Disinformation
Disinformation about the Day of the Lord caused alarm and confusion in the Thessalonian congregation – 2 Thessalonians 2:1-2. The
Apostle Paul addresses rumors and claims that the “Day of the Lord has set
in” in Second Thessalonians. False information about the “arrival”
of Jesus was disrupting the congregation. He attributed this disinformation either
to a “spirit,” word (logos), or a letter - “As if from us,”
namely, Paul and his coworkers.
Paul listed two events that must
occur before the ‘Parousia’ or “arrival” of
Jesus. First, the “revelation of the Man of Lawlessness,” and second,
the “Apostasy.” The fact that neither had occurred in
Thessalonica demonstrated that Christ’s return and the onset of the “Day of
the Lord” remained in the future.
[Photo by Towfiqu barbhuiya on Unsplash] |
Paul prepared the ground for this subject in the preceding chapter. Despite hostility from without, the Thessalonians had exhibited “endurance and faith in all their persecutions and tribulations.” However, God would recompense “tribulation to them that trouble you,” and provide “release” and “glory” to the beleaguered saints when Jesus was “revealed from heaven” - (2 Thessalonians 1:3-10).
Far more dangerous than
persecution, however, was the threat posed by the deceivers who were spreading their
lies in the Assembly, including disinformation about the future that could easily
cause many to apostatize.
Jesus also warned us not
to be alarmed by deceivers who spread false reports and cause anxiety
about the “End.” His warning became all too real in Thessalonica.
- (2 Thessalonians 2:1-2) - “But we request you, brethren, in behalf of the arrival of our Lord Jesus Christ and our gathering together to him, that you be not quickly tossed from your mind nor be put in alarm, either by spirit or by discourse or by letter as by us, as that the Day of the Lord has set in.”
The English term “arrival”
translates the Greek noun ‘Parousia,’ the word applied most often by
Paul to the future “coming of Jesus” in his letters to the Thessalonians.
It denotes an “arrival” or “presence,” the arrival of
someone or something. The clause “our gathering together” translates the
Greek noun ‘episunagogé.’ Whatever this “gathering” was, Paul
connected it to the ‘Parousia’ of Jesus and the “Day of the Lord”
- (1 Thessalonians 2:19, 3:13, 4:15, 5:23, 2 Thessalonians 2:1, 2:8-9).
Jesus applied the same term to the “gathering
of his elect” at his “coming” in his ‘Olivet Discourse’ (“Then
shall he send his angels and gather together his elect from the four
winds”). Paul writes in the present passage that the same event will occur on
the “Day of the Lord” - (Matthew 24:31, Mark 13:27, 1 Thessalonians 4:13-18).
This warning was to prevent the Thessalonians
from becoming “troubled.” The verb translated as “troubled” or ‘throeō’ occurs in the Greek New Testament only here and
on the lips of Jesus in his ‘Olivet Discourse.’ Paul was echoing his warning about
coming deceivers - “And you will hear of wars and rumors of wars; see
that you be not troubled, for these things must come to pass; but the
end is not yet” – (Matthew 24:6, Mark 13:7).
False information must
not be heeded - “whether by spirit or by discourse or by letter, as by us.” Paul was unsure how the false
rumors were being spread. The term “spirit” is ambiguous and could refer
to a spiritual gift such as the gift of prophecy.
The Greek word translated as “discourse”
or ‘logos’ could refer to several types of verbal communication. The
significance of the noun “letter” is obvious. The clause “as by us”
meant this communication was attributed to Paul, though falsely so.
DAY OF THE LORD
Paul linked the “Day of the Lord” to the “arrival” of Jesus and the “gathering”
of the elect, a common term in the Hebrew Bible for the time of visitation and
judgment of God, the “Day of Yahweh” when He would rescue His people and
judge His enemies - (Isaiah 2:12, Joel 1:15, 2:1, 2:31, 3:14, Malachi 4:5).
Paul used the same phrase in his first letter and compared its sudden arrival to “a thief in the night,” the same analogy Jesus applied to his future “coming.” That Day would bring “sudden destruction” on those who opposed the Gospel and persecuted the saints.
Elsewhere, the “Day of the Lord”
becomes the “Day of Jesus Christ,” the hour when he will vindicate the
righteous but also judge the wicked - (Matthew 24:42-44, Luke 12:39, 1
Corinthians 1:8, 5:5, 2 Corinthians 1:14, Philippian 1:6-10, 2:16, 1
Thessalonians 5:1-11).
The phrase “has set in”
translates the Greek verb ‘enistemi,’ meaning “stand in, to set in.” It
is in the Greek perfect tense, signifying a completed action. In this context, it indicates something imminent, or
more likely, an event that has already commenced, a present reality Paul
denies, at least, until this point.
His reference to the “word” received
“as from us” is also a verbal
link to the conclusion of this literary section where he instructs the
Thessalonians to adhere strictly to the “traditions” they received from
Paul and his coworkers - “whether through
discourse or our letter.”
Regardless of their source, believers must not heed voices
that deviate from the Apostolic Tradition preserved for us in the Greek New
Testament. By adhering to those teachings, we will avoid apostasy and
deception, become “blameless” before the Lord, and attain the “acquisition
of the glory of our Lord Jesus Christ” when he does appear – (1
Thessalonians 3:13, 5:9).
SEE ALSO:
- Stand Fast! - (Believers prepare for the Apostasy and the coming Man of Lawlessness by standing firm in the apostolic tradition)
- Seated in the Sanctuary - (The Man of Lawlessness will be unveiled when he seats himself in the House of God - 2 Thessalonians 2:3-4)
- The Apostasy - (Paul warned the Thessalonians of the future apostasy which he linked to the unveiling of the Man of Lawlessness, the Son of Destruction)
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