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Text -- 2 Thessalonians 3:13 (NET)

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Context
3:13 But you, brothers and sisters, do not grow weary in doing what is right.
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Dictionary Themes and Topics: Zeal | THESSALONIANS, THE SECOND EPISTLE OF PAUL TO THE | SALVATION | Poor | Perseverance | Labor | GALATIANS, EPISTLE TO THE | Decision | Commandments | more
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
Robertson , Vincent , JFB , Clarke , Calvin , 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 3:13 - -- But ye, brethren, be not weary in well-doing ( humeis de , adelphoi , mē enkakēsēte kalopoiountes ). Emphatic position of humeis in contras...

But ye, brethren, be not weary in well-doing ( humeis de , adelphoi , mē enkakēsēte kalopoiountes ).

Emphatic position of humeis in contrast to these piddlers. Mē and the aorist subjunctive is a prohibition against beginning an act (Robertson, Grammar , pp. 851-4). It is a late verb and means to behave badly in, to be cowardly, to lose courage, to flag, to faint, (en , kakos ) and outside of Luk 18:1 in the N.T. is only in Paul’ s Epistles (2Th 3:13; 2Co 4:1, 2Co 4:16; Gal 6:9; Eph 3:13). It occurs in Polybius. The late verb kalopoieō , to do the fair (kalos ) or honourable thing occurs nowhere else in the N.T., but is in the lxx and a late papyrus. Paul uses to kalon poiein in 2Co 13:7; Gal 6:9; Rom 7:21 with the same idea. He has agathopoieō , to do good, in 1Ti 6:18.

Vincent: 2Th 3:13 - -- Be not weary ( ἐντραπῇ ) With one exception, Luk 13:1, only in Paul. To faint or lose heart .

Be not weary ( ἐντραπῇ )

With one exception, Luk 13:1, only in Paul. To faint or lose heart .

Vincent: 2Th 3:13 - -- Well doing ( καλοποιοῦντες ) N.T.o . According to the Greek idiom, doing well , be not weary . Not limited to works of cha...

Well doing ( καλοποιοῦντες )

N.T.o . According to the Greek idiom, doing well , be not weary . Not limited to works of charity, but including Christian conduct generally, as, for instance, steadily attending to their own business, 2Th 3:12.

JFB: 2Th 3:13 - -- The oldest manuscripts read, "Be not cowardly in"; do not be wanting in strenuousness in doing well. EDMUNDS explains it: Do not culpably neglect to d...

The oldest manuscripts read, "Be not cowardly in"; do not be wanting in strenuousness in doing well. EDMUNDS explains it: Do not culpably neglect to do well, namely, with patient industry do your duty in your several callings. In contrast to the "disorderly, not-working busybodies" (2Th 3:11; compare Gal 6:9).

Clarke: 2Th 3:13 - -- Be not weary in well-doing - While ye stretch out no hand of relief to the indolent and lazy, do not forget the real poor - the genuine representati...

Be not weary in well-doing - While ye stretch out no hand of relief to the indolent and lazy, do not forget the real poor - the genuine representatives of an impoverished Christ; and rather relieve a hundred undeserving objects, than pass by one who is a real object of charity.

Calvin: 2Th 3:13 - -- 13.And you, brethren. Ambrose is of opinion that this is added lest the rich should, in a niggardly spirit, refuse to lend their aid to the poor, bec...

13.And you, brethren. Ambrose is of opinion that this is added lest the rich should, in a niggardly spirit, refuse to lend their aid to the poor, because he had exhorted them to eat every one his own bread. And, unquestionably, we see how many are unbefittingly ingenious in catching at a pretext for inhumanity. 724 Chrysostom explains it thus — that indolent persons, however justly they may be condemned, must nevertheless be assisted when in want. I am simply of opinion, that Paul had it in view to provide against an occasion of offense, which might arise from the indolence of a few. For it usually happens, that those that are otherwise particularly ready and on the alert for beneficence, become cool on seeing that they have thrown away their favors by misdirecting them. Hence Paul admonishes us, that, although there are many that are undeserving, 725 while others abuse our liberality, we must not on this account leave off helping those that need our aid. Here we have a statement worthy of being observed — that however ingratitude, moroseness, pride, arrogance, and other unseemly dispositions on the part of the poor, may have a tendency to annoy us, or to dispirit us, from a feeling of weariness, we must strive, nevertheless, never to leave off aiming at doing good.

TSK: 2Th 3:13 - -- ye : Isa 40:30,Isa 40:31; Mal 1:13; Rom 2:7; 1Co 15:28; Gal 6:9, Gal 6:10; Phi 1:9; 1Th 4:1; Heb 12:3 be not weary : or, faint not, Deu 20:8; Psa 27:1...

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: 2Th 3:13 - -- But ye, brethren, be not weary in well-doing - Margin, "faint not."The Greek means, properly, to turn out a coward; then to be faint-hearted, t...

But ye, brethren, be not weary in well-doing - Margin, "faint not."The Greek means, properly, to turn out a coward; then to be faint-hearted, to despond. The idea is, that they were not to be discouraged from doing good to the truly worthy and deserving by the idleness and improper conduct of some who asked their assistance. They were, indeed, shiftless and worthless. They would not labor; they spent their time in intermeddling with the concerns of their neighbors, and they depended for their support on the charity of others. The tendency of this, as all persons feel who have ever been applied to by such persons for aid, is, to indispose us to do good to any. We almost insensibly feel that all who ask for aid are of the same character; or, not being able to discriminate, we close our hands alike against all. Against this the apostle would guard us, and he says that though there may be many such persons, and though we may find it difficult to distinguish the worthy from the unworthy, we should not become so disheartened as not to give at all. Nor should we be weary though the applications for assistance are frequent. They are indeed frequent. God designs that they should be. But the effect should not be to dishearten us, or to make us weary in well-doing, but to fill us with gratitude - for it is a privilege to be permitted to do good. It is the great distinguishing characteristic of God that he always does good. It was that which marked the character of the Redeemer, that he "went about doing good;"and whenever God gives us the opportunity and the means of doing good, it should be to us an occasion of special thanksgiving. A man ought to become "weary"of everything else sooner than of evincing benevolence; compare the notes on Gal 6:10.

Poole: 2Th 3:13 - -- But ye, brethren: the apostle now directs his speech to those of the church that were not guilty of the disorders before mentioned, to whom he speaks...

But ye, brethren: the apostle now directs his speech to those of the church that were not guilty of the disorders before mentioned, to whom he speaks in mild and familiar language, as if the others deserved not to be so called.

Be not weary in well doing: and that which he speaks to them is, not to be weary of well doing. The Greek word is often used about sufferings, as 2Co 4:1 Eph 3:13 ; and then usually translated fainting, and which seems to be its most proper use, to shrink or faint as cowards in war; Mh ekkakhshte , Ne segnescite, definite, defatigamini; it signifies a receding or fainting, or tiring in our duty, because of the evil that attends it. Sometimes it is used of prayer, Luk 18:1 ; and sometimes generally of all duties of religion, which are generally called well doing, Gal 6:9 , and signifies either a slothfulness in them, or weariness of them: as those whom the prophets complain of, Amo 8:5 Mal 1:13 . The apostle useth the same word in this sense, Gal 6:9 : Let us not be weary in well doing; and in the text, those that did walk orderly, he exhorts them to hold on their course, either more peculiarly to the works of charity, which are called well doing, Phi 4:14 ; though those that worked not did not deserve them, or enjoy them, yet this should not discourage them from practising them towards others: or the word may extend more generally to all good works; we should persevere in them without fainting or weariness, notwithstanding the evils that may threaten us therein.

PBC: 2Th 3:13 - -- 2Th 3:13 Avoid, Yet Admonish {2Th 3:13-15} But ye, brethren, be not weary in well doing. And if any man obey not our word by this epistle, note that...

2Th 3:13

Avoid, Yet Admonish

{2Th 3:13-15} But ye, brethren, be not weary in well doing. And if any man obey not our word by this epistle, note that man, and have no company with him, that he may be ashamed. Yet count him not as an enemy, but admonish him as a brother.

In these verses Paul expands the scope of the church’s community discipline. In our last chapter he directed the church to avoid those who were able to work but refused to do so. Here he applies the same strategy to those who might not obey other teachings in his letter.

At first glance it almost seems that Paul is urging contradictory strategies. Which is it? Do you keep no company with an erring believer, or do you admonish him? Paul’s model requires both!

Be not weary in well doing. Before anyone in a church can or should consider admonishing or otherwise correcting others in the culture, he must ensure that his own conduct and attitude are fixed in a godly manner. If you struggle with impatience and frustration, you should never confront another person. You will harm the situation, not resolve it. Only as we are engaged in doing well are we equipped to reach out helpfully to others. In the sermon on the mount Jesus taught the same principle with the idea of the mote and the beam in the eye. Don’t criticize your brother or sister for having a speck of dust in his/her eye when you have a log (hyperbole, exaggeration for emphasis) in your own eye.

For the Thessalonians the measure of obedience is Paul’s epistle. For us it is the whole of New Testament Scriptures. We should never confront or correct another believer over private opinions or non-Biblical traditions. If we attempt to correct someone on the basis of our private opinions or local traditions, we have no basis for " correction." Perhaps in such a case the person who challenges and contradicts the norm is more correct than we.

Inherent in the fundamental idea of measuring another believer’s conduct by Scripture, be it one letter or the whole of the New Testament, is the fact that the Holy Spirit, and His chosen human authors, consider Scripture to be both understandable and practicable. The rather common idea that the Bible is so complex that no one can really understand it at all cannot stand this simple " in the trenches of the believer’s life" model.

Have no company with him, that he may be ashamed. In some cautious manner Paul has in mind a measured response toward the erring person sufficient that the person will know that other believers do not approve of their conduct. We have in this teaching an example of godly peer pressure.

Admonish him as a brother. Paul will have nothing to do with the occasional practice of " shunning" in which the congregation so fully isolates and ignores the erring person as to make him feel excluded from the assembly. Occasionally Christians will practice this extreme attitude of shunning without ever going to the person to discuss their erring behavior with them. The errant member simply realizes that another believer has thrown a cold shoulder his way, but doesn’t know why. Such unwise and unkind conduct among believers will never correct anyone; it will merely so discourage the errant member as to drive them away! It will leave the impression, both with the erring member and with onlookers that the church culture is cliquish. You must either fit in with the clique and be one of the " beautiful people," or you will be frozen out. This spirit will destroy the safe and godly climate of any church!

Many years ago in another region of the country I was talking with a minister regarding a local schism, actually one that eventually was resolved. However, his attitude toward the problem didn’t contribute to the healing of the schism. He boastfully observed that his strategy toward erring people, or even an erring church, was simply to ignore them. He chuckled and quipped a line from Mary Had a Little Lamb, " Leave them alone, and they’ll come home..." No, Mary’s line doesn’t work for lost sheep or for believers who have lost their way! Furthermore Paul’s direction here does not allow for, much less approve of, that cliquish attitude toward an erring believer.

The word translated admonish is the Greek word noutheteo SGreek: 3560. noutheteo. It is normally translated as admonish or warn. Its primary meaning has to do with the mind. Jay Adams has written many books about the practice of nouthetic counseling, or " Biblical counseling." In addition any number of other hybrid " Christian counseling" programs exist that typically include a mixture of secular psychological strategies with some Biblical instruction. Perhaps in specific settings any of these practices might prove helpful to a person in need of help with a personal problem or attitude. At times it appears that Adams almost excludes physiological factors, considering all mental problems or emotional stress as merely sin or unbelief in the person’s spiritual life. Equally the hybrid counseling programs may actually compromise Biblical counseling teachings from Scripture by attempting to mix them with contradictory secular psychological methods and philosophies. I will not rule out either, but would advise caution with both. The most Biblical strategy of counseling, of admonishing an erring or needy believer, should occur through the normal godly interaction between believers, not from a licensed or pseudo-professional Christian counselor. Granted, either of these strategies may help individual persons with emotional and/or spiritual problems. My point is that the church culture as a whole needs to be more attuned to the needs of its members. Its members need to grow more respectful of the healthy peer pressure and counsel of others in the church community. Sadly in our day, if a believer attempts to counsel another, the " counseled" member will react with resistance and resentment, as if the counseling believer is meddling into private matters or is trying to push their private ideas onto others.

Within our own fellowship of Primitive Baptists and within most conservative Christian church fellowships, the only real " church discipline" ever practiced is exclusion. Either a person is a " member in good standing" or a non-member with no standing. This model of church discipline ignores this context and many other New Testament examples that direct the church culture to involve itself kindly and graciously in the life and conduct of others in the church community. Exclusion, or excommunication, is not an example of successful and Biblical church discipline; it is the result of failed Biblical discipline!

Occasionally those who view exclusion as the only proper step in discipline, will protest against the exhortations and other steps set forth in the New Testament that aim at a more effective and gentle correction of behavior. They will use such terms as, " Well, I don’t believe the church should be a reform school." I offer that in an effective and corrective form that is precisely what a functional New Testament church should be!

Blended into a thoughtful and gentle harmony, the church as a whole body must grow in its awareness and its knowledge of what the New Testament teaches regarding acceptable conduct and faith for each individual in the assembly. Gentle and consistent peer pressure should be applied to urge all the members of the local assembly to follow the New Testament model of Christian conduct. And when someone in the culture fails, those who observe the conduct should prayerfully, and gently approach the erring member with Biblical, not emotional, reasons for repentance and faithfulness. And the erring member should respond with a Biblical, not an emotional, response of confession and correction. The New Testament attitude of actually preferring other believers to self would instantly revolutionize the modern church (Php 2:3-4, with the challenging example of our Lord’s own conduct during the Incarnation that follows in Php 2:5-11)!

The challenge in our passage appears in the matter of carefully-gracefully-weighed balance. When someone crosses the line of acceptable Biblical conduct, other believers should either approach that person with specific and kind confrontation (as in Mt 18:1-35) or with cautiously weighed distancing that communicates disapproval. For example, on one occasion many years ago, a respected man in a neighboring church called some of the men together in the church auditorium immediately following a worship service and told them a somewhat off-color joke. From a purely human point of view, it had a touch of humor. However from the perspective of the setting, it was altogether inappropriate. Rather than laughing and responding with another joke, I immediately turned and walked away. At least in some degree I wanted to communicate to this brother that I did not approve of his conduct. Perhaps I should have first made a gentle comment that the spirit of the moment did not make his joke appropriate for the occasion. How do we practice this strategy, avoid yet admonish?

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Gill: 2Th 3:13 - -- But ye, brethren,.... The rest of the members of the church, who were diligent and industrious in their callings, minded their own business, and did n...

But ye, brethren,.... The rest of the members of the church, who were diligent and industrious in their callings, minded their own business, and did not trouble themselves with other men's matters, took care of themselves, and their families, and were beneficent to others:

be not weary in well doing; which may be understood generally of all well doing, or of doing of every good work; which is well done when done according to the will of God, in faith, and from a principle of love, and in the name and strength of Christ, and with a view to the glory of God: or particularly of acts of beneficence to the poor; for though the idle and lazy should not be relieved, yet the helpless poor should not be neglected. This the apostle observes, lest covetous persons should make an handle of this, and withhold their hands from distributing to any, under a notion of their being idle and disorderly; or lest the saints should be tired, and become weary of doing acts of charity through the ingratitude, moroseness, and ill manners of poor people; see Gal 6:9.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: 2Th 3:13 Grk “brothers.” See note on the phrase “brothers and sisters” in 1:3.

Geneva Bible: 2Th 3:13 ( 10 ) But ye, brethren, be not weary in well doing. ( 10 ) We must take heed that the unworthiness of some men does not cause us to be slack in well...

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: 2Th 3:1-18 - --1 Paul craves their prayers for himself;3 testifies what confidence he has in them;5 makes request to God in their behalf;6 gives them divers precepts...

MHCC: 2Th 3:6-15 - --Those who have received the gospel, are to live according to the gospel. Such as could work, and would not, were not to be maintained in idleness. Chr...

Matthew Henry: 2Th 3:6-15 - -- The apostle having commended their obedience for the time past, and mentioned his confidence in their obedience for the time to come, proceeds to gi...

Barclay: 2Th 3:6-18 - --Here Paul is dealing, as he had to deal in the previous letter, with the situation produced by those who took the wrong attitude to the Second Comin...

Constable: 2Th 3:6-15 - --B. Church discipline 3:6-15 The false teaching that had entered the church had produced some inappropria...

Constable: 2Th 3:11-13 - --2. Specific instructions concerning the idle 3:11-13 3:11 The teaching that Christ could return at any moment had led some of the believers into idlen...

College: 2Th 3:1-18 - --2 THESSALONIANS 3 V. EXHORTATIONS (3:1-16) As in most of his letters, Paul ends 2 Thessalonians with a series of instructions and exhortations as to...

McGarvey: 2Th 3:13 - --But ye [who stand in contrast to the disorderly], brethren, be not weary [lose not heart] in well-doing . [A general exhortation as to all well-doing....

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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 3 (Chapter Introduction) Overview 2Th 3:1, Paul craves their prayers for himself; 2Th 3:3, testifies what confidence he has in them; 2Th 3:5, makes request to God in their...

Poole: 2 Thessalonians 3 (Chapter Introduction) THESSALONIANS CHAPTER 3

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 3 (Chapter Introduction) (2Th 3:1-5) The apostle expresses confidence in the Thessalonians, and prays for them. (2Th 3:6-15) He charges them to withdraw from disorderly walke...

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 3 (Chapter Introduction) In the close of the foregoing chapter, the apostle had prayed earnestly for the Thessalonians, and now he desires their prayers, encouraging them t...

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 3 (Chapter Introduction) A Final Word (2Th_3:1-5) Discipline In Brotherly Love (2Th_3:6-18)

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 3 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO 2 THESSALONIANS 3 In this chapter the apostle requests of the Thessalonians, that they would pray for him, and other Gospel ministe...

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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