
Text -- 2 Thessalonians 3:15 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Robertson -> 2Th 3:15
Robertson: 2Th 3:15 - -- Not as an enemy ( mē hōs echthron ).
This is always the problem in such ostracism as discipline, however necessary it is at times. Few things in ...
Not as an enemy (
This is always the problem in such ostracism as discipline, however necessary it is at times. Few things in our churches are more difficult of wise execution than the discipline of erring members. The word
Vincent -> 2Th 3:15
Wesley -> 2Th 3:15
Tell him lovingly of the reason why you shun him.
JFB -> 2Th 3:15
JFB: 2Th 3:15 - -- Not yet excommunicated (compare Lev 19:17). Do not shun him in contemptuous silence, but tell him why he is so avoided (Mat 18:15; 1Th 5:14).
Clarke -> 2Th 3:15
Clarke: 2Th 3:15 - -- Count him not as an enemy - Consider him still more an enemy to himself than to you; and admonish him as a brother, though you have ceased to hold r...
Count him not as an enemy - Consider him still more an enemy to himself than to you; and admonish him as a brother, though you have ceased to hold religious communion with him. His soul is still of infinite value; labor to get it saved.
Calvin -> 2Th 3:15
Calvin: 2Th 3:15 - -- 15.Regard him not as an enemy. He immediately adds a softening of his rigor; for, as he elsewhere commands, we must take care that the offender be no...
15.Regard him not as an enemy. He immediately adds a softening of his rigor; for, as he elsewhere commands, we must take care that the offender be not swallowed up with sorrow, (2Co 2:7,) which would take place if severity were excessive. Hence we see that the use of discipline ought to be in such a way as to consult the welfare of those on whom the Church inflicts punishment. Now, it cannot but be that severity will fret, 730 when it goes beyond due bounds. Hence, if we wish to do good, gentleness and mildness are necessary, that those that are reproved may know that they are nevertheless loved. In short, excommunication does not tend to drive men from the Lord’s flock, but rather to bring them back when wandering and going astray.
We must observe, however, by what sign he would have brotherly love shewn — not by allurements or flattery, but by admonitions; for in this way it will be, that all that will not be incurable will feel that concern is felt for their welfare. In the mean time, excommunication is distinguished from anathema: for as to those that the Church marks out by the severity of its censure, Paul admonishes that they should not be utterly cast away, as if they were cut off from all hope of salvation; but endeavors must be used, that they may be brought back to a sound mind.
TSK -> 2Th 3:15
TSK: 2Th 3:15 - -- count : Lev 19:17, Lev 19:18; 1Co 5:5; 2Co 2:6-10, 2Co 10:8, 2Co 13:10; Gal 6:1; 1Th 5:14; Jud 1:22, Jud 1:23
admonish : Psa 141:5; Pro 9:9, Pro 25:12...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> 2Th 3:15
Barnes: 2Th 3:15 - -- Yet count him not as an enemy, but admonish him as a brother - This shows the true spirit in which discipline is to be administered in the Chri...
Yet count him not as an enemy, but admonish him as a brother - This shows the true spirit in which discipline is to be administered in the Christian church. We are not to deal with a man as an adversary over whom we are to seek to gain a victory, but as an erring brother - a brother still, though he errs. There was necessity for this caution. There is great danger that when we undertake the work of discipline we shall forget that he who is the subject of it is a brother, and that we shall regard and treat him as an enemy. Such is human nature. We set ourselves in array against him. We cut him off as one who is unworthy to walk with us. We triumph over him, and consider him at once as an enemy of the church, and as having lost all claim to its sympathies. We abandon him to the tender mercies of a cold and unfeeling world, and let him take his course. Perhaps we follow him with anathemas, and hold him up as unworthy the confidence of mankind. Now all this is entirely unlike the method and aim of discipline as the New Testament requires. There all is kind, and gentle, though firm; the offender is a man and a brother still; he is to be followed with tender sympathy and prayer, and the hearts and the arms of the Christian brotherhood are to be open to receive him again when he gives any evidence of repenting.
Poole -> 2Th 3:15
Poole: 2Th 3:15 - -- They having thus proceeded against the disorderly and disobedient, the apostle directs them about their after-carriage, which either respects their ...
They having thus proceeded against the disorderly and disobedient, the apostle directs them about their after-carriage, which either respects their inward opinion of the mind, or outward action.
Yet count him not as an enemy they should not count him an enemy, putting a great difference between an offending brother and a professed enemy. They ought not to hate him as an enemy, nor look upon him as upon such who out of enmity to the gospel persecute Christianity, nor to have an unreconcilable mind towards him.
But admonish him as a brother and as to outward action, should admonish him as a brother. It is either private or public, ministerial or fraternal, gentle or severe, joined with commination. The Greeks express it in the degrees of it by three words,
Haydock -> 2Th 3:15
Haydock: 2Th 3:15 - -- Do not regard him as an enemy. A necessary introduction for those whom Providence has placed over others, to admonish and correct them, but with cha...
Do not regard him as an enemy. A necessary introduction for those whom Providence has placed over others, to admonish and correct them, but with charity and peace; so that we neither be, nor give them occasion to thin we are their enemies. (Witham) ---
He is your brother; compassionate his weakness; he is a sick member of the same body of which you are one of the members; the greater his infirmity, the greater should be your charity and anxiety for his cure; the greater excommunication separated the delinquent from the communion of the Church, making him in our regard as a heathen or a publican. But he is not here speaking of this kind, for he allows the faithful to speak to him for his spiritual advantage. (Calmet)
Gill -> 2Th 3:15
Gill: 2Th 3:15 - -- Yet count him not as an enemy,.... As an enemy of Christ, and the Christian religion, as the Jews and Pagans were; or as an enemy of all righteousness...
Yet count him not as an enemy,.... As an enemy of Christ, and the Christian religion, as the Jews and Pagans were; or as an enemy of all righteousness, as Elymas the sorcerer was; as one that has an implacable hatred to good men, and a persecutor of them, and has an utter aversion to them and their principles; nor deal with him in an hostile, fierce, furious, and passionate manner, as if you were seeking his destruction, and not his restoration. This seems to be levelled against the Jews, who allowed of hatred to incorrigible persons: they say t,
"an hater that is spoken of in the law, is not of the nations of the world, but of Israel; but how shall an Israelite hate an Israelite? does not the Scripture say, "thou shall not hate thy brother in thine heart?" the wise men say, when a man sees him alone, who has committed a transgression, and he admonishes him, and he does not return, lo, it is
But admonish, or "reprove" him
as a brother; as one that has been called a brother, and a member of the church, and who, though criminal, has no bitterness in him against the church, or against the name of Christ, and the doctrines of Christ; and therefore should not be treated in a virulent manner, but with a brotherly affection, meekness, compassion, and tenderness; and who indeed is to be reckoned as a brother, while the censure is passing, and the sentence of excommunication is executing on him; for till it is finished he stands in such a relation: though this also may have respect, as to the manner of excommunicating persons, so to the conduct of the church to such afterwards; who are not to neglect them, and much less to treat them as enemies, in a cruel and uncompassionate manner; but should inquire, and diligently observe, what effect the ordinance of excommunication has upon them, and renew their admonitions and friendly reproofs, if possible, to recover them.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> 2Th 3:1-18
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
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
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
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; 2Th 3:14-15
Constable: 2Th 3:6-15 - --B. Church discipline 3:6-15
The false teaching that had entered the church had produced some inappropria...
