By Joseph Benson
Introduction
The City. It belonged to Thrace
until 358 B. C., when it was
seized by Philip, king of
Macedon, father of Alexander the
Great It was the place where
Marcus Antonius and Octavius
defeated Brutus and Cassius (42
B. C.). which defeat overthrew
the Roman Oligarchy, and
Augustus (Octavius) was made
Emperor. Is was on the great
highway through which all trade
and traders going eastward and
westward must pass, and was,
therefore, a fit center of
evangelism for all Europe. It
was the place where the first
church Of Europe was established
by Paul on his second missionary
journey, A. D. 52.
Paul's Connection with the
Church. By a vision from God he
went to Philippi on the second
missionary journey (Acts
16:9-12). He first preached at a
woman's prayer-meeting, where
Lydia was converted. She
furnished him a home while he
continued his work in the city.
After some time there arose
great opposition to him and he
and Silas were beaten and put in
prison, but through prayer they
were released by an earthquake
which also resulted in the
conversion of the jailer (Acts ch. 16). He perhaps visited them
again on his journey from
Ephesus to Macedonia (Acts 20 2
Cor 2:12-13; 7:5-6). He spent
the Passover there (Acts 20:6)
and received messages from them
(Phil. 4:16). They also sent him
assistance (Phil. 18) and he
wrote them this letter.
The Character and Purpose of the
Letter. It is an informal letter
with no logical plan or
doctrinal arguments. It is the
spontaneous utterance of love
and gratitude. It is a tender,
warm-hearted, loving friend and
brother presenting the essential
truths of the gospel in terms of
friendly intercourse. He found
in them constant reasons for
rejoicing, and now that Epaphroditus who had brought
their aid to him was about to
return from Rome to Philippi, he
had an opportunity to send them
a letter of thanks (Phil. 4:18).
It is remarkable for its
tenderness, warnings, entreaties
and exhortations and should be
read often as a spiritual tonic.
Date. It was written by Paul
during his imprisonment at Rome,
about A. D. 62.
Analysis. Introduction, 1:1-11. I. Paul's Present Situation and
Feeling. 1:12-26. II. Some Exhortations,
1:27-2:18. III. He Plans to Communicate
with Them, 2:19 end. IV. Some Warnings, ch. 3.
V. Final Exhortation. 4:1-9. VI. Gratitude for Their Gifts,
4:10-19. Conclusion, 4:20 end.
For Study and Discussion. (1)
Paul as a good minister, 1:3-8.
Paul's prayer for the
Philippians, 1:9-11. (3) The
choice between life death,
1:19-26. (4) Humble-mindedness
and its rewards as seen in Jesus
2:5- 11. (5) An upright
Christian life, 2:12-18. (6)
Paul's sense of imperfection,
3:12-16. (7) Worthy meditations,
4:8-9. (8) Outline the
information the book gives
concerning Paul's condition at
the time of the writing. (9)
Point out all the teachings of
the book on the necessity of
cultivating unselfishness and
the blessing derived from it.
(10) The expression of joy and
rejoicing. (11) The number of
times our Lord, under different
names, is referred to. |
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