3. And--Greek, "Yea."
true yoke-fellow--yoked with me in the same Gospel yoke
(Mt 11:29, 30;
compare
1Ti 5:17, 18).
Either Timothy, Silas
(Ac 15:40; 16:19,
at Philippi), or the chief bishop of Philippi. Or else the
Greek, "Sunzugus," or "Synzygus," is a proper
name: "Who art truly, as thy name means, a yoke-fellow."
Certainly not Paul's wife, as
1Co 9:5
implies he had none.
help those women--rather, as Greek, "help them," namely,
Euodia and Syntyche. "Co-operate with them" [BIRKS]; or as
ALFORD, "Help
in the work of their reconciliation."
which laboured with me--"inasmuch as they labored with me." At
Philippi, women were the first hearers of the Gospel, and Lydia the
first convert. It is a coincidence which marks genuineness, that in this
Epistle alone, special instructions are given to women who labored with
Paul in the Gospel. In selecting the first teachers, those first
converted would naturally be fixed on. Euodia and Syntyche were
doubtless two of "the women who resorted to the riverside, where prayer
was wont to be made"
(Ac 16:13),
and being early converted, would naturally take an active part in
teaching other women called at a later period; of course not in public
preaching, but in a less prominent sphere
(1Ti 2:11, 12).
Clement--bishop of Rome shortly after the death of Peter and Paul.
His Epistle from the Church of Rome to the Church of Corinth is extant.
It makes no mention of the supremacy of the See of Peter. He was the
most eminent of the apostolical fathers. ALFORD thinks that the Clement
here was a Philippian, and not necessarily Clement, bishop of Rome.
But ORIGEN [Commentary, John 1:29] identifies the Clement here with
the bishop of Rome.
in the book of life--the register-book of those whose "citizenship
is in heaven"
(Lu 10:20;
Php 3:20).
Anciently, free cities had a roll book containing the names of all
those having the right of citizenship (compare
Ex 32:32;
Ps 69:28;
Eze 13:9;
Da 12:1;
Re 20:12; 21:27).
JFB.
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