Nijay K. Gupta

1–2 Thessalonians


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turned to the God of Israel.36 However, this assumption is misguided. Paula Fredriksen explains that Gentiles who chose to “visit with” Jews and their God felt “free to observe as much or as little of Jewish custom as they chose—free, indeed, to continue worshiping their own gods.”37 Shaye Cohen makes the same case about the possibility of god-fearers as polytheists, and seeks to help moderns understand how ancient Greeks and Romans thought.

      The theory that I find most plausible related to the Thessalonian church is this: a group of Gentiles were attracted to Jewish life and became associated with a synagogue (hence Acts 17:4). They maintained an interest in multiple gods, but also honored the god of Israel. Perhaps it was not too long after this interest that Paul introduced them to Messiah Jesus and many of them came to believe Paul’s gospel. This situation would, indeed, anger certain Jews in just such a way as we see in Acts 17 and also in 1 Thess 2:14–16, if symphyletēs refers to Jewish Thessalonian compatriots. Paul could write that they had turned from idols to serve God because they had not done so as god-fearers despite their prior interest in Israel’s god.

      Excursus: Gentile Believers Incorporated into Israel’s Story through Jesus

      It is possible that Jews from the synagogue where these Gentiles once worshiped (as god-fearers) tried to maintain an ongoing relationship with them, hoping to “win them back,” so to speak, even if through fear. Perhaps they urged, “We cannot ensure you will survive the wrath of God if you continue on following this Jesus.” The fear of wrath may have scared the Thessalonians enough they lost some security in their identity in Jesus. Paul, then, wrote 1 Thessalonians as a form of subversive rhetoric, trying to undo any of the damage done by fear-inducing words from opponents. His clear message to them in 1 Thessalonians is that their hope is found in Jesus alone; through him they are secure as God’s beloved, his chosen people. Paul would not have been saying this over and against Jews, but rather in affirmation of Gentiles incorporated into the people of God through Messiah Jesus. Thus, Paul can argue that he wants Gentiles saved, while the Jews (particularly those hostile to believers in Jesus) displease God by preventing this (1 Thess 2:15).

      Sexual Purity

      A second matter that Paul addresses in the letter relates to sexual purity. Paul calls for control over the body, lest they succumb to heathen lust (4:3–4). The Greco-Roman lifestyle was highly permissive when it came to male sexuality. Men often had sex with multiple people, though it was considered especially inappropriate to commit adultery by sleeping with another man’s wife. Paul called for a strict kind of holiness and purity that sought to honor one another and God (4:6).

      The Dead in the Messiah

      Excursus: Hypothesizing a Clandestine Attack

      One scenario that could bring several issues together in 1 Thessalonians is the consideration that the opponents of the believing Thessalonians planned some kind of clandestine attack. Let’s say certain upset Jews, (former) friends of these god-fearers-turned-Jesus-followers, secretly attacked their workshop or apartment building. Let’s say they set it on fire at night. This could explain how some people died at once. It could also explain why some are “weak” (injured?) and others are “faint hearted” (5:14). Furthermore, what if these same Jews blamed this fire on “the wrath of God” because these god-fearers began to follow Paul and worship Messiah Jesus (whom these Jews would have considered a false messiah)? What if these Jews tried to convince the Thessalonian believers that they could reclaim “peace and security” if they forsook Jesus and returned to the synagogue (5:3)? What if Jewish prophets “prophesied” further doom if they did not (see 5:20–21)? Paul’s wider message would be clear in response to this: Jesus is Lord, he is judge, salvation and hope are centered on him.

      Coming