IV. Fellowship In Persecution (2:13-16)

v. 13

“For this cause also thank we God without ceasing, because, when ye received the word of God which ye heard of us, ye received it not as the word of men, but as it is in truth, the word of God, which effectually worketh also in you that believe.

v. 14

“For ye, brethren, became followers of the churches of God which in Judea are in Christ Jesus: for ye also have suffered like things of your own countrymen, even as they have of the Jews:

v. 15

“who both killed the Lord Jesus, and their own prophets, and have persecuted us; and they please not God, and are contrary to all men:

v. 16

“forbidding us to speak to the Gentiles that they might be saved, to fill up their sins alway: for the wrath is come upon them to the uttermost.”

NOTES ON TEXT

v. 13 “For this cause also”: What is “this cause?” In other words, is Paul looking backward or forward? It is possible he is thanking God for the successful preaching of the gospel despite all difficulties, as described in vv 1-12. But it seems more likely that he is looking forward, and thanking God — more to the point — for the Thessalonians’ reception of that preaching as the word of God (vv 13,14). The “also” presents a bit of a problem too. If this is to be understood as a second reason for Paul’s giving thanks to God, it is scarcely distinguishable from the first reason (1Th 1:2-4). Perhaps Paul means “we also give thanks as we know you give thanks…”

“Without ceasing”: “Adialeiptos” (“continually”: NIV) is unique to Paul in the New Testament, and is always used in connection with prayer and thanksgiving. Paul uses this word to describe the incessant sorrow, or pain of heart, he feels for his unbelieving countrymen (Rom 9:2). (This characteristic attitude of Paul towards his Jewish enemies must be remembered especially when reading such a passage as 1Th 2:13-16, where the apostle seems almost vindictive toward these same Jews. The same man can righteously pray continually for the salvation of his fellow countrymen and rejoice in God’s coming judgments against them if they remain unrepentant.) Paul also uses “adialeiptos” in Rom 1:9; 2Ti 1:3; and 1Th 5:17, directly of prayer; and in 1Th 1:3 of his remembrance (in thanksgiving) of the faith and love of these same Thessalonians.

“Ye received it not as the word of men, but as it is in truth the word of God”: “You didn’t just take our word for it; you took it as God’s word!” Paul was accustomed (as many preachers of the Word have been since) to having his message dismissed as man-made, merely something devised by himself:

“But I certify you, brethren, that the gospel which was preached of me is not after man. For I neither received it of man, neither was I taught it, but by the revelation of Jesus Christ” (Gal 1:11,12).

But to the Thessalonians Paul’s words came with power and conviction (1Th 1:5,6), and they knew and believed that God was the source.

“Which effectively worketh also in you that believe”: In this case it is precisely the “word” that works, not God. Or, more accurately, God works through His word. This idea of a word or a message having an active power (an “energizing” influence) of its own, is common in both the Old Testament and the New Testament:

“And he hath made my mouth like a sharp sword…” (Isa 49:2).

“For as the rain cometh down, and the snow from heaven, and returneth not thither, but watereth the earth, and maketh it bring forth and bud, that it may give seed to the sower, and bread to the eater: so shall My word be that goeth forth out of my mouth: it shall not return unto me void, but it shall accomplish that which I please, and it shall prosper in the thing whereto I sent it” (Isa 55:10,11).

“Is not my word like as a fire? saith the Lord; and like a hammer that breaketh the rock in pieces?” (Jeremiah 23:29).

“The sword of the Spirit, which is the word of God” (Eph 6:17).

“For the word of God is quick, and powerful, and sharper than any two edged sword, piercing even to the dividing asunder of soul and spirit, and of the joints and marrow, and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart” (Heb 4:12).

This personification of the word of God progressed to the final stage in the advent of Jesus, the word of God made flesh (John 1:14). In the New Testament the two ideas, of God’s energizing word in us and of “Christ in us” (Rom 8:10; Eph 3.17; Col 1:27), become practically interchangeable. It is brought about by the spoken and written word of God, believed and acted upon.

The verb “energeo” is used mostly in the New Testament of the direct or indirect influence of God or His Spirit (1Co 12:6,11; Gal 2:8; 3:5; Eph 1:11,20; 3:20; Phi 2;13; Col 1:29), and also of the word of God (here) and the faith it produces (Gal 5:6). The word describes not so much the labor itself as the energizing power by which the labor is done. The believer does not go on “automatic pilot” when God comes into his life; he must still labor himself. But now he finds a new energy, a new strength, from God and His word to enable him to do things he would previously have considered impossible. Thus Paul can write without contradiction:

work out your own salvation… for it is God which worketh in you” (Phi 2:12,13).

The labor (“katergazomoi”), the intensive effort is ours (v 12). But the energizing influence (“energeo”), the motivation and the power, comes from God (v 13). God and man have become “laborers together” (1Co 3:9; cp Eph 2:10).

v. 14 “Followers”: “Imitators” (NIV), as in 1Th 1:6. In their endurance of persecution the Thessalonians had become imitators of the Judean ecclesias now being scattered abroad by their enemies (Acts 9:31). This implies more than a passive acceptance of suffering; the believers went forward to meet their sufferings with steadfast faith and courage, and rejoiced in this unique fellowship with their brethren in Israel.

It may be noted, incidentally, how favorably Paul speaks of the ecclesias in and around Jerusalem. This Paul is not the anti-Jewish schismatic that some modern scholars and critics would imply.

“For ye also have suffered like things of your own countrymen, even as they have of the Jews”: “Countrymen” (Greek “symphyletes”) means those of the same ethnic group, not the same geographical location. This would imply (as discussed elsewhere) that the Thessalonian church was predominantly Gentile (cp 1Th 1:9,10), and furthermore (despite the evidence of Acts 17:5-9) that their persecutors were likewise predominantly Gentile. It would have been thoroughly in character for Jewish enemies of the Truth to take the initiative in opposition, but then to shrewdly stand aside while certain base Gentile elements carried on what they had begun.

v. 15 “Who both killed the Lord Jesus”: Thus Paul reserves his most severe denunciations for the Jews, who were the instigators of the death of Jesus also (John 19:16) although Gentile hands were not altogether clean in the matter (Acts 4:25-28). By “Jews” (v 14) Paul would seem to have in mind (as did John generally in his gospel) the chief priests and rulers and other leaders of Israel. But the other men of Israel, wherever they lived, could scarcely escape all responsibility, as Peter makes plain on the day of Pentecost:

“Ye men of Israel, (‘out of every nation under heaven’ — v 5!)… ye have taken (Jesus), and by wicked hands have crucified and slain (him)” (Acts 2:22,23; cp v 36 also).

Noting the unmistakable bitterness of this passage, we must remind ourselves again that Paul was renowned for his sacrificial desire to see the salvation of his countrymen (Rom 9:1-3; 10:1), regardless of how much he had suffered personally at their hands (2Co 11:24,26).

Perhaps we may appreciate why, at this point especially in his work, Paul could speak so grimly of the Jews. He had been chased out of Damascus (Acts 9:23-25) and Jerusalem (Acts 9:29,30), by his own people not very long after his conversion. His message had been rejected and he had been driven out of Antioch in Pisidia (Acts 13:45,46,50). At Iconium the Jews had poisoned people’s minds against Paul and Barnabas and ultimately forced them out (Acts 14:2,5,6). They had journeyed to Lystra especially to instigate a riot that produced Paul’s stoning and left him as good as dead (Acts 14:19). Jewish opposition had continued to hound him even into Europe, forcing him to leave these very believers in Thessalonica against his will (Acts 17:5,10). Even as Paul writes these words from Corinth, a united attack has been mounted against him by the Jews of the city (Acts 18:6,12,13). Considering the present plight of the Thessalonian believers (1Th 3:3), ultimately traceable to Jewish enemies, it is no wonder that Paul is at this time moved to an uncharacteristic mention of Jewish stubbornness and rebellion, and of their coming punishment.

“And their own prophets”: The killing of Jesus was but the logical conclusion to the killing of those earlier prophets, who by their words and lives had foretold his coming. (So Stephen argued just before his own death — Acts 7:52.) Such a thought was certainly behind the words of Jesus, who mourned over the city:

“O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, thou that killest the prophets, and stonest them which are sent unto thee” (Mat 23:37).

for it cannot be that a prophet perish out of Jerusalem” (Luke 13:33).

And he addressed the Jews again:

“Woe unto you! for ye build the sepulchres of the prophets, and your fathers killed them. Truly ye bear witness that ye allow the deeds of your fathers…” (Luke 11:47,48).

So intent were the religious Jews upon preserving the traditions of their fathers that they fought tooth and nail against anything and anyone in any way different and challenging. This was also what their fathers had done when challenged by the prophets. Such inflexibility of mind renders men incapable of hearing the message of God, of examining themselves, and of repenting. Thus they cling to traditions that have the outward appearance of religion, but never come to grips with the “weightier matters.” The same frame of mind that would slavishly revere dead prophets would just as easily kill contemporary prophets.

“And have persecuted us”: Literally, “and also drove us out” (NIV), perhaps with special reference to the recent expulsion of Paul and his friends from Thessalonica (Acts 17:5-10) and then from Berea (vv 13,14).

“They please not God, and are contrary to all men”: An exclamation: “How much they displease God! How contrary they are to all men!” The word “contrary” (“enantios”) is commonly applied to the winds (Acts 27:4; Mark 6:48; Matt 14:24). It is used of the Jews as though their hatred of Jesus and his followers was an unreasoning force of nature.

v. 16 “Forbidding us to speak to the Gentiles that they might be saved… In their effort to keep us from speaking…” (NIV).

Some translations add this to v 15, thus explaining how the Jews showed themselves contrary or hostile to all men. This opposition was very much in the spirit of the Pharisees, of whom Jesus said “ye shut up the Kingdom of heaven against men: for ye neither go in yourselves, neither suffer ye them that are entering to go in” (Mat 23:13).

“To fill up their sins alway”: Their cup of guilt was already well on the way to being filled, and their present conduct was continually raising the level toward the brim. This vivid figure of speech is found throughout Scripture. In the days of Abraham the promised inheritance of the land was held back for 400 years because “the iniquity of the Amorites is not yet full” (Gen 15:16; cp Dan 8:23). But now, worse by far than those brutal, sensual Canaanites, these Jewish adversaries of their own God and their Lord Jesus are determined to fill up the measures of their iniquity in a tenth of the time:

“Fill ye up then the measure of your fathers… that upon you may come all the righteous blood shed upon the earth… Verily I say unto you. All these things shall come upon this generation” (Mat 23:32,35,36).

In Biblical symbolism, the cup of sin when at last full (with the blood of God’s people? — Rev 6:11; 17:6) becomes a cup of punishment, from which the sinner must drink (Isa 51:17; Jer 25:15-28: 51:7; Eze 23: 31-34; Rev 14:10; 16:19; 17:4; 18:6).

“For the wrath is come upon them to the uttermost”: The “wrath” is another allusion to Matthew’s Gospel (of which 1Th has many), ie, the words of John the Baptist to the Pharisees and Sadducees:

“O generation of vipers, who hath warned you to flee from the wrath to come?” (Mat 3:7).

If the wrath is yet future when Paul writes (cp 1Th 1:10), why does he speak of it as happening in the past: “the wrath has come upon” (NIV)? There are two other Biblical instances of this same form of this verb (“phano epi” — has come upon); in both of these (Mat 12.28; Luke 11:20) Jesus speaks of the coming of the Kingdom of God. In one sense, as Jesus expressed it, the “Kingdom” had come: he had brought it near in his person. In another sense, the Kingdom has not come even yet. And so it is equally true of the wrath of God: it is near and certain for those who do not repent, but it has not yet come upon them in actual fact.

Is this whole phrase a quotation of 2Ch 36:16?:

but they mocked the messengers of God, and despised his words, and misused his prophets, until the wrath of the LORD arose against his people, till there was no remedy.”

“To the uttermost”: “Eis telos”: either “at last” (NIV) or “fully” (NIV margin).

ADDITIONAL NOTES

Verses 14 and 15 are perhaps one of the most severe condemnations uttered by Paul in all his letters, and it has been suggested by some that it might be an interpolation. Although these verses may seem harsh, it cannot be doubted that Paul had ample justification for speaking as he did. No one suffered more at the hands of the Jews in the preaching of the gospel but no one showed greater determination to take the gospel far and wide whatever the opposition might be.

He warns the Thessalonians of the great lengths to which the Jews will go to stop the spread of the new faith (v 16). But nothing could prevent the message going forth to the Gentiles, as Paul and Barnabas had told the Jews at Antioch:

“For so hath the Lord commanded us, saying, I have set thee to be a light of the Gentiles, That thou shouldest be for salvation unto the ends of the earth” (Acts 13:47).

That the apostles were true to this commandment from Christ is borne out in the simple statement of Luke:

“And the word of the Lord was published throughout all the region” (v 49).

Nevertheless their persecutors continued on their wicked way:

“But the Jews stirred up the devout and honorable women, and the chief men of the city, and raised persecution against Paul and Barnabas, and expelled them out of their coasts” (v 50).


Verse 13 is a marvelous verse. All that a man needs to do is to accept the Bible, truly, as the word of God, and it will assuredly get to work in him and on him, effectively!

The attitude which a man chooses to adopt toward the word of God therefore determines his eternal destiny. Man is a free agent either to obey or to ignore the word of God. But God is not mocked, and the treatment that a man accords to His word is the basis of His treatment of him:

“But unto the wicked God saith, What hast thou to do to declare my statutes, Or that thou shouldest take my covenant in thy mouth? Seeing thou hatest instruction, and easiest my words behind thee” (Psa 50:16,17).

“He that rejecteth me, and receiveth not my words, hath one that judgeth him: the word that I have spoken, the same shall judge him in the last day” (John 12:48).

God works effectively through His word; that word, believed and acted upon, can change lives and save men, all to His glory. The word of God is the word of “faith” (Rom 10:8), “grace” (Acts 20:32), “truth” (2Ti 2:15; James 1:18), “life” (Phi 2:16), “righteousness” (Heb 5:13), “reconciliation” (2Co 5:19), “promise” (Rom 9:9), “power” (Heb 1:3), and “salvation” (Acts 13:26).

The word of God can provide all that is essential to salvation. It enlightens (Psa 119:130), converts (Psa 19:7), convinces (2Ti 3:16), and teaches (Psa 119:99; 2Ti 3:16). It makes alive (Psa 119:99; John 15:3), washes (Eph 5:26), sanctifies (John 17:17), and dwells (Col 3:16). It prospers (Isa 55:11), bears fruit (Mat 13:23), exhorts (Heb 13:22), and builds up (Acts 20:32). It guides (Psa 119:105), strengthens against sin (Psa 119:11), and endures (1Pe 1:23). It corrects (2Ti 3:16) and judges (John 12:48). Truly then it “works effectually “in those who believe (1Th 2:13). All things considered, is there then any necessity for believers to experience wonder-working Holy Spirit power in order to be saved?


We have noticed already some contacts between this section of 1 Thessalonians and the words of Jesus against the Scribes and Pharisees in Matthew 23. We now bring all these together:

1Th 2:14-16

Mat 23

Ye also have suffered like things of your own countrymen, even as they have of the Jews: who both killed the Lord Jesus, and their own prophets…

Wherefore ye be witnesses unto yourselves, that ye are the children of them which kill the prophets (v 31)

and have persecuted us; and they please not God, and are contrary to all men…

…some of them ye shall kill and crucify; and some of them shall ye scourge in the synagogues, and persecute them from city to city (v 34)

forbidding us to speak to the Gentiles that they might be saved…

…Ye shut up the kingdom of heaven against men: for ye neither go in yourselves, neither suffer ye them that are entering to go in (v 13)

to fill up their sins always…

Fill ye up then the measure of your fathers (v 32)

for the wrath is come upon them to the uttermost.

…upon you may come all the righteous blood shed upon the earth.. All these things shall come upon this generation (v 35,36)

It seems plain that Paul had this very discourse of Jesus in mind as he wrote. It is at least possible that Saul the young “Pharisee of the Pharisees” had been present in Jerusalem more than once to hear the words and see the deeds of Jesus of Nazareth, and to hear such words of condemnation directed against himself as well as others. So here, perhaps, we have Paul’s vivid memory of that unforgettable experience which set him on the road toward repentance and true faith in Christ, which he reached at last several years later on the road to Damascus.


The Thessalonians’ sufferings under persecution lasted a long time, and so did their steadfastness. Some six years later Paul could still speak of the Macedonian believers (which would certainly have included Thessalonica) as enduring “a great trial of affliction” and yet continuing to prove the reality of their faith by “the riches of their liberality” (2Co 8:1,2). The “deep poverty” of which he spoke could well have been the result of mob violence and looting, or systematic boycott by the believers’ enemies. Elsewhere in the New Testament another group of believers is reminded how, in earlier days, they “took joyfully the spoiling of (their) goods” as well as numerous other “reproaches and afflictions” (Heb 10:32-34). Nevertheless the words of Paul would be wonderfully appropriate to their circumstances:

“For our light affliction, which is but for a moment, worketh for us afar more exceeding and eternal weight of glory” (2Co 4:17).

V. Paul’s Continuing Concern (2:17-3:13)

A. Paul’s Desire to Return (2:17-20)

v. 17

“But we, brethren, being taken from you for a short time in presence, not in heart, endeavored the more abundantly to see your face with great desire.

v. 18

“Wherefore we would have come unto you, even I Paul, once and again; but Satan hindered us.

v. 19

“For what is our hope, or joy, or crown of rejoicing? Are not even ye in the presence of our Lord Jesus Christ at his coming?

v. 20

“For ye are our glory and joy.”

NOTES ON TEXT

v. 17 “Being taken from you”: “Aporphanizo” (used only here in the New Testament) is literally to be “torn away from” (NIV). This graphic word (from which comes the English “orphan”) combines the two aspects of physical separation and mental anguish. Paul’s intense affection for the Thessalonians is manifested in an amazing mixture of metaphors: in this one chapter he is, by turns, “mother” (vv 7,8) and “father” (v 11) and now even an orphaned child!

“For a short time”: Paul’s concern for his friends was so great that only a very short time elapsed before he was making serious efforts to return to them.

“In presence, not in heart”: He hastens to explain that, though absent physically, he was still with them in heart and mind and spirit. As Moffatt puts it, “out of sight, not out of mind.”

“Endeavored the more abundantly to see your face with great desire”: “Out of our intense longing we made every effort to see you” (NIV). Practically every word in this phrase is a superlative.

There is nothing of a “token” effort in Paul’s love. He does not just “try” — he struggles earnestly to see them! He does not just “desire” — he greatly longs to be with them! (The word is “epithumia” — a fierce passion, commonly translated “lust” and used in an evil sense.)

v. 18 “Once and again”: Literally, “again and again” (NIV). Not necessarily twice only, but perhaps several times Paul had made plans to return to them.

“Satan”: The agent that hinders Paul from returning he calls “Satan”, the “adversary.” One commentator writes of this verse: “It cannot be positively affirmed that Paul here means anything more than a personification of all that is opposed to God — the hostility of wicked men, etc.” And, plainly, that is the Satan/”adversary” that Paul has in mind: the Jewish and Gentile opposition to him in Thessalonica (Acts 17:5-10), which had perhaps gone so far as to put a price on his head. It was not so much that Paul was afraid for his own safety — the man who could write 2Co 11:23-29 was used to taking risks. The concern was predominantly for the Thessalonians themselves (maybe especially Jason?): their trials were severe already; Paul’s presence in the city might so intensify their persecutors’ anger against them that their lives would become absolutely unbearable. And of this Paul could not bear to think, he loved them so much.

v. 19: The NIV translation reorganizes the phrases of this verse into a much more understandable pattern:

“For what is our hope, our joy, or the crown in which we will glory in the presence of our Lord Jesus when he comes? Is it not you?”

The “crown” is “stephanos”, the chaplet or coronal wreath awarded to the victor in the Olympic Games. The only “crown” in which Paul will glory or boast on the Day of Judgement will be the faithful of Thessalonica (and other cities — cp Phi 4:1), whom he has brought to the gospel and nurtured along the Way. This thought is similar to that expressed by Paul in 1Co 3:14:

“If any man’s work abide which he hath built thereupon, he shall receive a reward.”

The “stephanos” is used in Scripture as a symbol of victory in the fight or race of life. To obtain that crown requires personal discipline (1Co 9:25), and respect for laws set down (2Ti 2:5). The “stephanos” is a wreath of “evergreens” in the truest sense; unlike the Olympic crown it will never fade away (1Pe 5:4). It relates to the future reward (2Ti 4:8; James 1:12); but it can be snatched away (Rev 3:11).

“Coming”: The letters to the Thessalonians are particularly about the “parousia” — “coming” or “presence” of Christ (see again the Introduction). References to the “parousia” occur seven times in the two letters (1Th 2:19; 3:13; 4:15; 5:23; 2Th 2:1,8,9).

v. 20 “Glory”: “Doxa”, often translated “praise.” This would seem to be basically equivalent to the “crown of rejoicing” in v 19.

“Joy”: Compare 1:6.

ADDITIONAL NOTES

Paul’s letters to the Thessalonians add much to our knowledge of this ecclesia and of Paul’s relations with it. They also present us with an aspect of the apostle’s character which is not revealed in the concise record given in Acts. Far from Paul forgetting the Thessalonians in the strenuous work in which he was engaged, his thoughts turned constantly to these new converts, and his heart yearned to see them again. His failures, time and again, to visit them only increased his longing for them.

As in so many directions, Paul shows us here the way we should follow him. He not only preached the gospel and brought men and women into it; but, having done that, he cherished them, encouraged them, and loved them. These two works are equally necessary in our day as they were in Paul’s. Let us both preach the Word with zeal and courage, and do all in our power to strengthen and establish new converts by our loving care and encouragement. If we do this, then, like Paul, we may anticipate that lovely laurel wreath of victory: the eternal fellowship with our “children” in the Kingdom.


A brief summary of some “Satan” passages:

An angel of God

= “Satan” (Num 22:22,32).

Human adversaries

= “Satan” (1Sa 29;4; 2Sa 19:22; 1Ki 5:4; 11:14,23,25; Psa 38:20; 71:13; 109:4,6,20,29.

Peter

= “Satan” (Mat 16:23; Mark 8:33).

The “world”

= “Satan” (1Co 5:5; 1Ti 1:20).

The Roman (or Jewish?) power, as an adversary to the gospel

= “Satan” (Rev 2:9,13)

The combination of Jewish-Roman opposition to Christianity, what Paul calls “Satan” in 1Th 2:18, is alluded to again and described in much greater detail in 2Th 2:3-12 written, (or so it would seem) very shortly after the first letter. It seems evident that Paul had first in mind a system already in existence (2Th 2:7), as Acts 17:1-9 abundantly indicates.

B. Timothy’s Mission (3:1-5)

v. 1

“Wherefore when we could no longer forbear, we thought it good to be left at Athens alone;

v. 2

“and sent Timotheus, our brother, and minister of God, and our fellow laborer in the gospel of Christ, to establish you, and to comfort you concerning your faith:

v. 3

“that no man should be moved by these afflictions: for yourselves know that we are appointed thereunto.

v. 4

“For verily, when we were with you, we told you before that we should suffer tribulation; even as it came to pass, and ye know.

v. 5

“For this cause, when I could no longer forbear, I sent to know your faith, lest by some means the tempter have tempted you, and our labor be in vain.”

NOTES ON TEXT

v. 1 “When we could no longer forbear”: The verb “stego” (also in v 5) originally meant to remain watertight — as a house or a ship that does not leak. Then of course it came to mean “to contain” or “to endure”, as in 1Co 9:12: “But (we) suffer (‘endure’) all things”, and 1Co 13:7 — love “endureth all things.” When Paul could no longer endure having no news of the Thessalonians, the “roof caved in” and he decided he must send Timothy to them.

“We thought it good to be left at Athens alone”: “We” would include Silas and Timothy. It is possible Silas had already gone on some other mission, or that he left at this time — since both Silas and Timothy rejoin Paul later at Corinth (Acts 18:5). Now, with these departures, “we” becomes “I” (cp 1Th 2:18 — “I Paul”); Paul was left truly alone to preach in Athens. The city was the intellectual capital of the world, its inhabitants for the most part educated and cultured. But to Paul it was the most barren wilderness. The small results of his efforts there (Acts 17:34) prove what a forbidding place it was for Paul. For the good of the Thessalonians (and for his own ultimate peace of mind) he realized it was necessary to send Timothy to them, but this verse gives us a glimpse of what it cost him.

v. 2 “Timotheus”: see notes, 1:1.

“Minister”: “Diakonos.” The word literally means servant, and a lowly servant at that — one who waits on tables. In the New Testament the word refers to many variations of service. It is used of the following:

  1. The angels who ministered to Jesus (Mat 4:11);
  2. Jesus himself (Luke 22:22; Rom 15:8);

  3. Timothy, at a time when he would surely have been an “elder-bishop” as well (1Ti 4:6);

  4. The other apostles (Acts 1:25; 6:4);
  5. A sister (Rom 16:11);

  6. All the followers of Jesus (John 12:26; Eph 6:21);
  7. A special class of servants within the church (1Ti 3:8-13).

“Fellow-laborers”: Literally, as 1Co 3:9, this is “fellow-worker with God.” There is some question about the text at this point, and some commentators object to the idea that man can be a companion in work with God. Why being a fellow-laborer with God should be objectionable is rather difficult to see.

There are many reasons, it would seem, why we should be fellow-workers with God. Primary among these is that we, along with Christ, must work, to repair the breach between God and man — following the example of Christ himself:

“My Father worketh hitherto, and I work” (John 5:17).

Labor is needed on our part, as well as God’s and His Son’s. Also, and more to the point, in preaching and in strengthening the believers, we must work with God — because there is no one else to do it. These activities are “off-limits” to the direct physical efforts of either Christ or his angels. “Fellow-laborers with God” indeed! If we do not do this work, then who will?

Since Timothy was a mere lad at this time (cp 1Ti 4:12 — where about twelve years later he is still a “youth”), Paul speaks so highly of him so as to encourage the Thessalonians to respect his presence and his mission.

“To establish you”: The verb “sterizo” means, in the classical sense, to put a buttress or support so as to strengthen a building. It appears in Exo 17:12, LXX, of Aaron and Hur “staying up” the arms of Moses. It is used primarily by Paul of the work of “strengthening” or confirming new believers (Acts 14:22; 15:32,41; 18:23; Rom 1:11), although he well recognized that the Father and the Son were the ultimate workers in this matter (1Th 3:13; 2Th 2:16,17; 3:13; Rom 16:25-27). So “fellow-workers with God” is, after all, a very Scriptural concept.

“To comfort you”: “Parakaleo” (cp 1Th 2:11).

v. 3 “That no man should be moved”: “Saineo” (only here in New Testament) is used of a dog wagging its tail. Here it means to be tempted (cp v 5) from one’s duty by an alluring bait — in other words, to be coaxed or wheedled away from the faith by the “kind” words of former friends: “Why can’t we be friends again? Give up these weird ideas of yours — it can’t be worth it! Look at all the problems it’s causing you!”

Perhaps in our more relaxed atmosphere we tend to forget how hard the way was, and correspondingly how insidiously easy would have been the choice of surrender. In the first century all it would have meant in many cases was to burn a handful of incense to Caesar — a mere “nominal” gesture. Time and again lenient judges pleaded with the early Christians to do so, but in most cases their pleadings were met with absolute refusal. How would we have fared under the same circumstances?

“by these afflictions”: Literally, “in the midst of these afflictions.” Compare notes on “affliction” in 1Th 1:6.

“We are appointed thereto”: The word “keimai” is very suggestive. It actually applies to a sentry posted by his officer (“set for the defense of the gospel”: Phi 1:17 — Phi 1:16 in NIV), or a “city set on a hill” (Mat 5:14). The idea is of remaining steadfast and doing one’s duty; bearing up under afflictions is part of that duty, as the New Testament abundantly testifies:

“yea, and all that will live godly in Christ Jesus will suffer persecution” (2Ti 3:12).

v .4 “We told you before:” Paul is not telling them anything strange and new. Even in his short stay with them, he had emphasized this lesson — knowing, no doubt, how much they would need it.

v. 5 “For this cause”: Because of the tribulations I know you to be experiencing, I was desperate to know how you were faring.

“When I could no longer forbear”: Same word as in v 1.

“I sent to know your faith”: He wanted to learn how well they were holding on to their faith. For Paul, faith was the fundamental activity and characteristic of a believer, out of which grew everything else. He knew that there were possibilities of defection, and he wanted to be sure that their faith was still real and active to sustain them.

lest by some means the tempter have tempted you”: The Greek reads literally “how the tempter did not tempt you,” neatly implying their steadfastness. The words “tempter” and “temptation” are both from the same root, signifying to test or try. The “tempter” must be the same as the “Satan” of 1Th 2:18 — the Jewish and Gentile opposition to the new Thessalonian believers. As Jesus was led by the Spirit into the wilderness immediately after his baptism to meet the “tempter” (Mat 4:3 — the only other verse where the noun occurs), so these new believers were experiencing severe temptations very soon after their baptisms. Sometimes some of the severest trials can come upon those who are newly baptized, as soon as the newness of their conversion begins to wear off, and especially if problems impinge upon them from the world outside. This entire verse is very similar to the idea expressed by Paul when writing to the Corinthians:

“For to this end also did I write, that I might know the proof of you, whether ye be obedient in all things… lest Satan should get an advantage of us: for we are not ignorant of his devices” (2Co 2:9,11).

“And our labor be in vain”: If the Thessalonians’ faith collapsed, then truly Paul’s work would become meaningless (cp 1Th 1:5; 2:1) and he would have no “crown” to wear (1Th 2:19). The phrase “in vain” is found only in Paul’s writings. The idea of laboring in vain is found also in 1Co 15:58, associated with the thought of no resurrection; and in Phi 2:16, in a form very similar to this verse. In Gal 2:2 Paul submits his gospel before the leaders of the Jerusalem ecclesia, “lest by any means I should run, or had run, in vain”; in 2Co 6:1 he warns the Corinthian believers against receiving the grace of God in vain.

ADDITIONAL NOTES

There is a distinct parallel between Paul’s actions here and those of Jesus under somewhat similar conditions, as we read in John 16:

“It is expedient for you that I go away: for if I go not away, the Comforter will not come unto you; but if I depart, I will send him unto you. And when he is come, he will reprove (convince) the world of sin, and of righteousness…” (vv 7,8).

The Lord, being taken away from his disciples for a little while (v 7), sent the Holy Spirit or “Comforter” to his “orphaned” followers (14:18, mg.) Thus by this means he helped to make up for his absence from their midst. In like manner Paul, forced to be away from the Thessalonians for a little while (1Th 2:17), sent Timothy to be the “comforter” (3:2, same word) of the “orphaned” (2:17) ecclesia. In such a wonderful way the apostle imitated his Master in showing love and consideration for his flock.

C. Timothy’s Encouraging Report (3:6-10)

v. 6

“But now when Timotheus came from you unto us, and brought us good tidings of your faith and charity, and that ye have good remembrance of us always, desiring greatly to see us, as we also to see you:

v. 7

“Therefore, brethren, we were comforted over you in all our affliction and distress by your faith:

v. 8

“For now we live, if ye stand fast in the Lord.

v. 9

“For what thanks can we render to God again for you, for all the joy wherewith we joy for your sakes before our God;

v. 10

“night and day praying exceedingly that we might see your face, and might perfect that which is lacking in your faith?”

NOTES ON TEXT

v. 6 “But now when Timotheus came from you unto us, and brought us good tidings of your faith and charity, and that ye have good remembrance of us always, desiring greatly to see us, as we also to see you”: Notice that Timothy brought good news of their faith and love — but not necessarily of their hope! Does Paul hint here at the deficiencies which he decides to make good in 1Th 4:13-14? At this point they had just arrived (Acts 18:5; Pro 25:25) with the good news (literally, the “gospel”, as in v 2) that all is well, and that the believers in Thessalonica are holding fast the faith as they were taught (1Th 1:3). Out of great relief Paul now begins to write this letter (cp his feelings: 2Co 7:4-6). Paul expresses a great deal of personal satisfaction here. First, it was a good sign that the Thessalonians held the apostles in affectionate remembrance and longed to see them again (cp 1Th 2:17). They could hardly have had such intense longing if they had been inclined to give way under the temptations they were experiencing. Secondly, it proved to Paul that they held no ill will against him for indirectly bringing this tribulation upon them, in introducing the gospel to them. Thirdly, they were anxious to see him again, notwithstanding the wave of increased persecution which no doubt would ensue if he were to return to Thessalonica. This also would cheer him greatly.

v. 7 “Therefore, brethren, we were comforted over you in all our affliction and distress by your faith”: Since leaving Thessalonica, Paul had been rejected at Berea (Acts 17:13,14) and Athens (Acts 17:32,33) and had met with many difficulties at Corinth: hunger, thirst, nakedness, revilings, and persecutions (1Co 4:11-13; 9:12). All this had left him “pressed in the spirit” (Acts 18:5), and living in “weakness (malaria, or some other illness?) and in fear, and in much trembling” (1Co 2:3). It is possible even that malaria (or some other physical infirmity) was as much the “Satan” that hindered Paul’s return to Thessalonica (1Th 2:18) as was the persecution that awaited him there.

v. 8 “For now we live, if ye stand fast in the Lord”: Until the wonderful news of vv 6,7, Paul was a dying man (perhaps even literally so). But now he has found a new lease of life. Like John, he could experience no greater joy than to learn that his “children” continued to walk in the Truth (3Jo 1:4).

v. 9 “For what thanks can we render to God?”: The sustained thanksgiving introduced in 1Th 1:2-10 and resumed in 1Th 2:13 is concluded in 3:9 with a rhetorical question. It is as if Paul is implying, “This gift (of good news about you) is so marvelous that I can never repay God for it!” (cp the question of Psa 116:12: “What shall I render unto the LORD for all His benefits toward me?”).

The word “render” conveys the idea of giving somebody what is due to him (Rom 12:19; 2Th 1:6).

v. 10 “Exceedingly”: “Hyper-ekperissou”, a quite unusual word that means to overflow abundantly: in this case, “super-abundantly!” Thessalonica was famous for its hot springs which continually overflowed; the city had once been called after them: “Therma” (see Introduction). Paul was fond of using this figure in varying degrees; he was like a hot spring, bubbling over with warmth and love — and so he wanted his converts to be. (The same or similar words occur in v 12; 1Th 4:1,10; Eph 3:20; Rom 5:21; and 2Co 7:4.)

“And might perfect that which is lacking in your faith”: “And make good the deficiencies in your faith.” “Katartizo” is a verb signifying “to render fit or complete”; it occurs thirteen times in the New Testament. It is used of mending nets (Mat 4:21; Mark 1:19); of reconciling disputes (1Co 1:10), of preparing a person for a work (Heb 10:5); of restoring a sinner to fellowship (Gal 6:1); and of completing the instruction and character of a believer (as here; Luke 6:40; Eph 4:12; 2Co 13:11; Heb 13:21; 1 Pet 5:10). The perfecting of believers is therefore the fitting or equipping of them, not for “show”, but for service.

It is possible that, in his absence, some of Paul’s converts had gone astray in their understanding of certain doctrines, and that this fact was revealed to him by Timothy in addition to the more joyful news (see note, v 6). It might as reasonably be assumed that Paul knew of some of these deficiencies even before Timothy came to him, deficiencies in their faith due to the little time he had to devote to them originally. (In that case, we have at least an indication that new converts were not expected to know absolutely everything before baptism!) Certainly among these problems were matters concerning the resurrection and the return of Christ. Paul’s words here serve as a gentle reminder to the Thessalonians of their continuing need for further spiritual growth — a fact which he did not deny or try to “sweep under the carpet.” His words also tactfully prepare them for the remaining part of his letter.

ADDITIONAL NOTES

There can be no question that Paul loved these people more than life itself. He prays for them continually, and desires more than anything to be with them. They have suffered together, and out of that shared experience of adversity they have developed an unshakeable bond of fellowship (1Th 1:6). Surely this is the “fellowship of his sufferings” to which Paul refers in Phi 3:10.

Although Paul is constantly moving about to preach in new areas, he never abandons the ecclesias he has established. Paul at Athens and at Corinth still feels obligated to the believers in Galatia and Thessalonica. All of his ministry is marked by such concern: although he is heavily involved in the concerns of the Gentile ecclesias of Europe, he nevertheless works hard at taking up an offering for the material needs of the Judaean brethren. Paul’s faith is a global faith, an international faith that ignores (or breaks down, if necessary) the cultural and ethnic barriers that exist in the Roman Empire.

Paul’s strategy takes risks with the newly established ecclesias. It leans heavily upon faith in and prayer to the Father through the Son, and that the Holy Spirit they control can work in ways unrecognized by men to strengthen and comfort believers. Paul cannot be everywhere and do everything himself; with a reasonable view of his own limitations, he instructs and trains (and then trusts!) his assistants in the work — young men like Timothy and Titus. This benevolent responsible attitude allows them in turn to grow to their full potential, and become more useful “fellow-laborers with God.”


“Life” (ie, v 8) and “death” take on new symbolic meanings for the believer. In his struggles against sin and human adversaries he expects to “die daily” (1Co 15:31) — for he bears about in his body “the dying of the Lord Jesus, that the life also of Jesus might be made manifest” in that body (2Co 4:10-12). The believer is a continually changing compound of the old man, who is (or should be) dying, and the new man, who is continually being born or “created” (Eph 4:22-24; Col 3:8-10). And even as the physical body is wasting away day by day, so the inner man is being renewed (2Co 4:16).

The business of serving Christ intensifies the daily experiences of life. Literally everything about one’s life is now seen to hold the potential of affecting eternity. Thus we see Paul cast down and afflicted because of thoughts of problems of other people many miles away. And we then find him, in a moment, overjoyed at the good report about them. “Who is weak, and I am not weak? who is offended, and I burn not?” So it must be small “deaths” and small “resurrections” each day — for one who takes upon himself the care of all the ecclesias (2Co 11:28,29). Is this a difficult way of life? Most assuredly. But can there be any other way for a true follower of Christ?

D. Paul’s First Prayer for the Thessalonians (3:11-13)

v. 11

“Now God himself and our Father, and our Lord Jesus Christ, direct our way unto you.

v. 12

“And the Lord make you to increase and abound in love one toward another, and toward all men, even as we do toward you:

v. 13

“to the end he may stablish your hearts unblameable in holiness before God, even our Father, at the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ with all his saints.”

NOTES ON TEXT

v. 11 “Direct”: “To make straight” — a word that appears also in 2Th 3:5 and Luke 1:79. Paul prays that God and Christ may remove all hindrances (as in 1Th 2:18) to open the way for Paul to return to Thessalonica. As Paul was directed to them in the first place (Acts 16:6-10), so he prays, and confidently expects, to be directed again:

“The steps of a good man are ordered (‘made straight:’ same word in LXX) by the Lord: And he delighteth in His way” (Psa 37:23).

Though he may not fully understand, still he relies upon the unseen constraints, the “ways of providence”:

“Ponder the path of thy feet, And let all thy ways be established (‘made straight’ — same word again)” (Pro 4:26).

v. 12 “Increase and abound”: The two words are practically synonymous; thus they reinforce one another, ie, “greatly abound” or “abound more and more.” “Increase” (“pleonazo”) is used of grace (Rom 6:1); the manna (2Co 8:15) and love (here). “Abound” is the word we saw also in v 10, which conveys the delightful impression of a bubbling, overflowing spring.

“Love one toward another”: “Agape”, the self-sacrificing love that is distinctly Christian. It is the pre-eminent “fruit of the Spirit” (Gal 5:22), out of which all other aspects of Christ-like character arise. God’s sacrificial love is seen in the gift of His Son (John 3:16; Rom 8:22; 1Jo 4:9,10), which sets the pattern for all subsequent acts of love to which His children are directed (1Th 4:9). In the same way that Christ loved us, so we the believers must love one another (John 13:34). Only by their acts of love, and only in their participation in the “agape”/”love feast” of fellowship, may they show others that they belong to Christ (v 35). There is nothing more important, for love is the fulfilling of the law (Rom 13:8).

“And toward all men”: This aspect of love is perhaps one that is most easily overlooked. The love of God is basic to our lives in the Truth. His love for us is so immense and far-reaching that it seems almost “natural” for us to love Him in return. Loving our Christian brothers and sisters, as members of the same divine family, is but the next logical step, for we are all bound together in the most wonderful fellowship. However, having come this far, something inside us seems to balk at the next step… “toward all men.” Perhaps our failure here is that our perceptions of God and His work and His love are just too limited. The God who loved us when we were yet “sinners” (Rom 5:8) — and loved us so much that He gave up His Son in death — surely expects us to love all men in the same way. The God who bestows the blessings of sunshine and rain on just and unjust alike is teaching us to love even our enemies and those who despitefully use us (Mat 5:44,45).

Jesus, in perhaps the greatest and most sublime of his parables, warns us against a narrow conception of one’s “neighbor” (Luke 10:25-37). “Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself” is the second commandment, like unto the first, and like the first unlimited in its scope (Mat 19:19; 22:39; Mark 12:31; Gal 6:10).

“Even as we do toward you”: Paul refers to his own example, an indication that this verse is not only a prayer but also an exhortation. That Paul and his companions could present themselves as examples of overflowing love may seem embarrassingly bold, but it is not uncommon in his letters (1:6; 2Th 3:7-9; Acts 20:35; 1Co 4:16; 11:1; Phi 3:17; 4:9). While we would not wish to emulate Paul in what might easily appear to be — for us! — unwarranted “boasting”, still it is useful for us all to remember how the examples of our own personal lives either support or detract from the message we preach.

v. 13 “To the end he may stablish your hearts unblameable in holiness”: A man can never hope to stand “holy and unblameable and unreprovable” before God (Col 1:21-23) by means of his own efforts, no matter how dedicated he may be. But he may be “established” or “presented” (Col 1:22; Jude 1:24; Eph 5:25-27) blameless by Christ, if he “continues” (again, Col 1:22) or “abides” (1Jo 2:28) in him. The emphasis must not be on strenuous endeavor, but on thankful loyalty. Good works are a reasonable expectation from those who have been gratefully redeemed, who have already received the means through God’s grace of standing blameless in His sight (Eph 2:9,10); but good works will never be the means themselves for that standing — that can be only by “grace” (Eph 2:7,8)!

In the love and mercy of God, as revealed through Christ, we may have confidence to stand unblameable before God (1Jo 2:28; 3:20,23; 4:17); but never can we place such confidence in our own works — no matter how numerous and how commendable!

“Coming”: “Parousia” again (cp 1Th 2:19)

“With all his saints”: “All his holy ones” (NIV). We may tend too much to equate “saints” in KJV with believers only, whereas the word literally means “holy ones” and can refer to the angels. Numerous passages, both in the Old Testament and the New Testament, refer to the angels of God as the “holy ones”, or other similar designations. While some of the passages appended here may be ambiguous, it is a good principle of interpretation to be aware of the two possibilities in almost every Theophany-type passage where “hagios” or its equivalent occurs. To fail to do this is to invite unnecessary misunderstandings and complications: Deu 33:2; Psa 68:17; 89:5; Dan 4:13; 7:10; 8:13; Zec 14:5; Mat 25:31; Mark 8:38; Luke 9:26; 2Th 1:10; Jude 1:14.

III The Man Of Sin Destroyed By Christ At His Coming (2:1-12)

A. Warning against False Claims (2:1,2)

v. 1

“Now we beseech you, brethren, by the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ, and by our gathering together unto him,

v. 2

“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.”

NOTES ON TEXT

v. 1 “Now we beseech you, brethren”: This is the apostle’s introduction to an exhortation or request of great importance (cp 1Th 4:1; 5:12; Phi 4:3).

“By the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ”: Instead of “by”, read “concerning” of “about.” Paul refers to the subject at hand, which he has been discussing in 2Th 1:5-12. “Coming” = “parousia”, a coming alongside, a visible presence; the thematic word of the Thessalonian letters (see “Main Theme” in Introduction, and 1Th 2:19, notes.)

“And by our gathering together unto him”: “Epi-sunagoge”: “Our assembling” (RSV). The same word occurs as a noun in Heb 10:25, having to do with the assembling together of the church for the communion service. But this reference is “about” the return of Christ — as the previous phrase and the whole context states: “assembly”, then, must be the great assembly: the final gathering of believers (living and dead) (Mat 23:37; Mark 13:27; Luke 13:34; 1Th 4:17) to the Marriage Supper of the Lamb.

v. 2 “That ye be not soon shaken in mind”: “Soon” (“tacheos”) actually means “quickly”, or “hastily”, “Saleuo”: agitated, tossed, as by the action of strong wind or waves.

“Troubled”: “Throemai”: put in a tumult. This word is used in a similar sense with regard to the return of Christ in Mark 13:7 and Mat 24:6.

“Spirit”: Greek “pneuma” — here referring to the (supposed) “revelation” and teaching of a false prophet (cp 1Jo 4:1; 1Th 5:19,20; 1Co 14:12,32). They needed to “discern the spirits” and recognize the spurious (1Co 12:10).

“Word”: “Logos” — a word-of-mouth communication, possibly purporting to come from Paul (cp his expression: “this we say unto you by the word of the Lord”: 1Th 4:15).

“Nor by letter as from us”: The “as from us” probably refers to all three forms of forged communication: spirit, word, and letter. Judaizers had resorted to publishing their own letters of commendation for the Corinthian ecclesia (2Co 3:1); this problem was acknowledged at the Jerusalem conference (Acts 15:24). In view of the prevalent forgeries, and in order positively to prove his own authorship, Paul sent his letters by the hand of accredited representatives (2Co 2:3,4,13; 7:6-8; 8:16-24). Furthermore, he sometimes signed his letters (2Th 3:17; Col 4;18; 1Co 16:21); at least once, he wrote the whole letter himself (Gal 6:11).

“As that the day of the Lord is at hand”: The “day of the Lord” or “of Christ” is Paul’s common expression of reference to the “parousia” or visible return of Christ (1Th 1:10; 5:2). “At hand” should be “has come” (RSV) or “is present” (RV). The expression is very strong in expressing suddenness or imminence: things present as distinguished from things to come (cp usage, Rom 8:38; 1Co 3:22; Gal 1:4; Heb 9:9). It was not erroneous to teach, as Paul himself did, that Christ might soon come: Paul clearly believed himself that he might live to see that day (1Th 4:13-18), and he was no longer a young man. The error that was being foisted upon the Thessalonians was that the events immediately preceding the return of Christ had already commenced.

B. The Man of Sin Revealed (2:3-9)

v. 3

“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;

v. 4

“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.

v. 5

“Remember ye not, that, when I was yet with you, I told you these things?

v. 6

“And now ye know what withholdeth that he might be revealed in his time.

v. 7

“For the mystery of iniquity doth already work: only he who now letteth will let, until he be taken out of the way.

v. 8

“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:

v. 9

“even him, whose coming is after the working of Satan with all power and signs and lying wonders.”

Introduction

(1) THE “MAN OF SIN” IN THE FIRST CENTURY

When the leaders of the Jews sought to contain the new movement led by Jesus of Nazareth, they used every subtle form of attack they were capable of. When these failed, they had to fall back on crude methods which involved using all the organized powers of religion and state to get him crucified.

With Jesus himself out of the way they next found that the hard facts of his resurrection, and of the transformation it wrought in his apostles, showed their problem to be still unsolved.

Now open persecution only seemed to make the movement prosper more than ever. But the old resources of craft and cunning were not used up completely. And so a deliberate attempt was made to wreck the new “sect” from within. Nowhere is this stated categorically in the New Testament, but the implication of numerous passages is very persuasive:

Galatia: To the Galatians Paul speaks of “false brethren” who had secretly infiltrated the churches, so as to enslave again (to the Law) those who had been made free by Paul’s own preaching (Gal 2:4,5). These agents had apparently been planted in the brotherhood, so as to work slowly and steadily either to draw believers back to the Law or, failing that, at least to create internal dissensions that would weaken the whole community and thus its appeal to others. Even Peter was practically won over to this philosophy (vv 11-14).

It soon became obvious that Paul — intelligent and resolute — posed the greatest single obstacle to their “satanic” objectives. And so the person and the claims and the worth of this great apostle to the Gentiles must be attacked also, as part of the overall plan of these subversives.

Corinth: In Corinth these enemies had some considerable success, in characterizing Paul as weak and contemptible as to his physical qualities (2Co 10:9,10; 11:6). By contrast, the leader of the subversives, called “Satan” by Paul himself, continues to present himself as polished and personable and wise and authoritative — the natural candidate to replace Paul as the leader of the ecclesias (2Co 11:22,23)! Such a sustained campaign of character assassination called forth from Paul the unusual expedient of a prolonged self-defense (2Co 11:13 to 12:12).

Jerusalem: Even in Jerusalem lies were being systematically spread about Paul, that he was teaching all Jews to forsake Moses and all the customs (Acts 21:20,21). While not true as to particulars, it had just enough plausibility to be accepted by gullible new converts. The faceless men who sought to pervert Paul’s work and keep the first-century ecclesia in bondage to the Temple and the priests had evidently been diligently at work in Jerusalem practically from the beginning. (It could not have been Paul’s open enemies among the Pharisees and Sadducees who told such lies, since their stories would have had no chance of being believed. This campaign was plainly carried on secretly, by whisper and innuendo, in the midst of the ecclesias.)

Rome: From Rome Paul wrote to the Philippians (Phi 1:15-17) of those who preached out of envy and strife, trying to add additional affliction to the bondage Paul was already suffering. It is clear that certain “believers” were finding malicious pleasure in preaching the gospel with some special emphasis, probably — because their work would only be another source of worry and vexation to Paul. Such were fulfilling the serpent’s role, by good words and fair speeches deceiving the simple (Rom 16:17,18).

Other hints of the same organized subversion are to be found in:

Eph 4:14:

“the sleight of men” (a phrase used for deliberate cheating at games), “and cunning craftiness, whereby they lie in wait to deceive”;

Col 2:4:

“lest any man should beguile you with enticing words” — another plain allusion to the serpent in the garden.

Titus 1:14:

Titus was warned not to give “heed to Jewish fables… that turn from the truth”, preached by the deceivers of the “circumcision” group (see also vv 4,9,10).

1Ti 4:1,2:

Timothy was likewise warned of false teachers (“seducing spirits”, Paul called them), speaking hypocritical lies, and fostering undue concern for dietary matters.

Hebrews:

The entire letter is a learned and reasoned attempt to forestall drift back to the Mosaic institutions and the synagogue system, a drift encouraged by this organized call of opposition in the very brotherhood.

It is plain, then, that there was a subversive, “Satanic” element at work in the ecclesia of Paul’s day: a group (with perhaps a formidable leader) who professed faith in Christ, but whose hidden agenda called for a “return to Moses.” This group (and its leader?) claimed apostolic authority that was rightly the province of Paul and the twelve, and they worked within the ecclesia, or the spiritual “temple of God” (2Th 2:4), being accepted as believers in good standing. It might be assumed that either some of their number actually had Holy Spirit gifts (“all power and signs and lying wonders” — v 9), or else deceived the simple-hearted into thinking they did. They systematically and subtly taught the “lie”, that men could be justified only by keeping the law of Moses.

It is reasonable to suppose that Paul actually had his eye on some apostasy current in his own time, and which had already shown its hostile attitude toward him in very effective fashion (v 7). Otherwise, it becomes very difficult to explain the immediacy and seriousness with which he describes the “man of sin.” These Jewish pseudo-Christians, along with their leader “Satan” (Paul’s “thorn in the flesh?”), were imposters; while professing the gospel, they had not really “received the love of the truth” but instead “had pleasure in (promoting) unrighteousness” (vv 10,12). Paul was using every ounce of his faith and energy to hinder this destructive work (v 6), but Paul would not always be with them: when he would at last pass from the scene, the Judaizers might be expected to flourish almost without restraint (v 7).

Therefore the same Paul who hoped and prayed for the return of Christ in his own lifetime (consider 1Th 4:15, for example) could also expect that the Lord when he appeared would overthrow and destroy this wicked pretender (2Th 2:8; cp 1:6-10). That Christ did not return during Paul’s day or even during the final years of the first century is no reflection on Paul’s faith or understanding: what else should he have done except look for his Lord’s coming? And the fact is, that the first-century “man of sin” (and his adherents) will be destroyed by Christ at his coming — being raised from the dead to stand before the judgment seat.

(2) TRANSITION

The foregoing, however, can scarcely be the complete fulfillment of the words of Paul. The letters to Thessalonica are so dominated by the theme of Christ’s second coming; and the Judeo-Christian “man of sin” of Paul’s day has long passed from the scene (along with his adherents). So it is reasonable to expect that another “man of sin” will be a dominant element in the prophetic framework of the last days. There is one system, the Papacy, that is eminently “qualified” to fill this role, as the Notes on the Text which follow should demonstrate. The question remains, however: Is there a transition, and a discernible link, between the first-century “man of sin” and the Roman Catholic apostasy?

Zechariah 5 offers such a link: Some of its connections with 2Th 2 are set out below:

Zechariah 5

2 Thessalonians 2

“This is their iniquity in all the land” (v 6, RV mg).

“The mystery of iniquity doth already work” (v 7)… “with all deceivableness of unrighteousness” (v 10).

“A woman that sitteth in the midst of the ephah (v 7).

“Sitteth in the temple of God” (v 4).

“He cast her down into the midst of the ephah: and he cast the weight of lead upon the mouth thereof” (v 8, RV).

“That which restraineth” (v 6, RV)…“there is one that restraineth now” (v 7, RV).

“This is Wickedness” (v 8, RV).

“Then shall that Wicked be revealed” (v 8).

Zechariah 5 appears to be a prophecy of the evils of Judaism which were manifested in New Testament times, corrupting the early ecclesias, and which eventually became firmly established in the Roman Catholic church, along with many pagan ideas.

In its immediate context, Zechariah 5 presents a false worship in a detailed contrast to the true worship depicted in chapter 4. Zechariah 5 has the house of wicked women and unclean birds in the land of Shinar (Babylon) (vv 9,11), whereas Zechariah 4 has the true house of God, the true temple (v 9), wherein are the anointed ones (v 14) and the lampstand (v 12). In the picture of the false worship, the flying roll or scroll (v 3) is a “curse” which “declares innocent” (“naqah” — not “cut off” as in AV) those who steal and swear falsely. The dimensions of this scroll of wickedness (20 cubits by 10 cubits) (v 2) are the precise dimensions of the holy place of the temple and tabernacle, indicating again the nature of this worship: a deliberate parody of that which is true.

The scroll, then, represents wicked teaching, which releases men and women from their obligation to obey God’s laws. Such teaching, with a Jewish flavor, may be traced in the Pharisees’ use of “Corban” — a legal fiction that effectively released a man of his obligation to his parents (Mark 7:6-12). By some similar misapplication of law Pharisees enriched themselves by “devouring widows’ houses” (Mat 23:14) and swearing falsely (v 16). This same attitude was carried forward into the early church and became part of the Roman Catholic apostasy. So-called saints are alleged to have accumulated large excesses of virtue which could be transferred, at a price, to sinners. The clerics, from the pope down to the parish priest, claimed the power to excuse on God’s behalf sins of lying, stealing and so on at the confessional. Hence the links between Zechariah 5 and the Man of Sin.

Then there is the ephah (v 6), a unit of measure. This aptly portrays Judaism in New Testament times, where everything became a matter of measure, of keeping rules and regulations, rather than of developing a character pleasing in God’s sight. Again this entered the early ecclesias and became fully developed in the Roman Catholic church. Col 2:20-22 warns against making religion a matter of rules and regulations which results only in fleshly pride when they are kept. In 1Ti 4:3 Paul prophesied of the time to come when apostasy would make rules about “forbidding to marry, and commanding to abstain from meats”, these are examples of the kinds of rules and regulations which Roman Catholicism invented so that the keepers of those rules might be considered as especially virtuous. The idea of a religion of “measure” comes out in other ways too: the idea that, after attending church, the rest of one’s time is one’s own; and the idea that after a fixed sum of money has been handed over, the rest is one’s own to use exactly as one pleases.

Zechariah 5 is thus a portrayal of apostasy, not so much in its false doctrines as in its iniquitous practices. Hence its use in 2 Thessalonians as the background for the Man of Sin prophecy. It is noteworthy that in Zechariah 5 it is a woman who goes to Babylon (Shinar) and builds a house there. The connection with the woman of Rev 17 is obvious. Note also the stork, the unclean bird; the “Babylon” of the Apocalypse is “a cage of every unclean and hateful bird” (Rev 18:2).

Indeed, without trying to trace actual historical links, the essential unity of the two false systems (apostate Judaism of Christ’s day and modern Roman Catholicism) is perfectly evident:

  • Both are heavily dependent upon the sanctity (or presumed sanctity) of special places and special, “holy” buildings.

  • Both appeal to tradition and antiquity.

  • Both encourage the ideal of a spiritual “elite”, set apart and elevated above the mass of ordinary believers.

  • Both teach the doctrine of “Salvation by works.”

  • Both have specially consecrated priests, dressed in distinctive garments, offering incense and “sacrifices.”

  • Both have well-developed machinery for extorting vast amounts of wealth under religious pretence.

As the great false religious system of the first century was destroyed by divine edict (in AD 70) so the great false religious system of the Last Days will be destroyed — by Christ in his coming in power and glory.

NOTES ON TEXT

v. 3 “Let no man deceive you”: “Exapateo” = to greatly deceive. The influence of sin is deceitful (Rom 7:11; 1Co 3:18 — same word). Jesus similarly warned his followers against misinformation as to the time of his appearing (Mat 24:5; Mark 13:5).

“By any means”: “In any way” (RSV) — ie, by claiming spirit-gift powers, by a word-of-mouth report, or by letter purporting to be from us (v 2).

“For that day shall not come except there come a falling away first”: “That day shall not come” is italicized in the AV, indicating that this clause is supplied to give the sense of the text but that it does not have an exact parallel in the Greek text.

“Falling away”: Greek “apostasia” — a defection, rebellion, revolt, or apostasy. The same word is translated “forsake” in Acts 21:21, and the verb form “depart” in 1Ti 4:1. The presence of the definite article suggests as the correct translation “the apostasy” — something which Paul had already discussed with the Thessalonians.

Gentiles who never knew God might be the grossest sinners, but they could never constitute the “apostasy.” Only those who in some sense had been related to the worship of the true God could forsake or revolt from that faith, and thus become “apostates.” (Old Testament usage of “apostasia” in the Septuagint suggests a religious connotation also: Josh 22:22; 2Ch 29:19; 33:19; Jer 2:19). Paul elsewhere warns against such apostasy within the ecclesia:

“For I know this, that after my departing shall grievous wolves enter in among you, not sparing the flock. Also of your own selves shall men arise, speaking perverse things, to draw away disciples after them” (Acts 20:29,30).

Later New Testament writers suggest such apostasy was truly increasing, even in the first century (2Ti 3:1-5; 4:3,4; 2Pe 2:1-22; 3:3-6; Jude 1:17,18; 1Jo 2:18,19; 2Jo 1:7-10; 3Jo 1:9,10).

“That man of sin”: This is a Hebrew idiom describing a predominant characteristic, as: “man of knowledge” (Pro 24:5) or “man of sorrows” (Isa 53:3). The predominant characteristic of this “man” is “sin!” The Greek manuscripts vary: some have “hamartia” (“sin”); others have “anomia” (“lawlessness”). There is, however, little difference between the two, since “sin is lawlessness” (1Jo 3:4, RSV).

The papacy has consistently claimed to be above the law — being the supreme judge even of civil laws. While claiming to be the “true successors” to the apostles, the popes have, with very few exceptions, led lives of wickedness of the grossest character. The papacy has imposed grievous and unnecessary burdens on its deluded followers, and has dishonored God by teaching for doctrines the commandments of men (Jesus rightly accused first-century Judaism of the same thing — Mat 15:9; Mark 7:7).

“Revealed”: “Apokalupto” — uncovered, unveiled. Just as the “man of righteousness”, Jesus Christ himself, will one day be “revealed” or “apokalypsed” (2Th 1:7), so the “man of sin” must first be “apokalypsed.” The similarity of expressions for each suggests that the one is the rival of the other — hence, the “Anti-Christ”: one appropriating to himself the honor and privilege due only to the true Messiah (1Jo 2:18). Paul’s later words indicate this power of wickedness was already working in his day (2Th 2:7), but it had not yet attained the fullness of its power.

“The son of perdition”: “Apoleia” = loss, destruction. This apostasy is the “father of sin” but also the “son of destruction”; its fate is sealed. Judas Iscariot, the first “apostate” from Christ, is called also “a son of perdition” (John 17:12). In the Revelation, or Apocalypse, the beast which carried the harlot goes at last “into perdition” (Rev 17:8).

v. 4 “Who opposeth”: “Antikeimai” = “to lie opposite to, to be set over against.” The word is used of those who opposed Jesus (Luke 13:17), who opposed his people (Luke 21:45; 1Co 16:9; Phi 1:28; 1Ti 5:14), and who opposed true doctrine (1Ti 1:10). The Judaizers in the first century claimed to have the only way to salvation — through circumcision and the law of Moses — and they opposed and harassed and undercut all who taught the true gospel, especially Paul. Likewise, in later years the Roman Catholic apostasy claimed to be God’s exclusive chosen “church”, and opposed (even to torture and death) the “heretics” and “infidels” who dared differ publicly with it. After the invention of the printing press, the Catholics were the primary suppressors of all early Bible translations into the ordinary languages of Europe.

“And exalteth”: “Huperairo” = to lift above. The language echoes that describing the willful King Antiochus in Dan 11:36,37. The Roman system claims absolute religious supremacy, as borne out by numerous papal statements. It also claims, or at least has claimed when it was propitious to do so, absolute political prerogatives. Thus it has exalted itself above God in two ways.

“Above all that is called God, or that is worshipped”: “Worshipped” is Greek “sebasma” (cp Acts 17:23) — an object of veneration. That is, “above every so-called ‘god’ or object of worship” — ie shrines, images, and relics. Roman Catholicism has, in fact, presided over a vast array of idols — and incorporated them into its system and used them all for its own advancement.

When Catholicism has held absolute authority, no other object of worship — true or false — has been allowed. The pope himself is the greatest “object of worship”: “His holiness”, “the Holy Father”, “the Bishop of Rome”, “Vicar of Jesus Christ”, etc. He has by decree claimed sovereignty over all mankind, both in religious and political spheres. And finally he has appropriated to himself the infallibility that belongs only to the God of Heaven!

“So that he as God”: These words are not in the Greek text and are deleted by RSV, NASB, NEB, and NIV.

“Sitteth in the temple of God”: He takes his seat, or establishes himself, in the “temple” of God. The Roman Emperor Caligula attempted to set up his own image in the Temple at Jerusalem, a gruesome blasphemy that was prevented only by his death about AD 40. It may well be that Paul had this incident still in his mind as he wrote these words: a foretaste of what would yet be. “Naos” may signify the literal temple at Jerusalem (Mat 23:16), still very much in use when Paul wrote to the Thessalonians. It was upon the necessity of continuing worship at this Temple that the first-century Judaizing element in the — ecclesias made its stand. “Naos” (temple) may also signify the spiritual “temple” of believers — the ecclesia itself (1Co 3:16,17; 2 Cor 6:16; Eph 2:21). The first-century apostasy, opposed strenuously by Paul, had set itself up as an integral part of the ecclesias.

In like fashion, the Roman Catholic apostasy, which had its beginnings in the church, came at last to enthrone itself in the most “beautiful” and “glorious” and elaborate of all “temples” ever built — St. Peter’s Basilica in Rome. The Pope takes his seat in the “Temple of God” (a false claim, of course) when, gorgeously arrayed, he is carried on the shoulders of his cardinals, to the papal chair in St. Peter’s. It is from this chair only, and in this temple only, that he may make “ex cathedra” infallible pronouncements as to the faith of his millions of followers.

“Shewing himself that he is God”: “Apodeiknumi” = setting himself forth, a word in common use for the proclamation of a sovereign upon his accession, or official entry into office (Acts 2:22; 23:7). “Proclaiming himself to be God” (RSV): Taking his “seat” in the “temple” he will thus proclaim himself “God.” The intended contrast is directly to the Lord God Himself, who sits enthroned upon the cherubim (Psa 80:1; 99:1). Other rulers have tried to appropriate to themselves the worship due only to the Deity (Eze 28:2; Acts 12:21-23), but this coming usurpation, Paul says, will be even more offensive.

v. 5 “Remember ye not, that, when I was yet with you, I told you these things?”: Notice that here Paul uses “I” in contrast to his more customary “we” when addressing the Thessalonians. “I used to tell you”, suggesting that the general theme of this chapter had been the subject of Paul’s teaching to the Thessalonians more than once (cp expression, 1Th 5:1). In his first letter to them, Paul had referred to the persecuting power of the Jews even then active against their own countrymen (1Th 2:14-16); this power of evil he even called “Satan” (v 18) — a significant link with the “man of sin” (2Th 2:9).

v. 6: “And now ye know what withholdeth”: The Greek “katecho” signifies “to hold down” or “to hold fast”: “is restraining” (RSV), “restraining” (NEB), “restrains” (NASB), or “holding back” (NIV). It is used of things (1Co 7:30; 2Co 6:10) and of people (Phm 1:3; Rom 7:6; Luke 4:42). An interesting parallel, or contrast, is Rom 1:18 — where righteous men “restrain” the Truth. Paul, as the chief antagonist of the Judaizing influence in the ecclesias, was the restraining element as long as he was active.

The paganism of the Roman Empire was, for many years, the restraining element that prevented the full religious and political development of the Roman Catholic apostasy. Paul himself had benefited at times from Roman intervention into Jewish affairs (Acts 17:6; 18:6; 21:32-39).

But, of course, in either case the true “restraint” was the Spirit of God — ever active to ensure His interests are fulfillled in the world over which He bears ultimate authority (Dan 4:17,25).

“That he might be revealed in his time”: “Apokalupto” = “uncovered, unveiled” (as in 2Th 1:7). “In his time”, or “in his season” (kairos), suggests that God has absolute control of the timetable for future events, even though men may not understand how and when God will act (1Th 5:2; Mat 24:36; Mark 13:32). No wicked person, nor group of wicked persons, nor wicked system, can overstep the bounds which God has appointed. God’s sovereignty is dominant. Evil is strong, and will wax stronger in the last days; but the believer may take heart in the fact that God is always in control.

v. 7: “For the mystery of iniquity doth already work”: The Greek “musterion” means that which can never be known merely by the wisdom of men, but which is known only to the initiated (Mark 4:11; Rom 11:25; 16:25; 1Co 15:51; Eph 1:9; 3:3,4). “Iniquity” is “anomia”, which signifies “lawlessness” (as RSV). This particular “lawlessness” is a “mystery”, according to Paul, because it is masquerading as the very opposite of what it really is (that is, “the mystery of godliness” — 1Ti 3:16), and therefore is deceiving many of the uninformed.

“Only he who now letteth will let, until he be taken out of the way”: “Only he who now restrains it will do so until he is out of the way” (RSV). The “what” that “restrains” in v 6 has now became “he” who “restrains.” Obviously the true restraining influence is the Holy Spirit — which operates either directly by inspiration (as in the case of Paul) or indirectly by providential arrangement. This would be the “what” of the previous verse. The full flowering of the Roman Catholic apostasy was restrained or hindered by the power of pagan Rome, or specifically the power of the emperor — although, undoubtedly, God’s Spirit was providentially active there as well.

v. 8: “And then shall that Wicked be revealed”: Greek “anomos” = the lawless one. “Revealed” is “apokalupto” — to be uncovered or unveiled. For the third time (cp vv 3,6), the “Man of Sin” is said to have his own “apocalypse”, as though consciously to rival the coming “apocalypse” of Christ. He is more than the “enemy” of Christ; he is in fact the substitute, “pseudo”, or “anti-Christ!”

“Whom the Lord shall consume”: Most manuscripts read “the Lord Jesus.” “Consume” = “katangesei”, “slay” (RSV), “overthrow” (NIV). The word signifies to reduce to nothingness.

“With the spirit of his mouth”: With his “breath” (RSV), or by his word (cp Psa 33:6,9). “He shall smite the earth with the rod of his mouth” (Isa 11:4). “Out of his mouth goeth a sharp sword, that with it he should smite the nations” (Rev 19:15).

“And shall destroy with the brightness of his coming”: “Epiphaneia” has the root idea of splendor, and generally (four times out of five in the New Testament) refers to the second coming of Christ (1Ti 6:14; 2Ti 4:1,8; Tit 2:13). “Parousia” has been discussed considerably already (see Introduction; 1Th 2:19; etc). The Thessalonians need not fear, no matter how eminent wicked men may become. Even the most outstanding of them will be far outshone, and summarily destroyed, by the Lord of these lowly believers when he appears.

v. 9: “Whose coming (‘parousia’) is after the working of Satan”: This passage is better rendered: “The coming of the lawless one by the activity of Satan” (RSV). What is “the activity of Satan”? It is the work of an adversary. Paul uses the same language, when writing to the Corinthians, in describing Jewish adversaries who had assumed apostolic powers, disguising themselves as servants of righteousness (2Co 10:12-15). “To come by the activity of Satan”, therefore, is to disguise one’s true character.

Likewise, the Roman Catholic “Church” claims to be the Bride of Christ, showing his love and glorifying God — but all the while it is only a guise. The Catholic system is in reality the “Satan”, or “Adversary,” of all true religion — claiming divine authority where it has none, persecuting believers of all other faiths, and actively suppressing the printing, distributing and reading of the Bible.

“With all power”: A reference to papal claims and pronouncements. The history of the “Bishop of Rome” is one of continual grasping for greater authority and power and control over the lives of all his followers.

“Signs and lying wonders”: Or, “pretended (‘pseudo’) signs and wonders” (RSV). Again, the Man of Sin is seen as striving to be the rival of the Man of Righteousness, and his apostles, who were truly revealed in signs and wonders (Acts 2:22,43; Gal 3:5; Heb 2:4). Jesus himself predicted such a parody of himself would arise (Mat 24:24; Mark 13:22). Some examples of this conscious deception: alleged miraculous cures, alleged miraculous appearances and revelations, wonder workers, exorcisms of “demons”, and veneration of relics.

ADDITIONAL NOTES

The Two “Apocalypses”

2Th 1: The Son of God

2Th 2: The Man of Sin

Revealed from heaven (1:7).

Revealed in apostasy.

In the glory of his might (1:9).

In power (2:9) and wicked deception (2:9).

With the mighty angels (1:7).

With the activity of “Satan” (2:9).

In flaming fire (1:7).

Pretended signs and wonders (2:9); pleasure in unrighteousness (2:12).

Inflicting vengeance upon those who (a) do not know God, (b) do not obey the gospel, and (c) refuse to love the truth (1:8).

Opposes, exalts self (2:4); pretends to be a god, “taking his seat in the temple of God” (2:4).

To be glorified in his saints and to be admired in all them that believe (1:10).

To be slain by Christ’s appearing and coming with the “breath of his mouth” (2:8).

The parallels between the “Man of Sin” and the Serpent of Eden are many and obvious. How could it be otherwise when the “Man of Sin” is Scripturally defined as the “Seed of the Serpent?” “Like father, like son”, certainly!”

2 Thessalonians 2

Genesis 3

Deceives believers (v 3); lying (v 9); deceit (v 10); strong delusion (v 11).

“The serpent beguiled me” (v 13).

The son of perdition — or destruction (v 3).

“Thou art cursed” (v 14).

Opposes God (v 4).

“Hath God said…?” (v 1).

Exalts himself above God (v 4), as a “Satan” — or adversary (v 9).

“For God doth know…” (v 5).

Sits in the Temple of God (v 4).

Antitype of serpent, sitting in Eden — the place of God’s sanctuary (v 24).

Manifested “in them that perish” (v 10) because…

“Unto dust shalt thou return” (v 19).

“…they received not the love of the Truth”: (v 10).

Adam and Eve, given a command, disobeyed it.

“A lie” — or “the lie” (v 11).

The foundation lie of all apostasy: “Ye shall not surely die” (v 3).

Proceeding through history with Bible in hand, we recognize that the “Man of Sin” apostasy has so many Scripturally-attested descriptions that we can scarcely fail to identify it. But perhaps the pre-eminent mark of the apostasy — in all its faces — is the great lie: “Ye shall not surely die!” Virtually every ecclesia of “Christendom” repeats, in one form or another, this original deception of its “father” the serpent.

The doctrine of the immortality of the “soul” — borrowed from deluded pagans — has become the cornerstone of apostasy. This doctrine alone effectively prevents its holders from perceiving the glorious, yet simple and reasonable truth of the gospel. This one doctrine, when given its logical (or illogical!) force, distorts almost every first principle. It is surely the great “delusion!”

* * *

There have been many forerunners, or advance messengers of the Anti-Christ:

  1. Cain, the originator of religious war, who slew his righteous brother (Gen 4:4-8), when Cain’s religious deception had been uncovered.

  2. Lamech, who boasted himself even against God — so great was his power, or so he thought (Gen 4:23)!

  3. Nimrod, the first great “world-ruler”, who began the history of Babylonian power (Gen 10:8-10).

  4. Balaam, the false prophet who for material gain seduced God’s people into immorality; the “anti-Moses”, so to speak (Num 31:17; 2Pe 2:15; Rev 2:14).

  5. Goliath — the “man of sin”, closely associated with the number six, the representative terrorist, the “anti-David”, who opposed God’s Anointed (1Sa 17).

  6. Antiochus Epiphanes, the devastator of the Sanctuary of God.

  7. Nero, the great first-century persecutor of the Christians, certainly regarded as “anti-Christ” by those who suffered under his rule.

  8. Mohammed, the “false prophet”, a deceiver and “Satan-adversary” in his own right, even though hostile toward the Catholic Church.

It is evident also that the “Man of Sin” closely resembles the “Beast” of Revelation:

2 Th.

Rev.

3

The falling away must come first

17:13

17:11

A harlot will be seated on the Beast, who goes into perdition

4

He exalts himself against God

13:4,5

13:8

13:12

The world worships the Beast, who speaks blasphemies. All the dwell on the earth except the faithful shall worship it. The false prophet ensures this.

4

He sits in the temple of God, claiming to be God

13:6

It blasphemes God’s name, His tabernacle, and those who dwell in heaven.

7

The mystery of iniquity is already at work

17:5

The harlot is called mystery, the mother of the abominations of the earth.

8

The Lord Jesus shall destroy him with the breath of His mouth, and bring him to naught by the manifestation of His coming.

17:14

19:15

The Lamb shall overcome the Beast with the ten kings. Out of his mouth proceeds a sharp sword.

9

His coming is according to the working of Satan, with all powers and signs and lying wonders.

13:13

He doeth great signs, that he should even make fire come down from heaven: it was given to him to give breath to the image of the Beast, that it should speak.

10

With all deceit and unrighteousness in them that are perishing, because they received not the love of the truth that they might be saved. For this cause God sends them a working of error, that they should believe a lie.

13:14

He deceives them that dwell on the earth by reason of the signs.

Some of the references in the Revelation column relate to the actions of the false prophet, but since these are performed on the Beast’s account they are included in the characteristics of the Beast itself.

This comparison leaves little doubt that the Man of Sin and the Beast refer to the same power.

C. His Followers Deceived (2:10-12)

v. 10

“and with all deceivableness of unrighteousness in them that perish; because they received not the love of the truth, that they might be saved.

v. 11

“And for this cause God shall send them strong delusion, that they should believe a lie:

v. 12

“that they all might be damned who believed not the truth, but had pleasure in unrighteousness.”

NOTES ON TEXT

v. 10 “All deceivableness of unrighteousness”: “All wicked deception” (RSV). The Roman Catholic Church has forged numerous documents in an effort to bolster its power and authority. It has been guilty of blatant mistranslations, to justify its unscriptural practices — such as masses, purgatory, and pilgrimages. It has even distorted the “Ten Commandments” so as to accommodate the worship of images.

The phrase belongs with the final phrase of v 9: The coming of the Man of Sin is attended by Satan-like activity, fraudulent signs and wonders and wicked deception.

“In them that perish”: “Apollumi” = to loose, to destroy. Here the verb is in the continuous tense: “them that are perishing.” This is a typical phrase of Paul (1Co 1:18; 2Co 2:15; 4:3), intended to contrast with “those who are being saved.” The followers of the Man of Sin will share his fate (cp v 8), since they share his character.

“Because they received not the love of the truth”: They “gave the Truth no welcome”, in contrast to the Thessalonians themselves, who received the word of God, and allowed it to work effectually in them (1Th 2:13). “Truth” here, as elsewhere in Paul’s writings, is not to be thought of simply as an abstract moral quality; rather, it is intimately related to Jesus (Eph 4:21; John 14:6) and the gospel he preached.

“That they might be saved”: Knowledge of and obedience to the Truth of Christ’s gospel are the divinely-provided means of salvation (1Ti 2:4; Heb 10:26; 1Pe 1:22). Those who do receive the love of the Truth are saved from the vengeance to be inflicted on those who do not know God (2Th 1:8), and from eternal destruction in the grave (v 9).

v. 11 “And for this cause God shall send them strong delusion”: Literally, “a working (‘energia’) of error.” No longer would there be only an indifference toward the Truth, but now there would also be a divine, judicial influence toward error upon their hearts and minds. When men refuse to retain God in their knowledge, He may — by His own deliberate action — abandon them to their own reprobate minds (Rom 1:26,28). Of this abandonment in lawlessness Esau is one example (Heb 12:15-17). There are other similar examples, of the imposition of judgmental “blindness” (1Ki 22:23; Rom 11:8, citing Isa 29:10; cp 2Sa 24:1 with 1Ch 21:1; Exo 9:12).

“That they should believe a lie”: Literally, “the lie.” In what is practically a parallel passage, Paul writes of those who exchanged the Truth of God for the lie, and worshipped and served the creature rather than the Creator (Rom 1:25). The philosophy that essentially enthrones man as the center of the universe, and thereby displaces God from His rightful place, is to be considered the great lie — and the root of all lies, errors, and deceptions. It is related to the first recorded lie, which was an attack on the character of God — the lie of the serpent: “Ye shall not surely die” (Gen 3:4). Virtually all false religions perpetuate this precise lie in the erroneous teaching of the immortality of the soul.

v. 12 “That they all might be damned who believed not the truth”: Greek “krinos” = “judged.” Each will be judged by God, but in another sense they have already judged themselves — by knowingly rejecting the truth presented to them (cp John 3:18-20; 9:39-41).

“But had pleasure in unrighteousness”: This contrasts with their attitude toward the Truth. There was no warmth in their attitude to the gospel, no welcome, no love, not even any belief. But they actively rejoiced in unrighteousness, finding pleasure therein. Again, compare this with Rom 1:32:

“Who knowing the judgment of God, that they which commit such things are worthy of death, not only do the same, but (also) have pleasure in them that do them.”

It is in the nature of sin that, when persisted in, it ultimately deceives. Those who do not resist the impulses of sin, who are not mortified and repentant when they fail, soon find that they are unable to feel anything but pleasure in their sins. They have thus become “slaves” to sin — the divinely imposed penalty that leads inexorably to condemnation. The downward process is not absolutely inevitable, but the man who has come at last to enjoy his own peculiar sin is standing on a very slippery slope.

Dogs, cats, and pigs

“I like pigs. Dogs look up to us. Cats look down on us. Pigs treat us as equals” (Winston Churchill).

Beware the bacon tree

Back in the cowboy days, a westbound wagon train was lost and low on food. No other humans had been seen for days… and then they saw an old Jewish rabbi, sitting beneath a tree. The leader rushed to him and said, “We’re lost and running out of food. Is there someplace ahead where we can get food?”

“Vell, I tink so, “the old man said, “but I vouldn’t go up dat hill, und down de udder side. Somevun tole me you’d run into a big bacon tree.”

“A bacon tree?” asked the wagon train leader.

“Yah, ah bacon tree. Vould I lie?… Trust me, I vouldn’t go dere.”

The leader goes back and tells his people what the rabbi said. “So why did he say not to go there?” some pioneers asked.

“Oh, you know those Jewish people — they don’t eat bacon. Nothing for us to worry about.” So the wagon train goes up the hill and down the other side.

Suddenly, Indians are attacking from everywhere and they massacre all except the leader. who manages to escape back to the old Jewish man. The one lone survivor starts shouting, “You fool! You sent us to our deaths! We followed your instructions, but there was no bacon tree. Just hundreds of Indians, who killed everyone but me.”

The old Jewish man holds up his hand and says, “Oy… vait a minute.” He then gets out an English-Yiddish dictionary, and begins thumbing through. “Oy Gevalt, I made myself such ah big mishtake! It vuzn’t a bacon tree after all.

“It vuz a ham bush!”

Cockpit to crew!

After every flight, pilots fill out a form called a gripe sheet, which informs the mechanics of problems encountered with the aircraft during the flight that need repair or correction. The mechanics read the sheet and then go about to correct the problem, and finally respond in writing on the lower half of the form — reporting the remedial action that was taken. The pilot then reviews the gripe sheets before the next flight.

Never let it be said that ground crews and engineers lack a sense of humor. Here are some actual logged maintenance complaints and problems as submitted by Qantas pilots, along with the solution recorded by the maintenance engineers. By the way, Qantas is the only major airline that has never had an accident.

(P = The problem logged by the pilot.)

(S = The solution and action taken by the mechanics.)

P: Left inside main tire almost needs to be replaced.

S: Almost replaced left inside main tire.

P: Test flight OK, except auto-land very rough.

S: Auto-land not installed on this aircraft.

P: Something loose in cockpit.

S: Something tightened in cockpit.

P: Dead bugs on windshield.

S: Live bugs on back-order.

P: Autopilot in altitude-hold mode produces a 200 feet per minute descent.

S: Sorry; cannot reproduce problem on ground.

P: Evidence of leak on right main landing gear.

S: Evidence removed.

P: DME volume unbelievably loud.

S: DME volume set to more believable level.

P: Friction locks cause throttle levers to stick.

S: That’s what they’re there for.

P: IFF inoperative.

S: IFF always inoperative in OFF mode.

P: Suspected crack in windshield.

S: Suspect you’re right.

P: Number 3 engine missing.

S: Engine found on right wing after brief search.

P: Aircraft handles funny.

S: Aircraft warned to straighten up, fly right, and be serious.

P: Target radar hums.

S: Reprogrammed target radar with lyrics.

P: Mouse in cockpit.

S: Cat installed.

Dead duck, the

A woman brought a very limp duck into a veterinary surgery. As she laid her pet on the table, the vet pulled out his stethoscope and listened to the bird’s chest. After a moment or two, the vet shook his head sadly and said, “I’m so sorry, Cuddles has passed away.”

The distressed owner wailed, “Are you sure? “Yes, I am sure. The duck is dead”, he replied. “How can you be so sure?” she protested. “I mean, you haven’t done any testing on him or anything. He might just be in a coma or something.”

The vet rolled his eyes, turned around and left the room, and returned a few moments later with a black Labrador Retriever. As the duck’s owner looked on in amazement, the dog stood on his hind legs, put his front paws on the examination table and sniffed the duck from top to bottom. He then looked at the vet with sad eyes and shook his head. The vet patted the dog and took it out, and returned a few moments later with a beautiful cat. The cat jumped up on the table and also sniffed delicately at the bird. The cat sat back on its haunches, shook its head, meowed softly and strolled out of the room.

The vet looked at the woman and said, “I’m sorry, but as I said, this is

most definitely, 100% certifiably, a dead duck.” Then the vet turned to his computer terminal, hit a few keys and produced a bill that he handed to the woman. The duck’s owner, still in shock, took the bill. “$150!” she cried, “$150 just to tell me my duck is dead?!!”

The vet shrugged. “I’m sorry. If you’d taken my word for it, the bill would have been $20, but what with the Lab Report and the Cat Scan…”

V. Prayerful Preparation For Work (3:1-5)

A. Paul’s Request for Prayer (3:1,2)

v. 1

“Finally, brethren, pray for us, that the word of the Lord may have free course, and be glorified, even as it is with you:

v. 2

“and that we may be delivered from unreasonable and wicked men: for all men have not faith.”

NOTES ON TEXT

v. 1 “Finally, brethren, pray for us”: Paul had previously requested their prayers (1Th 5:25, notes), but here he is more specific as to objects. Elsewhere also he has requested prayers for the progress of the gospel (Eph 6:19,20; Col 4:3,4).

“That the word of the Lord may have free course”: By “the word of the Lord” Paul means his own preaching of it (1Th 2:13). He wants the word of the Lord to “run” (AV mg) as he preaches it, a figure of speech perhaps borrowed from the Greek games (cp 1Co 9:24; Rom 9:16, Gal 2:2; 5:7; Phi 2:16), but also reminiscent of Psa 147:15 (“His word runneth very swiftly”) and Psa 19:5 (“a strong man running a race”). In other words, Paul hopes for many rapid conversions. Paul sometimes speaks of his apostolic endeavors as “running” (1Co 9:24; Gal 2:2; Phi 2:16). “Running” is also an Hebrew idiom for a prophet eager to communicate his message from God (Jer 23:21; Eze 1:18,20; 1Ki 18:46; 2Ch 16:9; Hab 2:2; Amos 8:12; Zec 4:10; Dan 12:4).

“And be glorified”: Men are led to glorify the Word of the Lord when they see what it can do, and especially when they see it having speedy effect on its hearers. The word had also been translated “triumph” (RSV) to carry forward the figure of running in a contest.

“Even as it is with you”: Their fame had spread abroad throughout Macedonia and Achaia, so that everywhere he went the apostle heard of their spiritual progress and firmness in the faith (1Th 1:5-9). Since Paul had left Thessalonica, he had had nowhere near the same sort of success in Berea or Athens — and he was bound to remember fondly how his preaching had produced swift and solid results among the Thessalonians.

v. 2 “And that we may be delivered from unreasonable and wicked men”: The first of the two adjectives (“atopos”) signifies that which is out of place, and is used more often of objects than of men. It is variously rendered “wrong-headed”, “perverse”, “truculent”, and “monstrous.” These wicked men were probably unbelieving Jews in Corinth, where Paul was encountering opposition even as he wrote (Acts 18:5,6,12,13; cp 1Th 2;14-16).

“For all men have not faith”: “The faith”, with the definite article here, refers to the body of doctrines believed by Christians. While some who hear the faith expounded react positively, and develop faith of their own, others react only with hostility and (sometimes) violence. They “receive not the love of the truth”, but are deluded into believing lies (2Th 2:10,11), and act accordingly.

B. Paul’s Confidence in Christ (3:3-5)

v. 3

“But the Lord is faithful, who shall stablish you, and keep you from evil.

v. 4

“And we have confidence in the Lord touching you, that ye both do and will do the things which we command you.

v. 5

“And the Lord direct your hearts into the love of God, and into the patient waiting for Christ.”

NOTES ON TEXT

v. 3 “But the Lord is faithful”: The last phrase of v 2 suggests the transition: “All men have not faith. But the Lord is faithful.” A similar contrast is evoked from the same word again in 2Ti 2:13:

“If we believe not (ie, have not faith), yet he (Christ) abideth faithful.”

As God is faithful (1Co 1:9; 10:13; 2Co 1:18; 1Th 5:24), so the Lord Jesus Christ is faithful.

“Who shall stablish you”: “Stablish” is “sterizo” again, as in 1Th 3:2,13; 2Th 2:17.

“And keep you from evil”: An echo of the Lord’s prayer (Mat 6:13). The word “keep” or “guard” (“phulasso”) — which signifies military protection against a violent attack, is used of God guarding Noah through the flood (2Pe 2:5), and Jesus guarding his disciples in the days of his flesh (John 17:12). It is uncertain as to whether the last expression signifies “evil” as a general principle, or “the evil one” (RV, NIV, RSV mg); if the latter, then Paul may have in mind unbelieving Jews, the Roman authorities, or perhaps — more specifically — the “man of sin” (2Th 2:9).

v. 4 “And we have confidence in the Lord touching you”: Therefore believers need not rely on their own strength or abilities, since the Lord Jesus Christ is a sufficient and active force on their behalf. Our pride in our natural talents will lead inevitably to failure. But our faith will call forth his faithfulness to strengthen and protect us. Compare similar expressions in Gal 5:10 and Phm 1:21.

“That ye both do and will do the things which we command you”: Though it may appear outwardly that believers are solely responsible for what they do, in the divine perspective this is far from the complete picture. Thus to exhort believers to do that which is entirely against natural inclinations is not a pointless exercise, because with God nothing is impossible! For believers, their union with Christ counteracts the weakness of human nature.

“Command”: Greek “parangello” = to announce, to give a message or an order, especially from a higher military rank down to a lower. A very strong and authoritative word, used five times in the Thessalonian letters (1Th 4:11; 2Th 3:4,6,10,12) and elsewhere in 1Ti 6:13; 1Co 7:10; 11:17.

v. 5 “And the Lord direct your hearts into the love of God”: As Paul had been “directed” (same word) to them (1Th 3:11), so they would be “directed” into the love of God — so long as they remained in the faith. The Lord’s help is indispensable: the fact that Paul has complimented them (v 4) does not imply that they are self-sufficient.

“The love of God”: This could mean three different things, all possible, and probably to be considered inclusively:

  1. That they might learn to love God.
  2. That they might know fully that God loved them.

  3. That they might truly love one another, and all men after the pattern of God’s love for them (John 3:16; 1Jo 3:16-18; etc).

“And into the patient waiting for Christ”: Paul encourages them to learn patience or endurance (1Th 1:3; notes) in their trials of faith, as they wait for the return of Christ. The faithful endurance of Christ himself is to be their example (Heb 12:2,3; 1Pe 2:21-23).

ADDITIONAL NOTES

Undoubtedly Paul is preparing the ground for what will be a difficult reprimand in the section that follows (2Th 3:6-15). He does not intend to ignore the problem, and he will speak quite bluntly when the times comes. But first he carefully reminds his readers of God’s love and Christ’s faithfulness. Here there is common ground for all believers. Men who truly know and remember such exalted concepts will not be resentful or angry at faithful and searching exhortations. Neither will they respond, “We cannot do what you ask”, when they have just been reminded that it is only in the Lord’s grace and not their own will and strength that they can succeed.

Just for Fun

The book offers a light, reflective look at faith by using everyday observations and humor to highlight simple spiritual lessons. It suggests that even ordinary or amusing moments can reveal meaningful insights about God, character, and belief. Overall, it encourages readers to see faith not only in serious study but also in the small, enjoyable aspects of life.

Barney the Antichrist?

Beware the bacon tree

Cockpit to crew!

Dead duck, the

Dogs, cats, and pigs

Employee handbook

English is a funny language

English is a strange language

Gonna be a bear!

Have some peanuts!

I am my own Grandpa!

I can’t believe it’s not butter!

Merry Something, and a Happy Whatever!

Musical appreciation

The Pope and the rabbi

That just about covers it!

What is a Cat?

What is a Dog?

Who’s on first? (Abbott and Costello)

Why rednecks make good soldiers

I. Greetings (1:1,2)

v. 1

“Paul, and Silvanus, and Timotheus, unto the church of the Thessalonians in God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ:

v. 2

“Grace unto you, and peace, from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ.”

NOTES ON TEXT

The three missionaries, who had first brought the gospel to Thessalonica and established the church in that city, now address the ecclesia a second time, in terms almost identical with the greeting of their first letter (1Th 1:1, notes).

Paul is still in Corinth. Apparently, only a few months have elapsed since he had sent his first letter to the brethren at Thessalonica.