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Text -- 2 Thessalonians 2:6 (NET)

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Context
2:6 And so you know what holds him back, so that he will be revealed in his own time.
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Dictionary Themes and Topics: THESSALONIANS, THE SECOND EPISTLE OF PAUL TO THE | MAN OF SIN | HERETIC; HERETICAL | ESCHATOLOGY OF THE NEW TESTAMENT, I-V | Antichrist | more
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
Robertson , Vincent , Wesley , JFB , Clarke , Calvin , Defender , TSK

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , PBC , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes , Geneva Bible

Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis , MHCC , Matthew Henry , Barclay , Constable , College , McGarvey

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Robertson: 2Th 2:6 - -- That which restraineth ( to katechon ).

That which restraineth ( to katechon ).

Robertson: 2Th 2:6 - -- And now you know ( kai nun oidate ) , says Paul in this cryptic apocalyptic passage. Unfortunately we do not know what Paul means by that which rest...

And now you know ( kai nun oidate )

, says Paul in this cryptic apocalyptic passage. Unfortunately we do not know what Paul means by that which restrains (holds back, katechon ), neuter here and masculine in 2Th 2:7 ho katechōn . "This impersonal principle or power is capable also of manifesting itself under a personal form"(Milligan). "He is Satan’ s messiah, an infernal caricature of the true Messiah"(Moffatt). Warfield ( Expositor , III, iv, pp. 30ff.) suggested that the man of lawlessness is the imperial line with its rage for deification and that the Jewish state was the restraining power. But God overrules all human history and his ultimate purpose is wrought out.

Robertson: 2Th 2:6 - -- To the end that ( eis to ). Another example of eis to and the infinitive for purpose.

To the end that ( eis to ).

Another example of eis to and the infinitive for purpose.

Robertson: 2Th 2:6 - -- In his own season ( en tōi autou kairōi ). Note autou (his), not heautou (his own), revealed in his time , in the time set him by God.

In his own season ( en tōi autou kairōi ).

Note autou (his), not heautou (his own), revealed in his time , in the time set him by God.

Vincent: 2Th 2:6 - -- What withholdeth ( τὸ κατέχον ) Better restraineth . The verb means to hold fast , as Luk 8:15 : to hold back , as Luk 4:...

What withholdeth ( τὸ κατέχον )

Better restraineth . The verb means to hold fast , as Luk 8:15 : to hold back , as Luk 4:42. See on Rom 1:18. He refers to some power which hinders the revelation of the man of sin or Antichrist.

Vincent: 2Th 2:6 - -- In his time ( ἐν τῷ αὐτοῦ καιρῷ ) Better, in his own season , Not before his appointed season.

In his time ( ἐν τῷ αὐτοῦ καιρῷ )

Better, in his own season , Not before his appointed season.

Wesley: 2Th 2:6 - -- By what I told you when I was with you.

By what I told you when I was with you.

Wesley: 2Th 2:6 - -- The power of the Roman emperors. When this is taken away, the wicked one will be revealed.

The power of the Roman emperors. When this is taken away, the wicked one will be revealed.

Wesley: 2Th 2:6 - -- His appointed season, and not before.

His appointed season, and not before.

JFB: 2Th 2:6 - -- By my having told you. The power must have been one "known" to the Thessalonians.

By my having told you. The power must have been one "known" to the Thessalonians.

JFB: 2Th 2:6 - -- That which holds him back; "keeps him in check": the power that has restrained the man of sin from his full and final development, is the moral and co...

That which holds him back; "keeps him in check": the power that has restrained the man of sin from his full and final development, is the moral and conservative influence of political states [OLSHAUSEN]: the fabric of human polity as a coercive power; as "he who now letteth" refers to those who rule that polity by which the great upbursting of godlessness is kept down [ALFORD]. The "what withholdeth" refers to the general hindrance; "he who now letteth," to the person in whom that hindrance is summed up. Romanism, as a forerunner of Antichrist, was thus kept in check by the Romanemperor (the then representative of the coercive power) until Constantine, having removed the seat of empire to Constantinople, the Roman bishop by degrees first raised himself to precedency, then to primacy, and then to sole empire above the secular power. The historical fact from which Paul starts in his prediction was probably the emperor Claudius' expulsion of the Jews, the representative of the anti-Christian adversary in Paul's day, from Rome, thus "withholding" them in some degree in their attacks on Christianity; this suggested the principle holding good to the end of time, and about to find its final fulfilment in the removal of the withholding person or authority, whereupon Antichrist in his worst shape shall start up.

JFB: 2Th 2:6 - -- Greek, "in order that": ye know that which keeps him back, in God's purposes, from being sooner manifested, "in order that he may be revealed in his o...

Greek, "in order that": ye know that which keeps him back, in God's purposes, from being sooner manifested, "in order that he may be revealed in his own time" (that is, the time appointed by God to him as his proper time for being manifested), not sooner (compare Dan 11:35). The removal of the withholding power will be when the civil polity, derived from the Roman empire, which is to be, in its last form, divided into ten kingdoms (Rev 17:3, Rev 17:11-13), shall, with its leading representative head for the time being ("he who now letteth," Greek, "withholdeth," as in 2Th 2:6), yield to the prevalent godless "lawlessness" with "the lawless one" as its embodiment. The elect Church and the Spirit cannot well be, as DE BURGH suggests, the withholding power meant; for both shall never be wholly "taken out of the way" (Mat 28:20). However, the testimony of the elect Church, and the Spirit in her, are the great hindrance to the rise of the apostasy; and it is possible that, though the Lord shall have a faithful few even then, yet the full energy of the Spirit in the visible Church, counteracting the energy or "working" of "the mystery of lawlessness" by the testimony of the elect, shall have been so far "taken out of the way," or set aside, as to admit the manifestation of "the lawless one"; and so DE BURGH'S'S view may be right (Luk 18:8; Rev 11:3-12). This was a power of which the Thessalonians might easily "know" through Paul's instruction.

Clarke: 2Th 2:6 - -- And now ye know what withholdeth - I told you this among other things; I informed you what it was that prevented this man of sin, this son of perdit...

And now ye know what withholdeth - I told you this among other things; I informed you what it was that prevented this man of sin, this son of perdition, from revealing himself fully.

Calvin: 2Th 2:6 - -- 6.. And now what withholdeth Τὸ κατέχον means here properly an impediment or occasion of delay. Chrysostom, who thinks that this can only ...

6.. And now what withholdeth Τὸ κατέχον means here properly an impediment or occasion of delay. Chrysostom, who thinks that this can only be understood as referring to the Spirit, or to the Roman Empire, prefers to lean to the latter opinion. He assigns a plausible reason — because Paul would not have spoken of the Spirit in enigmatical terms, 655 but in speaking of the Roman Empire wished to avoid exciting unpleasant feeling. He states also the reason why the state of the Roman Empire retards the revelation of Antichrist — that, as the monarchy of Babylon was overthrown by the Persians and Medes, and the Macedonians, having conquered the Persians, again took possession of the monarchy, and the Macedonians were at last subdued by the Romans, so Antichrist seized hold for himself of the vacant supremacy of the Roman Empire. There is not one of these things that was not afterwards confirmed by actual occurrence. Chrysostom, therefore, speaks truly in so far as concerns history. I am of opinion, however, that Paul’s intention was different from this — that the doctrine of the gospel would require to be spread hither and thither, until nearly the whole world were convicted of obstinacy and deliberate malice. For there can be no doubt that the Thessalonians had heard from Paul’s mouth as to this impediment, of whatever sort it was, for he recalls to their remembrance what he had previously taught in their presence.

Let my readers now consider which of the two is the more probable — either that Paul declared that the light of the gospel must be diffused through all parts of the earth before God would thus give loose reins to Satan, or that the power of the Roman Empire stood in the way of the rise of Antichrist, inasmuch as he could only break through into a vacant possession. I seem at least to hear Paul discoursing as to the universal call of the Gentiles — that the grace of God must be offered to all — that Christ must enlighten the whole world by his gospel, in order that the impiety of men might be the more fully attested and demonstrated. This, therefore, was the delay, until the career of the gospel should be completed, because a gracious invitation to salvation was first in order. 656 Hence he adds, in his time, because vengeance was ripe after grace had been rejected. 657

Defender: 2Th 2:6 - -- The Thessalonians should have known what was restraining the manifestation of the man of sin. This dread event must await the rapture. The influence o...

The Thessalonians should have known what was restraining the manifestation of the man of sin. This dread event must await the rapture. The influence of true Christians in the world, both in winning others to Christ and in serving as the "salt of the earth" and "light of the world" (Mat 5:13, Mat 5:14), is preventing the inevitable, quick decay of the world into the darkness and corruption of global evolutionary humanism. Since these Christians are actually indwelt and guided by God's Holy Spirit, it is the presence of the Holy Spirit Himself in the world that is really preventing the triumphant revelation of the man of sin."

TSK: 2Th 2:6 - -- withholdeth : or, holdeth, 2Th 2:7 revealed : 2Th 2:3, 2Th 2:8

withholdeth : or, holdeth, 2Th 2:7

revealed : 2Th 2:3, 2Th 2:8

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: 2Th 2:6 - -- And now ye know what withholdeth - Margin, "holdeth."The reference is, to something that then operated to constrain or hold back the obvious te...

And now ye know what withholdeth - Margin, "holdeth."The reference is, to something that then operated to constrain or hold back the obvious tendency of things, so that the "man of sin"should not at once appear, or so that things should not soon so develop themselves as to give rise to this anti-Christian power. There were causes at work even then, which would ultimately lead to this; but there was also something which checked the tendency of things, so that the revelation or development of the "man of sin"was put off to a future period. The obvious meaning of this would be, that, when the apostle wrote, there was a tendency to what would occur under the great apostasy, and that this would soon develop itself if it were not restrained. If the reference is to the papacy, this would consist in corruptions already existing in the church, having a resemblance to those which afterward existed under that system, or which were the germ of that system.

If there was a tendency toward the concentration of all power in an individual in the church, - if there was an assumption of authority by one class of ministers above another, - if there was a denial of the "parity of the clergy,"the tendency would have been to that ultimate assumption of authority which is found in the Romish hierarchy. But conjecture is useless as to what was the precise form in which this tendency then began to develop itself. That the corruptions early began in the church which terminated in the papacy, and which led on directly to it, we know; and that the apostle was able to foresee and predict such a final development, shows that he was under the influence of inspiration. It is not known precisely what is referred to by the phrase "what withholdeth," τὸ κατέχον to katechon . The phrase means properly, something that "holds back,"or "restrains."

The word here is in the neuter gender, "What withholdeth."In the following verse it is in the masculine gender, ὁ κατέχων ho katechōn - "he that letteth,"or withholdeth; and the reference would seem to be to some agency or state of things under the control of an individual, or of some civil power, that then operated as a restraint on the natural tendency of things. Of this, the apostle says, they had had full information; but we can only conjecture what it was. The restraining power of anything controlled by an individual, or of any government, or the restraining power of God, would meet all that the phrase implies. The most natural interpretation is that which refers it to civil power, meaning that there was something in the form of the existing administration which would prevent this development until that restraint should be removed. The supposition that there was even then a tendency to concentrate all ecclesiastical power at Rome, and that while the civil authority remained there it would not suffer ecclesiastical power to grow to the exorbitant height which it ultimately reached, will meet all that is implied in the language.

That he might be revealed in his time - The man of sin. The meaning is, that there was then a restraint operating which would prevent the development of this anti-Christian power until the proper time; that is, until the state of the world should be such that in the divine arrangements it would be proper to permit it. It was not to be permitted until the gospel should be extensively preached, and had had an opportunity of showing its fair effects on the nations; until it had become so planted and established that even the rise of this anti-Christian power could not effectually uproot it. If the "man of sin"had been permitted to rise at once, the consequence might have been that the new religion would have been crushed, so that it could never have revived again. There was then a providential arrangement by which this growth of wickedness should be checked and restrained, until the new religion should take deep root in the earth, and its perpetuity should be secured. Then the great trial was to be permitted under the "man of sin."

Poole: 2Th 2:6 - -- And now ye know what withholdeth: the apostle it seems had told them, as of his coming, so of what at present withheld the revealing of him. And what...

And now ye know what withholdeth: the apostle it seems had told them, as of his coming, so of what at present withheld the revealing of him. And what this was is difficult to know now, though it seems these Thessalonians knew it: there are many conjectures about it. This I shall say in general:

1. It was something that the apostle thought not safe openly to declare in writing; else he would not have written of it so obscurely.

2. It was both a thing, and a person; a thing, to katecon , in this verse, that which withholdeth; and a person, as in the next verse, o katecwn , he who letteth.

3. It was also such a thing and such a person as were to be removed out of the way, not totally, but as they were hinderances of this revelation.

Expositors, both popish and protestant, pitch upon the Roman emperor and empire as most probably meant here by the apostle; and therefore he wrote not plainly, lest by writing of the taking away that empire, which the Romans thought to be eternal, he might stir up their hatred against the Christians. Some understand it of the removing only the seat of the emperor from Rome to Constantinople, whereby the bishop of Rome had opportunity to grow up into greater power. The popish writers understand it of the total destruction of the empire, which because they see not yet done they conclude the man of sin is not yet revealed. Our protestant writers understand it only of such a weakening of the empire and imperial dominion, as gave the bishop and clergy of Rome advantage to rise up into power both spiritual and secular; as some learned writers have given an account thereof. When the empire was broken into ten kingdoms, the imperial power of the emperors was much weakened; and being afterwards united in the pope as an ecclesiastical monarch, he grew up, and the imperial power declined, the grandeur of them both could not stand together. And this is the beast with the ten horns, and ten crowns upon the horns, which is spoken of, Rev 13:1 ; whereupon this beast is worshipped, and the voice is: Who is like unto the beast? who is able to make war with him? 2Th 2:4 . Some of the ancient fathers had this sense of the text: see Tertul. de Resurrect. 1. 4. c. 24. Chrysost. in locum. Aug. de Civ. Dei, 1. 19. c. 20. Jerome, when he heard of the taking of Rome by Alaricus, expected the coming of antichrist not far off. Whereupon the ancient church did pray that the Roman empire might continue long, that his coming might be delayed: Tertul. Apol. c. 32,39. But it is now evident how it is fallen from what once it was. The eastern part is under the dominion of the Turk; the western divided into ten distinct kingdoms under distinct governments; and in Germany, where it is most remaining, the empire is little more than titular; and Italy and Rome wholly in the pope’ s possession: and hence this man of sin hath been long since revealed.

That he might be revealed in his time: as God appoints seasons for all his works, so for the revealing of him, as also for his ruin.

PBC: 2Th 2:6 - -- 2Th 2:6 What, or Who, is the Mystery of Iniquity? 2Th 2:6-12 And now ye know what withholdeth that he might be revealed in his time. For the mystery...

2Th 2:6

What, or Who, is the Mystery of Iniquity?

2Th 2:6-12 And now ye know what withholdeth that he might be revealed in his time. For the mystery of iniquity doth already work: only he who now letteth will let, until he be taken out of the way. And then shall that Wicked be revealed, whom the Lord shall consume with the spirit of his mouth, and shall destroy with the brightness of his coming: Even him, whose coming is after the working of Satan with all power and signs and lying wonders, And with all deceivableness of unrighteousness in them that perish; because they received not the love of the truth, that they might be saved. And for this cause God shall send them strong delusion, that they should believe a lie: That they all might be damned who believed not the truth, but had pleasure in unrighteousess.

This chapter possibly contains the most disputed verses in the New Testament, challenged only by Heb 6:1-20. In one verse the hindering force appears as impersonal, " what." In another verse it appears as a person, " he." Or do these two expressions describe the two opposing forces of the invisible spirit world?

We should avoid excessive pursuits of difficult points to the neglect of clear truths that also appear here. Who hinders? What does he hinder? Why? These are challenging questions. Ask six people, even Biblical scholars, and you’ll likely get about five or six distinct answers with very little cohesion among them.

What can we know from the lesson? We see the outline of the colossal battle of the ages shaping up. Satan appears for one last effort to derail God’s eternal plan. He parodies the divine with all kinds of miracles and wonders, but at the end of the day they are all mere parody, not the real thing performed in loving mercy by God.

This lesson mirrors the final conflict described in the closing chapters of Revelation. If you read those chapters closely, you will discover something of a surprise. John sets the stage for a colossal battle. Satan and his forces array themselves against the Lion-Lamb. The Ruling Lamb takes angels and redeemed saints with him, but their garments are not the garments of soldiers, but of civilians. They appear, not to assist the Lamb in the final battle, but to witness the Lamb’s final defeat of the archenemy. Although the stage is set for a battle, the Lamb merely speaks and the enemy fades into defeat. The famous symbol of defeat, that blood flows to the depth of a horse’s bridle, leaves no doubt that a battle was fought and that one or the other sides in the conflict suffered incredible losses. Yet no one with the Lamb appears to have even participated in the battle, much less died in it. The blood depicts Satan’s defeat! And our passage in 2 Thessalonians confirms with clarity what is not so clear in the Revelation counterpart. The Lamb’s final weapon that defeats Satan finally and for ever is the simple and sovereign expression of his voice! He speaks against Satan, and the battle is over! Praise God for ultimate victory such as we have never known before. On that day all of God’s children will believe in the sovereign power of the Lamb’s voice, {Joh 5:25} though some of his people do not view it so highly now. The parodies and charades of miracles wielded by Satan may frighten and even deceive some of God’s people now, but they will not deceive our Lord on that day.

Accompanying the Lamb’s wilting voice in the defeat will be the melting force of his glory. It will be embraced with joy by the saints, but it will be the very force that destroys the evil one.

We might wonder at the terms that describe the cause of judgment, that they received not the love of the truth. If God reveals truth to his elect and gives them a love for it, how can he condemn those who are not his elect for not receiving the love of the truth? The conclusion overlooks the cause-effect pattern that appears in the lesson. They took pleasure in unrighteousness so fully and eagerly that their judgment actually came upon them because of this sin. In other words their judgment and their blindness is part of a righteous judicial blindness imposed upon them. While unregenerate sinners cannot {Ro 8:5-8} receive or embrace the spiritual truths of God, they can use their natural intelligence to understand the handprint of God upon his creation, a fact that according to Paul they stubbornly refuse to do. {Ro 1:19-23} They will justly stand in judgment before God for this sin, the point of our passage. Their judgment will not be for what they could not do, but for what they could have done, but refused to do with sinful rebellion against the God who created the universe.

The lesson is building to draw a sharp contrast between the elect and the lost, between saints and sinners. One shook their fist in the face of God and refused to acknowledge him, even in natural things where his hand is as clearly seen as in the spiritual world. The other bows in humble submission to the will of God with thankful hearts for undeserved mercies lavished upon them by a gracious Savior. Rather than question the divine motives, much less the divine justice or the divine right, follow this passage into a more careful scrutiny of the motive and heart of the wicked. You will begin to see in a finite way what evokes the divine judgment against them. Man’s incredible rejection of God defies the rational mind that God gave to him. Often rather than acknowledge God’s hand in anything evil men will utter senseless blasphemies against him.

Often man in his desperate attempt to keep God out of the equation will reveal his own guile. Have we not all heard the reasoning of the evolutionists who must constantly increase the time necessary for the various kinds and complexities of life on earth to evolve? From a few thousand years it grew to a few million years. Today they tell us that it may have been several hundred million years. Anchor this point clearly in your mind. Planet earth must have maintained an evolution-friendly climate for hundreds of millions of years in order for evolution to have a leg of credibility. Then when many of the same scientific minds shift their focus to outer space and the variety of asteroids that spin around us and at times frighteningly close to us, these same men tell us that about every hundred thousand years one of these asteroids collides with planet earth and destroys all living things. One supposed scientific point devastates the other! The collision of asteroids defines the space during which life as we know it must have developed to less than a hundred thousand years, a time lapse that these same scientific minds will frankly tell you is impossibly short for life as we know it to evolve out of primordial slime. Such scientific contradictions often appear within circles of academia where God is consistently ridiculed and eliminated. God will have more than adequate sins on which to judge evil humans and to sentence them to eternal punishment.

Try to follow Paul’s frame of reference and his mind as you work your way through these verses. For Paul, there is no question regarding divine justice. The wicked people who face God in that final judgment will deserve every word they hear in their sentence. They will deserve the punishment imposed upon them for their sins against God.

Another point in which we should not allow the less clear points in our passage to obscure the plain teaching relates to the present masking of evil compared with its final disclosure. In our present age evil is covered up and camouflaged so as to appear as if it were actually something good. Gullible humans will see any appearance of the miraculous and try to rationalize that it must have come from God, even though Paul clearly reveals that Satan and his emissaries will parody God in miracles and wonders. The evil one and his works seem rather unclear at times now, but then in the light of God’s judgment they will appear clearly in all their evil character. Notice that Paul characterizes these wonders as " lying wonders." They did not occur to benefit mankind out of mercy from their perpetrator. They appeared as a calculated attempt to deceive. Satan’s perpetual disposition appears here as clearly as it appeared in the Garden of Eden where we see it in direct contrast to God and his nature. God gave man everything in the garden that the heart could desire that was good, and he didn’t have to work to enjoy it. Satan entered the garden with deceptive subtlety. From his entrance we have no doubt as to his motive. He wants to strip God of his glory in creation, to steal away the crown jewel of God’s creation, Adam and Eve. He utters one lie after another to entice Eve. We cannot miss his motive. He used her as the tool in his conflict with God. She is no more than a weapon in his hands as he intends to demean the God who created both the place and the people who inhabited it. Never miss his disposition. It never changes!

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Gill: 2Th 2:6 - -- And now ye know what withholdeth,.... Or hinders the revelation of the man of sin, or antichrist; by which is meant not the Apostle Paul, though he by...

And now ye know what withholdeth,.... Or hinders the revelation of the man of sin, or antichrist; by which is meant not the Apostle Paul, though he by his ministry was a very great hinderance of the growth of error, and the spread of evil practices in the churches, and so of the more open appearance of the man of sin in his forerunners; and after his departure from Ephesus, and imprisonment at Rome, and suffering death, there was a great falling off in the churches, and among professors of religion, which made way for the manifestation of antichrist in due time: nor the preaching of the Gospel, in its power and purity, in the several parts of the world; though so long as this obtained, got ground, and gained success, the man of sin could not show his head; and therefore it must, as it did, decline, and was gradually taken away that he might appear: nor the Spirit of God, as the spirit of truth and holiness, though as long as he continued in his gifts and operations of grace in the churches, they were preserved from antichristian doctrine and worship; but when he removed from them, this enemy and adversary of Christ and his Gospel came in like a flood: nor the general defection in 2Th 2:3 though that was to be previous to the revelation of antichrist, and was to be what would usher him in; nor could he appear until the wickedness of men was come to a pitch, that they would be ready to receive him, and pay homage and worship to him: nor is the decree of God meant, though till the time came fixed by God for his appearance, the decree must be a bar in his way; since as there is a time for every purpose, nothing can come to pass till that time comes: but by that which withheld, let or hindered the open appearance of antichrist, were the Roman empire and emperors; these stood in his way, and while this empire lasted, and the emperors wore the imperial crown, and sat on the throne, and held the government in their hands, the popes could not come at the height of their ambition, dignity, and authority, nor shine in their glory; nor could the whore of Babylon take her seat, and sit upon the seven hills of Rome until the Roman emperor was taken out of the way: this therefore hindered,

that he might be revealed in his time. The Ethiopic version renders it, "until his time appointed came": wherefore till the time that God had fixed for the appearance of this monster of iniquity, this son of perdition, the Roman empire must continue, and Roman emperors must keep their place and dignity to prevent his appearance sooner: the reason why the apostle expresses this not in plain words, but in an obscure manner, and with so much caution, was, that he might not offend the Roman emperors, and provoke them to a severe persecution of them as seditious persons, that sought the destruction of the empire: the word here used, which is rendered "withholdeth", or "letteth", as in the next verse, signifies a ruler or governor, and answers to the Hebrew word עצר, "to keep back, or restrain"; and which is used of kings, who by their laws and government restrain and withhold people from doing what they would; see 1Sa 9:17 to which the apostle, who well understood the Hebrew language, doubtless had reference; so יורש עצר, is rendered, "a magistrate", in Jdg 18:7.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: 2Th 2:6 Grk “the thing that restrains.”

Geneva Bible: 2Th 2:6 And now ye know ( g ) what withholdeth that he might be revealed in his time. ( g ) What hinders and stops.

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: 2Th 2:1-17 - --1 Paul urges them to continue stedfast in the truth received;3 shows that there shall be a departure from the faith,9 and a discovery of Antichrist, b...

MHCC: 2Th 2:5-12 - --Something hindered or withheld the man of sin. It is supposed to be the power of the Roman empire, which the apostle did not mention more plainly at t...

Matthew Henry: 2Th 2:3-12 - -- In these words the apostle confutes the error against which he had cautioned them, and gives the reasons why they should not expect the coming of Ch...

Barclay: 2Th 2:1-12 - --This is undoubtedly one of the most difficult passages in the whole New Testament; and it is so because it is using terms and thinking in pictures wh...

Constable: 2Th 2:1-12 - --III. CORRECTION OF PRESENT ERROR 2:1-12 Paul next dealt with a doctrinal error that had come into the Thessaloni...

Constable: 2Th 2:6-12 - --B. The mystery of lawlessness 2:6-12 Paul continued his instruction concerning the events that must precede the beginning of the day of the Lord by st...

College: 2Th 2:1-17 - --2 THESSALONIANS 2 III. INSTRUCTION ON THE LORD'S RETURN (2:1-12) This section, which is central to the entire second Thessalonian letter, presents o...

McGarvey: 2Th 2:6 - --And now ye know [because Paul had told them verbally] that which restraineth [i. e., retards and delays the antichrist], to the end that he may be rev...

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Introduction / Outline

Robertson: 2 Thessalonians (Book Introduction) Second Thessalonians From Corinth a.d. 50 Or 51 By Way of Introduction It is plain that First Thessalonians did not settle all the difficulties ...

JFB: 2 Thessalonians (Book Introduction) Its GENUINENESS is attested by POLYCARP [Epistle to the Philippians, 11], who alludes to 2Th 3:15. JUSTIN MARTYR [Dialogue with Trypho, p. 193.32], al...

JFB: 2 Thessalonians (Outline) ADDRESS AND SALUTATION: INTRODUCTION: THANKSGIVING FOR THEIR GROWTH IN FAITH AND LOVE, AND FOR THEIR PATIENCE IN PERSECUTIONS, WHICH ARE A TOKEN FOR ...

TSK: 2 Thessalonians (Book Introduction) The First Epistle to the Thessalonians, it is generally agreed, was the earliest written of all St. Paul’s epistles, whence we see the reason and pr...

TSK: 2 Thessalonians 2 (Chapter Introduction) Overview 2Th 2:1, Paul urges them to continue stedfast in the truth received; 2Th 2:3, shows that there shall be a departure from the faith, 2Th 2...

Poole: 2 Thessalonians 2 (Chapter Introduction) THESSALONIANS CHAPTER 2

MHCC: 2 Thessalonians (Book Introduction) The second epistle to the Thessalonians was written soon after the first. The apostle was told that, from some expressions in his first letter, many e...

MHCC: 2 Thessalonians 2 (Chapter Introduction) (2Th 2:1-4) Cautions against the error that the time of Christ's coming was just at hand. There would first be a general apostacy from the faith, and ...

Matthew Henry: 2 Thessalonians (Book Introduction) An Exposition, with Practical Observations, of The Second Epistle of St. Paul to the Thessalonians This Second Epistle was written soon after the form...

Matthew Henry: 2 Thessalonians 2 (Chapter Introduction) The apostle is very careful to hinder the spreading of an error into which some among them had fallen concerning the coming of Christ, as being ver...

Barclay: 2 Thessalonians (Book Introduction) A GENERAL INTRODUCTION TO THE LETTERS OF PAUL The Letters Of Paul There is no more interesting body of documents in the New Testament than the letter...

Barclay: 2 Thessalonians 2 (Chapter Introduction) The Lawless One (2Th_2:1-12) God's Demand And Our Effort (2Th_2:13-17)

Constable: 2 Thessalonians (Book Introduction) Introduction Historical background This epistle contains evidence that Paul had recent...

Constable: 2 Thessalonians (Outline)

Constable: 2 Thessalonians 2 Thessalonians Bibliography Barclay, William. The Letters to the Philippians, Colossians and Thessalonians. Da...

Haydock: 2 Thessalonians (Book Introduction) THE SECOND EPISTLE OF ST. PAUL, THE APOSTLE, TO THE THESSALONIANS. INTRODUCTION. In this epistle St. Paul admonishes the Thessalonians to be c...

Gill: 2 Thessalonians (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO 2 THESSALONIANS This second epistle was written, not from Athens, as the subscription testifies, nor from Rome, as Athanasius a sup...

Gill: 2 Thessalonians 2 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO 2 THESSALONIANS 2 In this chapter the apostle guards against a notion, as if the second coming of Christ was at hand; declares that...

College: 2 Thessalonians (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION The pressures of persecution, apparent in 1 Thessalonians, have intensified in this letter. In its three brief chapters the reader perce...

College: 2 Thessalonians (Outline) OUTLINE I. GREETING - 1:1-2 II. OPENING THANKSGIVING, ENCOURAGEMENT AND PRAYER - 1:3-12 A. Thanksgiving for the Thessalonians' Growth and Endu...

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