Scofield Reference Bible Notes of 1917 By C. I. Scofield
Introductory Notes to The Epistles of Paul
The Epistles of the Apostle Paul
have a very distinctive character. All Scripture, up to the Gospel accounts
of the crucifixion, looks forward to the cross, and has primarily in view Israel,
and the blessing of the earth through the Messianic kingdom. But "hid in God"
(Ephesians 3:9) was an unrevealed fact--the interval of time between the crucifixion
and resurrection of Christ and His return in glory; and an unrevealed purpose--
the outcalling of the ecclesia, the church which is Christ's body. In Mat. 16,
our Lord announced that purpose, but wholly without explanation as to how, when,
or of what materials, that church should be built, or what should be its position,
relationships, privileges, or duties.
All this constitutes precisely the
scope of the Epistles of Paul. They develop the doctrine of the church. In his
letters to seven Gentile churches (in Rome, Corinth, Galatia, Ephesus, Philippi,
Colosse, and Thessalonica), the church, the "mystery which from the beginning
of the world hath been hid in God" (Ephesians 3:9), is fully revealed, and fully
instructed as to her unique place in the counsels and purposes of God.
Through Paul alone we know that
the church is not an organization, but an organism, the body of Christ; instinct
with His life, and heavenly in calling, promise, and destiny. Through him alone
we know the nature, purpose, and form of organization of local churches, and
the right conduct of such gatherings. Through him alone do we know that "we
shall not all sleep," that "the dead in Christ shall rise first," and that living
saints shall be "changed" and caught up to meet the Lord in the air at His return.
But to Paul was also committed the
unfolding of the doctrines of grace which were latent in the teachings of Jesus
Christ. Paul originates nothing, but unfolds everything, concerning the nature
and purpose of the law; the ground and means of the believer's justification,
sanctification, and glory; the meanings of the death of Christ, and the position,
walk, expectation, and service of the Christian.
Paul converted by the personal ministry
of the Lord in glory, is distinctively the witness to a glorified Christ, Head
over all things to the church which is His body, as the Eleven were to Christ
in the flesh, the Son of Abraham and David.
The chronological order of Paul's
Epistles is believed to be as follows: 1 and 2 Thessalonians, 1 and 2 Corinthians,
Galatians, Romans, Philemon, Colossians, Ephesians, Philippians, 1 Timothy,
Titus, 2 Timothy. Hebrews has a distinctive place, nor can the order of that
book amongst the writings of Paul be definitely fixed.
The Two Silences
Two periods in the life of Paul after
his conversion are passed over in a silence which is itself significant--the
journey into Arabia, from which the Apostle returned in full possession of the
Gospel explanation as set forth in Galatians and Romans; and the two silent
years in prison in Caesarea, between his arrest in the temple at Jerusalem and
his deportation to Rome.
It was inevitable that a trained
intellect like that of Paul, a convinced believer in Mosasism, and, until his
conversion on the Damascus road, an eager opposer of Christianity, must seek
the underlying principles of the Gospel. Immediately after his conversion he
preached Jesus as the Messiah; but the relation of the Gospel to the Law, and,
in a lesser degree, of the great Jewish promises, needed clear adjustment if
Christianity was to be a reasonable faith, and not a mere dogma. In Arabia Paul
sought and found that adjustment through revelation by the Spirit. Out of it
came the doctrinal explanation of salvation by grace through faith, wholly apart
from the law, embodied in Galatians and Romans.
But the Gospel brings the believer
into great relationships--to the Father, to other believers, to Christ, and
to the future purposes of God. It is not only a salvation from sin and the consequences
of sin, but into an amazing place in the Divine counsels. Furthermore, the new
thing, the church in its various aspects and junctions, demanded clear revelation.
And these are the chief themes of the Epistles written by Paul from Rome, and
commonly called the Prison Epistles--Ephesians, Philippians, Colossians. It
is contrary to the method of inspiration, as explained by Paul himself, to suppose
that these crowning revelations were made apart from deep meditation, demanding
quietness, and earnest seeking. It seems most congruous with the events of Paul's
life to suppose that these great revelations came during the silent years at
Caesarea--often spoken of as wasted.
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