Adam Clarke's
Bible Commentary in 8 Volumes
Volume 7
Epistle
of
Paul the Apostle to the
Philippians
Chapter
4
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Notes on Chapter 4. Verse 1. Therefore, my-beloved Because ye have this armor, and those enemies, and God for your support, see that ye stand fast in him. This verse most unquestionably belongs to the preceding chapter. Verse 2. I beseech Euodias, and beseech Syntyche These were two pious women, as it is generally supposed, who were deaconesses in the Church at Philippi, and who in some points of doctrine and discipline had disagreed. He exhorts them to be of the same mind, that is, to compose their differences; and, if they could not perfectly agree to think and let think, and to avoid all public opposition, as their dissension would strengthen the hands of the common enemy, and stumble those who were weak. But it is more likely that Euodias was a woman, and Syntyche a man, and probably the husband of Euodias; and that it is Syntyche whom the apostle calls true yokefellow in the next verse. Verse 3. Help those women which labored with me Both in the Grecian and Asiatic countries women were kept much secluded, and is was not likely that even the apostles had much opportunity of conversing with them; it was therefore necessary that they should have some experienced Christian women with them, who could have access to families, and preach Jesus to the female part of them. The apostle tells us that certain women labored with him in the Gospel, and were assistants to others also who had assisted him. Some think the women here were Euodias and Syntyche; but I rather incline to the opinion that Syntyche was a male, and Euodias his wife. EUODIAS signifies a pleasant scent; SYNTYCHE, fortunate. There have been a number of conjectures who these persons were, and who is meant by the true yokefellow; but as there is nothing certain known on the subject, it is useless to propagate conjecture. With Clement also Supposed to be the same who was afterwards bishop of Rome, and who wrote an epistle to the Corinthians, which is still extant. Whose names are in the book of life. Who are genuine Christians; who are enlisted or enrolled in the armies of the Lord, and have received a title to eternal glory. The reader is requested to refer to the note on Exodus 32:32, 33, and the concluding observations at the end of that chapter, {Exodus 32:35} where the writing in and blotting out of the book of life are particularly considered, and the difficulties on the subject removed. See also on Luke 10:20. Verse 4. Rejoice in the Lord alway Be continually happy; but this happiness you can find only in the Lord. Genuine happiness is spiritual; as it can only come from God, so it infallibly tends to him. The apostle repeats the exhortation, to show, not only his earnestness, but also that it was Gods will that it should be so, and that it was their duty as well as interest. Verse 5. Let your moderation be known The word epieikev is of very extensive signification; it means the same as epieikeia, mildness, patience, yieldingness, gentleness, clemency, moderation, unwillingness to litigate or contend; but moderation is expressive enough as a general term. Moderation, says Dr. Macknight, means meekness under provocation, readiness to forgive injuries, equity in the management of business, candour in judging of the characters and actions of others, sweetness of disposition, and the entire government of the passions. The Lord is at hand. A phrase something similar to the Maranatha of 1 Corinthians 16:22: The Lord is Judge, and is at hand to punish. Schoettgen supposes, from this verse, taken in connection with the preceding, that Euodias and Syntyche were of a quarrelsome disposition; and hence the exhortation and threatening in the third and fifth verses. Verse 6. Be careful for nothing mhden merimnate? Be not anxiously solicitous; do not give place to carking care, let what will occur; for anxiety cannot chance the state or condition of any thing from bad to good, but will infallibly injure your own souls. By prayer and supplication God alone can help you; he is disposed to do it, but you must ask by prayer and supplication; without this he has not promised to help you. By prayer solemn application to God from a sense of want. Supplication continuance in earnest prayer. With thanksgiving, for innumerable favors already received; and for dangers, evils, and deaths turned aside. And let your souls be found in this exercise, or in the disposition in which this exercise can be performed, at all times, on all occasions, and in all places. Verse 7. And the peace of God That harmonizing of all passions and appetites which is produced by the Holy Spirit, and arises from a sense of pardon and the favor of God; Shall keep your hearts frourhsei? Shall keep them as in a strong place or castle. Your hearts the seat of all your affections and passions, and minds your understanding, judgment, and conscience through Christ Jesus; by whom ye were brought into this state of favor, through whom ye are preserved in it, and in whom ye possess it; for Christ keeps that heart in peace in which he dwells and rules. This peace passeth all understanding; it is of a very different nature from all that can arise from human occurrences; it is a peace which Christ has purchased, and which God dispenses; it is felt by all the truly godly, but can be explained by none; it is communion with the Father, and his Son Jesus Christ, by the power and influence of the Holy Ghost. Verse 8. Finally, brethren The object of the apostle is to recommend holiness and righteousness to them in every point of view; and to show that the Gospel of Christ requires all its professors to have the mind that was in Christ, and to walk as he himself also walked. That they were not to attend to one branch of righteousness or virtue only, but to every thing by which they might bring honor to God, good to their fellow creatures, and credit to themselves. Whatsoever things are true /osa-alhqh? All that is agreeable to unchangeable and eternal truth. Whether that which is to be learned from the nature and state of created things, or that which comes immediately from God by revelation. Whatsoever things are honest /osa simna? Whatever is grave, decent, and venerable. Whatever becomes you as men, as citizens, and as Christians. Whatsoever things are just /osa dikaia? Whatsoever is agreeable to justice and righteousness. All that ye owe to God, to your neighbor, and to yourselves. Whatsoever things are pure /osa agna? Whatsoever is chaste. In reference to the state of the mind, and to the acts of the body. Whatsoever things are lovely /osa prosfilh? Whatsoever is amiable on its own account and on account of its usefulness to others, whether in your conduct or conversation. Whatsoever things are of good report /osa eufhma? Whatsoever things the public agree to acknowledge as useful and profitable to men; such as charitable institutions of every kind, in which genuine Christians should ever take the lead. If there be any virtue If they be calculated to promote the general good of mankind, and are thus praiseworthy; Think on these things. Esteem them highly, recommend them heartily, and practice them fervently. Instead of ei tiv epainov, if there be any praise, several eminent MSS., as D*EFG, add episthmhv, of knowledge; and the Vulgate and the Itala have disciplinae, of discipline; but none of these appear to be an original reading. Verse 9. Those things, which ye have-learned From my preaching and writing; And received By faith, as a revelation from God; And heard From my preaching, and that of those who labored with me; and heard from me, in my private communications with you; and heard of me from other Churches; And seen in me While living and labouring among you; Do Take them for the rule of your faith and practice. And the God of peace He who is the author of peace, the lover of peace, and the maintainer of peace; he who has made peace between heaven and earth, by the mission and sacrifice of his Son, shall be ever with you while you believe and act as here recommended. Verse 10. But I rejoiced in the Lord Every good comes from God, either immediately from his providence or from his grace; therefore the apostle thanks God for the kindness of the Philippians towards him; for it was God that gave them the power, and directed their hearts to use it. Hath flourished again They had helped him before, Philippians 2:25; they had ceased for a time, and now they began again. This is evidently designed by the apostle, as the word aneqalete implies, which is a metaphor taken from the reviviscence of flowers in spring which seemed dead in winter. For the time in which they were apparently remiss he makes a delicate apology: Ye were careful, but ye lacked opportunity; or rather hkaireisqe, ye had not ability, ye wanted the means; as the word sometimes implies. Verse 11. Not that I speak in respect of want I am quite unconcerned in this respect; leaving the whole of my support, while bound for the testimony of Jesus, to the providence of God. For I have learned I am so satisfied with the wise providence and goodness of God, that I know whatever he determines is the best; and therefore I am perfectly contented that he should govern the world in that way which seems best to his godly wisdom. How true is the proverb, A contented mind is a continual feast! What do we get by murmuring and complaining? Verse 12. I know-how to be abased I have passed through all these states; I know how to conduct myself in each, and how to extract good from all. And he had passed through these things, especially the hardships, so that he had learned the lesson perfectly, as the word memuhmai implies; he was thoroughly instructed; fully initiated into all the mysteries of poverty and want, and of the supporting hand of God in the whole. See here the state to which God permitted his chief apostle to be reduced! And see how powerfully the grace of Christ supported him under the whole! How few of those who are called Christian ministers or Christian men have learned this important lesson! When want or affliction comes, their complaints are loud and frequent; and they are soon at the end of their patience. Verse 13. I can do all things It was not a habit which he had acquired by frequent exercise, it was a disposition which he had by grace; and he was enabled to do all by the power of an indwelling Christ. Through Him who strengtheneth me is the reading of some of the best MSS., versions, and fathers; the word cristw, Christ, being omitted. Verse 14. Ye have well done Though I have learned all these important lessons, and am never miserable in want, yet ye have done well in sending me relief in the time of affliction. Verse 15. In the beginning of the Gospel When, having preached to you, I went forth into Macedonia, I received help from none of the Churches which I had founded, but from you alone. I received nothing from any others, and nothing was offered me. Verse 16. For even in Thessalonica While labouring to plant the Church there, he was supported partly by working with his hands, 1 Thessalonians 2:9; 2 Thessalonians 3:7-9; and partly by the contributions sent him from Philippi. Even the Thessalonians had contributed little to his maintenance: this is not spoken to their credit. Verse 17. Not because I desire a gift I do not speak thus to incite you to send me a farther gift; I speak this on the general subject, because I wish you to bear such fruit as shall abound to your account in the day of the Lord. Verse 18. I have all Ye have now sent me so much by Epaphroditus, that I abound in all the necessaries of life. Having received-the things Probably a supply of clothes and such like necessaries, as well as of money. An odor of a sweet smell Alluding to the sacrifices offered up under the law. With what ye have done to me, his servant, God is well pleased. See Ephesians 5:2, and the note there. Verse 19. My God shall supply all your need As you have given to me in my distress, God will never suffer you to want without raising up help to you, as he raised you up for help to me. According to his riches His fullness is infinite; and through Christ, whose followers we are, he will dispense every requisite blessing of providence, grace, and glory, to you. Verse 20. Now unto God and our Father God is our Father in Christ Jesus; and such pity as a father hath for his children, such has the Lord for them that fear him; as a father is concerned for the support and life of his children, so is God concerned for you. A father may be poor, and unable to help his most beloved children; God, your Father, is infinite in his riches of his grace and glory, and out of his abundance we have all received, and grace for grace. Therefore, to God our Father, be glory for ever and ever! Verse 21. Salute every saint Remember to present my affectionate wishes to every Christian at Philippi. The brethren which are with me Those who were fellow laborers with him, generally supposed to be Aristarchus, Mark, Justus, Epaphras, Luke, and Demas. See the end of the epistles to the Colossians, and to Philemon. Verse 22. All the saints All the Christians now at Rome. They that are of Caesars household. Nero was at this time emperor of Rome: a more worthless, cruel, and diabolic wretch never disgraced the name or form of man; yet in his family there were Christians: but whether this relates to the members of the imperial family, or to guards, or courtiers, or to servants, we cannot tell. If even some of his slaves were converted to Christianity, it would he sufficiently marvellous. Converts to Christianity in this family there certainly were; and this shows how powerfully the Divine word had been preached and spread. That the Empress Poppaea may have been favourably inclined to Christianity is possible; for Josephus relates of her, Antiq., lib. xx. cap. 7: qeosebhv gar hn? She was a worshipper of the true God; it is not likely, therefore, that she threw any hinderances in the way of her servants who might wish to embrace the Christian faith. St. Jerome, in Philemon, states that St. Paul had converted many in Caesars family; A Caesare missus in carcerem, notior familiae ejus factus, persecutoris Christi domum fecit ecclesiam. Being by the emperor cast into prison, he became the more known to his family, and he turned the house of Christs persecutor into a church. Some imagine that Seneca, the preceptor of Nero and the poet Lucan, were converted by St. Paul; and there are still extant, and in a MS. now before me, letters which profess to have passed between Paul and Seneca; but they are worthy of neither. They have been printed in some editions of Senecas works. See the remarks below. Verse 23. The grace of our Lord The usual apostolical benediction, which has often occurred, and been more than once explained. See on Romans 1:7, and Galatians 6:18. The word hmwn, our, is omitted by many MSS. and several versions, which simply read, The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ. Be with you all. Instead of pantwn, all, pneumatov, Spirit, is the reading of ADEFG, several others, with the Coptic, Sahidic, AEthiopic, Armenian, Vulgate, and Itala; besides several of the Fathers. There are various subscriptions to this epistle in the different MSS. and versions. In the common GREEK text it stands thus: It was written to the Philippians from Rome by Epaphroditus. The Epistle to the Philippians was written from Rome, and sent by Epaphroditus. SYRIAC. To the Philippians. AETHIOPIC. The end of the Epistle; it was written at Rome, and sent by Epaphroditus. ARABIC. To the Philippians by Timothy and Epaphroditus. COPTIC.
Finished correction for the press, Dec. 16th, 1831. A. C. |