Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Philemon 1:9
Yet for love’s sake I rather beseech [thee,] being such a one as Paul the aged, and now also a prisoner of Jesus Christ.
9. for love’s sake ] Lit., “ because of the love ” ; i.e., perhaps, “because of our love.” Ellicott, Alford, and Lightfoot take the reference to be to (Christian) love in general. But the Greek commentators (cent. 11) Theophylact and cumenius (quoted by Ellicott) explain the phrase as referring to the love of the two friends; and this is surely in point in this message of personal affection.
beseech ] The verb is one which often means “ exhort,” in a sense less tender than “ beseech.” But see e.g. Php 4:2 for a case where, as here, it evidently conveys a loving appeal.
being such a one as ] Does this mean, “ because I am such,” or “ although I am such”? The answer depends mainly on the explanation of the next following words.
Paul the aged ] Paulus senex, Latin Versions; “and so apparently all versions” (Ellicott). So R.V. text. Its margin has “ Paul an ambassador ” ; and this rendering is advocated by Lightfoot in a long and instructive note. He points out that not only are presbts (“ an elder,” which all mss. have here) and presbeuts (“ an envoy ”) nearly identical in form, but that the latter word was often spelt by the Greeks like the former. And he points to Eph 6:20 (see our note there), where “ the ambassador in chains ” expressly describes himself a passage written perhaps on the same day as this. So explaining, the phrase would be a quiet reminder, in the act of entreaty, that the suppliant was no ordinary one; he was the Lord’s envoy, dignified by suffering for the Lord.
But, with reverence to the great Commentator, is not the other explanation after all more in character in this Epistle, which carries a tender pathos in it everywhere? A fresh reminder of his dignity, after the passing and as it were rejected allusion to it in Phm 1:8, seems to us to be out of harmony; while nothing could be more fitting here than a word about age and affliction. The question whether St Paul was “an old man,” as we commonly reckon age, is not important; so Lightfoot himself points out. At all periods, men have called themselves old when they felt so; Lightfoot instances Sir Walter Scott at fifty-five. (St Paul was probably quite sixty at this time.) And it is immaterial whether or no Philemon was his junior. If he were Paul’s coeval, it would matter little. The appeal lies in the fact of the writer’s “failing powers,” worn in the Lord’s service; and this would touch an equal as readily as a junior. To our mind too the phrase, “ being such a one as,” conveys, though it is hard to analyse the impression, the thought of a pathetic self-depreciation.
On the whole we recommend the rendering of the A.V. and (text) R.V. But by all means see Lightfoot’s note.
also a prisoner of Jesus Christ ] See on Phm 1:1. “ Also ” : the weakness of age was aggravated by the helplessness of bonds.
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
Yet for loves sake – For the love which you bear me, and for the common cause.
I rather beseech thee – Rather than command thee.
Being such an one as Paul the aged – presbutes – an old man. We have no means of ascertaining the exact age of Paul at this time, and I do not recollect that he ever alludes to his age, though he often does to his infirmities, in any place except here. Doddridge supposes that at the time when Stephen was stoned, when he is called a young man ( neanias, Act 7:58), he was 24 years of age, in which case he would now have been about 53. Chrysostom supposes that he may have been 35 years old at the time of his conversion, which would have made him about 63 at this time. The difficulty of determining with any degree of accuracy the age of the apostle at this time, arises from the indefinite nature of the word used by Luke, Act 7:58, and rendered a young man. That word, like the corresponding word neaniskos, was applied to men in the vigor of manhood up to the age of 40 years.
Robinson, Lex. Phavorinus says a man is called neaniskos, a young man, until he is 28; and presbutes, presbutes, from 49 until he is 56. Varro says that a man is young (juvenis), until he is 45, and aged at 60. Whitby. These periods of time, however, are very indefinite, but it will accord well with the usual meaning of the words to suppose that Paul was in the neighborhood of 30 when he was converted, and that he was now not far from 60. We are to remember also, that the constitution of Paul may have been much broken by his labors, his perils, and his trials. Not advanced probably to the usual limit of human life, he may have had all the characteristics of a very aged man; compare the note of Benson. The argument here is, that we feel that it is proper, as far as we can, to grant the request of an old man. Paul thus felt that it was reasonable to suppose that Philemon would not refuse to gratify the wishes of an aged servant of Christ, who had spent the vigor of his life in the service of their common Master. It should be a very strong case when we refuse to gratify the wishes of an aged Christian in anything, especially if he has rendered important services to the church and the world.
And now also a prisoner of Jesus Christ – In the cause of Jesus Christ; or a prisoner for endeavoring to make him known to the world; compare the Eph 3:1; Eph 4:1; Eph 6:20 notes; Col 4:10 note. The argument here is, that it might be presumed that Philemon would not refuse the request of one who was suffering in prison on account of their common religion. For such a prisoner we should be ready to do all that we can to mitigate the sorrows of his confinement, and to make his condition comfortable.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Phm 1:9
Yet for loves sake I rather beseech thee
A beautiful specimen of Christian humility and genuine pathos
I might be bold to command thee in Christs name, by which I am strong; but thou dost not need any argument derived from my strength: and for loves sake I rather beseech thee by my own weakness, by my years, and by my chains.
Such language–the language of entreaty–best befits me now in my prison and in my old age. (Bp. Chris. Wordsworth.)
The entreaty of love
Love naturally beseeches, and does not command. The harsh voice of command is simply the imposition of anothers will, and it belongs to relationships in which the heart has no share. But wherever love is the bond, grace is poured into the lips, and I order becomes I pray. So that even where the outward form of authority is still kept, as in a parent to young children, there will ever be some endearing word to swathe the harsh imperative in tenderness, like a sword blade wrapped about with wool, lest it should wound. Love tends to obliterate the hard distinction of superior and inferior, which finds its expression in laconic orders and silent obedience. It seeks not for mere compliance with commands, but for oneness of will. Its entreaties are more powerful than imperatives. The lightest wish breathed by loved lips is stronger than all stern injunctions–often, alas I than all laws of duty. The heart is so tuned as only to vibrate to that one tone. The rocking stones, which all the storms of winter may howl round and not move, can be set swinging by a light touch. Una leads the lion in a silken leash. Love controls the wildest nature. Authority is the weapon of a weak man, who is afraid of his own power to get himself obeyed; or of a selfish one, who seeks for mechanical submission rather than for the fealty of willing hearts. Love is the weapon of a strong man, who can cast aside the trappings of superiority, and is never loftier than when he descends, nor more absolute than when he abjures authority and appeals with love to love. (A. Maclaren, D. D.)
Gentle means of persuading men to be used rather than severe
I. Reasons.
1. We are bound to use those means and to take that course which is most forcible and effectual. But to deal with love, and to handle our brethren kindly and meekly, is most likely to prevail with most men. Therefore the apostle requireth that the Servant of God must not strive, but must be gentle toward all men, apt to teach, suffering the evil, instructing them with meekness that are contrary minded. There is no way so available to bring evil men out of the dangers wherein they stand, who are, as it were, made bondslaves to do the devils will, than to allure them by gentleness, to draw them by long suffering, and to overcome them by patience.
2. This course, well and duly observed, serveth to persuade them with whom we deal of our love and tender affection towards them. For loving and friendly dealing argueth loving and affectionate minds, and the ready way to bend and incline him unto that which is good, and to turn him from that which is evil, when his persuasions are perceived to tend to the profit and benefit of him whom we would persuade.
3. We are to imitate our Head and Master, Christ Jesus; He used not His authority and power that was in Him; He dealt not roughly and severely with His enemies, but meekly and mercifully, and most compassionately; lie was meek, and as a lamb before the shearer.
II. Uses.
1. We learn that mercy and compassion–yea, all tokens and testimonies of love–are to he showed toward malefactors, even when justice is to be executed and punishment inflicted.
2. Seeing we are to win men rather by gentleness and love, we must acknowledge that great wisdom and discretion is required in the ministry, to divide the Word of God aright, and to be able to apply himself to every degree and calling of men. When the people of God went out to war, the Lord commanded them to offer conditions of peace to that city; if it refuse to make peace, they should besiege it, smite it, and destroy it. So should we, when we execute our office, first offer peace before we proclaim war; first allure by gentleness before we thunder out judgments; first exhort before we threaten. In the material building, all the stones that are to be fitted to the building are not of one nature; some are soft and easy to be fitted and hammered; others more hard and of a flintier marble disposition–they require sharp tools, strong blows, before they can be brought into form, or be squared for that place which they are to hold. So it is with the lively stones of the spiritual temple of God: some have soft hearts of flesh, and are of humble and contrite spirits, like the bruised reed or the smoking flax; others have hearts hard as the adamant, and cannot easily be brought to feel the strokes of the Word of God. These are not to be dealt withal and handled alike, but after a divers manner. This is the counsel of the apostle Jude, Have compassion of some in putting difference, and others save with fear, pulling them out of the fire, and hate even that garment which is spotted by the flesh. This serveth to reprove, first, such as use unseasonable lenity when godly severity is required. Some diseases require sharp medicines. Secondly, it reproveth such as are too sharp and vigorous against offenders, and forget all rules of charity toward them. True it is, the pastors and ministers are to rebuke such as are fallen; but when they see sorrow for sin, and repentance from dead works wrought in them, they should begin to raise them up again and comfort them with the precious promises of the gospel, lest they should be overwhelmed with despair and he swallowed up with over-much heaviness.
3. And, last of all, we learn for our obedience, that whensoever entreating, gentle, or loving dealing is used to call men home to God and to themselves, it is their duty to yield themselves and to embrace earnestly the mercies of God offered unto them. The sin of contempt and contumacy is fearful, when the bountifulness of God is despised, His mercies loathed, His patience and long suffering abused. If we will not hear when He crieth to us, we shall cry also in the days of our misery, and He will not hear us in our trouble, but mock at our affliction. (W. Attersoll.)
Love more effective than severity
One winter morning, as the Wind set out on his days work, he found the trees loaded with ice. Every tiny twig was bending under an armour many times its weight. The little white lady birches had drooped until their heads touched the ground. A great groan to be delivered went up from all the trees. This will never do! cried the Wind; and straightway he went to work with all his might. The branches of the giant elms swung and creaked. The brown, curled leaves still clinging to the oaks were snatched away and went whirling through the air. There was a great rustling in all the wood. But the ice did not move. Still harder the wind blew. And now whole branches came crashing down, until they lay thick on the ground in their glittering winding sheets. But still the ice did not move. At last the Spirit of the Woods came forth, frowning. Do you call this helping? cried she. You are ruining my trees. To get rid of the ice, forsooth, you are breaking off the boughs. Get you gone! The Wind retired to his cave, and was melancholy all day. He had had a sincere desire to do good, but now he saw that he had only done harm. He shuddered as he thought of the wrecks he had made in his untempered zeal. What is the use of nay trying to do anything? he sighed. Many an eager soul has known such hours, when it had thought to add its note of praise to the great chorus, and has only succeeded in making a discord. The next morning the Sun knocked at the door of the cave, and cried, in genial tones, Come on, friend! I want your help. The trees must be rid of their load. I will shine on them, and then do you gently wave their branches and shake off the loosened ice. They went forth together, and the Sun shone on the forest. An hour passed. The only visible result was here and there a drop of water from the icy boughs. We shall never get through at this rate! panted the Wind. Gently, friend, gently! All in good time! replied the Sun. The ice was a day and a night in forming. Could you hope to get rid of it by one fierce gust? When I get higher in the sky, I can strike the trees more directly with my beams. After another hour of silent shining, the Sun whispered, Now, friend, with your wings! But not too violently. See, now, some pieces are falling. Two or three hours of work like this, and our task is done. There is another piece loose. So the Sun shone on, and the wind from time to time shook down the loosened pieces of ice, and what did not rattle down dissolved in fast-flowing tears under the gentle yet burning eye of the Sun. The birches gradually lifted their pliant forms. The Spirit of the Woods came out with her blessing for the two workers. And that night the Wind returned to his cave humbled but joyous, because he had found the more excellent way.
Paul the aged—
The aged Christian
We have–
I. In Pauls circumstances the occupations of the aged Christian.
1. He preaches and teaches.
2. He is full of care for distant Churches.
3. He is tenderly interested in individuals near him.
II. In Pauls recollections the memories of the aged Christian.
1. Trials.
2. Labours.
3. Graces.
III. In Pauls anticipations the hopes of the aged Christian.
1. Hope of renewed service on earth.
2. Hope of the victory of the truth on earth.
3. Hope of blessedness in heaven. (U. R. Thomas.)
Paul the aged
We are accustomed to think of Paul the persecutor, the Christian, the missionary, the apostle, the inspired scribe, the sufferer for Christ. Here another and unexpected epithet pictures him to us as Paul the aged. The word is from his own pen. Perhaps now he is learning for the first time that his days of mature vigour are past. Manifold labours, perils, trials, have broken him in premature age.
I. Paul wears old age as a crown (see Pro 16:31). There is a pleasant story told of Frederick the Great. At a parade of the guard in the Kings apartments at Berlin, Fredericks quick eye picked out among the splendid crowd the brave old Ziethen, who, though turned eighty-five years, had come to pay his duty to his monarch. Greeting the veteran with a cry of joy, the King called for a chair. Objections were in vain. Sit down, good father, said the King. I will have it so, or I must instantly leave the room. The old soldier yielded, and Frederick the Great continued standing before him, the centre of the illustrious circle that had gathered around, and so honoured the face of the old man. The aged Christian has his peculiar infirmities, but he also has his peculiar joys. To the aged saint come the fullest revelations of God, the most comfortable words of Christ, the sweetest visitations of the Spirit.
II. Pauls old age had its duties and labours. He does not excuse himself from duty on the ground of age. He will do what he can for Onesimus. He writes for him with a delicacy, a tact, a tenderness, an urgency, such as he himself never surpassed. The aged Christian is still a unit in the host of society, still kindred to some and neighbour and friend to others. And still, however much may be lost, duty remains–duty to himself, to others, and in all to God. Life is lengthened that it may labour for Christ. And is not the old the best workman? The young may attract more attention, but it is the experienced hand that does the most and best.
III. Paul used his age as a plea of love. Where we may command, it is wise to request. Love wins love. Gentleness calls out gentleness.
IV. Paul is Paul the aged no more. He has escaped, through death, from all earthly prisons, and is op pressed by old age no longer. He is with Christ, which is far better. (G. T. Coster.)
Reverence due to old age
Old men are to be reverenced–
1. For their very age, because they draw nearest to the Ancient of Days (Lev 19:32).
2. For their wisdom.
3. For their experience.
4. For their piety (Pro 16:31). (W. Jones, D. D.)
The aged minister
I. Review his past history.
1. His character; and how, during this long period, he has conducted himself: what reputation he has spent so many years in building up, and in what estimate he is now held when grey hairs are upon him.
2. His labours. True, his toils are chiefly mental; but who knows not that, on this account, they are the more exhausting and wearing?
3. His usefulness. How many have been impressed by his example, enriched by his beneficence, blessed by his prayers, and instructed by his principles.
4. His trials. Ah, you know a ministers joys far better than you know his sorrows. You see his sails, but not his ballast. You follow him in his public walks of labour, but not in his Gethsemane retreat, where he goes to pray and agonise alone. He calls you to share his felicities, but he carries his perplexities and his griefs to his closet and his God. Look, then, at the hoary man over whom the clouds of fifty years have rolled. How many storms have burst upon that aged tree, tearing off its branches, stripping off its leaves, and dismantling it in some cases, till little else but the mere trunk and a few boughs remain of all that once umbrageous top. Still, however, the venerable trunk does remain, and there is life in it to the last. How much of Divine power and faithfulness and grace we associate with that sacred antique.
5. His temptations. A minister is the chief mark for Satans arrows.
II. Estimate his present claims.
1. He is entitled, if a holy and faithful man, and in proportion to his sanctity and fidelity, to respect and veneration.
2. He is entitled to affection. It is not claimed for what he is in himself, but what he is to his people as their friend and counsellor; in fact, the instrument of their salvation and the promoter of their progressive sanctification.
3. He has a right to expect gratitude.
4. I next mention candour and forbearance as virtues which an aged minister is entitled to expect, and of which, in some cases, by the gathering infirmities of declining years, he will stand in need.
5. And has he not a claim upon your attendance upon his ministry? To desert him when he is old is a poor reward for the more effective services of younger and stronger days.
III. Anticipate his future destiny. Growth, decline, and death, are the law of all life on earth, from which there is no exemption on behalf of the minister of the gospel. The weary, worn out labourer goes to his rest and to his reward; goes to be associated with those who were his hope and joy on earth, and now are to be his crown of rejoicing in the presence of Christ; goes to meet his Maker, and hear Him say, Well done, good and faithful servant; enter thou into the joy of the Lord. (J. A. James.)
A review of life and a glimpse of glory
This language–
1. Supposes childhood and the scenes of life already past.
2. Suggests a review of the events of individual life.
3. Reminds us of the infirmities which years witness.
4. Shows Paul to us as an old disciple–not only a man, but a new man, a man in Christ.
5. Contains a touching plea.
6. Suggests that the aged Christian has nearly finished his course. (J. S. Pearsall.)
The standard of age
He was, perhaps, sixty, perhaps a few years more. Labour, sorrow, the storms of ocean and the fires of thought, possible sickliness–the sad and solemn maturity which is the portion upon earth of men who believe intensely–had done their work. Roger Bacon wrote me senem at fifty-two or fifty-three, and Sir Walter Scott at fifty-five calls himself sadly an old grey man and aged. In truth, the standard by which old age is measured is pretty much subjective. At an age about fifteen years earlier than that of St. Paul at this time, Chateaubriand writes, Deja je nappartenais plus a ces matins qui se consolent eux-memes–je touchais a ces heures du soir qui ont besoin detre consolees. A different periods of life we adopt a different standard. It was said by Victor Hugo that forty is the old age of youth, and fifty the youth of old age. (Bp. Wm. Alexander.)
Anxieties tell on age
Such a multitude of anxieties and endurances as are recounted in 2Co 11:23-30 must have told upon him and exhausted his manly vigour. (M. F. Sadler, M. A.)
Christian old age
No more beautiful picture of the bright energy and freshness still possible to the old was ever painted than may be gathered from the apostles unconscious sketch of himself. He delighted in having fresh young life about him–Timothy, Titus, Mark, and others–boys in comparison with himself, whom yet he admitted to close intimacy, as some old general might the youths of his staff, warming his old age at the genial flame of their growing energies and unworn hopes. His was a joyful old age, too, notwithstanding many burdens of anxiety and sorrow. We hear the clear song of his gladness ringing through the epistle of joy–that to the Philippians–which, like this, dates from his Roman captivity. A Christian old age should be joyful, and it only will be; for the joys of the natural life burn low when the fuel that fed them is nearly exhausted, and withered hands ave held in vain over the dying embers. But Christs joy remains, and a Christian old age maybe like the polar midsummer days, when the sun shines till midnight, and dips but for an imperceptible interval ere it rises for the unending day of heaven. Paul the aged was full of interest in the things of the day–no mere praiser of time none by, but a strenuous worker, cherishing a quick sympathy and an eager interest, which kept him young to the end. And over his cheery, sympathetic, busy old age there is thrown the light of a great hope, which kindles desire and onward looks in his dim eyes, and parts such a one as Paul the aged by a whole universe from the old whose future is dark and their past dreary, whose hope is a phantom and their memory a pang. (A. Maclaren, D. D.)
Now also a prisoner of Jesus Christ—
Duty enforced by personal consideration
He holds up his fettered wrist, and in effect says, Surely you will not refuse anything that you can do to wrap a silken softness round the cold, hard iron, especially when you remember for whose sake and by whose will I am bound with this chain. He thus brings personal motives to reinforce duty which is binding from other and higher considerations. Christ does thus with His servants. He does not simply hold up before us a cold law of duty, but warms it by introducing our personal relation to Him as the main motive for keeping it. Apart from Him, morality can only point to the tables of stone and say, There! that is what you ought to do. Do it, or face the consequences. But Christ says, I have given Myself for you. My will is your law. Will you do it for My sake? Instead of the chilling, statuesque ideal, as pure as marble and as cold, a Brother stands before us with a heart that beats, a smile on His face, a hand outstretched to help; and His word is, If ye love Me, keep My commandments. (A. Maclaren, D. D.)
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 9. Paul the aged] If we allow St. Paul to have been about 25 years of age at the utmost, in the year 31, when he was assisting at the martyrdom of Stephen, Ac 7:58; as this epistle was written about A. D. 62, he could not have been at this time more than about 56 years old. This could not constitute him an aged man in our sense of the term; yet, when the whole length of his life is taken in, being martyred about four years after this, he may not improperly be considered an aged or elderly man, though it is generally allowed that his martyrdom took place in the 66th year of our Lord.
But the word signifies, not only an old man, but also an ambassador; because old or elderly men were chosen to fulfil such an office, because of their experience and solidity; and , for , is used in the same sense and for the same reason by the Septuagint; hence some have thought that we should translate here, Paul the ambassador. This would agree very well with the scope and even the design of the place.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
Yet for loves sake; writing to thee in a cause of love, where so good and charitable a man may have an opportunity to express his charity. Or rather, out of my love and kindness to thee, persuading me that I need not use my apostolical authority to such a brother and friend,
I beseech thee.
Being such an one as Paul the aged; being such a one as Paul now much in years, and not like to trouble thee long with any request. Or, Paul the elder by office, one who is thy brother in the ministry.
And now also a prisoner of Jesus Christ; and now a prisoner for Christs sake, and so cannot personally speak to thee; and I know such is thy piety, that my being a sufferer for the sake of Christ will not render my petition to thee lest acceptable, or to be regarded less.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
forloves sake mine to thee, and (what ought to be) thine to Onesimus. Or, thatChristian love of which thou showest so bright an example (Phm1:7).
beingsuch an one Explain, Beingsuch a oneas thou knowest me to be, namely,
Paul the founder of so many churches, and an apostle of Christ, andthy father in the faith.
theaged a circumstance calculated to secure thy respect for anything Irequest.
andnow also a prisoner of Jesus Christ the strongest claim I have on thy regard: if for no other reason,at least in consideration of this, through commiseration gratify me.
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
Yet for love’s sake I rather beseech thee,…. Either for the sake of the great love which the apostle bore to Philemon, being, as he calls him, his dearly beloved, he took this method; or because of Philemon’s great love to all the saints before mentioned, he was encouraged to proceed in this manner, hoping on that account to have success; or it may be, it was for the sake of that love with which God had loved him, and which he puts him in mind of, to engage him to grant his request; that seeing God the Father had loved him, and chosen him in Christ; and Christ had loved him, and redeemed him by his blood; and the Holy Spirit had loved him, and sanctified him by his grace, that therefore he would receive his servant again for the sake of this love; who also was the object of it; see Ro 15:30. The Alexandrian copy reads, “for”, or “through necessity”, as if necessity obliged him to this request.
Being such an one as Paul the aged; or “the elder”; meaning either in office, which he might mention with this view, that his request might have the greater weight and influence; or else in years, and which he might observe partly to move compassion in Philemon, and that he might not grieve him in his old age, as he would, should he deny his request; and partly to suggest to him, that the advice he was about to give him, to receive his servant, did not come from a raw young man, but from one well stricken in years, with whom were wisdom and understanding; and therefore not to be treated with neglect or contempt: how old the apostle was at this time, is not certain; he could not be less than sixty years of age, or he would not have called himself an old man; for no man was so called by the Jews, but he that was at the age of sixty b. Some editions of the Vulgate Latin version, as that of the London Polyglot Bible, read, “seeing thou art such an one as Paul the aged”; as if Philemon was an old man, as the apostle was, and therefore he would not lay his commands upon him, as an ancient man might upon a young man, but rather entreat him as equal to him in years: but then it follows, which does not appear to be true of Philemon, or that he was in the like case,
and now also a prisoner of Jesus Christ; which is observed with the same view as in Phm 1:1.
[See comments on Phm 1:1].
b Pirke Abot, c. 5. sect. 1.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
Paul the aged ( ). Paul is called (a young man) at the stoning of Stephen (Ac 7:58). He was perhaps a bit under sixty now. Hippocrates calls a man from 49 to 56 and after that. The papyri use for old man as in Lu 1:18 of Zacharias and in Tit 2:2. But in Eph 6:20 Paul says (I am an ambassador in a chain). Hence Lightfoot holds that here = because of common confusion by the scribes between and . In the LXX four times the two words are used interchangeably. There is some confusion also in the papyri and the inscriptions. Undoubtedly ambassador () is possible here as in Eph 6:20 () though there is no real reason why Paul should not term himself properly “Paul the aged.”
Fuente: Robertson’s Word Pictures in the New Testament
Being such an one as Paul the aged [ ] . Being such an one, connect with the previous I rather beseech, and with Paul the aged. Not, being such an one (armed with such authority), as Paul the aged I beseech (the second beseech in ver. 10); but, as Rev., for love ‘s sake I rather beseech, being such an one as Paul the aged. The beseech in ver. 10 is resumptive. Aged; or ambassador (so Rev., in margin). The latter rendering is supported by presbeuw I am an ambassador, Eph 6:10. 21 0 There is no objection to aged on the ground of fact. Paul was about sixty years old, besides being prematurely aged from labor and hardship. For aged see Luk 1:18; Tit 2:2.
Fuente: Vincent’s Word Studies in the New Testament
1) “Yet for love’s sake” (dia ten agapen) “Because or on account of mutual divine love.” The triangle of persons involved had all become children of God, possessions of His high and holy love – Paul, Philemon, and Onesimus were that triangle, 1Jn 3:14; 1Jn 4:7.
2) “I rather beseech thee” (mallon parakalo) “I rather beseech (thee).” This is a low-key approach to a touchy problem – that of the proper manner of physical treatment of a run-away slave, mortgage property of Philemon. Joh 13:34-35. Paul asked Philemon, on the basis of mutual experimental love in Christ, to accept Onesimus.
3) “Being-such an one as Paul the aged” (toioutos on hos Paulos presbutes) “Being such an one as Paul, an old man, or one grown old.” Appeals and pleas were more becoming to an old man than a hard, bold charge. To this language Paul resorted.
4) “And now also a prisoner of Jesus Christ”‘ (nuni de kai desmios Christou lesou) -What is more, now and continuing hereafter a prisoner of Jesus Christ.” Paul affirmed that he had permanent bond obligations to Jesus Christ, Gal 2:20.
Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary
9. Being such a one. He claims the right to command on two grounds, that he is an elder, and that he is a prisoner for Christ He says that, on account of Philemon’s love, he chooses rather to entreat, because we interpose authority in commanding those things which we wish to extort by necessity even from the unwilling, but there is no need of commanding those who willingly obey. And because they who are ready of their own accord to do their duty listen more willingly to a calm statement of what is necessary to be done than to the exercise of authority, with good reason does Paul, when he has to deal with an obedient man, use entreaty. By his example he shows that pastors should endeavor to draw disciples gently rather than to drag them by force; and indeed, when, by condescending to entreaty, he foregoes his right, this has far greater power to obtain his wish than if he issued a command. Besides, he claims nothing for himself, but in Christ, that is, on account of the office which he has received from him; for he does not mean that they whom Christ has appointed to be apostles are destitute of authority.
What is proper. By adding this, he means that teachers have not power to enact whatever they please, but that their authority is confined within these limits, that they must not command anything but “what is proper,” and, in other respects, consistent with every man’s duty. Hence (as I said a little before) pastors are reminded that the hearts of their people must be soothed with all possible gentleness, wherever this method is likely to be more advantageous, but yet so as to know that they who are treated so gently have nothing less exacted from them than what they ought to do.
The designation “elder,” here, denotes not age, but office. He calls himself an apostle for this reason, that the person with whom he has to deal, and with whom he talks familiarly, is a fellow-laborer in the ministry of the word.
Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary
9. Being such Alford, and others of the best class of commentators, place a period before being, a comma after such, and a comma after Christ. The following as, then, does not correspond with such; and such refers to Paul as being entitled to enjoin, as above. Being such, (as might enjoin thee,) being Paul the aged, being also Christ’s prisoner for these three motives he does beseech. He is thus triply a supplicator for Onesimus, placing his own personality as pleader in front of his client.
The aged The veneration for his own age, for his long antecedents of toils, imprisonments, and martyrdoms, must plead for Onesimus. Paul was “a young man” at the martyrdom of St. Stephen, (Act 7:58,) but as he was then clothed by the Sanhedrin with plenary authorities, and was himself a member of the Sanhedrin, he was, probably, not less than thirty years of age. Supposing this to have been A.D. 37, and the letter to Philemon A.D. 63, Paul must now be near sixty. But bearing the weight of only sixty years, he bore the load of a life of labours and excitements, and the prestige of a great history, so as to have possessed the venerability of near seventy. But his age of sixty would imply that Philemon, from whom St. Paul claims the deference due to age, was a much younger man, so that Archippus could hardly have been, as some commentators suggest, his son.
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
Phm 1:9. Paul the aged, It is generally thought that this Epistle was written about the year of Christ 62; and if we suppose St. Paul to have been twenty-four years old when Stephen was stoned, which is consistent with his being called a young man;that being about the year 34, (for we have not data sufficient absolutely to determine the exact time,) he would be now fifty-two; and considering how much his constitution would probably be impaired by his fatigues and sufferings, before that time he might properly enough call himself , one advanced in age, though not an old man. Let us now attend a little to the force of the argument contained in the present verse. It is as if the apostle had said, “I am become a humble petitioner;and consider with yourself who it is that begs this favour: It is Paul;a name which once sounded pleasing in your ears, and a person for whom you professed a high regard; that very person, who has travelled many a hundred miles by sea and by land, through numberless difficulties, and much ill treatment for his attempts to make men wise, holy, and good through the grace of God in Jesus Christ: to whom you, Philemon, as well as many thousands, owe instrumentally the salvation of their souls, and whose very name might carry init the force of many arguments: the person who now humbly petitions you, is one who might address you in a different manner: he has been illuminated with abundance of revelations from Heaven, favoured with the power of working numerous, great, and beneficial miracles, and by the laying on of his hands is, under the Spirit of God, able to communicate spiritual gifts or miraculous powers unto others. He has been sent out among the nations, has baffled the wisdom of the world, has prevailed against the eloquence of the orators, and has overturned the schemes of the heathen philosophers, and Jewish scribes and rabbies: he has, through grace, made numerous converts, both among Jews and Gentiles; turning men from ignorance, superstition, idolatry, and vice, to knowledge, holiness, piety, virtue, and happiness. He bears a commission of a sublime nature, and of the utmost importance to the welfare of mankind; and he carries his credentials along with him: he is an ambassador for Christ, as though God did beseech you by him; and he prays you, in Christ’s stead, be you reconciled to Onesimus again. Permit me also to add another circumstance, which with all humane persons, and more especially with all genuine Christians, must have great weight: the aged ambassador is now also the prisoner of Jesus Christ. I have been almost two years in the custody of a soldier, and often chained to him; confined to a disagreeable companion, and very much in his power, and at his mercy. Inquire now at Rome for the aged ambassador of Jesus Christ,you will find him in custody, like a criminal; though really wearing that chain onlyfor preaching the gospel, especially among you Gentiles. And, finally, consider him whose ambassador and prisoner I am; my commission is from a Person of highest dignity, for whose sake I can endure a prison, and joyfully wear this chain; and I am persuaded that your regard to him is not small, nor will you suffer an ambassador and prisoner of Christ to petition in vain.” Almost every word carries in it the force of an argument; Philemon’s love to the person of St. Paul,his regard for his high office and dignity, as the aged ambassador of Christ,his love and cheerful obedience to the Lord Jesus himself, are all touched upon or intimated in this short sentence
Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke
f
Phm 1:9 f. Before we have to place a full stop; the participial predication sums up the quality which was expressed in Phm 1:8 by ; and lastly, supports the . . . of Phm 1:10 , from a consideration of the personal position of the apostle in such a way, that the granting of the request could not but appear to Philemon as a matter of dutiful affection . Consequently: Seeing that I am so constituted , [70] since such is my manner of thinking and dealing, that, namely, in place of commanding thee, I rather for love’s sake betake myself to the , I exhort thee as Paul , etc. A very mistaken objection to this view of is that Paul would not have said at all that he was so constituted , but only that he did so in the given case (Hofmann, following Wiesinger). He, in fact, says even now with itself that such is his nature . Observe, moreover, that the supporting elements, . . ., are prefixed with all the emphasis of urgency to the , since in them lies the progress of the representation, namely, that which comes in as additional to the , already said before. Usually is taken as preparative , so that . . . is the more precise explanation of it; in which case some (as Luther, Calvin, and others, including Flatt, de Wette, Wiesinger, Ewald) find only two elements, taking . together; others (most expositors since the time of Chrysostom, including Bleek and Hofmann), three elements
, , . Expositors have differed in defining the significance of the particulars in their bearing on the matter in hand , [71] while recognising on the whole the “pondus ad movendum Philemonis animum” (Estius). According to de Wette (comp. Wetstein), . . . is to be held parallel to the participial clause of Phm 1:8 , in accordance with which the participle would thus have to be resolved by although . But the whole mode of interpretation, which takes as preparative, is untenable. It must of necessity point back , summing up under the notion of personal quality what was said by in Phm 1:8 ; for if is not already defined (as is here the case by reference to Phm 1:8 ), it may, doubtless, become defined either by an adjective immediately following, or by a following (Plato, Conv. p. 199 D; Dem. 41, 3), or (Xen. Anab. i. 4. 2; Plat. Phaed . p. 92 B; Heb 8:1 ), or (Isocr. Paneg . 21), or by with the infinitive (Plato, Conv. p. 175 D, al. ), but never by , which neither actually occurs (the usually cited passage from Andocides in Wetstein, de Wette has rightly described as not here relevant [72] ) nor can take place logically, since , that is, as (not like , which it means after in Aesch. Pers . 180), already presupposes the definiteness of . This more precise definiteness is not, however, to be relegated to the mere conception or mode of view of the writer (Wiesinger: “I, in my circumstances”), according to which is then held to introduce an appositional definition, to which also Bleek and Hofmann ultimately come; but it is to be taken from what Paul has previously said , because it results from that quite simply and suitably. Comp. on , which always in classical writers also where it is not followed by a corresponding , , , or summarily denotes the quality, disposition, demeanour, or the like, more precisely indicated before; Plato, Rep. p. 493 C; Xen. Anab. i. 1. 30; Hellen . iv. 1. 38; Cyrap . i. 5, 8; Soph. Aj . 1277 (1298); Lucian, Cont. 20, and many other places. It is further to be noted, (1) that the true explanation of . . . of itself imperatively requires that we connect these words with the following (Flatt, Lachmann, who, however, parenthesises , de Wette, Wiesinger, Ewald, Bleek, Hofmann), not with that which precedes (as formerly was usual ), in which case the second is understood as resumptive, an (Theophylact), inquam , or the like, being supplied in thought (so Castalio, Beza, Hagenbach, and many). (2) The elements expressed by stand seeing that is a substantive and has not the article in such relation to each other, that and . . . are two attributive statements attaching themselves to ; consequently: as Paul, who is an old man, and now also a prisoner , etc. (3) The (flexible) notion of must by no means have its meaning altered, as is done e.g. by Calvin, who makes it denote “non aetatem, sed officium ;” but, at the same time, may not be rigidly pressed in so confidential a private writing, in which “lepos mixtus gravitate” (Bengel), prevails, especially if Philemon was much younger than Paul. Observe, withal, that the apostle does not use some such expression as , but the more relative term .; comp. Tit 2:2 with the contrast in Phm 1:6 . He sets himself down as a veteran in contradistinction to the younger friend, who was once his disciple. At the stoning of Stephen, and so some twenty-six or twenty-seven years earlier, Paul was still (Act 7:58 ); he might thus be now somewhere about fifty years of age.
. . ] as in Phm 1:1 .
] tenderly affectionate designation of his convert (comp. 1Co 4:14 f.; Gal 4:19 ; 1Pe 5:13 ), in connection with which the conception of his own child is brought more vividly into prominence by the prefixed and by (see the critical remarks), and [73] makes the recommendation yet more affecting and urgent.
] Accusative, in accordance with a well-known attraction; see Winer, p. 155 [E. T. 205]; Buttmann, p. 68 [E. T. 78],
[70] The Vulgate erroneously referred to Philemon : “cum sis talis,” which Cornelius a Lapide unsuccessfully defends.
[71] So e.g. Erasmus, Paraphr .: “Quid enim neges roganti? primum Paulo : cum Paulum dico non paulum rerum tibi significo; deinde seni : nonnihil tribui solet et aetati nunc etiam vincto : in precibus nonnihil ponderis habet et calamitas obtestantis; postremo vincto Jesu Christi : sic vincto favere debent, qui profitentur Christi doctrinam.” Similarly Grotius and others; while, according to Heinrichs, by there was to be awakened gratitude ; by . the readiness to oblige , natural towards the aged; and by . . compassion . Hofmann holds that “the name Paul puts Philemon in mind of all that makes it a historical one,” and that the impression of this becomes thereupon confirmed by the other two elements.
[72] The passage runs: , . Here, precisely as in our passage, belongs not to , but to what follows, and sums up what had been said before. The comparison of , Hom. od. xvi. 205 (Hofmann), where besides no follows, is unsuitable, partly on the general ground of the well-known diversity of meaning of the two words (comp. Khner, ad Xen. Mem. i. 7. 5), which is not to be abandoned without special reason, partly because in that passage stands absolutely and ( hicce ego talis ), so that the following . . . belongs to .
[73] That the expression: in the bonds , was suitable only to Rome and not to Caesarea, is incorrectly inferred by Wieseler, p. 420, from Act 24:23 . See on that passage. It was likewise incorrect to assign the Epistle, on account of , to the alleged second imprisonment at Rome (Calovius).
Fuente: Heinrich August Wilhelm Meyer’s New Testament Commentary
9 Yet for love’s sake I rather beseech thee , being such an one as Paul the aged, and now also a prisoner of Jesus Christ.
Ver. 9. Yet for love’s sake, &c. ] Here is brave oratory, such as might well mollify the hardest heart; Petendo movet, et movendo petit.
Paul the aged ] And therefore venerable. Cognata sunt. Old age and honour are in the Greek tongue very near akin; and . It is a crown (saith Solomon), and that of glory, when found in the way of righteousness,Pro 16:31Pro 16:31 . These bear a resemblance of the Ancient of days, Dan 7:9 . These are like flowers which have their roots perfect when themselves are withering; these, like roses, keep a sweet savour though they lose their colour. These give greatest glimpse at their going down. Magna fuit semper capitis reverentia cani,Act 21:16Act 21:16 .
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
9 . ] is not to be restricted to ‘ this thy love ’ (of Phm 1:7 ; so Calv., al.), or ‘ our mutual love ’ (Grot., al.), but is quite general ‘that Christian love, of which thou shewest so bright an example:’ Phm 1:7 .
] reason for the ‘I prefer this way, as the more efficacious, being such an one, &c.’ The ‘cum sis talis’ of the Vulgate is evidently a mistake. I believe Meyer is right in maintaining that cannot be taken as preparatory to , ‘ such an one, as ’ as in E. V., and commonly. I have therefore punctuated accordingly, as has Ellic. The rendering will be: Being such an one (as declared in . ), as (1) Paul the aged and (2) now a prisoner also of Christ Jesus ( two points are made, and not three as Chrys., all. going together, and the fact of his being a prisoner, adding weight ( ). The fact of is interesting, as connected with the date of this Epistle and those to Eph. and Col.: see Prolegg. to Eph. iv.), I beseech thee , &c.
If we read before , the repetition of will serve, as Meyer remarks, to mark more forcibly the character of his own child, and gives more weight still to the entreaty.
is not (with Erasm.-Schmid) to be treated as if it were a play on the name , ‘ profitable to me :’ but simply to be regarded as an accusative by attraction.
Fuente: Henry Alford’s Greek Testament
Phm 1:9 . : “ can be defined only by a following adjective, or by , , , or with the infinitive; never by ” (Vincent). It seems, therefore, best to take as referring to , which is taken up again in the next verse; must be regarded as though in brackets; would then mean “one who beseeches”. : this can scarcely be in reference to age, for which would be more likely to have been used; besides, in Act 7:58 , at the martyrdom of St. Stephen, the term is applied to St. Paul. Lightfoot in his interesting note on this verse, says: “There is reason for thinking that in the common dialect may have been written indifferently for in St. Paul’s time; and if so, the form here may be due, not to some comparatively late scribe, but to the original autograph itself or to an immediate transcript”; and he gives a number of instances of the form being used for . If, as seems very likely, we should translate the word “ambassador” here, then we have the striking parallel in the contemporary epistle to the Eph 6:20 , . Deissmann ( Licht vom Osten , p. 273) points out that both the verb , and the substantive , were used in the Greek Orient for expressing the title of the Legatus of the emperor. Accepting the meaning “ambassador” here, the significance of the passage is much increased; for Christ’s ambassador had the right to command, but in merely exhorting he throws so much more responsibility on Philemon. The word “ambassador” would be at least as strong an assertion of authority as “apostle”; to a Greek, indeed, more so. : perhaps mentioned for the purpose of hinting that in respect of bondage his position was not unlike that of him for whom he is about to plead; cf. the way in which St. Paul identifies himself with Onesimus in Phm 1:12 , , and Phm 1:17 . : belongs both to and to , cf. Phm 1:1 , Eph 3:1 ; Eph 4:1 , 2Ti 1:8 .
Fuente: The Expositors Greek Testament by Robertson
Acts
THE YOUNG SAUL AND THE AGED PAUL 1
Act 7:58
A far greater difference than that which was measured by years separated the young Saul from the aged Paul. By years, indeed, the difference was, perhaps, not so great as the words might suggest, for Jewish usage extended the term of youth farther than we do, and began age sooner. No doubt, too, Paul’s life had aged him fast, and probably there were not thirty years between the two periods. But the difference between him and himself at the beginning and the end of his career was a gulf; and his life was not evolution, but revolution.
At the beginning you see a brilliant young Pharisee, Gamaliel’s promising pupil, advanced above many who were his equals in his own religion, as he says himself; living after its straitest sect, and eager to have the smallest part in what seemed to him the righteous slaying of one of the followers of the blaspheming Nazarene. At the end he was himself one of these followers. He had cast off, as folly, the wisdom which took him so much pains to acquire. He had turned his back upon all the brilliant prospects of distinction which were opening to him. He had broken with countrymen and kindred. And what had he made of it? He had been persecuted, hunted, assailed by every weapon that his old companions could fashion or wield; he is a solitary man, laden with many cares, and accustomed to look perils and death in the face; he is a prisoner, and in a year or two more he will be a martyr. If he were an apostate and a renegade, it was not for what he could get by it.
What made the change? The vision of Jesus Christ. If we think of the transformation on Saul, its causes and its outcome, we shall get lessons which I would fain press upon your hearts now. Do you wonder that I would urge on you just such a life as that of this man as your highest good?
I. I would note, then, first, that faith in Jesus Christ will transform and ennoble any life.
That initial impulse operated through all the rest of his career. Hearken to him: ‘I live, yet not I, but Christ liveth in me. To me to live is Christ. Whether we live, we live unto the Lord; or whether we die, we die unto the Lord. Living or dying, we are the Lord’s.’ ‘We labour that whether present or absent, we may be accepted of Him.’ The transforming agency was the vision of Christ, and the bowing of the man’s whole nature before the seen Saviour.
Need I recall to you how noble a life issued from that fountain? I am sure that I need do no more than mention in a word or two the wondrous activity, flashing like a flame of fire from East to West, and everywhere kindling answering flames, the noble self-oblivion, the continual communion with God and the Unseen, and all the other great virtues and nobleness which came from such sources as these. I need only, I am sure, remind you of them, and draw this lesson, that the secret of a transforming and noble life is to be found in faith in Jesus Christ. The vision that changed Paul is as available for you and me. For it is all a mistake to suppose that the essence of it is the miraculous appearance that flashed upon the Apostle’s eyes. He speaks of it himself, in one of his letters, in other language, when he says, ‘It pleased God to reveal His Son in me.’ And that revelation in all its fulness, in all its sweetness, in all its transforming and ennobling power, is offered to every one of us. For the eye of faith is no less gifted with the power of direct and certain vision-yea! is even more gifted with this-than is the eye of sense. ‘If they hear not Moses and the prophets, neither will they be persuaded though one rose from the dead.’ Christ is revealed to each one of us as really, as veritably, and the revelation may become as strong an impulse and motive in our lives as ever it was to the Apostle on the Damascus road. What is wanted is not revelation, but the bowed will-not the heavenly vision, but obedience to the vision. I suppose that most of you think that you believe all that about Jesus Christ, which transformed Gamaliel’s pupil into Christ’s disciple. And what has it done for you? In many cases, nothing. Be sure of this, dear young friends, that the shortest way to a life adorned with all grace, with all nobility, fragrant with all goodness, and permanent as that life which does the will of God must clearly be, is this, to bow before the seen Christ, seen in His word, and speaking to your hearts, and to take His yoke and carry His burden. Then you will build upon what will stand, and make your days noble and your lives stable. If you build on anything else, the structure will come down with a crash some day, and bury you in its ruins. Surely it is better to learn the worthlessness of a non-Christian life, in the light of His merciful face, when there is yet time to change our course, than to see it by the fierce light of the great White Throne set for judgment. We must each of us learn it here or there.
II. Faith in Christ will make a joyful life, whatever its circumstances.
That was one side of it. Was that all? This man had that within him which enabled him to triumph over all trials. There is nothing more remarkable about him than the undaunted courage, the unimpaired elasticity of spirit, the buoyancy of gladness, which bore him high upon the waves of the troubled sea in which he had to swim. If ever there was a man that had a bright light burning within him, in the deepest darkness, it was that little weather-beaten Jew, whose ‘bodily presence was weak, and his speech contemptible.’ And what was it that made him master of circumstances, and enabled him to keep sunshine in his heart when winter bound all the world around him? What made this bird sing in a darkened cage? One thing-the continual presence, consciously with Him by faith, of that Christ who had revolutionised his life, and who continued to bless and to gladden it. I have quoted his description of his external condition. Let me quote two or three words that indicate how he took all that sea of troubles and of sorrows that poured its waves and its billows over him. ‘In all these things we are more than conquerors through Him that loved us.’ ‘As the sufferings of Christ abound in us, so our consolation aboundeth also by Christ.’ ‘For which cause we faint not, but though our outward man perish, yet our inward man is renewed day by day.’ ‘Most gladly therefore will I rather glory in my infirmities, that the power of Christ may rest upon me.’ ‘I have learned in whatsoever state I am therewith to be content.’ ‘As sorrowful, yet always rejoicing; as poor, yet making many rich; as having nothing, yet possessing all things.’
There is the secret of blessedness, my friends; there is the fountain of perpetual joy. Cling to Christ, set His will on the throne of your hearts, give the reins of your life and of your character into His keeping, and nothing ‘that is at enmity with joy’ can either ‘abolish or destroy’ the calm blessedness of your spirits.
You will have much to suffer; you will have something to give up. Your life may look, to men whose tastes have been vulgarised by the glaring brightnesses of this vulgar world, but grey and sombre, but it will have in it the calm abiding blessedness which is more than joy, and is diviner and more precious than the tumultuous transports of gratified sense or successful ambition. Christ is peace, and He gives His peace to us; and then He gives a joy which does not break but enhances peace. We are all tempted to look for our gladness in creatures, each of which satisfies but a part of our desire. But no man can be truly blessed who has to find many contributories to make up his blessedness. That which makes us rich must be, not a multitude of precious stones, howsoever precious they may be, but one Pearl of great price; the one Christ who is our only joy. And He says to us that He gives us Himself, if we behold Him and bow to Him, that His joy might remain in us, and that our joy might be full, while all other gladnesses are partial and transitory. Faith in Christ makes life blessed. The writer of Ecclesiastes asked the question which the world has been asking ever since: ‘Who knoweth what is good for a man in this life, all the days of this vain life which he passeth as a shadow?’ You young people are asking, ‘Who will show us any good?’ Here is the answer-Faith in Christ and obedience to Him; that is the good part which no man taketh from us. Dear young friend, have you made it yours?
III. Faith in Christ produces a life which bears being looked back upon.
What did Paul say? ‘I have fought the good fight, I have finished my course, I have kept the faith: henceforth there is laid up for me a crown of righteousness.’ He was not self-righteous; but it is possible to have lived a life which, as the world begins to fade, vindicates itself as having been absolutely right in its main trend, and to feel that the dawning light of Eternity confirms the choice that we made. And I pray you to ask yourselves, ‘Is my life of that sort?’ How much of it would bear the scrutiny which will have to come, and which in Paul’s case was so quiet and calm? He had had a stormy day, many a thundercloud had darkened the sky, many a tempest had swept across the plain; but now, as the evening draws on, the whole West is filled with a calm amber light, and all across the plain, right away to the grey East, he sees that he has been led by, and has been willing to walk in, the right way to the ‘City of habitation.’ Would that be your experience if the last moment came now?
There will be, for the best of us, much sense of failure and shortcoming when we look back on our lives. But whilst some of us will have to say, ‘I have played the fool and erred exceedingly,’ it is possible for each of us to lay himself down in peace and sleep, awaiting a glorious rising again and a crown of righteousness.
Dear young friends, it is for you to choose whether your past, when you summon it up before you, will look like a wasted wilderness, or like a garden of the Lord. And though, as I have said, there will always be much sense of failure and shortcoming, yet that need not disturb the calm retrospect; for whilst memory sees the sins, faith can grasp the Saviour, and quietly take leave of life, saying, ‘I know in whom I have believed, and that He is able to keep that which I have committed to Him against that day.’
So I press upon you all this one truth, that faith in Jesus Christ will transform, will ennoble, will make joyous your lives whilst you live, and will give you a quiet heart in the retrospect when you come to die. Begin right, dear young friends. You will never find it so easy to take any decisive step, and most of all this chiefest step, as you do to-day. You will get lean and less flexible as you get older. You will get set in your ways. Habits will twine their tendrils round you, and hinder your free movement. The truth of the Gospel will become commonplace by familiarity. Associations and companions will have more and more power over you; and you will be stiffened as an old tree-trunk is stiffened. You cannot count on to-morrow; be wise to-day. Begin this year aright. Why should you not now see the Christ and welcome Him? I pray that every one of us may behold Him and fall before Him with the cry, ‘Lord! what wilt Thou have me to do?’
1 To the young.
Fuente: Expositions Of Holy Scripture by Alexander MacLaren
Yet. Omit.
for. sake. App-104.
beseech. App-134. Compare Phm 1:7.
aged. Greek. presbutes. See Tit 2:2. Elsewhere, Luk 1:18.
also, &c. = a prisoner also.
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
9. ] is not to be restricted to this thy love (of Phm 1:7; so Calv., al.), or our mutual love (Grot., al.), but is quite general-that Christian love, of which thou shewest so bright an example: Phm 1:7.
] reason for the -I prefer this way, as the more efficacious, being such an one, &c. The cum sis talis of the Vulgate is evidently a mistake. I believe Meyer is right in maintaining that cannot be taken as preparatory to , such an one, as as in E. V., and commonly. I have therefore punctuated accordingly, as has Ellic. The rendering will be: Being such an one (as declared in . ),-as (1) Paul the aged and (2) now a prisoner also of Christ Jesus (two points are made, and not three as Chrys., all.- going together, and the fact of his being a prisoner, adding weight (). The fact of is interesting, as connected with the date of this Epistle and those to Eph. and Col.: see Prolegg. to Eph. iv.), I beseech thee, &c.
If we read before , the repetition of – will serve, as Meyer remarks, to mark more forcibly the character of his own child, and gives more weight still to the entreaty.
is not (with Erasm.-Schmid) to be treated as if it were a play on the name , profitable to me: but simply to be regarded as an accusative by attraction.
Fuente: The Greek Testament
Phm 1:9. , love) Mine to thee, thine to Onesimus. Philemons love to Paul was previously mentioned. Paul asks lovingly one who loves him.-, rather) He does not say, if you refuse you will incur my indignation and that of Peter, according to the style of the Roman court, a style which is by no means apostolical.-, I beseech).
There are three divisions of the epistle:
I.THE INSCRIPTION, Phm 1:1-3.
II. Having mentioned the flourishing condition of Philemon in spiritual things, Phm 1:4, etc., HE BEGS him to receive Onesimus, a runaway slave, Phm 1:12-17. And desires him to provide a lodging for himself, Phm 1:22.
III.CONCLUSION, Phm 1:23-25.
-, such) He lays down three arguments why he would rather affectionately exhort and ask him, than issue a command: his own (Pauls) natural disposition, long ago well known to Philemon, his old age, and his imprisonment. Old age renders men mild: comp. Luk 5:39 : but even before old age, Paul was still Paul; he formerly depended on the kindness of others, and now, in no respect happier abroad, he still depends upon it. The graceful courtesy in this epistle is mixed with gravity.
Fuente: Gnomon of the New Testament
Philemon 1:9
yet for loves sake I rather beseech, being such a one as Paul the aged, and now a prisoner also of Christ Jesus:-Paul preferred asking Philemon through love, rather than commanding him because of any authority he might have over those whom he had taught the truth, to do what was proper in that concerning what he writes to him.
Fuente: Old and New Testaments Restoration Commentary
righteousness (See Scofield “1Jn 3:7”).
iniquity lawlessness. (See Scofield “Rom 3:23”).
Fuente: Scofield Reference Bible Notes
love’s sake: Rom 12:1, 2Co 5:20, 2Co 6:1, Eph 4:1, Heb 13:19, 1Pe 2:11
Paul: Psa 71:9, Psa 71:18, Pro 16:31, Isa 46:4
prisoner: Phm 1:1, Eph 3:1, Eph 4:1
Reciprocal: Jdg 21:22 – Be favourable unto them 2Sa 9:1 – show him 1Ch 13:2 – If it seem Neh 5:10 – I pray you Psa 37:25 – I have Pro 23:24 – shall have Isa 11:6 – General Act 15:2 – should Act 16:23 – they cast Act 21:16 – an old Act 23:18 – Paul 1Co 1:10 – I beseech 2Co 10:1 – I Paul 2Co 11:23 – in prisons Gal 5:2 – I Paul Phi 4:3 – I 1Th 2:6 – when 1Th 2:18 – even 1Th 4:1 – we 1Ti 5:1 – entreat Phm 1:14 – without Heb 13:22 – suffer 1Pe 5:1 – who
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
Phm 1:9. Because of his love for Philemon, the apostle preferred to use a milder basis for his instruction, namely, his age and also his situation. Respect for age should incline Philemon to heed the request of Paul. Also, his imprisonment would indicate his sincerity which should prompt Philemon to heed the request.
Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary
Phm 1:9. Yet for loves sake. This might mean Philemons love towards Paul, which from what is said in this letter may well be supposed to have been great, and such as the apostle could appeal to, but it seems more consonant with the tone of the whole Epistle to understand it of Pauls love to Philemon, as if he would say, For the love I bear you I lay aside all authority, and beg you to be moved by that love alone.
I rather beseech. The character of the Gospel spirit, in meekness to forego a right rather than to insist on it.
being such an one as Paul an ambassador. The apostle now sets forth some grounds for his appeal. The rendering of the A. V., Paul the aged, seems hardly a fitting reason to bring forward to Philemon, who himself, from his position, may be supposed to have been not much younger. Nor can St. Paul have been so old as to justify the use of such words. At the death of Stephen, not thirty years before, he is spoken of as young (Act 7:58), so that he must have been most likely between fifty and sixty when he was first imprisoned at Rome. The word usually rendered aged differs but by one letter from that meaning ambassador, and there seems to be evidence to warrant us in believing that in a dialect of Greek one form would stand for the other. But the most weighty reason for the rendering given above is St. Pauls own language, Eph 6:20, an Epistle written at the same time as this letter to Philemon, in which he speaks (using the verb from which our noun is derived) of himself as an ambassador in bonds. Thus the connection of ideas is the same as in the verse before us, and as Christs ambassador St. Paul could plead with much more force than by any allusion to his own age. The same verb, joined with the word here used for beseech, is found in 2Co 5:20, We are ambassadors for Christ, as though God did beseech you by us.
and now also. St. Paul was under all circumstances Christs officer, but there is now an additional ground why his entreaty should be granted,a prisoner of Christ Jesus. See on Phm 1:1.
Fuente: A Popular Commentary on the New Testament
1:9 {1} Yet for love’s sake I rather beseech [thee], being such an one as Paul the aged, and now also a prisoner of Jesus Christ.
(1) An example of a Christian exercise and commendation for another man.
Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes
Paul perhaps referred to his aged condition to remind Philemon of the affliction he had undergone for the gospel that may have aged him prematurely. Several commentators pointed out that "aged" or "old man" (Gr. presbytes) may have originally read "ambassador" (presbeutes, cf. Eph 6:20), but there does not seem to be sufficient reason to amend the text. At this time Paul would have been about 55 years old, which in his day was older than it is in ours because life expectancies were shorter then. He appealed as a father for his son in the faith. His reference to his present imprisonment also would have encouraged Philemon to comply.
". . . Paul knew Philemon as modern commentators cannot and no doubt had a good idea of how Philemon was likely to react to such sentiments being read in public in the church of which he was a member as well as leader." [Note: Dunn, p. 328.]
This type of appeal would have had much greater force in the honor-shame culture in which these people lived than it does in modern western power-weakness culture.