Generally speaking, the report brought by Timothy concerning the church in Thessalonica was most heartening, and when Paul heard it, he offered thanks to God for their faith and love, for their hard work and hope. But in some respects there was room for improvement. Of particular concern was the relationship between the leaders of the church and the other members. Due perhaps to a restlessness provoked by uncertainty about the Parousia or by some other factor (see disc. on 4:11; 5:14; 2 Thess. 3:6–13 and note), some of the members’ conduct called for rebuke by the leaders, but the leaders did not handle the situation as tactfully as they might have, and tensions resulted. Paul’s advice to remedy this situation is found in verses 12 and 13 (on the form of this parenesis, see disc. on 4:1–12 but note that it does not conform fully to the pattern set out there, in that it has no prepositional phrase). The remaining verses of the section present us with a triple series of brief instructions. The first instruction consists of five pastoral exhortations, the last occurring in both a negative and a positive form (vv. 14f., again see disc. on 4:1–12 for the parenetic structure of these verses; and see A. J. Malherbe, “ ‘Pastoral Care’ in the Thessalonian Church,” NTS 36 [3, 1990], pp. 375–91, for Paul’s use of methods and traditions derived from the moral philosophers). The second consists of three directions for working out the will of God in one’s life (vv. 16–18). The third contains five injunctions relating to the prophetic ministry (vv. 19–22). The letter ends with a prayer reminding the Thessalonians of God’s grace and of the dignity that is theirs because of it. Every aspect of their lives is now important (“spirit, soul, and body”), and the prayer is that, in every way (“through and through”), they might be sanctified and found to be so at the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ (v. 23). Confident that God will answer this prayer (v. 24), Paul asks for prayer for himself and his colleagues (v. 25; cf. 2 Thess. 3:1–5). The final greeting (v. 26) is followed by an instruction that this letter be read to the whole church (v. 27). He then pronounces the grace (v. 28).
5:12 Now we ask you, brothers (for erōtaō, “to ask,” see disc. on 4:1). The tone is respectful as he asks the Thessalonians to show respect for their leaders. The Greek is literally “to know” them in the sense “to know their worth.” There follows a threefold description of the leaders. The one definite article governing the three participles of this description makes it clear that Paul has in mind one group only and not three. They are described in terms of their functions (the present tense indicating that this is their characteristic role): they work hard among you, where the Greek implies laborious toil (kopiaō; see 1:3 for the corresponding noun); they are over you in the Lord, where, of the three participles, this one distinctly marked them out for what they were. But the qualifying phrase reminds us that Christian leaders are themselves under the Lord’s authority (Jesus’ authority; see note on 1:1) and that the style of their leadership must reflect that authority—“Be shepherds of God’s flock … not greedy for money, but eager to serve; not lording it over those entrusted to you, but being examples to the flock” (1 Pet. 5:2f.). The verb itself illustrates this. Proistēmi’s meaning ranges from having authority over others (cf. Rom. 12:8; 1 Tim. 5:17) to caring for others (cf. 1 Tim. 3:4, 5, 12 and Titus 3:8, 14, for the thought that this care will be expressed in action—in doing good works). A noun from the same root, prostatis, describes Phoebe, the deacon of Cenchreae, as having been “a great help” to many, including Paul (Rom. 16:2). And (returning to the description of the Thessalonian leaders) they admonish you. Like the hard work mentioned above, this was another aspect of their care. The verb noutheteō is peculiar to Paul in the NT and carries the sense of blame for wrongdoing, though more in the nature of a friendly than of a hostile warning (cf. 5:14; 2 Thess. 3:15).
5:13 Paul asks two things of the Thessalonians concerning their leaders: First, as we have seen in verse 12, that they should know their worth and thus respect them, and second, that they should hold them in the highest regard in love. The verb hēgeomai usually means “to consider” or “to regard,” in the neutral sense of that word (cf. 2 Thess. 3:15), but here it has a more positive content dictated both by the adverb, hyperekperissōs (see disc. on 3:10), and by the adverbial phrase, “in love.” The church members are asked to regard their leaders thus, not for any personal qualities they might have, but because of their work, in the sense that their work will go better, whether within the church or in extending the church, if they can be made to feel that they are loved.
Commentators debate whether the final injunction of verse 13 belongs with the preceding or not. It probably does and is Paul’s way of rounding off the discussion. It is important to note that it is a general injunction. Evidently, fault existed on both sides (leaders and members), and the whole church had to be told to make it their practice (note the present imperative) to live in peace with each other (cf. 4:11). This is a common Christian instruction (cf. Rom. 12:18; 14:19; 2 Cor. 13:11; Eph. 4:3; Col. 3:15; 2 Tim. 2:22; Heb. 12:14) going back to the instruction given by Jesus himself (Mark 9:50; cf. Ps. 34:14), for it goes to the heart of what we as Christians are called to be and to do: “Be imitators of God … and live a life of love” (Eph. 5:1f.).
5:14–15 Again, it is important to note that the instruction contained in these verses is general, addressed to the whole church and not simply to the leaders, although it obviously applies to them in particular. The introductory formula, we urge you, brothers (for parakaleō, “to urge,” see disc. on 3:2) is parallel to that in 4:1, 10 and 5:12, where the whole church is addressed, so that, as Paul understands it, every member of the brotherhood has a pastoral responsibility however much that may be the particular role of the leaders.
First they must warn those who are idle. Brotherhood does not mean turning a blind eye to the faults of others. Rather, it means being concerned for their welfare, reminding them, if need be, of the standards expected of Christians. The verb is again that of verse 12, noutheteō, while the word “idle” (ataktos, cf. 2 Thess. 3:6, 11 for the adverb ataktōs, and 2 Thess. 3:7 for the verb atakteō) is, strictly, a military term, signifying the soldier who does not hold the line in the pressure of battle but breaks ranks (taxis). Thus the word comes to describe the undisciplined who act in a disorderly manner. The precise nature of the “disorderliness” of the Thessalonian offenders is indicated by the context both here and, more importantly, in 2 Thessalonians 3:6–12. It was idleness. Apparently there were a number of people within the Thessalonian church who were not merely out of work (argos, Matt. 20:3, 6; 1 Tim. 5:13; Titus 1:12) but who refused to work (cf. 2 Thess. 3:10, who “will not work”), thus breaking ranks and undermining the good order both of the church and of society (for the tradition, paradosis, of work as a part of the Christian ethic, see disc. on 2 Thess. 3:6; cf. Rom. 13:13; 1 Cor. 14:33, 39f.; Eph. 5:3 where “greed,” improper for Christians, could be countered by the manual work mentioned earlier in 4:18; for Paul’s concern for the church’s role in civil order, see disc. on 4:12, cf. Rom. 13:1–7; Col. 3:18–4:1). This phenomenon of culpable idleness is sometimes thought to have been the product of mistaken ideas about the Parousia, either that it was near or had come (see disc. on 2 Thess. 2:2). On the one hand, this view receives some support in the fact that Paul moves from an allusion to the idle in 4:11f., to eschatology in 4:13–5:11, and then back to the problem of idleness in 5:14. But, on the other hand, we notice that the missionaries had already warned against idleness when they were in Thessalonica, before there was any confusion, as far as we know, about the Parousia (cf. 2 Thess. 3:6). Perhaps then, the problem stemmed not from a mistaken eschatology but from social factors within that society (see note on 2 Thess. 3:6).
The second injunction is to encourage (or “comfort” or “console,” see disc. on 2:12 for paramytheomai) the timid. “The timid” (oligopsychos, found only here in the NT) may refer to those who by nature are diffident, or to those who in terms of their Christian faith have lost heart. Perhaps the fear of some of the Thessalonians that their dead loved ones might miss the Parousia had caused them to lose heart.
Third they are to help the weak. The verb antechomai means “to hold fast to” (cf. Matt. 6:24; Luke 16:13; Titus 1:9), and here church members are told to hold fast to the weak in the sense of supporting them, helping them. “The weak” are the weak in faith (Rom. 14:1). The train of thought leading from the second to the third injunction is clear, and Paul is still requiring this pastoral concern of his readers in Romans 15:1 when he wrote, “we who are strong ought to bear with the failings of the weak and not please ourselves.”
Fourth, they are to be patient (makrothymeō) with everyone. In Galatians 5:22, patience (makrothymia) is a fruit of the Spirit (cf. also 1 Cor. 13:4; Eph. 4:2; Col. 1:11; 3:12), reproducing in us a characteristic of God who is himself “patient (makrothymos, NIV ‘compassionate’) and gracious” (Exod. 34:6; Ps. 103:8). The word implies an enduring patience, a patience that lasts the distance (the sense of makro-) no matter how trying the circumstances. Some people are easy to be patient with; others are not. But Paul says “be patient with everyone” (pros pantas, “towards all” including, we suppose, those outside the church; see disc. on 3:12). An enduring patience even with the most difficult of people is a real test of Christian character. It is a product both of God’s grace (the fruit of the Spirit) and of our own discipline and determination (hence this injunction).
The last injunction is described first negatively and then positively: Make sure that nobody pays back wrong for wrong, but always try to be kind to each other and to everyone else. A change from the plural throughout these verses (vv. 13–15), including the imperative of this verse, “make sure” (lit. “you [pl.] see to it”), to the third person singular in the noun clause, “that nobody pays back wrong for wrong,” makes the point that individually as well as corporately we have a responsibility in this matter. This was a theme of Jesus’ teaching (cf. Matt. 5:44–48; Luke 6:27–36; cf. Prov. 25:21) as it was elsewhere of Paul’s (cf. Rom. 12:17, which uses the same verb, apodidōmi and the same expression kakon anti kakou, “wrong for wrong”), in the face of a society which, then as now, accepted retaliation as the norm. Injustice done, injustice returned. Dirty tricks done, dirty tricks done in return. Violence suffered, revenge paid back in kind. The Christian norm, however, is to do good. A Christian congregation that tolerates the harboring of grudges or the intention to retaliate is a contradiction in terms. In the second half of the verse Paul reverts to the plural, making the complementary point to the singular noted above, that we are all expected to act in this way. The command is general to all Christians, literally “pursue the good” (to agathon diōkete), that is, make the best interest of others our aim and work constantly at achieving it (the force of the present imperative and of the adverb, pantote, “always”). The “try to be kind” of NIV is too feeble. Paul throws down a tremendous challenge to Christians to be Christlike (for that is what the injunction amounts to) both within the church in our dealings with each other (eis allēlous), and outside in our dealings with everyone else (eis pantas). Remember, the Thessalonians were a persecuted church, but for all that, they were not to return wrong for wrong, but rather, they were to work constantly for the good of the very people who were doing them harm. Not an easy assignment! Impossible, indeed, apart from God’s grace. Yet something required of us no less than of them.
5:16–18 Some things vary in the Christian experience; they come and go. But some things have an “always” attached to them. These verses name three, for the explanatory clause at the end of these verses almost certainly refers to them all (despite the singular “this” of v. 18 which might appear to refer only to the last of the three). Thus it was God’s will for them first, that they should learn to face all that comes with irrepressible joy (NIV be joyful always). Paul’s intent is explained more fully in Philippians 4:4, where he has “rejoice in the Lord always.” We might have little in the world to be glad about (cf. 1:6), but in the Lord we have much, and the world cannot take that joy from us (cf. John 16:22). The phrase “in the Lord” points to the objective grounds for our rejoicing in what God has done for us in Christ: “God so loved … that he gave …” (John 3:16). But this is linked with a subjective capacity to rejoice, which is no less God-given: once again a part of the fruit of the Spirit (Gal. 5:22; cf. Acts 13:52; Rom. 14:17). In short, joy lies at the heart of the gospel—a truth echoed in the common root, in Greek, of two words, grace and joy (charis, chara). It is God’s joy to be gracious to us, while our joy has its grounds in his grace.
Second, they should face all that comes with prayer—pray continually, that is, live always in the spirit of prayer. Prayer acknowledges our utter dependence upon God and the utter dependability of God in all circumstances. Prayer as much as joy is the product of God’s grace. For the adverb, “continually,” adialeiptōs, cf. 1:2 and 2:13, and for the injunction to pray continually, compare Jesus’ intention in telling the parable of the Persistent Widow: “that they (the disciples) should always pray and not give up” (Luke 18:1). See also Romans 12:12, where the thought is again of persistence in prayer. Paul’s own letters are a case in point. They are full of prayers for his readers, and their picture of Paul as a man of prayer is corroborated by Luke’s account of him in Acts (cf. Acts 9:11; 13:2f.; 14:23; 16:25; 20:36; 21:5; 22:17–21; 27:35; 28:8).
Third, God’s will for them was that they should give thanks in all circumstances. This is not a stoical indifference to all that comes. Paul regards the Christian as vulnerable. He or she can be hurt, disappointed, confused, or defeated, but never driven to total despair, never forsaken, never destroyed (2 Cor. 4:8–11), for God is always there. As in verse 17, so here, there is the implied qualification: “to the Lord.” Compare Paul’s thanksgiving for joy “in the presence of our God” in 3:9. His love and his power give the strength to meet every situation in life. The thanks are not for the circumstances but for the fact that in all circumstances the Lord is there. The same association of thanksgiving with prayer in these verses occurred earlier in 1:2 and reappears in Philippians 4:6. According to Romans 1:21, the failure to give thanks is a mark of human sinfulness, and elsewhere Paul urges those whose sins have been forgiven to “overflow with thankfulness” (Col. 2:7; cf. also Eph. 5:4, 20; Col. 3:15, 17; 4:2). To be able to give thanks in all circumstances presupposes a recognition of God’s sovereignty, that in all these circumstances (whatever the appearance might be) he is working “for the good of those who love him, who have been called according to his purpose” (Rom. 8:28).
Finally, we note that God’s will is said to be in Christ Jesus. In these particular matters, as in all others (for God’s will includes far more than is mentioned here; note that “will” in the Greek lacks the definite article—“a will of God for you is …”), his will is made known to us in Christ, whether in his practice or in his precepts, whether in the days of his flesh or through his Spirit. Moreover, only as we are “in Christ” are we empowered through that same Spirit to do what God’s will demands (for Christ, see note on 1:1, and for his oneness with the Father, see disc. on 3:11 and 2 Thess. 2:16).
5:19–22 Verse 20 may be the key to the interpretation of all five injunctions in these verses; they may all have to do with the prophetic gift. The prophet spoke for the risen Lord; he or she could declare, “Thus says the Lord,” and in that capacity the prophet’s ministry comprised both preaching and prediction. This ministry was a gift of the Spirit (cf. Acts 11:28; 21:11; 1 Cor. 12:10f., 28; 14:1, 39; Eph. 4:11; see also Eph. 2:20; 3:5 for the ranking of prophets next to apostles) and in that connection especially, though the same would apply to any aspect of the Spirit’s work, Paul warned, Do not put out the Spirit’s fire (v. 19, lit., “do not extinguish the Spirit”). The figure of fire variously denotes the Spirit or the work of the Spirit (cf. Matt. 3:11; Luke 3:16; 12:49; Acts 2:3). This particular prohibition is expressed in the Greek by the negative of the present imperative (as also v. 20, do not treat prophecies with contempt), which may imply that the Thessalonians were extinguishing the fire of the Spirit as manifested in the voice of prophecy and were being told by Paul to put an end to such practice. But the present tense may only mean that they should not make it their habit to extinguish the Spirit, whether or not they were doing so now (the three positive injunctions of vv. 21, 22 are all in the present imperative, giving the same sense that believers should make the thing commanded their practice).
The voice of prophecy might be extinguished either by the prophet’s refusing to speak (cf. Jer. 20:9) or by others’ refusing to listen or obstructing the speaker (cf. Amos 2:12; Mic. 2:6). The particular issue may have been prophecies concerning the coming of Christ, which some members, overreacting against the enthusiasm of others, rejected. But no prophecy should be rejected out of hand, any more than should all that purports to be prophecy be accepted uncritically. Rather, Paul instructs, Test everything (the neuter panta indicates that it is the substance, not the speaker, which is to be tested; for the verb, dokimazō, see disc. on 2:4). No criterion is offered for testing what the prophet said, but elsewhere we learn of two tests of genuine prophecy: how it measures up against what other prophets said (1 Cor. 14:29) and how it measures up against “the Lord’s command” (1 Cor. 14:37f.). The latter reference implies that the kerygma—the gospel—central to which is the proclamation of Jesus as Lord (cf. Acts 2:36; 1 Cor. 12:3) is the ultimate criterion of genuine prophecy. This comes as a warning, then, that prophets are not the source of new truth insofar as they are preachers, but they are expositors of truth that has already been revealed. In this connection, another gift, founded upon and fostered by a knowledge of Scripture, of “distinguishing between spirits,” is much to be prized (1 Cor. 12:10).
Out of such a gift will come the church’s ability to hold on to the good in what the prophet may utter (for the verb katechō, cf. 2 Thess. 2:6) and to avoid every kind of evil. If it is right that all five of these injunctions concern prophecy, it may be better to treat “evil” as an attributive adjective and to translate this injunction, “avoid every evil kind (of utterance),” which would be every utterance that ran counter to the kerygma. It must be conceded, however, that Paul’s thought may have moved beyond prophecy to more general considerations in verse 22 and even in verse 21, and that his instruction in these verses is that in all matters the Thessalonians should “hold on to the good” and “avoid every kind of evil” (cf. Isa. 1:16f., also 1 Thess. 4:3). This expression is sometimes understood in the sense of “every appearance of evil” (cf. AV). The word concerned (eidos) does sometimes have that meaning. If it were taken in that sense, it would mean the evil that outwardly reflects the inner character. But NIV has probably expressed the sense that Paul intended.
5:23–24 Paul prays again for the Thessalonians. Earlier he prayed that their “hearts might be established blameless in holiness” (3:13), and he defined holiness both as consecration to God and as separation from the world and its ways (4:3–8). Here he stresses that the consecration must be total, “through and through … spirit, soul and body.” For the expression, God himself, using the emphatic pronoun, see disc. on 3:11. The description the God of peace is echoed in 2 Thessalonians 3:16 (the Lord of peace) and later in Romans 15:33; 16:20; 2 Corinthians 13:11 (the God of love and peace) and Philippians 4:9 (cf. also Heb. 13:20 and Rom. 14:17 for peace as a characteristic of God’s kingdom). Peace, as we have seen (1:1), signifies well-being in the widest sense, but Paul has in mind spiritual well-being, peace with God. That peace originates with God himself, not the person concerned. God takes the initiative in salvation (see disc. on 1:4; 5:9). The point is reinforced by the conjunction de, “but” (not shown in NIV), which sets this prayer over against the injunctions of the preceding verses. They speak of what we must do; this prayer concerns what God has done and will do on our behalf. God could not acquiesce in a state of affairs in which sinners were at enmity with himself. In Christ, therefore, he took the initiative to put them at peace (cf. Rom. 5:6ff.; Eph. 2:13ff.). To those who respond to his initiative, he gives a new status, a new start; and now Paul prays, in effect, that he who began this good work in them might “carry it on to completion until the day of Christ Jesus” (Phil. 1:6). That is, he prays that God might sanctify them through and through. The latter expression renders the word, holotelēs, unique to this passage in the NT. It is comprised of two words, the one signifying wholeness, the other completion. Paul was never afraid to aim high in his prayers (see, e.g., Eph. 3:19). His prayer for the Thessalonians was for their total sanctification (see disc. on 4:3). We have seen that there is a human role in this process, hence the exhortations above; but even that is largely a matter of letting God do the work, and this prayer focuses on that work of God in shaping their lives.
The second half of the prayer (may your whole spirit, soul and body be kept blameless) is essentially the same as the first (and as the prayer of 3:11–13 where Paul also prays that they “will be blameless,” amemptos). Again praying for their complete sanctification, Paul now uses the adjective “whole,” holoklēron (lit. “complete in all its parts,” cf. James 1:4, and Acts 3:16 for the equivalent noun), but the sense is the same as that of holotelēs (the “through and through”) in the first half of the prayer. “Clearly Paul is stretching his vocabulary … to bring out the truth that he is looking for the Thessalonian Christians to live on the highest plane” (Morris, Themes, p. 61). Holoklēron qualifies the three nouns, spirit, soul and body.
Paul’s use of these three nouns should not be pressed as a basis of his anthropology. The piling up of the nouns functions only to emphasize the completeness of the sanctification—it is to touch every aspect of their lives. One would be hard pressed indeed to draw a distinction between spirit and soul; and, while it may be easier to distinguish between spirit and body, the biblical notion of the wholeness of our being must be kept in view. Aspects of our being can be referred to as spirit, soul, or body, but our being is indivisible. It is a whole. We are one.
Paul is confident that God will sanctify the Thessalonians and keep them blameless, not because he has prayed, but because the God to whom he has prayed is faithful—the one who calls you is faithful and he will do it. The faithfulness of God, i.e., his utter dependability, is a favorite Pauline theme (see disc. on 2 Thess. 3:3; cf. 1 Cor. 1:9; 10:13; 2 Cor. 1:18; 2 Tim. 2:13; also Heb. 10:23; 11:11). As for God’s calling the Thessalonians, Paul referred to this earlier in connection with both their salvation (2:12) and their sanctification (4:7). The present tense of the participle, “who calls,” suggests that God goes on calling—he calls the unbeliever to faith and the believer to holiness. Paul’s prayer concerns the latter and is offered with an eye to the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ (for parousia, see disc. on 2:19, and on 3:13 for the Coming as an incentive to Christian practice; see note on 1:1 for the titles Lord and Christ).
5:25 In the same confidence that God will answer his prayer for them, Paul asks the Thessalonians to pray for him and his colleagues—to pray constantly, if we can again press the present tense of the imperative. Notice the mutuality of ministry implied in this request—his to them and theirs to him. “The church at prayer is a church where pastor and people are praying for others, where pastors pray for their people, and where people are praying for their pastors who, like them, are standing in the need of prayer” (Saunders). Paul was certainly conscious of that need, ever aware of his own weakness and of his utter dependence on God. Similar requests for prayer are found in 2 Thessalonians 3:1f.; Romans 15:30; Ephesians 6:19; Colossians 4:3f. (cf. also Heb. 13:18). See also 2 Corinthians 1:11 and Philippians 1:19 for the acknowledgement that others were praying for him. If his request shows an awareness of the weakness of his humanity, his calling the Thessalonians brothers evinces its warmth. See the discussion on 1:4 for this address as a measure of his affection for the Thessalonians.
5:26 The instruction Greet all the brothers with a holy kiss means, “Give them all a kiss from me” (cf. Rom. 16:16; 1 Cor. 16:20; 2 Cor. 13:12; in 1 Pet. 5:14 it is called the “kiss of love” and, with this, cf. 1 Cor. 16:24, “my love to all of you”). Kissing was a common form of salutation in the ancient world, indicating affection and sometimes homage (1 Sam. 10:1) and sometimes, in that sense, it became an act of worship (1 Kings 19:18; Job 31:27; Hos. 13:2). By the time of Justin Martyr (ca. A.D. 100–165), the kiss had become an accepted part of the Christian liturgy and was exchanged after the prayers and before the presentation of the bread and wine (First Apol. 65.2). Hippolytus (d. ca. A.D. 236) called it the “kiss of peace,” and in the Apostolic Constitutions (fourth century) its practice was regulated: men were to kiss only men, and women only women (2.57.17). Whether the kiss was formalized in the liturgy in Paul’s day is open to question. It is also a moot point whether “all” should be given particular emphasis. Is Paul stressing that all should be greeted in a situation where there was dissension? Or should we treat “all” as no different from “one another,” the expression he employs elsewhere?
5:27 As evidence of dissension and even of division within the church, some commentators appeal to this verse, where the very strength of Paul’s language, I charge you before the Lord to have this letter read to all the brothers, might hint at his fear that it would not be read at all (cf. the milder request of Col. 4:16, “see that it is … read”). But nothing in the letter thus far indicates that the situation in Thessalonica is nearly as serious as this suggests. On the contrary, such is the general tenor of the letter (cf. e.g., 1:2f.; 2:19f.; 3:7–9) that this church seems to have been free from any serious problems of division. It would be unwise, therefore, to build too much on the strength of the language. Rather, it probably reflects his love for the Thessalonians. He longed to be with them and, for the time being, this letter was the closest he could come to satisfying that longing. Therefore he wanted them all to hear it read. Notice the first person singular, “I charge you.” This is Paul speaking for himself, from his own heart and perhaps, at this point, holding the pen in his own hand (see disc. on 5:28; cf. also 2 Thess. 2:5). The expression is a strong one (enorkizō), “I put you on oath.” He is not swearing by the Lord (cf. Matt. 5:34) but appealing to his readers to act as though, in this matter, they were on oath to the Lord. Almost certainly the Lord is Jesus, as in verses 23 and 28, and that Paul should invoke him in this way is “another indication of the stature of the Lord as Paul saw him” (Morris, Themes, p. 33; see disc. on 3:11 and 2 Thess. 2:16).
5:28 The letter ends much as it began (1:1) and in a manner that would soon become the trademark of the apostle. He commends his readers to the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ (for an expanded form of this grace, see 2 Cor. 13:14, and for a shortened form, Col. 4:18; 1 Tim. 6:21; 2 Tim. 4:22; Titus 3:15; for the titles Lord and Christ, see note on 1:1). Paul typically links grace with the Lord Jesus Christ (2 Thess. 1:2, 12; 2:16; 3:18). He also customarily employed an amanuensis to transcribe his letters, but at about this point he would seize the pen and write the final words in his own hand (cf. 2 Thess. 3:17; Gal. 6:11). The first person singular of verse 27 may signal that change.
Additional Notes
5:20 Do not treat prophecies with contempt: If 1 Corinthians is any guide, it may not have been unusual to find men and women exercising the gift of prophecy during a worship service (see 1 Cor. 11:4f.; 14:29; cf. also Acts 13:1). But besides these, others, such as the “prophets” referred to in the list of charismata (1 Cor. 12:28f.; Eph. 4:11; cf. Eph. 2:20; 3:5), exercised this gift more widely. To this group belonged Agabus and the others mentioned in Acts 11:27 (cf. also Acts 21:10). In their capacity as preachers, the prophets offered edification, comfort, and encouragement (Acts 15:32; 1 Cor. 14:2f.). The reaction of unbelievers to their ministry (1 Cor. 14:24f.) shows that they preached “the whole will of God” (Acts 20:27). In the context of the church meeting, their ministry is described as a “revelation” (1 Cor. 14:26ff.), which appears to mean that it was usually a spontaneous utterance in response to a distinct moving of the Spirit. The utterances of the prophets communicated intelligently (unlike the gift of tongues) to those who heard them.
5:21–22 Test everything. Hold on to the good. Avoid every kind of evil: Early Christian writers invariably quote these words as a comment on a logion attributed to Jesus: “Be approved money changers” (see J. Jeremias, Unknown Sayings of Jesus [London: S.P.C.K., 1964], pp. 100–104). The connection between Paul’s injunction and the logion was found in the word eidos, which early writers understood in the sense of “kind of money,” i.e., Latin species. On this basis, Paul extended Jesus’ metaphor, “Be like good money changers; test every coin that comes across your table; keep the good, reject the bad.” However, “kind of money” is not attested for eidos, and the connection is, therefore, a tenuous one.