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Text -- 2 Thessalonians 3:16 (NET)

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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Robertson: 2Th 3:16 - -- The Lord of peace himself ( autos ho kurios tēs eirēnēs ).
See note on 1Th 5:23 for the God of peace himself.
The Lord of peace himself (
See note on 1Th 5:23 for the God of peace himself.

Robertson: 2Th 3:16 - -- Give you peace ( doiē humin tēn eirēnēn ).
Second aorist active optative ( Koiné[28928]š ) of didōmi , not dōēi (subjunctive). So a...
Vincent: 2Th 3:16 - -- The Lord of peace ( ὁ κύριος τῆς εἰρήνης )
The only instance of the formula.
The Lord of peace (
The only instance of the formula.

Vincent: 2Th 3:16 - -- By all means ( ἐν παντὶ τρόπῳ )
Or in every way . The alternative reading τόπῳ place is rejected by the princip...
By all means (
Or in every way . The alternative reading
Christ.
JFB: 2Th 3:16 - -- Jesus Christ. The same title is given to Him as to the Father, "the GOD of peace" (Rom 15:33; Rom 16:20; 2Co 13:11). An appropriate title in the praye...
Jesus Christ. The same title is given to Him as to the Father, "the GOD of peace" (Rom 15:33; Rom 16:20; 2Co 13:11). An appropriate title in the prayer here, where the harmony of the Christian community was liable to interruption from the "disorderly." The Greek article requires the translation, "Give you the peace" which it is "His to give." "Peace" outward and inward, here and hereafter (Rom 14:17).

Unbroken, not changing with outward circumstances.

JFB: 2Th 3:16 - -- Greek, "in every way." Most of the oldest manuscripts read, "in every place"; thus he prays for their peace in all times ("always") and places.
Greek, "in every way." Most of the oldest manuscripts read, "in every place"; thus he prays for their peace in all times ("always") and places.

JFB: 2Th 3:16 - -- May He bless you not only with peace, but also with His presence (Mat 28:20). Even the disorderly brethren (compare 2Th 3:15, "a brother") are include...
Clarke: 2Th 3:16 - -- The Lord of peace - Jesus Christ, who is called our peace, Eph 2:14; and The Prince of peace, Isa 9:6. May he give you peace, for he is the Fountain...

Always - Both in your own consciences, and among yourselves

Clarke: 2Th 3:16 - -- By all means - Παντι τροπῳ· By all means, methods, occasions, instruments, and occurrences; peace or prosperity in every form and sha...
By all means -
Instead of

Clarke: 2Th 3:16 - -- The Lord be with you all - This is agreeable to the promise of our Lord: Lo, I am with you alway, even unto the end of the world; Mat 28:20. May the...
The Lord be with you all - This is agreeable to the promise of our Lord: Lo, I am with you alway, even unto the end of the world; Mat 28:20. May the Lord, who has promised to be always with his true disciples, be with you! Christians are the temple of God, and the temple of God has the Divine presence in it. May you ever continue to be his Church, that the Lord God may dwell among you!
Calvin -> 2Th 3:16
Calvin: 2Th 3:16 - -- 16.Now the Lord of peace. This prayer seems to be connected with the preceding sentence, with the view of recommending endeavors after concord and mi...
16.Now the Lord of peace. This prayer seems to be connected with the preceding sentence, with the view of recommending endeavors after concord and mildness. He had forbidden them to treat even the contumacious 731 as enemies, but rather with a view to their being brought back to a sound mind 732 by brotherly admonitions. He could appropriately, after this, subjoin an injunction as to the cultivation of peace; but as this is a work that is truly Divine, he betakes himself to prayer, which, nevertheless, has also the force of a precept. At the same time, he may also have another thing in view — that God may restrain unruly persons, 733 that they may not disturb the peace of the Church.
TSK -> 2Th 3:16
TSK: 2Th 3:16 - -- the Lord of : Psa 72:3, Psa 72:7; Isa 9:6, Isa 9:7; Zec 6:13; Luk 2:14; Joh 14:27; Rom 15:33, Rom 16:20; 1Co 14:33; 2Co 5:19-21, 2Co 13:11; Eph 2:14-1...
the Lord of : Psa 72:3, Psa 72:7; Isa 9:6, Isa 9:7; Zec 6:13; Luk 2:14; Joh 14:27; Rom 15:33, Rom 16:20; 1Co 14:33; 2Co 5:19-21, 2Co 13:11; Eph 2:14-17; 1Th 5:23; Heb 7:2, Heb 13:20
give : Num 6:26; Jdg 6:24 *marg. Psa 29:11, Psa 85:8-10; Isa 26:12, Isa 45:7, Isa 54:10, Isa 66:12; Hag 2:9; Joh 16:33; Rom 1:7; Phi 4:7-9
The Lord be : 2Th 3:18; 1Sa 17:37, 1Sa 20:13; Psa 46:7, Psa 46:11; Isa 8:10; Mat 1:23, Mat 28:20; 2Ti 4:22; Phm 1:25

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> 2Th 3:16
Poole -> 2Th 3:16
Poole: 2Th 3:16 - -- Now the Lord of peace himself give you peace: the apostle is now taking his leave, and closing up his Epistle; and this he doth with prayer; and what...
Now the Lord of peace himself give you peace: the apostle is now taking his leave, and closing up his Epistle; and this he doth with prayer; and what he prays for is peace: and though the word peace hath various acceptations, and is of comprehensive signification, yet here it is to understood of brotherly peace and unity. Whether it was occasioned by any dissensions that were actually among them, or his fears of such to arise upon the practice of their duties to the disorderly among them, that he thus prays, is uncertain. And it is that which he much presseth and prays for in his several Epistles to the churches, as being that wherein the honour of the gospel, and their own comfort and edification, were so much concerned. And the person he prays to he styles the Lord of peace, whereby I suppose he means Jesus Christ, who is sometimes called the Prince of Peace, Isa 9:6 ; as God is called the God of peace, 1Th 5:23 . It is he that hath made peace between God and us, between the Jew and Gentile, and it is one of the fruits of his Spirit in the hearts of Christians, Gal 5:22 . True Christian peace is the gift of Christ, and therefore the apostle prays the Lord to give it, and saith, the Lord himself, as intimating none but he can give it, and that it is a singular blessing to enjoy it, as we must so interpret the phrase when at any other time we find it, as 1Th 5:23 .
Always by all means: he shows both the desirableness and difficulty of peace. It is worth the using all endeavours for it, and without such we shall hardly attain it, as Rom 12:18 : If it be possible, as much as lieth in you, live peaceably with all men; quite contrary to the temper and practice of some men, who will live peaceably with no man: and elsewhere we read of following peace; Heb 12:14 , and seeking peace and pursuing it, 1Pe 3:11 , and endeavouring to keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace, Eph 4:3 . And the apostle prays for it in the text with much earnestness, and that they might enjoy it without interruption, always; that there might be no schism rise up among them at any time. And if we read the next words, in every thing, he prays that their peace might be universal with respect to opinions, words, and actions. And as a final farewell he addeth:
The Lord be with you all which shows his affection to them all, though he had reproved sharply the disorders that some were guilty of. And a greater thing he could not desire for them, it comprehends all blessings in it, and the very blessedness of heaven itself; as a usual farewell word, Adieu, is a recommending a person to God.
PBC -> 2Th 3:16
PBC: 2Th 3:16 - -- 2Th 3:16
Farewell Grace
{2Th 3:16-18} Now the Lord of peace himself give you peace always by all means. The Lord be with you all. The salutation of ...
Farewell Grace
{2Th 3:16-18} Now the Lord of peace himself give you peace always by all means. The Lord be with you all. The salutation of Paul with mine own hand, which is the token in every epistle: so I write. The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with you all. Amen.
As one reads the New Testament epistles, it becomes increasingly obvious that there are no perfect churches in this world. There was likely a Jew-Gentile schism, at least a major tension, in the Roman church. The church in Corinth had a double portion of problems! The Galatian churches had significant theological problems. Ephesus started well, but before the end of the first century had left her first love. Colosse was struggling with Gnostic philosophies among her members. And this church in Thessalonica had major error in its eschatological thought, its views of the Second Coming. This theological error prompted behavioral errors, including slothfulness. Make no mistake, there is no perfect church on earth, not even ours! We all exist as individual churches through God’s incredible mercy, not through our superior faith and theological purity.
Despite the major theological errors in this church, Paul approached it with tender and convincing instruction. As he concluded his letter, he closed it with incredibly tender grace. I offer that this model of conduct should characterize our own behavior toward other believers, either within our local church or within our fellowship of churches. An angry assaulting spirit will not recover an erring brother or sister from their sinful conduct.
While Paul’s prayer for peace and the Lord’s personal presence among the Thessalonians catches our attention and forces us to take a second look at our own reactions to difficulties-and to difficult people-his simple comment, " The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with you all," says it all. We ably champion God’s grace in our salvation. As mere mortals, we struggle, both individually and culturally, with the practical extension of God’s grace into our conduct. Grace neither condones and tolerates error, nor abrasively attacks those who disagree with us.
We rightly reject the idea of natural cloning because of its obvious ethical and moral problems. If we so emphatically reject the ethics of natural cloning, how can we justify behavioral cloning? It is one thing to encourage members of our church community to grow in grace and to increase their faithfulness. It is quite another thing to impose a narrow, cloned cultural identity on people. Compatibility within a defined scope of faith is essential for Biblical Christianity. Finite cloning of every aspect of culture and attitude becomes cliquish and will inevitably so narrowly define who is acceptable and who is not as to force a culture’s death. Eventually the " me, my wife, my son John, his wife; us four and no more" attitude will drive away anyone who does not fall into the mold. What happens when " us four" die?
We could learn an incredible lesson in variation and godly tolerance by a study of the cultural breadth that existed within the various churches that are introduced to us in the New Testament. The churches that had direct and regular interaction with the Jerusalem churches were asked by the Jerusalem church to respect their Jewish problem with certain meats and dietary prohibitions. {Ac 15:1-41} Yet when Paul addressed the question of whether believers can, or should, eat meat that had been offered to a pagan idol prior to being sold in the local meat market, he made no reference whatever to the Jerusalem petition. He displayed " grace" to them within their cultural setting in a manner vastly different from the tenets of the Jerusalem petition. As an aside, I observe that the letter sent from Jerusalem in Ac 15:1-41 was not the conclusion of a multi-church council. It was a letter sent by the Jerusalem church to other churches regarding some of her members who had created problems for those other churches. Jerusalem was not the " mother church" with superior authority over the other churches. Such a notion is more denominational than Biblical, and should be consistently rejected, regardless of the name or location of the church involved.
How do you show grace toward someone who is involved in error? How do you communicate to them that you do not share in their error and, in fact, disapprove of it? How do you, at the same time, avoid abrasiveness in your confrontation of their error? These questions challenge every one of us almost daily. In our marriage, in our family, in the neighborhood, on the job, and indeed in our churches, we must seek this gracious balance as we (far less than perfect humans) interact with other less than perfect humans. The very challenge of maintaining this balance itself should instill in us a growing appreciation for those who occasionally confront us in a sincere effort to lead us gracefully to improved discipleship. Perhaps they don’t follow the rule with perfection. Perhaps they fail to demonstrate the precise balance that we believe they should show toward us. Can we honestly think that we might do a better job in their shoes? When we’ve faced the need to confront someone, how well did we maintain our balance? If the person whom we confronted were to give us a report card on our efforts to admonish them, would they grade us as highly as we think to grade ourselves? The regular practice of this spirit will make us far more tolerant and gracious toward those who attempt to correct us than we sometimes exhibit in our reaction to them.
Sadly, the fierce independence of the " American spirit" runs at significant cross-purposes with this spirit of brotherly love and respect toward others in the family of believers. Pride often rules far more directly than grace! The response of pride to a confrontation will appear in resistance to the confrontation, in criticism of the person who confronted us, and in a prideful defensiveness of our conduct rather than a thoughtful reflection on a better way. When Paul taught the Philippians, and us, to imitate the mind of our Lord Jesus Christ, considering others as better than ourselves, viewing our role as to serve rather than be served, he intended the simplest and most straightforward practice of this attitude imaginable. Consider a church business meeting at which some item is under consideration in which the members have differing opinions. Make it something really important, nearly essential to the church’s future (such as the color of the carpet to be put on the floors!). One person speaks up for one course. Another person speaks up for a different course. Watch the strategies each person follows as they try to convince others that their opinion is superior. How much of this true spirit of Christ appears? How much of the " I want my way and I’ll do whatever I can to get it" attitude appears? Do we really believe Paul’s exhortation? How then do we practice it while working to manipulate others to our preferences? This spirit of grace lies at the heart of Biblical faith. It will either gain others with winsome grace, or its sad absence will drive them away and leave a church auditorium increasingly empty!
Imagine the spirit of God’s grace that saved you. Did he decide to save you and simply allow you to continue in your sins as if he’d never touched your soul with grace? Did he decide to threaten you with the fires of hell if you didn’t agree with him about your sins? Theologically we reject both attitudes, and well we should. Why then should we embrace the practical counterparts of these faulty attitudes in our daily interaction with other believers?
Paul wrote this church out of grave concern for their theological and behavioral error. He graciously and convincingly met each point of error with a greater truth. He embraced the church with love and respect as he worked his way through these issues. Then he closed his letter with incredible tenderness and regard for them.
This model of Christian love will do more for churches than any amount of pride in their theological purity. Indeed we must give heed to the quality of our theology, but we can follow Ephesus into theological purity and sterile coldness that will kill our church and our opportunity to impact those around us.
The grace-response toward others will heal and challenge us no less than they to a better way of serving God and practicing our faith. Recently I had occasion to react to what I believe to be a significant error being followed by a friend. I must confess that my first inclination was to go after him with a heavy hand. Upon reflection I reconsidered and reacted with a kinder tone. How will it work out? I don’t know. I can tell you that I slept far better that night than I would have had I taken the harsh approach. May we learn the meaning of grace!
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Gill -> 2Th 3:16
Gill: 2Th 3:16 - -- Now the Lord of peace himself,.... The Prince of peace, who is peaceable himself, and the author of peace in all his churches, and who requires peace,...
Now the Lord of peace himself,.... The Prince of peace, who is peaceable himself, and the author of peace in all his churches, and who requires peace, calls for it, and encourages it:
give you peace always by all means; both a conscience peace, through the blood, righteousness, and sacrifice of Christ, and faith in them, which passes all understanding, and which, when he gives, none can take away; and a church peace, being freed from all such disorderly persons and their abettors, the disturbers of it: and indeed, the way to have true peace and prosperity in churches is to keep up the discipline of God's house. The apostle prays for it in faith, upon an observance of the rules he had given; he prays for constant and perpetual peace, which is greatly to be desired; and that it might be had by all means, and in every way through praying, preaching, administering the ordinances, laying on censures, when necessary, and Christian conversation. Some copies, and the Vulgate Latin version, read "in every place"; as well as at Thessalonica.
The Lord be with you all; by his presence, to comfort and refresh; by his power, to keep and preserve; by his grace, to assist; and by his Spirit, to counsel, advise, and direct.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes




