Robertson Word Pictures - 1 Thessalonians 1:6 - 1:6

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Robertson Word Pictures - 1 Thessalonians 1:6 - 1:6


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This Chapter Verse Commentaries:

Imitators of us and of the Lord (mimētai hēmōn kai tou kuriou). Mimētēs (̇tēs expresses the agent) is from mimeomai, to imitate and that from mimos (mimic, actor). Old word, more than “followers,” in the N.T. only six times (1Th 1:6; 1Th 2:14; 1Co 4:16; 1Co 11:1; Eph 5:1; Heb 6:12). Again Paul uses ginomai, to become, not eimi, to be. It is a daring thing to expect people to “imitate” the preacher, but Paul adds “and of the Lord,” for he only expected or desired “imitation” as he himself imitated the Lord Jesus, as he expressly says in 1Co 11:1. The peril of it all is that people so easily and so readily imitate the preacher when he does not imitate the Lord. The fact of the “election” of the Thessalonians was shown by the character of the message given them and by this sincere acceptance of it (Lightfoot).

Having received the word (dexamenoi ton logon). First aorist middle participle of dechomai, probably simultaneous action (receiving), not antecedent.

In much affliction (en thlipsei pollēi). Late word, pressure. Tribulation (Latin tribulum) from thlibō, to press hard on. Christianity has glorified this word. It occurs in some Christian papyrus letters in this same sense. Runs all through the N.T. (2Th 1:4; Rom 5:3). Paul had his share of them (Col 1:24; 2Co 2:4) and so he understands how to sympathize with the Thessalonians (1Th 3:3.). They suffered after Paul left Thessalonica (1Th 2:14).

With joy of the Holy Spirit (meta charas pneumatos hagiou). The Holy Spirit gives the joy in the midst of the tribulations as Paul learned (Rom 5:3). “This paradox of experience” (Moffatt) shines along the pathway of martyrs and saints of Christ.