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John S. C. Abbott and Jacob Abbott
Illustrated New Testament (1878)

 

¶ T H E   E P I S T L E   T O

P H I L E M O N.

[1]


      AT the same time that Paul sent his Epistle from Rome to the churches at Ephesus and Colosse, he wrote this letter to Philemon, apparently an officer of the church at Colosse, to be conveyed by Onesimus, his servant, who had fled from his master, and made his way to Rome, where he had been converted to Christianity under the ministry of Paul. The letter states to Philemon the circumstances of the case, and enjoins upon him to receive his servant again, though not now as a servant, that is, as a slave, but as a Christian brother.


 

      2. Apphia and Archippus may have been the wife and son of Philemon. Archippus is mentioned in the Epistle to the Colossians, which was sent at the same time with this.

      4. I thank my God. These words are to be connected with the fifth verse. He thanked God on account of what he heard of Philemon's love and faith, &c.

      8. That which is convenient; that which is right,--which Christian principles require, meaning in respect to Onesimus, as is explained below. [481]

      12. Mine own bowels; mine own self.

      14. Thy mind; thy consent.

      16. Not now as a servant; not as a slave. Philemon was to change entirely the nature of the relation which had subsisted between him and his bondman. (Compare Col. 4:1.) The emancipation of slaves does not at all imply their separation from their masters. Emancipation is simply the substitution of wages for stripes, as the inducement to labor. We are not, therefore, to be surprised that Paul sent Onesimus back to his former home. If the slaves of a whole community were to escape from their thraldom, it would be the wisest philanthropy to send them all back to their wonted occupations again, with the injunction to their masters to receive them, not as slaves, but as fellow-men; provided that there was a reasonable ground to expect, as in this case, that the injunction would be obeyed. [482]

 

[AINT 481-482]


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John S. C. Abbott and Jacob Abbott
Illustrated New Testament (1878)