2 Thessalonians in Smiths Bible Dictionary
appears to have been written from Corinth not very long
after the first, for Silvanus and Timotheus were still with
St. Paul. 2Th 1:1 In the former letter we saw chiefly the
outpouring of strong personal affection, occasioned by the
renewal of the apostle's intercourse with the Thessalonians,
and the doctrinal and hortatory portions are there
subordinate. In the Second Epistle, on the other hand, his
leading motive seems to have been the desire of correcting
errors in the church of Thessalonica. We notice two points
especially which call for his rebuke:-- First, it seems that
the anxious expectation of the Lord's advent. Instead of
subsiding, had gained ground since the writing of the First
Epistle. Second, the apostle had also a personal ground of
complaint. His authority was not denied by any, but it was
tampered with, and an unauthorized use was made of his name.
It will be seen that the teaching of the Second Epistle is
corrective of or rather supplemental to that of the first,
and therefore presupposes it. This epistle, in the range of
subject as well as in style and general character closely
resembles the first; and the remarks made on that epistle
apply for the most part equally well to this. The structure
is somewhat similar the main body of the epistle being
divided into two parts in the same way, and each part
closing with a prayer. ch. 2Co 2:16,17; 3:16 The epistle
ends with a special direction and benediction. ch. 2Co
3:17,18 The external evidence in favor of the Second Epistle
is somewhat more definite than that which can be brought in
favor of the first. The internal character of the epistle
too, as in the former case, bears the strongest testimony to
its Pauline origin. Its genuineness, in fact, was never
questioned until the beginning of the present century.
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