
Text -- 1 Thessalonians 4:6 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Robertson: 1Th 4:6 - -- That no man transgress ( to mē huperbainein ).
Old verb to go beyond. Final use of to (accusative of general reference) and the infinitive (negat...
That no man transgress (
Old verb to go beyond. Final use of

Robertson: 1Th 4:6 - -- And wrong his brother ( kai pleonektein ton adelphon autou ).
To take more, to overreach, to take advantage of, to defraud.
And wrong his brother (
To take more, to overreach, to take advantage of, to defraud.

Robertson: 1Th 4:6 - -- In the matter ( en tōi pragmati ).
The delicacy of Paul makes him refrain from plainer terms and the context makes it clear enough as in 2Co 7:11 (...
In the matter (
The delicacy of Paul makes him refrain from plainer terms and the context makes it clear enough as in 2Co 7:11 (

Robertson: 1Th 4:6 - -- An avenger ( ekdikos ).
Regular term in the papyri for legal avenger. Modern men and women need to remember that God is the avenger for sexual wrongs...
An avenger (
Regular term in the papyri for legal avenger. Modern men and women need to remember that God is the avenger for sexual wrongs both in this life and the next.
Vincent: 1Th 4:6 - -- That no man go beyond ( τὸ μὴ ὑπερβαίνειν )
Lit. the not going beyond . Dependent on this is the will of ...
That no man go beyond (
Lit. the not going beyond . Dependent on this is the will of God , 1Th 4:3. The verb N.T. Often in lxx, mostly in the literal sense of overpassing limits . Also of overtaking , passing by , surpassing , as in wickedness or cruelty. It is an expansion of the preceding thought. Pursue your business as holy men: do not overreach or defraud.
It is the overstepping of the line between mine and thine. It is used absolutely, being defined by the succeeding clause. The A.V. is literal, go beyond . Rev. renders transgress . Weizsäcker and Bornemann " ubergreife overreach ." So. Rev. margin. This last is the best.

Vincent: 1Th 4:6 - -- Defraud ( πλεονεκτεῖν )
Po . See on 2Co 2:11, and see on covetousness , Rom 1:29. It emphasizes gain as the motive of fraud. Three ...

Vincent: 1Th 4:6 - -- In any matter ( ἐν τῷ πράγματι )
Rev. correctly, in the matter. Comp. 2Co 7:11. The sense is the business in hand, whatev...
In any matter (
Rev. correctly, in the matter. Comp. 2Co 7:11. The sense is the business in hand, whatever it be. The

Vincent: 1Th 4:6 - -- Avenger ( ἔκδικος )
Po . Here and Rom 13:4. In lxx rarely, and in the same sense as here. In this sense it occurs only in late Greek. ...
Wesley -> 1Th 4:6
Wesley: 1Th 4:6 - -- By violating his bed. The things forbidden, here are three: fornication, 1Th 4:3; the passion of desire, or inordinate affection in the married state,...
Transgress the bounds of rectitude in respect to his "brother."

"overreach" [ALFORD]; "take advantage of" [EDMUNDS].

JFB: 1Th 4:6 - -- Rather as Greek, "in the matter"; a decorous expression for the matter now in question; the conjugal honor of his neighbor as a husband, 1Th 4:4; 1Th ...
Rather as Greek, "in the matter"; a decorous expression for the matter now in question; the conjugal honor of his neighbor as a husband, 1Th 4:4; 1Th 4:7 also confirms this view; the word "brother" enhances the enormity of the crime. It is your brother whom you wrong (compare Pro 6:27-33).

JFB: 1Th 4:6 - -- Greek, "concerning all these things;" in all such cases of wrongs against a neighbor's conjugal honor.
Greek, "concerning all these things;" in all such cases of wrongs against a neighbor's conjugal honor.
Clarke: 1Th 4:6 - -- That no man go beyond and defraud his brother - That no man should by any means endeavor to corrupt the wife of another, or to alienate her affectio...
That no man go beyond and defraud his brother - That no man should by any means endeavor to corrupt the wife of another, or to alienate her affections or fidelity from her husband; this I believe to be the apostle’ s meaning, though some understand it of covetousness, overreaching, tricking, cheating, and cozenage in general

Clarke: 1Th 4:6 - -- The Lord is the avenger of all such - He takes up the cause of the injured husband wherever the case has not been detected by man, and all such vice...
The Lord is the avenger of all such - He takes up the cause of the injured husband wherever the case has not been detected by man, and all such vices he will signally punish. Every species of uncleanness was practised among the heathens, nor were they reputed as vices. Their gods, their emperors, their philosophers, and their great men in general, gave them examples of every species of impurity; and they had no system of ethics which forbade these abominations. The Christian religion not only discountenances these things, but forbids them on the most awful penalties; therefore wherever Christianity prevails, these vices, if practised at all, are obliged to seek the deepest gloom of midnight to cover them from the eyes of men. On this account they are comparatively rare, even among the mere professors of Christianity; they exist, but do not flourish.
Calvin -> 1Th 4:6
Calvin: 1Th 4:6 - -- 6.Let no man oppress Here we have another exhortation, which flows, like a stream, from the doctrine of sanctification. “God,” says he, “has it...
6.Let no man oppress Here we have another exhortation, which flows, like a stream, from the doctrine of sanctification. “God,” says he, “has it in view to sanctify us, that no man may do injury to his brother. ” For as to Chrysostom’s connecting this statement with the preceding one, and explaining
TSK -> 1Th 4:6
TSK: 1Th 4:6 - -- go : Exo 20:15, Exo 20:17; Lev 19:11, Lev 19:13; Deu 24:7, Deu 25:13-16; Pro 11:1, Pro 16:11, Pro 20:14; Pro 20:23, Pro 28:24; Isa 5:7, Isa 59:4-7; Je...
go : Exo 20:15, Exo 20:17; Lev 19:11, Lev 19:13; Deu 24:7, Deu 25:13-16; Pro 11:1, Pro 16:11, Pro 20:14; Pro 20:23, Pro 28:24; Isa 5:7, Isa 59:4-7; Jer 9:4; Eze 22:13, Eze 45:9-14; Amo 8:5, Amo 8:6; Zep 3:5; Mal 3:5; Mar 10:19; 1Co 6:7-9; Eph 4:28; Jam 5:4
defraud : or, oppress, or, over-reach, Lev 25:14, Lev 25:17; 1Sa 12:3, 1Sa 12:4; Pro 22:22; Jer 7:6; Mic 2:2; Zep 3:1; Jam 2:6
in any matter : or, in the matter
the Lord : Deu 32:35; Job 31:13, Job 31:14; Psa 94:1, Psa 140:12; Pro 22:22, Pro 22:23; Ecc 5:8; Isa 1:23, Isa 1:24; Rom 1:18, Rom 12:19; Eph 5:6; 2Th 1:8

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> 1Th 4:6
Barnes: 1Th 4:6 - -- That no man go beyond - ὑπερβαίνειν huperbainein . This word means, "to make to go over,"as, e. g., a wall or mountain; the...
That no man go beyond -
And defraud -
In any matter - Margin, "or the."According to the reading in the margin, this would refer to the particular matter under discussion 1Th 4:3-5, to wit, concupiscence. and the meaning then would be, that no one should be guilty of illicit intercourse with the wife of another. Many expositors - as Hammond Whitby, Macknight, Rosenmuller, and others, suppose that this is a prohibition of adultery, and there can be no doubt that it does include this. But there is no reason why it should be confined to it. The Greek is so general that it may prohibit all kinds of fraud, overreaching, or covetousness, and may refer to any attempt to deprive another of his rights, whether it be the right which he has in his property, or his rights as a husband, or his rights in any other respect. It is a general command not to defraud; in no way to take advantage of another; in no way to deprive him of his rights.
Because that the Lord is the avenger of all such - Of all such as are guilty of fraud; that is, he will punish them; compare Rom 12:19 note; Eph 6:9 note.
As we also have forewarned - Doubtless when he was with them.
Poole -> 1Th 4:6
Poole: 1Th 4:6 - -- This some understand to be another part of sanctification, mentioned before, 1Th 4:3 , taking the word sanctification in a more general sense. And...
This some understand to be another part of sanctification, mentioned before, 1Th 4:3 , taking the word sanctification in a more general sense. And as before he spake of chastity, so here of commutative justice in commerce and traffic; and the rather because Thessalonica was a city of great trade and merchandise, and it is true that sanctification doth comprehend this righteousness in it, and will restrain men from that which is opposite to it, which, as the apostle speaks, is going beyond and defrauding his brother. To
go beyond is that which we call overreaching; when in buying or selling we keep not a just measure, when we observe not a due proportion between the price and the commodity, considering it either in its natural worth, or in such circumstances as make it more or less valuable: or, to take advantage of another’ s ignorance or necessities, to take unreasonable profit: or, to break covenant with another, answering to the Hebrew word Gnabhar, used in this sense, Deu 17:2 : the original word signifies to transgress, or go above the due bounds. And to defraud is, when, out of a covetous mind, we exact upon another beyond what is meet. Some refer the former word to injustice by force, and the latter by fraud, 2Co 7:2 . And the evil is the greater because done to a brother There is a brother by a common relation, and so all men that partake of human nature are brethren; or by special relation, which is either natural, civil, or spiritual. We may understand the word in all these senses, especially the last, that those that are brethren in Christ and in the faith, should not defraud one another. And when the apostle adds, in any matter, the word any not being in the Greek, we may better read it, in dealing, or doing; the word is general, and is to be restrained by the subject matter spoken of. There is another sense of the words, agreeable to the former verses, and the verse that follows, and so some understand the apostle as still speaking of chastity; and so here he forbids the invading another’ s bed, transgressing the bounds of marriage, whereby men go beyond or defraud their brother, usurping the use of another man’ s wife, whom he hath no right to. And then in any matter we must read, in that matter which he had been speaking of before, or it is a modest expression of the act of adultery. The Hebrew Bo is often used in the Old Testament for carnal copulation, and thence the Greek
As we also have forewarned you and testified: and this the apostle saith he had forewarned them of, and testified. Though the light of nature told the heathen that God was an avenger of wickedness, Act 28:4 , and the heathen could say,
Haydock -> 1Th 4:6
Haydock: 1Th 4:6 - -- That no man overreach, nor deceive his brother in business. [1] The Protestant and Mr. N. even in their translations, add, in any matter, because s...
That no man overreach, nor deceive his brother in business. [1] The Protestant and Mr. N. even in their translations, add, in any matter, because some expound it of frauds and circumventions in any kind of business. But this addition of any, should be left out, seeing the best interpreters expound it of a prohibition of adultery, and the injury thereby done to another, and of sins of that kind only, which is confirmed by what follows and what goes before. See St. Jerome in chap. iv. ad Ephes. tom. 4. p. 369.; St. John Chrysostom serm. 3 on this place. Here, says he, he speaks of adultery, as before of fornication, &c. See Theodoret, Theophylactus, Estius, Menochius, A. Lapide, &c. (Witham)
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[BIBLIOGRAPHY]
Ne quis supergrediatur, neque circumveniat in negotio fratrem, Greek: en to pragmati. See St. Jerome: diligenter observa, quia ad castitatem nos provocans, et volens uxoribus tantum esse contentos, dixerit, ne quis supergrediatur, &c. St. John Chrysostom, ( Greek: log. e. p. 186.) Greek: entautha peri moicheias phesin, anotero de peri porneias pases.
Gill -> 1Th 4:6
Gill: 1Th 4:6 - -- That no man go beyond, and defraud his brother in any matter,.... Or "in this matter", as the Syriac version. This is commonly understood of transgres...
That no man go beyond, and defraud his brother in any matter,.... Or "in this matter", as the Syriac version. This is commonly understood of transgressing the bounds of justice and equity between men and men; and of cheating and defrauding in trade and business, by increasing or lessening the value and prices of goods by the buyer and seller, by not keeping to the bargain, contract, covenant, or sample, by false weights and measures, and by taking the advantage of the weakness and ignorance of men; all which is aggravated by dealing thus with a brother; see 1Co 6:8 and this hint is thought the rather necessary, since Thessalonica was a place of great trade and business. But the matter, or business referred to, is not trade, but the subject of chastity or uncleanness the apostle is speaking of, both before and after; and the phrases used either design the act of adultery, coveting a brother's wife, and lying with her, and so a defrauding and wronging of him by defiling his bed; or rather sodomitical practices, an unnatural lust and desire in men after men, and copulation with them; for
"these are to be burned,
And again z,
"these are to be beaten,
And the word
because that the Lord is the avenger of all such; or "with respect to all these things", as the Vulgate Latin and Syriac versions render it; or "for all these things", as the Arabic and Ethiopic versions; as fornication, adultery, lasciviousness, and all sorts of abominable uncleanness. The person that commits these things the Lord avenges, either in this life, by the hand of the civil magistrate, who is the minister of God, a revenger to execute wrath on him that does evil; or by a violent death, as in the case of Zimri and Cozbi, and twenty four thousand more at the same time; or by some awful judgment from heaven, as in the case of Sodom and Gomorrah; or in the world to come; for the law of God is made and lies against such persons; these living and dying in such sins God will judge, to whom vengeance belongs; these shall not inherit the kingdom of God, but have their part and portion in the lake which burns with fire and brimstone.
As we have also forewarned you and testified; not by a former epistle, as if this was the second to them, and what follows the first, as Grotius thought; but they did this when they were in person with them, knowing that these abominable vices greatly prevailed in their city; therefore they bore their testimony against them, and exposed the evil of them, and warned them of the danger by them, so that they could not now plead ignorance. The Ethiopic version reads in the first person singular, "as I have before said unto you, and testified to you".

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> 1Th 4:1-18
TSK Synopsis: 1Th 4:1-18 - --1 He exhorts them to go forward in all manner of godliness;6 to live holily and justly;9 to love one another;11 and quietly to follow their own busine...
MHCC -> 1Th 4:1-8
MHCC: 1Th 4:1-8 - --To abide in the faith of the gospel is not enough, we must abound in the work of faith. The rule according to which all ought to walk and act, is the ...
Matthew Henry -> 1Th 4:1-8
Matthew Henry: 1Th 4:1-8 - -- Here we have, I. An exhortation to abound in holiness, to abound more and more in that which is good, 1Th 4:1, 1Th 4:2. We may observe, 1. The man...
Barclay -> 1Th 4:1-8
Barclay: 1Th 4:1-8 - --It may seem strange that Paul should go to such lengths to inculcate sexual purity in a Christian congregation; but two things have to be remembered....
Constable -> 1Th 4:1-12; 1Th 4:3-8
Constable: 1Th 4:1-12 - --A. Christian living 4:1-12
Paul used the opportunity this epistle afforded him to give his readers basic...
