), and was in
righteous retribution punished by the instrumentality of the world
power itself (Jerusalem being destroyed by Rome), Daniel 9:26;
Daniel 9:27; so the degenerate
Church (become an "harlot"), allying itself with the
godless world power (the "beast" of Revelation) against
vital religion (that is, the harlot sitting on the beast), shall be
judged by that world power which shall be finally embodied in
Antichrist (Zechariah 13:8; Zechariah 13:9;
Zechariah 14:2; Revelation 17:16;
Revelation 17:17). In this early
Epistle, the apostate Jewish Church as the harlot, and pagan Rome as
the beast, form the historical background on which Paul draws his
prophetic sketch of the apostasy. In the Pastoral Epistles, which
were later, this prophecy appears in connection with Gnosticism,
which had at that time infected the Church. The harlot (the apostate
Church) is first to be judged by the beast (the world power) and its
kings (Revelation 17:16); and
afterwards the beasts and their allies (with the personal Antichrist
at their head, who seems to rise after the judgment on the harlot, or
apostate Church) shall be judged by the coming of Jesus Himself (Revelation 17:16). Anti-Christian tendencies produce different Antichrists:
these separate Antichrists shall hereafter find their consummation in
an individual exceeding them all in the intensity of his evil
character [AUBERLEN]. But
judgment soon overtakes him. He is necessarily a child of death,
immediately after his ascent as the beast out of the
bottomless pit going into perdition (Revelation 17:8;
Revelation 17:11). Idolatry of self,
spiritual pride, and rebellion against God, are his
characteristics; as Christ-worship, humility, and dependence
on God, characterize Christianity. He not merely assumes
Christ's character (as the "false Christs," Revelation 17:11), but "opposes" Christ. The Greek
implies one situated on an opposite side (compare 1 John 2:22;
2 John 1:7). One who, on the
destruction of every religion, shall seek to establish his own
throne, and for God's great truth, "God is man," to
substitute his own lie, "Man is God" [TRENCH].
above all that is called God—
(1 Corinthians 8:5). The Pope (for
instance, Clement VI) has even commanded the angels to admit into
Paradise, without the alleged pains of purgatory, certain souls. But
still this is only a foreshadowing of the Antichrist, who will not,
as the Pope, act in God's name, but against God.
or that is worshipped—Rome
here again gives a presage of Antichrist. The Greek is
Sebasma; and Sebastus is the Greek for Augustus,
who was worshipped as the secular ruler and divine vicegerent. The
papacy has risen on the overthrow of Cæsar's power.
Antichrist shall exalt himself above every object of worship,
whether on earth as the Cæsar, or in heaven as God. The various
prefigurations of Antichrist, Mohammed, Rome, Napoleon, and modern
infidel secularism, contain only some, not all, his
characteristics. It is the union of all in some one person that shall
form the full Antichrist, as the union in one Person, Jesus, of all
the types and prophecies constituted the full Christ [OLSHAUSEN].
in the temple of God . . .
that he is God—"He will reign a time, times, and half a
time" (Daniel 7:25), that is,
three and a half years, and will sit in the temple at Jerusalem:
then the Lord shall come from heaven and cast him into the take of
fire and shall bring to the saints the times of their reigning, the
seventh day of hallowed rest, and give to Abraham the promised
inheritance" [IRENÆUS,
Against Heresies, 30.4].
showing himself—with
blasphemous and arrogant DISPLAY
(compare a type, Daniel 7:25). The earliest Fathers unanimously looked for a personal
Antichrist. Two objections exist to Romanism being regarded the
Antichrist, though probably Romanism will leave its culmination
in him: (1) So far is Romanism from opposing all that is called
God, that adoration of gods and lords many (the Virgin Mary and
saints) is a leading feature in it; (2) the papacy has existed for
more than twelve centuries, and yet Christ is not come, whereas the
prophecy regards the final Antichrist as short-lived, and soon going
to perdition through the coming of Christ (Revelation 17:8;
Revelation 17:11). Gregory the Great
declared against the patriarch of Constantinople, that whosoever
should assume the title of "universal bishop" would be "the
forerunner of Antichrist." The papacy fulfilled this his
undesigned prophecy. The Pope has been called by his followers, "Our
Lord God the Pope"; and at his inauguration in St. Peter's,
seated in his chair upon the high altar, which is treated as his
footstool, he has vividly foreshadowed him who "exalteth himself
above all that is called God." An objection fatal to
interpreting the temple of God here as the Church
(1 Corinthians 3:16; 1 Corinthians 3:17;
1 Corinthians 6:19) is, the apostle would
never designate the apostate anti-Christian Church "the
temple of God." It is likely that, as Messiah was
revealed among the Jews at Jerusalem, so Antimessiah shall appear
among them when restored to their own land, and after they have
rebuilt their temple at Jerusalem. Thus Daniel 11:41;
Daniel 11:45 (see on Daniel 11:45; Daniel 11:45), corresponds,
"He shall enter the glorious land (Judea), and he shall plant
the tabernacles of his palaces between the seas in the glorious
holy mountain"; and then (Daniel 11:45) "Michael, the great prince, shall stand up" to
deliver God's people. Compare Note, see on Daniel 11:45. Also the king of Assyria, type of Antichrist (Daniel 11:45). "Lucifer" (a title of Messiah, assumed by
Antichrist, Revelation 22:16); "I
will exalt my throne above the stars of God." "I will sit
upon the mount of the congregation (that is, God's place of
meeting His people of old, the temple), in the sides of the north
(Psalms 48:2); I will be like the
Most High." Revelation 11:1;
Revelation 11:2, "The temple of God
. . . the holy city" (namely, Jerusalem, Revelation 11:2), compare Psalms 68:18;
Psalms 68:29, referring to a period
since Christ's ascension, therefore not yet fulfilled (Isaiah 2:1-3;
Ezekiel 40:1-44; Zechariah 14:16-20;
Malachi 3:1). "In the temple of
God," implies that it an internal, not an external, enemy
which shall assail the Church. Antichrist shall, the first three and
a half years of the prophetical week, keep the covenant, then break
it and usurp divine honors in the midst of the week. Some think
Antichrist will be a Jew. At all events he will, "by
flatteries," bring many, not only of the Gentiles, but also of
"the tribes" of Israel (so the Greek for "kindreds,"
Revelation 11:8; Revelation 11:9),
to own him as their long-looked-for Messiah, in the same "city
where our Lord was crucified." "Sitteth" here implies
his occupying the place of power and majesty in opposition to Him who
"sitteth on the right hand of the Majesty on high" (Revelation 11:9), and who shall come to "sit" there where the
usurper had sat (Matthew 26:64).
See on Matthew 26:64; Revelation 11:2;
Revelation 11:3; Revelation 11:9;
Revelation 11:11. Compare Ezekiel 38:2;
Ezekiel 38:3; Ezekiel 38:6;
Ezekiel 38:9; Ezekiel 38:10;
Ezekiel 38:13; Ezekiel 38:14;
Ezekiel 38:16, as to Tyre, the type
of Antichrist, characterized by similar blasphemous arrogance.
Remember ye not, that, when I was yet with you, I told you these things?
5. Remember, &c.—confuting
those who represent Paul as having labored under error as to Christ's
immediate coming when writing his first Epistle, and as now
correcting that error.
I told you—more than
once, literally, "I was telling," or "used to tell."
And now ye know what withholdeth that he might be revealed in his time.
6. now ye know—by my having
told you. The power must have been one "known" to the
Thessalonians.
what withholdeth—that
which holds him back; "keeps him in check":
the power that has restrained the man of sin from his full and final
development, is the moral and conservative influence of political
states [OLSHAUSEN]:
the fabric of human polity as a coercive power; as "he
who now letteth" refers to those who rule that polity by
which the great upbursting of godlessness is kept down [ALFORD].
The "what withholdeth" refers to the general hindrance;
"he who now letteth," to the person in whom that
hindrance is summed up. Romanism, as a forerunner of Antichrist,
was thus kept in check by the Romanemperor (the then
representative of the coercive power) until Constantine, having
removed the seat of empire to Constantinople, the Roman bishop by
degrees first raised himself to precedency, then to primacy, and then
to sole empire above the secular power. The historical fact from
which Paul starts in his prediction was probably the emperor
Claudius' expulsion of the Jews, the representative of the
anti-Christian adversary in Paul's day, from Rome, thus "withholding"
them in some degree in their attacks on Christianity; this suggested
the principle holding good to the end of time, and about to find its
final fulfilment in the removal of the withholding person or
authority, whereupon Antichrist in his worst shape shall start
up.
that he might be—Greek,
"in order that": ye know that which keeps him back, in
God's purposes, from being sooner manifested, "in order that
he may be revealed in his own time" (that is, the
time appointed by God to him as his proper time for being
manifested), not sooner (compare ). The removal of the withholding power will be when the
civil polity, derived from the Roman empire, which is to be, in its
last form, divided into ten kingdoms (Revelation 17:3;
Revelation 17:11-13), shall, with
its leading representative head for the time being ("he who now
letteth," Greek, "withholdeth," as in Revelation 17:11-66), yield to the prevalent godless "lawlessness" with
"the lawless one" as its embodiment. The elect Church
and the Spirit cannot well be, as DE
BURGH suggests, the
withholding power meant; for both shall never be wholly
"taken out of the way" (Revelation 17:11-66). However, the testimony of the elect Church, and
the Spirit in her, are the great hindrance to the rise of the
apostasy; and it is possible that, though the Lord shall have a
faithful few even then, yet the full energy of the Spirit in the
visible Church, counteracting the energy or "working"
of "the mystery of lawlessness" by the testimony of the
elect, shall have been so far "taken out of the way," or
set aside, as to admit the manifestation of "the lawless
one"; and so DE
BURGH'S'S view may be
right (Luke 18:8; Revelation 11:3-12).
This was a power of which the Thessalonians might easily "know"
through Paul's instruction.
For the mystery of iniquity doth already work: only he who now letteth will let, until he be taken out of the way.
7. the mystery of iniquity—the
counterwork to "the mystery of godliness" (). Anti-Christianity latently working, as
distinguished from its final open manifestation. "Mystery"
in Scripture means, not what remains always a secret, but that which
is for a while hidden, but in due time manifested (compare Ephesians 3:4;
Ephesians 3:5). Satan will resort to a
mode of opposition more conformed to the then imminent "appearing"
and "presence" of the Saviour, and will anticipate Him with
a last effort to maintain the dominion of the world [DE
BURGH], just as at His
first advent he rushed into open opposition, by taking possession of
the bodies of men. "Iniquity," Greek, "lawlessness";
defiant rejection of God's law (compare Note, see on
Ephesians 3:5, Ephesians 3:5). "Wickedness" (translated by the
Septuagint by the same Greek, meaning "lawlessness,"
which Paul employs here), embodied there as a woman, answers to "the
mystery of iniquity," here embodied finally in "the man of
sin": as the former was ultimately banished for ever from the
Holy Land to her own congenial soil, Babylon, so iniquity and the man
of sin shall fall before Michael and the Lord Himself, who shall
appear as the Deliverer of His people (Daniel 12:1-3;
Zechariah 14:3-9). Compare Zechariah 14:3-38. The Jewish nation dispossessed of the evil spirit, the
demon of idolatry being cast out through the Babylonian captivity,
receives ultimately a worse form of the evil spirit, Christ-opposing
self-righteousness. Also, the Christian Church in course of time
taken possession of by the demon of Romish idolatry, then
dispossessed of it by the Reformation, then its house "garnished"
by hypocrisy, secularity, and rationalism, but "swept empty"
of living faith, then finally apostatizing and repossessed by "the
man of sin," and outwardly destroyed for a brief time
(though even then Christ shall have witnesses for Him among both the
Jews, Zechariah 13:9, and Gentiles,
Matthew 28:20), when Christ shall
suddenly come (Daniel 11:32-45;
Luke 18:7; Luke 18:8).
already— (2 John 1:9;
2 John 1:10; Colossians 2:18-23;
1 Timothy 4:1); compare "even now
already" (1 John 2:18; 1 John 4:3)
as distinguished from "in his own time" of being revealed
hereafter. Antiquity, it appears from hence, is not a
justification for unscriptural usages or dogmas, since these were
"already," even in Paul's time, beginning to spring up: the
written word is the only sure test. "Judaism infecting
Christianity is the fuel; the mystery of iniquity is the spark."
"It is one and the same impurity diffusing itself over many
ages" [BENGEL].
only he who now letteth will
let —The italicized words are not in the Greek.
Therefore, translate rather, "only (that is, the continuance of
the MYSTERY of
iniquity-working will be only) until he who now
withholdeth (the same Greek as in 1 John 4:3) be taken out of the way." "Only (waiting,
Hebrews 10:13) until he," &c.
Then it will work no longer in mystery, but in open
manifestation.
And then shall that Wicked be revealed, whom the Lord shall consume with the spirit of his mouth, and shall destroy with the brightness of his coming:
8. Translate, "the lawless
one"; the embodiment of all the godless "lawlessness"
which has been working in "mystery" for ages (): "the man of sin" ().
whom the Lord—Some of
the oldest manuscripts read, "the Lord Jesus." How
awful that He whose very name means God-Saviour, should appear
as the Destroyer; but the salvation of the Church requires the
destruction of her foe. As the reign of Israel in Canaan was ushered
in by judgments on the nations for apostasy (for the
Canaanites were originally worshippers of the true God: thus
Melchisedek, king of Salem, was the "priest of the most high
God," Genesis 14:18: Ammon and
Moab came from righteous Lot), so the Son of David's reign in Zion
and over the whole earth, is to be ushered in by judgments on the
apostate Christian world.
consume . . . and . . .
destroy—So Daniel 7:26,
"consume and destroy"; Daniel 7:26. He shall "consume" him by His mere breath
(Isaiah 11:4; Isaiah 30:33):
the sentence of judgment being the sharp sword that goeth out of His
mouth (Revelation 19:15; Revelation 19:21).
Antichrist's manifestation and destruction are declared in the same
breath; at his greatest height he is nearest his fall, like Herod his
type (Isaiah 1:24-27; Acts 12:20-23).
As the advancing fire, while still at a distance consumes little
insects [CHRYSOSTOM] by
its mere heat, so Christ's mere approach is enough to consume
Antichrist. The mere "appearance of the coming" of the Lord
of glory is sufficient to show to Antichrist his perfect nothingness.
He is seized and "cast alive into the take of fire" (Acts 12:20-44). So the world kingdoms, and the kingdom of the beast, give
place to that of the Son of man and His saints. The Greek for
"destroy" means "abolish" (the same Greek
is so translated, 2 Timothy 1:10);
that is, cause every vestige of him to disappear. Compare as to Gog
attacking Israel and destroyed by Jehovah (2 Timothy 1:10), so as not to leave a vestige of him.
with the brightness of his
coming—Greek, "the manifestation, (or
appearance) of His presence": the first outburst
of His advent—the first gleam of His presence—is enough to
abolish utterly all traces of Antichrist, as darkness
disappears before the dawning day. Next, his adherents are "slain
with the sword out of His mouth" (2 Timothy 1:10). BENGEL'S
distinction between "the appearance of His coming" and the
"coming" itself is not justified by 1 Timothy 6:14;
2 Timothy 1:10; 2 Timothy 4:1;
2 Timothy 4:8; Titus 2:13,
where the same Greek for "appearing" (English
Version, here "the brightness") plainly refers to the
coming itself. The expression, "manifestation
(appearing) of His presence," is used in awful contrast to the
revelation of the wicked one in the beginning of the verse.
Even him, whose coming is after the working of Satan with all power and signs and lying wonders,
9. whose coming—The same Greek
as was used for the Lord's coming () or personal "presence."
is—in its essential
character.
after—according to
the working ("energy") of Satan, as opposed to the energy
or working of the Holy Spirit in the Church (see on ). As Christ is related to God, so is Antichrist to Satan,
his visible embodiment and manifestation: Satan works through him. , "The dragon gave him (the beast) his power . . . seat
. . . great authority."
lying wonders—literally,
"wonders" or "prodigies of falsehood." His
"power, signs, and wonders," all have falsehood for
their base, essence, and aim (), [ALFORD]. In Jesus implies that the miracles shall be real, though
demoniac, such mysterious effects of the powers of darkness as we
read of in the case of the Egyptian sorcerers, not such as Jesus
performed in their character, power, or aim; for they are against the
revealed Word, and therefore not to be accepted as evidences of
truth; nay, on the authority of that sure Word of prophecy (here, and
Matthew 24:24), to be known and
rejected as wrought in support of falsehood (Deuteronomy 13:1-3;
Deuteronomy 13:5; Galatians 1:8;
Galatians 1:9; Revelation 13:11-15;
Revelation 19:20). The same three Greek
words occur for miracles of Jesus (Acts 2:22;
Hebrews 2:4); showing that as the
Egyptian magicians imitated Moses (Hebrews 2:4), so Antichrist will try to imitate Christ's works as a
"sign," or proof of divinity.
And with all deceivableness of unrighteousness in them that perish; because they received not the love of the truth, that they might be saved.
10. deceivableness—rather as
Greek, "deceit of (to promote) unrighteousness" ().
in—The oldest
manuscripts and versions omit "in." Translate, "unto
them that are perishing" (2 Corinthians 2:15;
2 Corinthians 2:16; 2 Corinthians 4:3):
the victims of him whose very name describes his perishing
nature, "the son of perdition"; in contrast to you
whom (2 Thessalonians 2:13) "God hath
from the beginning chosen to salvation through sanctification
of the Spirit and belief of the truth."
because—literally, "in
requital for"; in just retribution for their having no love
for the truth which was within their reach (on account of its putting
a check on their bad passions), and for their having "pleasure
in unrighteousness" (2 Thessalonians 2:12;
Romans 1:18); they are lost
because they loved not, but rejected, the truth which would have
saved them.
received not—Greek,
"welcomed not"; admitted it not cordially.
love of the truth—not
merely love of truth, but love of THE
truth (and of, Jesus who is the Truth, in opposition to
Satan's "lie," 2 Thessalonians 2:9;
2 Thessalonians 2:11; John 8:42-44),
can save (Ephesians 4:21). We
are required not merely to assent to, but to love the truth
(Psalms 119:97). The Jews
rejected Him who came in His divine Father's name; they will receive
Antichrist coming in his own name (Psalms 119:97). Their pleasant sin shall prove their terrible scourge.
And for this cause God shall send them strong delusion, that they should believe a lie:
11. for this cause—because
"they received not the love of the truth." The best
safeguard against error is "the love of the truth."
shall send—Greek,
"sends," or "is sending"; the "delusion"
is already beginning. God judicially sends hardness of heart on those
who have rejected the truth, and gives them up in righteous judgment
to Satan's delusions (Isaiah 6:9;
Isaiah 6:10; Romans 1:24-26;
Romans 1:28). They first cast off
the love of the truth, then God gives them up to Satan's delusions,
then they settle down into "believing the lie": an awful
climax (1 Kings 22:22; 1 Kings 22:23;
Ezekiel 14:9; Job 12:16;
Matthew 24:5; Matthew 24:11;
1 Timothy 4:1).
strong delusion—Greek,
"the powerful working of error," answering to the
energizing "working of Satan" (1 Timothy 4:1); the same expression as is applied to the Holy Ghost's
operation in believers: "powerful" or "effectual
(energizing) working" (1 Timothy 4:1).
believe a lie—rather,
"the lie" which Antichrist tells them, appealing to
his miracles as proofs of it . . . (1 Timothy 4:1).
That they all might be damned who believed not the truth, but had pleasure in unrighteousness.
12. they all . . . damned—rather
as Greek, "that all," c. He here states the
general proposition which applies specially to Antichrist's
adherents. Not all in the Church of Rome, or other anti-Christian
systems, shall be damned, but only "all who believed not the
truth," when offered to them, "but had pleasure in
unrighteousness" (Romans 1:32
Romans 2:8). Love of unrighteousness
being the great obstacle to believing the truth.
But we are bound to give thanks alway to God for you, brethren beloved of the Lord, because God hath from the beginning chosen you to salvation through sanctification of the Spirit and belief of the truth:
13. But—In delightful contrast
to the damnation of the lost () stands the "salvation" of Paul's converts.
are bound—in duty ().
thanks . . . to God—not
to ourselves, your ministers, nor to you, our converts.
beloved of the Lord—Jesus
(Romans 8:37; Galatians 2:20;
Ephesians 5:2; Ephesians 5:25).
Elsewhere God the Father is said to love us (2 Thessalonians 2:16;
John 3:16; Ephesians 2:4;
Colossians 3:12). Therefore Jesus and
the Father are one.
from the beginning—"before
the foundation of the world" (Colossians 3:12; compare 1 Corinthians 2:7;
2 Timothy 1:9); in contrast to those
that shall "worship the beast, whose names are not written in
the book of life of the Lamb slain from the foundation of the world"
(Revelation 13:8). Some of the oldest
manuscripts read as English Version, but other oldest
manuscripts and Vulgate read, "as first-fruits."
The Thessalonians were among the first converts in Europe (compare
Romans 16:5; 1 Corinthians 16:15).
In a more general sense, it occurs in James 1:18;
Revelation 14:4; so I understand it here
including the more restricted sense.
chosen you—The Greek,
is not the ordinary word for "elected," implying His
eternal selection; but taken for Himself, implying His
having adopted them in His eternal purpose. It is found in the
Septuagint (Deuteronomy 7:7;
Deuteronomy 10:15).
through—rather as
Greek, "in sanctification" as the element in
which the choice to salvation had place (compare Deuteronomy 10:15), standing in contrast to the "unrighteousness,"
the element in which Antichrist's followers are given over by God to
damnation (2 Thessalonians 2:12).
of the Spirit—wrought
by the Spirit who sanctifies all the elect people of God, first by
eternally consecrating them to perfect holiness in Christ, once for
all, next by progressively imparting it.
belief of the
truth—contrasted with "believed not the truth" (2 Thessalonians 2:12).
Whereunto he called you by our gospel, to the obtaining of the glory of our Lord Jesus Christ.
14. you—The oldest manuscripts
read, "us."
by our gospel—"through"
the Gospel which we preach.
to . . . glory—In it was "salvation," that is, deliverance from all
evil, of body and soul (1 Thessalonians 5:9);
here it is positive good, even "glory," and that "the
glory of our Lord Jesus" Himself, which believers are privileged
to share with Him (John 17:22;
John 17:24; Romans 8:17;
Romans 8:29; 2 Timothy 2:10).
Therefore, brethren, stand fast, and hold the traditions which ye have been taught, whether by word, or our epistle.
15. Therefore—God's sovereign
choice of believers, so far from being a ground for inaction on their
part, is the strongest incentive to action and perseverance in it.
Compare the argument, Philippians 2:12;
Philippians 2:13, "Work out your
own salvation, FOR it
is God which worketh in you," c. We cannot fully explain this in
theory but to the sincere and humble, the practical
acting on the principle is plain. "Privilege first, duty
afterwards" [EDMUNDS].
stand fast—so as not to
be "shaken or troubled" (Philippians 2:13).
hold—so as not to let
go. Adding nothing, subtracting nothing [BENGEL].
The Thessalonians had not held fast his oral instructions but had
suffered themselves to be imposed upon by pretended
spirit-revelations, and words and letters pretending to be from Paul
(2 Thessalonians 2:2), to the effect that
"the day of the Lord was instantly imminent."
traditions—truths
delivered and transmitted orally, or in writing
(2 Thessalonians 3:6; 1 Corinthians 11:2;
Greek, "traditions"). The Greek verb from
which the noun comes, is used by Paul in 2 Thessalonians 2:11;
2 Thessalonians 15:3. From the three
passages in which "tradition" is used in a good sense, Rome
has argued for her accumulation of uninspired traditions,
virtually overriding God's Word, while put forward as of co-ordinate
authority with it. She forgets the ten passages (Matthew 15:2;
Matthew 15:3; Matthew 15:6;
Mark 7:3; Mark 7:5;
Mark 7:8; Mark 7:9;
Mark 7:13; Galatians 1:14;
Colossians 2:8) stigmatizing man's
uninspired traditions. Not even the apostles' sayings were all
inspired (for example, Peter's dissimulation, Colossians 2:8), but only when they claimed to be so, as in their words
afterwards embodied in their canonical writings. Oral inspiration was
necessary in their case, until the canon of the written Word should
be complete; they proved their possession of inspiration by miracles
wrought in support of the new revelation, which revelation, moreover,
accorded with the existing Old Testament revelation; an additional
test needed besides miracles (compare Deuteronomy 13:1-6;
Acts 17:11). When the canon was
complete, the infallibility of the living men was transferred to the
written Word, now the sole unerring guide, interpreted by the Holy
Spirit. Little else has come down to us by the most ancient
and universal tradition save this, the all-sufficiency of
Scripture for salvation. Therefore, by tradition, we are constrained
to cast off all tradition not contained in, or not provable by,
Scripture. The Fathers are valuable witnesses to historical facts,
which give force to the intimations of Scripture: such as the
Christian Lord's day, the baptism of infants, and the genuineness of
the canon of Scripture. Tradition (in the sense of human
testimony) cannot establish a doctrine, but can
authenticate a fact, such as the facts just mentioned.
Inspired tradition, in Paul's sense, is not a supplementary oral
tradition completing our written Word, but it is identical
with the written Word now complete; then the latter not being
complete, the tradition was necessarily in part oral, in part
written, and continued so until, the latter being complete before the
death of St. John, the last apostle, the former was no longer needed.
Scripture is, according to Paul, the complete and sufficient rule in
all that appertains to making "the man of God perfect,
throughly furnished unto all good works" (2 Timothy 3:16;
2 Timothy 3:17). It is by leaving
Paul's God-inspired tradition for human traditions that Rome has
become the forerunner and parent of the Antichrist. It is striking
that, from this very chapter denouncing Antichrist, she should draw
an argument for her "traditions" by which she fosters
anti-Christianity. Because the apostles' oral word was as trustworthy
as their written word, it by no means follows that the oral word of
those not apostles is as trustworthy as the written
word of those who were apostles or inspired evangelists. No tradition
of the apostles except their written word can be proved
genuine on satisfactory evidence. We are no more bound to accept
implicitly the Fathers' interpretations of Scripture, because we
accept the Scripture canon on their testimony, than we are bound to
accept the Jews' interpretation of the Old Testament, because we
accept the Old Testament canon on their testimony.
our epistle—as
distinguished from a "letter AS from us," 2 Timothy 3:17, namely, that purports to be from us, but is not. He refers
to his first Epistle to the Thessalonians.
Now our Lord Jesus Christ himself, and God, even our Father, which hath loved us, and hath given us everlasting consolation and good hope through grace,
16, 17. himself—by His own
might, as contrasted with our feebleness; ensuring the efficacy of
our prayer. Here our Lord Jesus stands first; in , "God our Father."
which . . . loved us—in
the work of our redemption. Referring both to our Lord Jesus
(Romans 8:37; Galatians 2:20)
and God our Father (Galatians 2:20).
everlasting consolation—not
transitory, as worldly consolations in trials (Romans 8:38;
Romans 8:39). This for all time
present, and then "good hope" for the future [ALFORD].
through grace—rather as
Greek "IN grace"; to be joined to "hath given."
Grace is the element in which the gift was made.
Comfort your hearts, and stablish you in every good word and work.
17. Comfort your hearts—unsettled
as you have been through those who announced the immediate coming of
the Lord.
good word and work—The
oldest manuscripts invert the order, "work and word."
Establishment in these were what the young converts at
Thessalonica needed, not fanatical teaching (compare ).