Philemon (Part 2)

The Epistle of Paul to Philemon Introduction. 1. The letter to Philemon is the shortest of Paul’s epistles and along with the epistles to Timothy and Titus, it is written primarily to a single person. 2. The occasion of the epistle was this: Philemon, a Christian brother from the city of Colosse, had a servant (v. 16) named Onesimus, who, having apparently purloined some of his master’s goods, ran away and ended up in Rome. A. Servant: A person of either sex who is in the service of a master or mistress; one who is under obligation to work for the benefit of a superior, and to obey his (or her) commands. (1) The Greek word (doulos) which is translated as servant in v. 16 means a slave or bondman (according to Strong and Thayer). (2) The same word is also translated as servant in 1CO 7:21-22 where it is juxtaposed with being a freeman. (3) Freeman: a. One who is personally free; one who is not a slave or serf. b. In later use often, one who is politically free; one not a subject of a tyrannical or usurped dominion. B. While in Rome, he providentially encountered Paul, who was a prisoner for the gospel, and he was converted by Paul to the truth. C. After his conversion, he ministered to Paul in his bonds and they became close friends. D. Even though useful and dear to Paul, being another man’s servant, Paul would not, without Philemon’s consent, detain Onesimus, but sends him back to his master with this letter in which he earnestly sues for his pardon and kind reception as both a servant and a brother in the faith. COL 4:9. 3. Even though this is not one of Paul’s doctrinal epistles, as preserved by God and included in His word, it “...is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, and for instruction in righteousness” (2TI 3:16). A. It manifests the goodness and mercy of God to a poor sinner, saving him by His grace and providentially effecting his conversion. ISA 65:1. B. It displays the effects of God’s grace manifested in an unprofitable servant who ran from serving his master but who became a profitable, willing, and affectionate servant to Paul, who converted him, and also to God. C. The letter shows the tender compassion and concern of Paul for this poor servant, who being now reconciled to God, was also now the object of his earnest labors to reconcile him to his master. D. There is comfort and instruction for Christians not to lose hope concerning those that depart from them without evident marks of grace or obedience to the truth, for God allows some to depart for a season that they should be received forever. v. 15. E. There is here a parallel to the mediation and intercession of Christ for sinners, who like Onesimus, have rebelled against the service of God until Christ finds them, and by His grace works a change in them, and mediates and intercedes with the Father for them, that they may be received into His favor, and have their past offenses mercifully forgiven. The Preface. vs. 1-7. 1. vs. 1-2. Paul was a prisoner in Rome at the time of the writing of this letter. A. It is not generally a thing of honor to be a prisoner, but in the case of Paul, he was a Philemon 4-17-11 Page 1prisoner of Jesus Christ for the faith, and for preaching the gospel of Christ. EPH 6:19-20; 2TI 1:9. B. There is no shame in suffering affliction for Christ (1PE 4:16), and God greatly used Paul as a prisoner. PHIL 1:12-14, 20, 29. (1) Some of the most powerful and enduring writings have come from believers' imprisonments. (2) Consider the influence of Paul's epistles written in Roman imprisonment or John Bunyan's epic “Pilgrim's Progress” written in the Bedford gaol. C. The intent of Paul’s letter is to move Philemon to receive Onesimus with kindness and pardon. A petition from Paul (who was also the minister that converted Philemon) as one suffering for Christ and His gospel would be graciously received and regarded by a fellow believer. v. 9. D. Paul also includes Timothy, a fellow minister and (“our”) brother in the petition made to Philemon concerning Onesimus, which would add more weight to his request. E. The letter is principally addressed to Philemon whom Paul addresses as “...our dearly beloved and fellow-labourer.” (1) Paul expresses their great affection for Philemon, calling him our dearly beloved. (2) This indicates that Timothy and Philemon were personally acquainted and also dear friends. (3) Philemon was a good man to have the affection of these two men of God. TIT 1:8. (4) Philemon is also addressed as their fellow-labourer, which may indicate that he was a fellow minister, but is also a term used of those that helped and ministered greatly to other saints. ROM 16:12; 1CO 15:58; 16:15-16; PHIL 4:3. F. Paul also addresses Apphia, Archippus and the church in Philemon’s house. (1) “Our beloved Apphia”, as Paul addresses her, is a Christian woman who may have been Philemon’s wife. She was also a dear friend of Paul and Timothy. (2) Archippus was definitely a fellow minister with Paul and Timothy as stated in COL 4:17 and because of the title fellow-soldier, which is a term used exclusively of ministers. PHIL 2:25; 2TI 2:3-4. (3) Apparently they had either a small church or a large house and Archippus may have been the pastor. House churches were not uncommon. ROM 16:5; 1CO 16:19; COL 4:15. (4) Since there was a church in Philemon’s house, it is reasonable to assume that Onesimus had contact with the truth before he ran away. 2. v. 3. Paul’s chief wish for them is that God’s grace and peace might be with them. A. This was the token in every epistle that Paul wrote. 2TH 3:17-18. (1) Paul sought the very best things for his brethren, which were not earthly blessings, but rather God’s all-sufficient grace and peace, which are given to us through Jesus Christ. 1CO 15:10; 2CO 12:9; PHIL 4:13; JOH 1:16. a. Grace is that which empowers our lives after it saves us. b. Grace is also our sufficiency in the absence of power. 2CO 12:9. (2) Peace from God and our Lord Jesus Christ is the quietness and mental calmness we can experience in our minds and hearts, whatever the conflicts and tribulation going on around us. JOH 14:27; 16:33; 2TH 3:16; PHIL 4:6-7; ROM 15:13; ISA 26:3. (3) With an abundance of God’s grace and peace, we can cope with any situation God allows into our lives. Paul is a great example. B. Spiritual well-being was of utmost concern to the apostles for their children and brethren Philemon 4-17-11 Page 2and their greatest joy was to find them spiritually prospering and walking in the truth. 3JO 1:1-4, 14; 2JO 1:1-4 c/w PHIL 1:7. 3. vs. 4-7. Paul thanks God, not Philemon, for the evidences of God’s grace seen in him which he further enumerates and also states that he specifically and frequently prays for him. A. What ever we as Christians do that is considered good in the eyes of God is because God saved us and gave us the ability to work out that which He worked in us. PHIL 2:12-13; EPH 2:10; 1CO 15:10. B. We ought to thank God for His grace and mercy manifested in us and in our brethren. 1CO 1:3-6; PHIL 1:3-6; COL 1:3-4. C. We ought always to lift each other to God in our prayers. JAM 5:16. (1) One of the greatest and most beneficial things we can do for each other is to pray for one another. (2) Paul fervently practiced for his brethren that which he also sought from them for himself. ROM 15:30; 2CO 1:11; 1TH 5:17 c/w PHM 1:22. D. Paul thanked God hearing of Philemon’s love and faith which he had toward the Lord Jesus and toward all saints. v. 5. (1) Paul thanked God for Philemon’s faith and love because true faith and love are gifts of God’s Holy Spirit. GAL 5:22. (2) Faith and love are first directed towards God and then towards our brethren. 1JO 4:7-11, 19-21; 3:23. (3) Love towards God is connected to loving the children of God. 1JO 5:1. (4) Love towards our Lord Jesus and our brethren is practiced by obeying Jesus/God. JOH 14:15; 1JO 5:3; 2JO 1:5-6. (5) Faith toward the Lord Jesus and love toward our brethren are together evidences of our eternal salvation and of Philemon’s. 1JO 5:1; 3:14. E. Paul not only thanked God for Philemon’s faith and love but prayed that the communication of his faith might become effectual by the acknowledging of every good thing which was in him in Christ Jesus. v. 6. (1) Communication: The action of communicating or imparting. (2) Communicate: To give to another as a partaker; to give a share of; to impart, confer, transmit... (3) Impart: To give a part or share of; to make another a partaker of; to bestow, give, communicate. a. The Greek word (koinonia) which is here translated as communication is translated as communicate in HEB 13:16, contribution in ROM 15:26, and distribution in 2CO 9:13. b. Mind that subjection to the gospel of Christ leads to a distribution of that faith in helping others. (4) Effectual: That produces its intended effect, or adequately answers its purpose. (5) Acknowledging: Recognizing or admitting as true or valid; owning, confessing, or avowing. (6) Paul is praying that the imparting of his faith, both the knowledge of it and its fruit, might produce its intended effect and fulfill its purpose by his recognizing and owning every good thing which was in him as he was in Christ. (7) The good things that were in him in Christ would be the fruit of the Spirit of Christ and those things that pertain to those chosen in Christ. ROM 7:18 c/w GAL 5:22-23; EPH 5:9; COL 3:12-14. (8) The communication of one’s faith would include practicing and imparting the good Philemon 4-17-11 Page 3things that are in us in Christ to others, and particularly our brethren. 3JO 1:5; GAL 6:9-10. (9) For the communication of our faith to have its intended effect, we must recognize and own every good thing that is in us in Christ. a. We will not impart that which we do not believe we possess nor will we practice it. COL 1:4-11; 3:12-14. b. For the communication of our faith to be effectual, we must acknowledge EVERY good thing that is in us in Christ. We are not to be selective in those good things of the inward man. 2PE 1:5-8 c/w JOH 15:2. (10) There is also a sense in which our faith has an intended effect when others acknowledge the good things which are in us in Christ. MAT 5:16; 1PE 2:12. (11) The acknowledging of every good thing in Philemon and the communicating of them would include receiving Onesimus with love, mercy, and forgiveness, even as Christ received Philemon. ROM 15:7. F. Paul and Timothy had great joy and consolation in Philemon’s love toward the saints because the bowels of the saints were refreshed by him. v. 7. (1) Bowels: Considered as the seat of the tender and sympathetic emotions, hence: Pity, compassion, feeling, 'heart.' 4. The interior of anything; heart, center. (2) Consolation: The action of consoling, cheering, or comforting; the state of being consoled; alleviation of sorrow or mental distress. (3) Console: To comfort in mental distress or depression; to alleviate the sorrow of (any one); ‘to free from the sense of misery.' (4) Refresh: To make (one) feel fresher than before; to impart fresh vigour to (a person, the spirits or mind, the eyes, etc.) when fatigued or exhausted; to reanimate; reinvigorate physically, mentally, or spiritually; to provide with refreshment. (5) Refresh is the same word translated rest in MAT 11:28. a. Refreshment and rest are gospel correspondents one of the other. ISA 28:11-12 c/w ICO 14:21. b. Christ and His gospel provide the “...oil of joy for mourning, the garment of praise for the spirit of heaviness...” (ISA 61:1-3). c. “Heaviness in the heart of man maketh it stoop: but a good word maketh it glad” (PRO 12:25). i. How good a word to the sorrowing sinner is the reminder that “...Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners...” (1TI 1:15) and we can “...come boldly unto the throne of grace that we may obtain mercy...” (HEB 4:16). ii. How good a word to the troubled saint is the reminder that Jesus said “...be of good cheer; I have overcome the world” (JOH 16:33) or “...the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory which shall be revealed in us” (ROM 8:18). d. Believers have enough in Christ to disqualify murmurings and complainings. PHIL 2:13-14 ct/w JUDE 1:16. e. Philemon's faith and conversation (manner of living) were a positive force in the church at his house. This was his demonstration of his love toward the Lord Jesus and the saints. v. 5. (6) Paul and Timothy publicly acknowledge and praise their brother Philemon for his Philemon 4-17-11 Page 4great love shown to the saints in his refreshing of them. a. It is not wrong nor is it flattery to acknowledge and praise a brother or a sister for their exemplary Christian behavior. 3JO 1:3-6; ROM 16:1-2; 1CO 16:15-18; 2TI 1:16-18. b. When saints minister one to another, whether it be physically, mentally, or spiritually, it is refreshing and strengthening. PHIL 2:1-2; GAL 6:2; ACT 27:3; 24:23; 20:34-35. i. Minister: To serve, wait at table; to attend to the comfort or wants of another; to render aid or tendance. ii. In this case, Paul first praises Philemon for his love in refreshing the bowels of the saints, and later in his letter asks for some refreshing himself. v. 20. iii. The manifestation of the good things that are in us in Christ and acts of Christian charity are also refreshing for those who teach the saints. 2CO 7:4-7, 13-16; PHIL 2:1-2; 3JO 1:3. The Request. vs. 8-21. 1. vs. 8-9. Paul begins his request of Philemon by entreating him rather than enjoining him, coming from the position of love and affection rather than authority. A. Paul connects his request to his praise and acknowledgement of Philemon’s faith and love as manifested in his ministering to the saints by the word “wherefore.” (1) Wherefore is a conjunctive adverb termed an illative (introducing or stating an inference). (2) Conjunctive adverbs are transition words that define the relationship between independent clauses. (3) Wherefore: Introducing a clause expressing a consequence or inference from what has just been stated: On which account; for which reason; which being the case; and therefore. (4) The reason Paul was requesting a favor of Philemon and the reason he was beseeching him (v. 10) rather than enjoining him, was because of the godly character of this man and his reputation for ministering to others. a. Enjoin: To prescribe authoritatively and with emphasis (an action, a course of conduct, state of feeling, etc.). b. Beseech: To supplicate, entreat, implore (a person). B. Paul could have used his authority as an apostle and elder to order him to comply with his purpose in writing him the letter, yet Paul would rather make an appeal out of love than demand what he considered proper and fitting. 1CO 12:28; 2CO 10:8 c/w 2CO 13:2, 10. (1) Both approaches would have the same result, but willing compliance is always to be preferred over force, even though Paul had the authority to order Philemon to do the proper thing. In this case, Paul gave the power to make the right decision to Philemon. v. 14. a. Convenient: Suitable to the conditions or circumstances; befitting the case; appropriate, proper, due. b. This is a sound pattern for everyday life: as those under authority show themselves mature in their fidelity and discernment, give them room to exercise their own good judgment appropriate to a given circumstance. c. A virtually guaranteed way of breeding frustration, resentment and rebellion Philemon 4-17-11 Page 5in children is to order their every motion throughout the entire time they are under your roof. (2) The apostles often used a more gentle approach in their ministry as apostles and elders. 1TH 2:5-12; 1CO 4:14-21; 2CO 2:8-9; 6:1; EPH 4:1; 1PE 2:11. (3) Yet Paul also enjoined or commanded in certain instances. 2TH 3:6,10-12; 1TH 4:11. (4) In the preaching of the gospel, there is seen both a commanding with authority and a beseeching appeal for love’s sake. ACT 17:30-31; 1TI 4:11; 2CO 5:14-15, 18-21. Philemon 4-17-11 Page 6

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