the Week of Proper 10 / Ordinary 15
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Bible Commentaries
Ellicott's Commentary for English Readers Ellicott's Commentary
Thanksgiving and Prayer; Paul's Imprisonment.Chapter 2
Christ's Humility; Unity; Shining as Lights.Chapter 3
Righteousness through Faith; Pressing Toward the Goal.Chapter 4
Rejoicing; Contentment; Final Exhortations.
- Philippians
by Charles John Ellicott
THE EPISTLES TO THE EPHESIANS, PHILIPPIANS, AND COLOSSIANS.
BY
THE RIGHT REV. ALFRED BARRY, D.D.
INTRODUCTION
TO
THE EPISTLE OF PAUL THE APOSTLE TO THE PHILIPPIANS.
I. Time, Place, and Occasion of the Epistle.âThe indications of the time and place of this Epistle are unusually clear. It is written by St. Paul âin bondsâ (Philippians 1:7-13); in the Prætorium (Philippians 1:13), that is, under the charge of the Prætorian guard; it sends greeting from the âsaints of Caesarâs householdâ (Philippians 4:21); it expresses an expectation of some crisis in his imprisonment (Philippians 1:20-26), and a confident hope of re-visiting Philippi (Philippians 1:26; Philippians 2:24). All these indications place it in the Roman imprisonment of St. Paulâwhich we know (Acts 28:30) to have lasted without trial or release for âtwo whole years,â and which certainly began about A.D. 61. The date of the Epistle must therefore be fixed about the year A.D. 62 or 63.
Nor is the occasion of the Epistle less obvious. The Church at Philippi now, as at an earlier time (Philippians 4:10-19), had sent contributions to St. Paulâs necessities, under the distress and destitution of imprisonment, when he was unable to maintain himself by the labour of his own hands, as he had formerly done at Thessalonica, Corinth, and Ephesus. Epaphroditus, their messenger, through his affectionate exertions on St. Paulâs behalf, had fallen into dangerous illness, and on his convalescence had been seized with home-sickness, aggravated by the uneasiness of knowing that his danger had been reported to his friends at home (Philippians 2:25-30). St. Paul, therefore, sent him back with this Letter, the immediate object of which was to convey his thanks and blessing for the generosity of the Philippians, and to commend warmly the devotion of Epaphroditus, which had been in great degree the cause of his illness.
II. The Church to which it was written.âOf the first preaching at Philippi we have a full and graphic account in Acts 16:0, where a description of the history and character of the city itself will be found in the Notes. The preaching began, as usual, from a Jewish centre, but this was only a proseuche, or oratory (Acts 16:13)ânot, as at Thessalonica, a synagogue (Acts 17:1); and the whole history shows no indication of any strong Jewish influence. The first convert named is Lydia, an Asiatic of Thyatira, not a Jewess, but âone who worshipped Godââa âproselyte of the gate.â The first opposition came not from the Jews, as at Thessalonica (Acts 17:5-6; Acts 17:13), but from the masters of the âdamsel possessed with a spirit of divination,â simply because by the exorcism of the Apostle the âhope of their gain was gone.â The accusation levelled against St. Paul and his companion was one which was intimately connected with the peculiar position of Philippi as a Roman colonyâa fragment (as it were) of the imperial city itself. We note, indeed, that at this very time (Acts 18:2) âClaudius had commanded all Jews to depart from Rome,â and it is at least probable that this decree of banishment might extend to the Roman colonies, as distinguished from the ordinary provincial cities. Accordingly, in the accusation itself stress was laid on the fact that the accused were âJews,â and the charge was that they preached a religio illicita, involving customs which it was ânot lawful for the Philippians to receive, being Romansâ (Acts 16:21). The Church was therefore, mainly a Gentile Churchâthe firstfruits of European Christianityâand its attachment to the Apostle of the Gentiles was especially strong and fervent. The Philippians alone, it appears, offeredâcertainly from them alone St. Paul consented to receiveâthose contributions to his necessities, which elsewhere (see Acts 20:33-35; 2 Corinthians 11:7-12; 1 Thessalonians 2:9; 2 Thessalonians 3:8) he thought it best to refuse for the gospelâs sake.
The foundation of the Church had been laid amidst a persecution, in which the Roman magistrates, with a characteristic dislike of all foreign superstitions likely to lead to uproar, and a characteristic disregard of justice towards two or three obscure Jews, simply played into the hands of mob violence. The step which St. Paul afterwards took of asserting his citizenship and forcing the magistrates to confess their wrong-doing (Acts 16:37-38) looks like a precaution to render the recurrence of arbitrary persecution less likely after his departure. But we gather from this Epistle (Philippians 1:27-30) that the Church had still, like the sister Church at Thessalonica (1 Thessalonians 1:6; 1 Thessalonians 2:14) and the other Macedonian churches (2 Corinthians 8:2), to undergo âthe same conflictâ of suffering from âtheir adversaries,â âwhich they had seen in him.â It grew up under the bracing air of trial, with a peculiar steadfastness, warm-heartedness, and simplicity, apparently unvexed by the speculative waywardness of Corinth or the wild heresies of Ephesus or Colossæ. Again like the Thessalonian Church, its dangers were mainly practical (see Philippians 3:0); the Judaising influence was probably foreign and not very formidable; the tendencies to Antinomian profligacy (Philippians 3:17-21), to some division by party spirit (Philippians 2:1-4; Philippians 4:2-3), to occasional despondency under trial (Philippians 1:28), hardly appear to have affected the Church widely or seriously. In its condition, accordingly, St. Paul could rejoice almost without reserve, of sorrow or anxiety.
Of St. Paulâs subsequent visits to Philippi we have no full record. We cannot doubt that he visited the city on his way from Ephesus to Macedonia and Greece, on the third missionary circuit (Acts 20:3). The common tradition, exceedingly probable in itself, dates the Second Epistle to the Corinthians from Philippi on that occasion. We know (Acts 20:6) that it was from Philippi that he started, some months after, on his last journey to Jerusalem. At a period subsequent to this Epistle, we learn (1 Timothy 1:3) that St. Paul, apparently after a visit to Ephesus, âwent into Macedoniaâ after his first captivity, and so, no doubt, fulfilled his hope of re-visiting this well-loved Church. After this we have no notice of the Church in history till we read of their kindly reception of Ignatius on his way to martyrdom, and study the Epistle of Polycarp to them, written shortly after, mainly practical and hortatory, and implying, with but slight reservation, a still strong and vigorous Christianity, and a constant grateful memory of the great Apostle. (See, for example, Philippians 1:0ââI rejoiced greatly with you in our Lord Jesus Christ, because ye have adopted the imitation of true love. . . . because the firm root of your faith, celebrated from ancient times, remains even until now, and bears fruit unto the Lord Jesus Christ;â Philippians 3:0ââNeither I nor any like me can follow out fully the wisdom of the blessed and glorious Paul, who, when he came among you, taught accurately and durably the word of truth.â) Tertullian also alludes to it (de Præscr. xxxvi.) as one of the churches where the âauthentic letters of the Apostlesââno doubt, this Epistle itselfâwere read. Afterwards we have little reference to it in Church history. Like Colossæ, it sank into insignificance.
III. The Genuineness of the Epistle.âExternal Evidence.âThe evidence for the genuineness of the Epistle is very strong. In all ancient catalogues, from the Muratorian Fragment (A.D. 170) downwards, in all ancient versions, beginning with the Peschito and the old Latin, it is placed among the undoubted Epistles of St. Paul. In Christian writings, before the end of the second century, knowledge of it may be distinctly traced; after that time it is quoted continually.
Thus, in the Apostolic Fathers, to say nothing of slighter indications which have been noted (as by Dr. Westcott, Canon of the New Testament, Philippians 1:0, and Dr. Lightfoot, in his Introduction to this Epistle), St. Polycarp, in his Epistle to the Philippians (Philippians 3:0), expressly declares that St. Paul, âwhen absent, wrote letters to them, by searching into which they can still be built up in the faith,â and speaks of them as âpraised in the beginning of his Epistleâ (chap. 11). Nor are there wanting expressions in his letter (such as the âusing our citizenship worthily of Christ,â âthe enemies of the cross,â the ârejoicing with them in the Lord,â the ânot running in vain,â &c.) which not obscurely indicate reference to the text of our Epistle itself. Again, Dr. Lightfoot quotes from the Testaments of the Twelve Patriarchs, a Judæo-Christian work, dating early in the second century, certain expressionsââthe form of Godâ and the âfashion of menâ (see Philippians 2:6), the âluminariesâ of heaven (see Philippians 2:15), and, above all, the unique phrase âthe bowels (heart) of the Son of Godâ (see Philippians 1:8)âwhich indicate unmistakably knowledge of this Epistle.
Perhaps the earliest direct quotation of it is in the celebrated Epistles of the Churches of Lyons and Vienne (A.D. 177), on the martyrdoms in the persecution of Marcus Aurelius (Eusebius, Ecclesiastical History, v. 2)âwhere we find the great passage: âHe being in the form of God, thought it not robbery to be equal with God,â &c. Then, as in other cases, the habit of quotation begins in Irenæus, Clement of Alexandria, and Tertullian, and continues afterwards unbroken. Tertullian, as we have already seen, apparently speaks of the Letter as being read as an Apostolic letter in the Philippian Church; and in his controversy with Marcion (v. 20) so quotes it as to show that it had escaped the destructive criticism and arbitrary mutilation in which Marcion so constantly anticipated the critical scepticism of later times.
Internal Evidence.âBut, strong as external evidence is, it is in this case far weaker than the internal, which may be said to rise almost to demonstration. The strong marks of personality which we trace in every line, the unstudied frequency of historical allusion and of undesigned coincidences with historical records, the simple and natural occasion of writing, in the reception of the offerings and the illness of Epaphroditus, the absence of all formal doctrinal or ecclesiastical purpose, the fulness and warmth of personal affection,âall are unmistakable marks of genuineness, all are fairly inconceivable on the supposition of imitation or forgery. The character of St. Paul, as unconsciously drawn in it, is unquestionably the same character which lives and glows in the Corinthian and Galatian Epistles; and yet there is in it an indescribable growth into greater calmness and gentleness, which corresponds remarkably with advance of age and change of circumstances. There are also marked similarities, both of style and expression, with the earlier Epistles, and, above all, with the Epistle to the Romans, the last of the earlier group, which will be found noted in detail on the various passages.[1] There is also that mingling of identity and development of idea which is notable in all the Epistles of the Captivity. But in this case, perhaps, the similarity is greater, and the diversity less, than in the other Epistles of the same period.
[1] Perhaps the most notable are:â
(a) Philippians 2:10-11, compared with Romans 14:11.
(b) Philippians 3:10-11, compared with Romans 6:5.
(c) Philippians 3:19, compared with Romans 16:18.
(d) Philippians 4:18, compared with Romans 12:1.
(e) Philippians 3:5-6, compared with 2 Corinthians 11:22, Romans 11:1. It may be noted that in all these cases there is similarity with differenceâthe characteristic of independent coincidence not of imitation.
It is, therefore, not surprising that, even in the freest speculation of the higher criticism, there are but few examples of scepticism as to the genuineness of this Epistle.
IV. The main Substance of the Epistle.â(1) The Picture of the Writer and the Receivers.âThe first and simplest impression made by this Epistle is the vivid portraiture which it gives us of St. Paul himselfâespecially in the conflict of desire for the death which is the entrance to the nearer presence of Christ, and for the longer life, which will enable him to gather a fuller harvest for Christâin the striking union of affection and thankfulness towards the Philippians, with a dignified independence and a tone of plenary authorityâin the sensitiveness to the sorrow and inactivity of imprisonment, overcome and finally absorbed into an almost unequalled fulness of joy in the Lord. Side by side with this, we are next struck with the picture which it gives us of the Macedonian Christianity at Philippiânot unlike that of Thessalonica, though, it would seem, less chequered by fanaticism or disorder, and certainly singularly accordant with the Macedonian character, as it paints itself at once speculatively inferior and practically superior to the Greek, in the pages of history. The Philippian Christianity is pre-eminently vigorous, loyal, and warm-hearted, courageous and patient, little disturbed either by speculative refinements or speculative inventions, hardly needing any warning, except against the self-assertion which is the natural excrescence of earnestness, or any exhortation, except to a deeper thoughtfulness, which might âoverflow into knowledge,â and prove âthe things which are really excellent.â There is no letter of St. Paulâs so absolutely free from the necessity of rebuke, and, accordingly; there is none so full of joy, in spite of all the circumstances of suffering and anxiety under which it was written.
(2) The Condition of the Church at Rome.âThe next great subject of interest is the light thrown by this Epistle on the progress of the Church at Rome during St. Paulâs imprisonment. Of his preaching to the Jews, the Asiatic Gentiles, and the Greeks, we have plain historical record in the Acts of the Apostles. That record fails us at the moment when he reaches the great centre of heathen civilisation at Rome, simply telling us that his imprisonment was not allowed to be a hindrance to his preaching, first (as always) with the Jews, then, on their rejection of the gospel, to the Gentiles who were âwilling to hear it.â Now, we know by the history of the Neronian persecution in Tacitus that, less than ten years after St. Paulâs arrival in Rome, the Christians were already âa vast multitude,â not only in the Eastern home of their religion, but in the metropolis itself. While we perceive from St. Paulâs Epistle to the Romans that, before that arrival Christianity was firmly established in Rome, and suspect that the ignorance of the Jewish leaders concerning âthe sect everywhere spoken againstâ (Acts 28:22) was in great degree affected, yet we cannot but see that these ten years must have been years of rapid progress, in order to justify, even approximately, the description of the Roman historian. Naturally, we conclude that St. Paulâs presence, even in his prison, must have given the chief new impulse to such progress, and inquire eagerly for any indications of his actual discharge to the Romans of the debt of gospel preaching which he had long ago acknowledged as due to them (Romans 1:14-15). To this inquiry almost the only answer is found in the Epistle to the Philippians.
There we learn that, as we might have expected, St. Paulâs bonds âturned outâ to the great âfurtherance of the gospel.â Wherever his prison actually was, it gave him opportunity of influence over the Prætorian guards, and all the rest of the world, civilian or military, who frequented their quarters; it gave him access, moreover, to those of Caesarâs householdâthat large community of the domus Augusta which included all varieties of occupation, character, and rank. That the earlier Christianity of Rome was largely under Jewish influence we learn from the whole argument of the Epistle to the Romans; and it has been often remarked that the names included in the long list of salutations in the last chapter show a preponderance of Greek nationality in the converts themselves. But of those who came under the spell of St. Paulâs presence, probably comparatively few would be Jews, although indeed at this time, through the influence of Poppæa, the Jewish element might be more than usually prominent in Caesarâs household; and while the greater number of that household who came in contact with him would be slaves of various nationalities, still, in the higher officers and among the Praetorian soldiery, many would be of true Roman origin. Remembering the friendship of Seneca for Burrhus, the Prætorian Prefect at the time of St. Paulâs arrival, and the former conduct of Gallio, Senecaâs brother, towards the Apostle at Corinth, many have delighted to speculate on the probability of some direct intercourse between the Apostle of the Gentiles and the philosopher of the later and more religious Stoicism, who was then the leader of higher Roman thought. But, however this may be, and whatever may be the real weight of the apparent similarities to familiar Stoic phraseology traceable in the Epistle (see Philippians 4:11-13, and Notes thereon), those who remember the eagerness of Roman society at this time for new religions, new mysteries, and even new superstitions, from the East, will find no difficulty in believing that one who was placed, by the circumstance of his imprisonment, in the imperial court itself, might easily have produced a deep impression on men of Roman birth, perhaps of high Roman rank.
This new Christianity would therefore probably be of a type, more purely Gentile, less predominantly Oriental, than the Christianity to which the Epistle to the Romans was addressed. Of the division between the old and the new the Epistle shows traces, in the description of those who preached Christ âof good willâ to St. Paul, and those who preached in âfactiousness and vain-glory;â for it seems clear, from his rejoicing that âevery way Christ was preached,â that the division was as yet one of mere faction and party, not of the contrast of false with true doctrine, which we know that he treated with stern, uncompromising severity. (See 2 Corinthians 11:1-4; Galatians 1:6-9.) Like all such divisions, it probably marked and justified itself by some differences in religious teaching and religious life: but if these existed, they did not go down to the foundation. The time, indeed, was not far distant, when the fall of Jerusalem, and the obvious passing away of the whole Jewish dispensation, struck the final blow to the existence of Judaism in the Christian Church. In spite, therefore, of this division, it seems clear that at the time of the Philippian Epistle Christianity had advanced, and was advancing, with rapid strides. âThe city which is in heavenâ was already beginning to rise from its foundations in the âgreat Babylon of the Seven Hills,â now the very type of the kingdom of the earth, destined hereafter to be, even visibly, the metropolis of Western Christianity.
(3) The main Subjects of the Epistle.âTurning to the teaching of the Epistle itself, the main interest centres round the great passage in the second chapter (Philippians 2:5-11), which is the very creed of the Incarnation, Passion, and Exaltation of our Lord Jesus Christ. This has been noticed already in the General Introduction to the Epistles of the Captivity, and is dealt with in detail in the Notes on the passage. Here it need only be remarked that its advanced Christology is made the more striking by the occasion of its occurrence, which is, in point of form, simply incidental, in enforcement of the familiar exhortation to follow the mind of Christ Jesus in humility and self-sacrifice; and that the singular simplicity and clearness of its enunciation of truth stand to the profounder and more mysterious teaching on the same subject in the Epistle to the Colossians, much as, in later times, the simplicity of a Western creed stands to the greater subtlety of an Eastern. Next in interest, though after a long interval, is the light thrown (in Philippians 3:0) on the obstinate persistence in Macedonia of the old Judaising influence, elsewhere decaying or passing into new forms; and the appearance both of the pretensions to perfection (Philippians 3:12-16) and of the Antinomian recklessness (Philippians 3:17-21)âsometimes associated with these pretensions, sometimes in revolt against themâwith which we are but too familiar in subsequent Church history.
(4) Analysis of the Epistle.âA full analysis will be found in each chapter. A shortened general sketch of these analyses we have subjoined as usual.
1.
The First Section (original Letter?).
(1)
INTRODUCTION.
(a)
Salutation (Philippians 1:1-2);
(b)
Thanksgiving for their âfellowshipâ in the work of the gospel, specially shown towards himself (Philippians 1:3-8);
(c)
Prayer for their fuller knowledge and increase of fruitfulness to the end (Philippians 1:9-11).
(2)
DECLARATION OF THE POSITION AT ROME.
(a)
The progress of the gospel through his bonds, stimulating preaching of the gospel, partly in good will, partly in strife, but in any case a cause of joy (Philippians 1:12-18);
(b)
His own division of feeling, between desire to depart, and a willingness to remain for their sakes, which he knows will be realised (Philippians 1:19-26).
(3)
EXHORTATION:
(a)
To steadfast boldness under persecution, now present or imminent (Philippians 1:27-30);
(b)
To unity of spirit in the humility and self-sacrifice of âthe mind of Christ Jesusâ (Philippians 2:1-4).
(4)
THE DOCTRINE OF CHRIST.
(a)
His humility in the Incarnation: stooping from the form of God to the form of man (Philippians 2:5-7);
(b)
His second humility in the Passion (Philippians 2:8);
(c)
His exaltation above all created being (Philippians 2:9-11).
(5)
ORIGINAL CONCLUSION OF THE EPISTLE.
(a)
Final exhortation to obedience, quietness, purity, joy with him in sacrifice (Philippians 2:12-18);
(b)
Mission and commendation of Timotheus as St Paulâs forerunner (Philippians 2:19-24);
(c)
Mission and commendation of Epaphroditus (Philippians 2:25-30);
(d)
Final âfarewell in the Lordâ (Philippians 3:1).
2.
The Second Section (Postscript?).
(1)
PRACTICAL WARNINGS:
(a)
Against Judaism, by the example of his own renunciation of all Jewish privilege (Philippians 3:2-10);
(b)
Against claim of perfection, again enforced by his own example (Philippians 3:11-16);
(c)
Against Antinomian profligacy, as unworthy of the âcitizens of heavenâ (Philippians 3:17-21).
(2)
EXHORTATIONS RENEWED:
(a)
To unity (Philippians 4:1-3);
(b)
To joy, thankfulness, and peace (Philippians 4:4-7);
(c)
To following of all good, in the fulness in which he had taught it (Philippians 4:8-9).
(3)
ACKNOWLEDGMENT OF OFFERINGS.
(a)
Rejoicing in their renewed care for him (Philippians 4:10-14);
(b)
Remembrance of theirâ former liberality (Philippians 4:15-17);
(c)
Thanks and blessing (Philippians 4:18-20).
(4)
CONCLUDING SALUTATION AND BLESSING.