PREFACE
This second epistle to the
Thessalonians is thought, by the
best critics and chronologers,
to have been written from
Corinth, soon after the former,
chiefly on account of some
things therein which had been
misunderstood. This appears
probable for this reason, among
others, that Timothy and
Silvanus, who joined him in his
first letter, were still with
him, and joined him in this
second. And, seeing in this
epistle he desired the brethren
to pray that he might be
delivered from unreasonable and
wicked men, (2 Thessalonians
3:2,) it is probable he wrote it
soon after the insurrection of
the Jews at Corinth, in which
they dragged him before Gallio,
the proconsul of Achaia, and
accused him of persuading men
“to worship God contrary to the
law,” Acts 18:13; we cannot
therefore be much mistaken, in
supposing that it was dated in
or about the year of our Lord
55.
The epistle begins with a devout
acknowledgment to God for the
eminent attainments which the
Thessalonians had made in faith
and other Christian graces, and
especially for the zeal and
fidelity with which they adhered
to the gospel in the midst of
persecution, 2 Thessalonians
1:1-4. II. To support and
animate them under their trials,
he reminds them of the
distinguished honour that would
be conferred on all the saints
at the coming of Christ, and the
vengeance that would at the same
time overtake all the enemies of
the gospel; assuring them of his
constant prayers for their
further improvement in true
religion, 2 Thessalonians
1:5-12. III. Lest, by mistaking
the meaning of what he had said
or wrote to them at any time
upon that subject, or by any
other means, they should be
deceived into an opinion that
the day of final judgment was
near at hand, he informs them,
that before that awful time
there would be a grand apostacy
in the church, and an
antichristian power, which he
calls the man of sin, would
arise, and greatly obstruct the
progress of the gospel,
arrogantly assuming to itself
the divine authority, and, by
pretending miracles, leading
multitudes into the most fatal
delusions. Some beginnings of
this power, he signifies, were
already discoverable; and as
soon as those restraints which
then lay upon it were removed,
it would break out in all its
force, and continue to spread,
till it should be finally
destroyed by the coming of
Christ, 2 Thessalonians 2:1-12.
IV. By these views, he is led to
express his thankfulness to God
that the Thessalonians had
escaped this corruption which
had begun so early to prevail in
the church, and had given such
convincing proofs of their
entering into the true spirit of
Christianity, in which he
exhorts them to persevere with
steadfastness and constancy,
adding his earnest supplications
for their increasing comfort and
establishment, 2 Thessalonians
2:13-17. V. He desires their
prayers that his labours might
be attended with the same
success among others as they had
been among them; and that he
might be delivered from the
opposition of unreasonable men,
expressing withal his confidence
in their continued regards to
the instructions he had given
them, 2 Thessalonians 3:1-5. VI.
He gives directions for their
conduct toward some disorderly
members of the church, who,
neglecting their proper
business, meddled in the
concerns of others. These he
exhorts to attend to their own
affairs, and to provide
carefully for their own
subsistence, that they might not
be a burden to others; reminding
them of the example he had set,
while at Thessalonica, in
maintaining himself by the
labour of his own hands, 2
Thessalonians 3:6-12. VII. If
any one, notwithstanding, should
refuse to comply with this
exhortation, he directs the
other members of the church to
exclude him from their company
and friendship, that he might be
made sensible of his fault;
concluding with his usual
salutation, 2 Thessalonians
3:13-18. It is justly observed
by Dr. Doddridge, from whose
Introduction to this epistle the
above analysis of its contents
is extracted, that “though this
is the shortest of all St.
Paul’s epistles, it is not
inferior to any of them in the
sublimity of the sentiments
which it contains, and the
excellent spirit which it
breathes. And besides those
marks of its genuineness and
divine authority which it bears
in common with the rest of these
epistles, it has one peculiar to
itself, from the exact
representation it contains of
the Papal power, under the
characters of the ‘man of sin’
and the ‘mystery of iniquity.’
For, considering how directly
opposite the principles here
described were to the genius of
Christianity, it must have
appeared, at the time when this
epistle was written, highly
improbable to all human
apprehension that they should
ever have prevailed in the
Christian Church; and,
consequently, a prediction like
this, which answers so exactly,
in every particular, to the
event, must be allowed to carry
its own evidence along with it,
and to prove that the author of
it wrote under a divine
influence.”
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