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See also: Colossae (Col. iv
.
9), either offence rendering him liable to be crucified
.
Voluntarily or accidentally, he came across See also: Paul, who won him over to the Christian faith
.
In the few tactful and charming lines of this brief note, the apostle sends him back to his master with a plea for kindly treatment
.
After greeting Philemon and his wife, with See also: Archippus (possibly their son) and the Christians who met for worship at Philemon's See also: house (vv
.
1-2), Paul rejoices over (vv
.
4–7) his correspondent's character; it encourages him to make an See also: appeal on behalf of the unworthy Onesimus (8-21), now returning (Col. iv
.
9) along with Tychicus to Colossae, as a penitent and sincere Christian, in See also: order to resume his place in the See also: household
.
With a See also: line or two of See also: personal detail (22–25) the note closes
.
See also: Rome would be a more natural See also: rendezvous for fugitivarii (runaway slaves) than Caesarea (Hilgenfeld and others), and it is probable that Paul wrote this note, with See also: Philippians and See also: Colossians, from the metropolis
.
As See also: Laodicea is close to Colossae it does not follow, even if Archippus be held to have belonged to the former See also: town (as Lightfoot argues from Col. iv
.
13-17), that Philemon's residence must have been there also (so A
.
Maier, Thiersch, Wieseler, &c.)
.
Paul cannot have converted Philemon at Colossae (Col. ii
.
1), but elsewhere, possibly at See also: Ephesus; yet Philemon may have been on a visit to Ephesus, for, even were the Ephesian Onesimus of See also: Ignatius (Eph. ii.) the Onesimus of this note, it would not prove that he had always lived there
.
No adequate reason has been shown for suspecting that the note is interpolated at any point
.
The association of See also: Timotheus with Paul (v
.
1) does not involve any official tinge, which would justify the deletion of Kai TiuhOeos o aSeXior ,uov in that verse, and of i'µwv in vv
.
1–2 (so See also: Holtzmann), and See also: Hausrath's suspicions of the allusion to Paul as a prisoner and of v
.
12 are equally arbitrary
.
The construction in vv
.
5–6 is difficult, but it yields to exegetical treatment (cf. especially See also: Haupt's note) and does not involve the interpolation of See also: matter by the later redactor of Colossians and See also: Ephesians (Holtzmann, Hausrath' and See also: Bruckner, Reihenfolge d
.
Paul . Briefe, 200 seq.) . The brevity of the note and its lack of doctrinal significance prevented it from gaining frequent See also: quotation in the early Christian literature, but it appears in See also: Marcion's See also: canon as well as in the Muratorian, whilst See also: Tertullian mentions, and See also: Origen expressly quotes it
.
During the 19th century, the hesitation about Colossians led to the rejection of Philemon by some critics as a pseudonymous little pamphlet on the slave question—an aberration of See also: literary See also: criticism (reproduced in Ency
.
Bib., 3693 seq.) which needs simply to be chronicled
.
It is interesting to observe that, apart from the letter of See also: commendation for See also: Phoebe (Rom. xvi.), this is the only letter in the New Testament addressed, even in See also: part, to a woman, unless the second See also: epistle of See also: John be taken as meant for an individual
.
i
See also: History of the New Testament Times (1895), iv
.
122-123
.
See, on this, See also: Schenkel's Bibel-Lexikon, iv
.
531-532
.
Drysdale's devotional commentary (See also: London, 1906)
.
(J
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