Bible Study Column
PHILEMON
John Nelson Darby
The very beautiful and interesting
Epistle to Philemon does not require much comment; it is an expression of the
love which works by the Spirit within the assembly of God in all the
circumstances of individual life.
Written for the purpose of awakening in Philemon sentiments which certain events
had a tendency to extinguish in his heart, this epistle is suited to produce
those feelings in the reader more than to be the object of explanation.
It is a fine picture of the way in
which the tenderness and the strength of the love of God, working in the heart,
occupies itself with every detail wherein that love might be wounded, or that
might be an occasion for its growth and manifestation. In this point of view the
epistle is as important as beautiful; for this development of tender and
delicate consideration in the midst of the apostle's gigantic labours, and of
the immense truths that formed the basis of relationship between all creatures
and God in Christ, gives a very peculiar character to Christianity and shews its
divine nature; since He who reveals the most profound truths, and puts them in
their right place in the circle of divine thought, does so as speaking of a
known thing, as communicating His own thoughts; and can (being the Spirit of the
God of love) fill the heart with considerations which love only can suggest,
with a dignity which manifests their source, and with a delicacy of application
which shews that, whatever be the grandeur of His thoughts, He is at liberty to
consider everything.
When the human mind is occupied
with elevated subjects, it feels their weight, and bends under the load; it is
absorbed; it has to abstract itself, to fix its attention. God reveals His own
thoughts; and, vast as they may be to the human mind, they flow with the
clearness and connectedness that is natural to them, when he communicates them
by His chosen instruments. The latter are free to love; for the God who employs
them and inspires them is love. It is a more essential part of their task to
present Him thus, than even to speak of the deep things. Accordingly, when they
are moved by that love, the character of Him who sends them is demonstrated as
that of the God who is the source of love, by a perfect consideration for
others, and the most delicate attention to those things which their hearts would
feel.
Moreover this love develops itself
in relationships formed by the Holy Ghost Himself, between the members of the
body of Christ, that is to say, between men. Springing from a divine source, and
always fed by it, Christian affections assume the form of human regard, which by
exhibiting love and the opposite of selfishness, bear the stamp of their origin.
Love, free from self, can and does think of all that concerns others and
understands what will affect them.
Onesimus, a fugitive slave, had
been converted by means of Paul in his bonds. Philemon, a rich man or at least
one of easy fortune, received the assembly in his house (his wife also being
converted) and in his measure laboured himself in the Lord's work. Archippus
was a servant of the Lord, who ministered in the assembly, perhaps an
evangelist; at any rate he took part in the conflicts of the gospel, and was
thus associated with Philemon and the assembly.
The apostle, in sending Onesimus
back, addresses the whole assembly. This is the reason that we have here, grace
and peace without the addition of mercy as when individuals only are addressed
by the apostles. His appeal on behalf of Onesimus is to Philemon; but the whole
assembly is to interest itself in this beloved slave, who was become a child of
God. Their Christian hearts would be a support and a guarantee for the conduct
of Philemon; although the apostle expects pardon and kindness for Onesimus from
the love of Philemon himself as a servant of God.
Paul (as was his custom) recognizes
all the good that was in Philemon, and uses it as a motive to Philemon himself,
that he might let the feelings of grace flow out freely, in spite of anything
that the return of Onesimus might excite in the flesh or any displeasure that
Satan might try to re-awaken in him. The apostle would have that which he
desired for Onesimus to be Philemon's own act. The enfranchisement of his
former slave, or even his kind reception as a brother, would have quite a
different bearing in that case, than if it had arisen from a command on the
apostle's part; for Christian affection and the bonds of love were in
question. He gives due weight to the right he had to command, but only I order
to abandon it, and to give more force to his request; and at the same time he
suggests that the communion of Philemon's faith with the whole assembly of God
and with the apostle that is, the way in which his faith connected him, in the
activities of Christian love, with the assembly of God and those appointed by
him to labour in it, and with the Lord Himself
which had already shewn itself so honourably in Philemon, would have its
full development in the acknowledgment of tall the apostle's rights over his
heart.
In verse 6 we must read very good
thing which is in us.
It is beautiful to see the mixture
of affection for Onesimus which shews itself in an anxiety that makes him plead
every motive which could act on the heart of Philemon with the Christian feeling that inspired him with full
confidence in the kindly affections of this faithful and excellent brother. The
return of his fugitive slave was indeed likely to stir something in his natural
heart; the apostle interposes his letter on behalf of his dear child in the
faith, born in the time of his captivity. God had interposed the work of His
grace, which ought to act on the heart of Philemon, producing altogether new
relationships with Onesimus. The apostle beseeches him to receive his former
slave as a brother, but it is evident (ver 12), although Paul wished it to be
the spontaneous act of the master whom Onesimus had wronged, that the apostle
expected the affranchisement of the latter. Be that is it may, he takes
everything upon himself for his dear son. According to grace Onesimus was more
profitable to Philemon, as well as to Paul, than formerly, when the flesh had
made him an unfaithful and valueless servant; and this he should rejoice in. (Ver
11) Paul alludes to the name of Onesimus which means profitable. Finally he
reminds Philemon that he was indebted to him for his own salvation for his life
as a Christian.
Paul at this moment was a prisoner
at Rome. God had brought Onesimus there (whither all resorted) to lead him to
salvation and the knowledge of the Lord, in order that we should be instructed,
and that Onesimus should have a new position in the Christian assembly.
It was apparently towards the end
of the apostle's imprisonment. He hopes at least soon to be released and tells
Philemon to prepare him a lodging.
We find the names again in the
Epistle to the Colossians. There the apostle says, Onesimus, who is one of you;
so that, if it be the same, he was of Colosse. It seems likely, because there is
Archippus also, who is exhorted to take heed to his ministry. If it be so, the
fact that he speaks thus of Onesimus to the Christians at Colosse is another
proof of his loving care for this new convert. He lays him thus upon the hearts
of the assembly, sending his letter by him and Tychicus. In the Epistle to the
Ephesians there are no salutations; but the same Tychicus is its bearer. Timothy
is joined with Paul in the address of the Epistle to the Colossians, as well as
in this to Philemon. It was not so in the Epistle to the Ephesians; but in that
to the Philippians to whom the apostle hoped to send Timothy ere long, their two
names are again united.
I do not draw any conclusions from
these last details; but they furnish ground for inquiry into details. Each of
the four epistles was written during the apostle's captivity at Rome, and when
he was expecting to be delivered form that captivity.
Finally, that which we have especially to remark in the Epistle to Philemon is the love which, in the intimate centre of this circle (guarded all round by an unparalleled development of doctrine) reigned and bore fruit, and bound the members of Christ together, and spread the savour of grace over all the relationships in which men could stand towards each other, occupying itself about all the details of life with a perfect propriety, and with the recognition of every right that can exist among men and of all that the human heart can feel.
[ Top of this page | Table of Contents ]
.