Verse 1-2
1 Thessalonians 4:1-2.
Furthermore — το λοιπον, as for
what remains to be said, in
subserviency to the important
end of your being presented
before God in the final
judgment, perfected in holiness;
we beseech you, by the Lord
Jesus — By his authority, in his
name, and for his sake; that as
ye have received of us — While
we were among you; how ye ought
to walk — If you desire to adorn
your Christian profession; so ye
would abound more and more —
Striving continually to make
advances in every Christian
grace and virtue. Here the
apostle reminds the Thessalonian
believers that from his first
coming among them he had
exhorted them to conduct
themselves in a holy manner, if
they wished to please and
continue in the favour of the
living and true God, in whom
they had believed; and that he
had explained to them the nature
of that holiness which is
acceptable to God. And the same
method of exhortation and
instruction he undoubtedly
followed in all other cities and
countries. For you know — You
cannot but remember; what
commandments we gave you —
Commandments very different from
those enjoined by the heathen
priests, as pleasing to their
pretended deities.
Verses 3-6
1 Thessalonians 4:3-6. For — As
we solemnly assured you, and
charged you to keep continually
in remembrance; this is the will
of God, your sanctification —
That, as God hath chosen us from
the rest of the world to be a
people dedicated to his honour
and service, we should not
pollute ourselves with those
abominations which are so common
among the heathen, but that we
should be perfectly holy in
heart and life; and therefore,
to mention one single branch of
the contrary; that ye should
abstain from fornication — And
every other kind of lewdness, so
commonly practised among those
who are unacquainted with the
true religion. This beautiful
transition of the apostle, shows
that nothing is so seemingly
distant, or below our thoughts,
but we have need to guard
against it. That every one of
you should know — Should learn
and accustom himself to exercise
that holy skill; how to possess
his vessel — His body; for this
word in some other passages
signifies the body, (1 Peter 3:7
:) Giving honour to the wife as
the weaker vessel. That is, as
weaker in body. (1 Samuel 21:5,)
And the vessels, bodies, of the
young men are holy. The body was
called by the Greeks and Romans
a vessel, because it contains
the soul, and is its instrument.
The apostle’s meaning may be,
Let every man consider his body
as a vessel consecrated to the
service of God, and let him
dread the impiety of polluting
it by any vile, dishonourable
indulgence whatever, or by
putting it to any base use. Or,
as some think, by his vessel, he
may mean his wife. In
sanctification and honour — In a
chaste and holy manner,
answerable to that dignity which
God has put upon it by making it
his temple. Not in the lust of
concupiscence — εν παθει
επιθυμιας, in the passion of
lust; not indulging passionate
desires; as the Gentiles — The
heathen; who know not God — To
any saving purpose; and are
ignorant of that pure and
sublime happiness which arises
from contemplating, adoring,
imitating, and having communion
with him. That no man go beyond
—
The bounds of chastity, or of
matrimony; or overreach, as some
render υπερβαινειν; and defraud
— Or, exceed toward, his
brother, in any, or in the,
matter — Namely, of which the
apostle had been speaking. Beza,
Le Clerc, and some others,
understand this as a prohibition
of injustice in general; but the
context seems to determine its
meaning to that kind of injury
by which chastity is violated.
Probably the apostle intended
here to prohibit three things;
fornication, (1 Thessalonians
4:3,) passionate desire, or
inordinate affection in the
married state, and the breach of
the marriage contract. Because
the Lord is the avenger of all
such — Will severely punish all
such gross misdeeds; as we also
have forewarned you, &c. — As I
formerly testified to you when I
preached to you in Thessalonica.
For God hath not called us — In
so extraordinary a manner, and
separated us from the rest of
the world; to uncleanness — To
leave us at liberty to defile
ourselves with any kind of sin;
but unto holiness — Of heart and
life. He therefore that
despiseth — The commandments we
give by authority from God, and
according to his will; despiseth
not man — Only or chiefly; but
God — Speaking in and by us; who
hath also given unto us — Who
are his divinely-commissioned
teachers; his Holy Spirit — To
guide us in what we deliver.
What naked majesty of words! how
oratorical, and yet with how
great simplicity! a simplicity
that does not impair, but
improve the understanding to the
utmost; that, like the rays of
heat through a glass, collects
all the powers of reason into
one orderly point, from being
scattered abroad in utter
confusion!
Verses 9-12
1 Thessalonians 4:9-12. As
touching brotherly love — That
peculiar affection which one
disciple of Christ owes to
another; ye need not so much
that I should write unto you;
for ye yourselves — Independent
of any teaching of mine; are
taught of God — By his Spirit;
to love one another — In an
especial manner, even with pure
hearts fervently, 1 Peter 1:22.
And indeed ye do it — And not
only with respect to the
brethren in your own city, but
toward all who are in Macedonia
— All the believers in that
province, relieving them in
their necessities according to
your ability. But we beseech you
that ye increase more and more —
In this divine and necessary
endowment. And that ye study —
Literally, that ye be ambitious,
to be quiet — To live quietly in
the practice of those peaceful
and humble virtues which suit
the genius of Christianity; an
ambition worthy of a follower of
Jesus: and to do your own
business — Without meddling,
uncalled, with the concerns of
others; and to work with your
own hands — Not a needless
caution; for to attend to
temporal matters is often a
cross to them whose hearts have
been lately filled with the love
of God. That ye walk honestly —
ευσχημονως, decently, as becomes
Christians; toward them that are
without — The enclosure of the
church; that they may have no
pretence to say, (but they will
say it still,) “This religion
makes men idle, and brings them
to beggary.” And that ye may
have lack of nothing — Needful
for life and godliness: more
than which no Christian should
desire, unless that he may have
wherewith to supply the wants of
others.
Verse 13
1 Thessalonians 4:13. I would
not have you ignorant, brethren
— The apostle had intimated, (1
Thessalonians 3:10,) that he
desired to make them another
visit at Thessalonica, in order
to perfect that which was
lacking in their faith. Perhaps
what he now proceeds to say was
part of what he wanted to teach
them, as not having seen it
proper when he was with them to
enter into such discoveries as
are here made. But having been
informed that they lamented over
their dead with immoderate
sorrow, and perhaps that they
hired mourners on such
occasions, and were even apt to
repine at the divine providence
for taking their pious friends
and relatives from them, he here
proceeds to give them
information well calculated to
support and comfort them in such
circumstances. Concerning them
who are asleep — των
κεκοιμημενων, who have slept;
who have departed this life. The
death of the body is termed its
sleep, because it suspends the
exercise of all the animal
functions, closes all its
senses, and is a cessation of
all motion and feeling in it;
and because it shall be followed
by a reviviscence to a more
vigorous and active life than it
now enjoys. That ye sorrow not —
Immoderately: herein the
efficacy of Christianity greatly
appears, that it neither takes
away nor imbitters, but sweetly
tempers, that most refined of
all affections, our desire of,
or love to the dead. As others —
Who are unacquainted with the
truths of the gospel. It was the
custom of the heathen, on the
death of their relations, to
make a show of excessive grief,
by shaving their heads, and
cutting their flesh, (Leviticus
19:27-28,) and by loud howlings
and lamentations. They even
hired persons, who had it for a
trade to make these howlings and
cries. But this show of
excessive grief, as well as the
grief itself, being inconsistent
with that knowledge of the state
of the dead, and with that hope
of their resurrection, which the
gospel gives to mankind, the
apostle forbade it, and
comforted the Thessalonians by
foretelling and proving Christ’s
return to the earth, to raise
the dead, and carry the
righteous with him into heaven.
Who have no hope — Many of the
heathen entertained a kind of
belief of a future state, but
that belief being derived from
nothing but an obscure
tradition, the origin of which
they could not trace, or from
their own wishes, unsupported by
any demonstrative reasoning,
could scarcely be called belief
or hope, and had very little
influence on their conduct. See
note on Ephesians 2:12. Add to
this, none of them had any
knowledge or expectation that
the righteous, or virtuous,
would be raised from the dead
with glorious, immortal,
incorruptible bodies, and taken
to heaven; neither had they any
conception of the employments
and enjoyments of that immortal
state. St. Paul’s discourse,
therefore, concerning these
grand events, must have given
much consolation to the
Thessalonians under the death of
their relations, as it assured
them that if they all died in
Christ, they should all meet
again, and spend an endless life
in complete happiness, never
more to part. In this light
death is only a temporary
separation of friends, which is
neither to be dreaded nor
regretted. Concerning our
knowing one another after the
resurrection, see on 1
Thessalonians 2:20.
Verse 14
1 Thessalonians 4:14. For if we
believe that Jesus died and rose
again — Namely, 1st, In
attestation of the truth of his
doctrine, in which he taught
expressly the immortality of the
soul, Matthew 10:28; Luke 23:43;
and the resurrection of the
body, John 5:28-29. 2d, For the
expiation of sin, and the
procuring of justification and
peace with God for the penitent
that should believe in him,
however guilty they had before
been, Hebrews 9:26; Romans
4:24-25. 3d, That he might
procure and receive for us the
Holy Spirit, to work that
repentance and faith in us,
assure us of our justification
and of our title to that future
felicity, and to prepare us for
it by inward holiness; and, 4th,
That he might ascend, take
possession of it in our name,
receive our departing souls, and
raise from the dust our fallen
and corrupted bodies, and so
exalt us to that immortal,
glorious, and blessed state;
even so them also which sleep in
Jesus — Who die in the Lord,
(Revelation 14:13,) in union
with him, and possessed of an
interest in him; will God bring
with him — They will be found in
the train of his magnificent
retinue at his final appearance,
when he comes to judge the
world, and reward his faithful
servants.
Verse 15
1 Thessalonians 4:15. For this
we say unto you by the word of
the Lord — By a particular
revelation from him. No words,
as Dr. Doddridge observes, can
more plainly assert that, in
what follows, the apostle
declares precisely what God
revealed to him, and
consequently that there can be
no room for any such
interpretation of this passage,
as supposed him to be at all
mistaken in any circumstance of
the account he gives. That we
who are alive and remain — This
manner of speaking intimates the
fewness of those who will be
then alive, compared with the
multitude of the dead. It is
well observed, says Whitby, by
the Greek scholiasts, that the
apostle speaks these words, not
of himself, but of the
Christians that should be found
alive at the second coming of
Christ: so Chrysostom,
Theodoret, Œcumenius, and
Theophylact; for he well knew
that he was not to live till the
resurrection: yea, he himself
expected a resurrection, saying
to the Corinthians, He that
raised up the Lord Jesus, shall
raise up us also by Jesus, and
present us with you, 2
Corinthians 4:14. He laboured
that he might attain to the
resurrection of the dead,
Philippians 3:11. Yet some
divines have inferred, from this
and some other places in the
epistles, that the apostles
themselves thought and taught,
that they might live until the
second coming of Christ; and
that St. Paul afterward changed
his opinion on this subject, and
admonished the Thessalonians of
it, 2 Thessalonians 2:2-6. But
this certainly is a dangerous
mistake, and highly prejudicial
to the authority of the
apostles, and therefore to the
Christian faith. Indeed, if the
churches of Christ had once
received this doctrine from
them, and afterward had
understood, even from their own
confession, that it was a
mistake, this would naturally
have led them to conceive that
the apostles might have been
mistaken also in any other
doctrine, and to suspect the
truth of all that was contained
in their epistles. This the
apostle seems to insinuate, 2
Thessalonians 2:1-2. But that
this apostle taught no such
doctrine in either of his
epistles to the Thessalonians,
will be exceeding evident, 1st,
From the following words in that
chapter, 1 Thessalonians 4:3,
Let no man deceive you by any
means, declaring them deceivers
who either taught this doctrine,
or imposed it on them as taught
by the apostles; and also having
said, in opposition to such an
opinion, that day was not to
come till there was a falling
away first, adding, Remember you
not that when I was yet with you
I told you these things? He
therefore had taught them the
contrary before he had written
either of these epistles, and,
of consequence, cannot
rationally be supposed to
contradict himself. 2d, From the
very words used in proof of this
opinion, which are introduced
with this solemn declaration,
This we say unto you by the word
of the Lord, that we who are
alive, &c., in which words he
most plainly vouches the
authority of Christ for the
truth of what he says; and
therefore, if he were mistaken,
either our Lord himself must
have erred with him, or the
apostle must vouch Christ’s
word, and his authority, when
Christ had spoken no such word,
and given him no authority to
declare such doctrine in his
name; both which assertions
overthrow the certainty and
truth of all St. Paul’s
epistles. And hence it follows
that the apostle could not
deliver this assertion in any
other of his epistles, for all
the learned agree in this, that
these epistles to the
Thessalonians were the first
epistles St. Paul wrote; whence
it must follow that he could not
deliver, in his following
writings to that church, or any
other churches, that doctrine
which he had so industriously
before confuted, and declared
very dangerous, in his epistle
to the church of Thessalonica.
The truth is, such expressions
as these, we who are alive, (1
Thessalonians 4:15,) we shall
not all sleep, but we shall all
be changed, &c., (1 Corinthians
15:51,) are not to be understood
of the writers themselves: they
are mere figures of speech used
by the best authors to draw
their readers’ attention, or to
soften some harsh or
disagreeable sentiment; without
intending to represent
themselves either as of the
number, or of the character, of
the persons with whom they class
themselves. Thus Hosea says,
(Hosea 12:4,) God spake with US
in Bethel; and the psalmist,
(Psalms 66:6,) WE rejoiced,
namely, at the Red sea, when
divided; and, (Psalms 81:5,) I
heard a language I understood
not, that is, in Egypt, though
neither were in existence at the
times when the facts referred to
happened. This figure in the
mouth of Christ’s disciples has
a singular propriety, because
all of them making but one
collective body, of which Christ
is the Head, and which is united
by the mutual love of all the
members, individuals may
consider every thing happening
to the members of this body, as
happening to themselves. We
shall not prevent — Or
anticipate; them who are asleep
— Shall not receive our
glorified bodies before them.
Verses 16-18
1 Thessalonians 4:16-18. The
Lord himself — The Lord Christ,
arrayed in all his own glory,
and in that of his Father; shall
descend from heaven — “This
expression does not imply that
the Lord Jesus will fix his
tribunal on the earth; but that
he will descend so as to fix his
seat in the air, at such
distance from the earth that
every eye shall see him, and
every ear shall hear his voice,
when he passes the awful
sentence by which their state
shall be unchangeably fixed.
This conjecture is confirmed by
1 Thessalonians 4:17, where we
are told that, after the
judgment, the righteous shall be
caught up in clouds to join the
Lord in the air.” — Macknight.
With a shout — Raised by
millions of happy attendant
spirits. The word κελευσματι, so
rendered, denotes the shout
which the soldiers of an army
used to make at their first
onset to encourage one another
in the attack; it is therefore
used with great propriety to
express the loud acclamation
which the whole angelical hosts
will utter to express their joy
at the coming of Christ to raise
the dead and judge the world.
The voice of the, or rather, (as
the article is wanting in the
original,) an archangel — He,
probably, who will preside over
that innumerable company of
angels who are to attend Christ
when he comes to judge the
world. And the trump of God —
Sounding, doubtless, with more
loud and terrible blasts than
those uttered on mount Sinai
when the law was given. Perhaps
the voice of God himself is
meant, or a great and terrible
sound made by attendant angels,
analogous to that of a trumpet.
This circumstance is mentioned
likewise 1 Corinthians 15:52,
where see the note. And as
Theodoret remarks, If the loud
sound of the trumpet, when the
law was given from mount Sinia,
especially when it sounded long,
and waxed continually louder and
louder, was so dreadful to the
Israelites, that they said to
Moses, Let not the Lord speak to
us lest we die; how terrible
must the sound of this trumpet
be, which calls all men to that
final judgment that will
determine their lot for ever!
And the dead in Christ — Those
that had departed this life in a
state of union with, and
conformity to him; who had
received his Spirit in its
various graces, and imitated his
example; shall rise first —
Shall spring forth out of their
graves in forms of glory, to the
infinite astonishment of the
surviving world, before the rest
of the dead are raised, or the
living saints are changed. Then
we who are alive — Those in
Christ who are found living at
his coming; shall be caught up —
That is, after their bodies are
changed and rendered glorious
and immortal; together with them
— Namely, with the saints now
raised, while the wicked remain
beneath. What is intended by the
expression caught up, Dr. Scott
(Christ. Life, vol. 3. pp. 1,
204) thinks shall be effected by
the activity of the glorified
bodies of the righteous. But
this opinion does not seem
consistent with the original
word, αρπαγησομεθα, here used,
which implies the application of
an external force. Doubtless
they shall be caught up by a
mighty and instantaneous
operation of the divine power;
to meet the Lord in the region
of the air — Where his throne
shall then be erected; and
there, having been openly
acknowledged and acquitted by
him, they shall be assessors
with him in that judgment to
which wicked men and angels are
there to be brought forth; and
when the final sentence is
passed upon them, shall
accompany their re-ascending
Saviour. And so shall we ever be
with the Lord — Where we shall
spend a blissful eternity ill
the sight and participation of
his glory. Wherefore — Make
these grand events the subject
of your frequent meditation; and
when your hearts are distressed
with grief for the loss of your
pious friends, or on any other
occasion which can arise in this
mortal life; comfort one another
with these words — The tenor of
which is so important, and the
truth contained in them so
certain, as being taught by the
infallible dictates of the
Spirit of God, and revealed to
us by him, from whose fidelity,
power, and grace, we expect this
complete salvation. |