Assignments
for this course take the form of written summaries, research, and
analysis. They are designed to help us work through the course
objectives, while keeping a focus on our spiritual growth through
conceptual learning. For
each assignment, please develop a document and submit it to me in
either Microsoft Word or HTML format (your word processing software
should permit you to do a "save as" and choose either of those
formats).
Introduction to Paul's
Prison Letters
Paul's Roman Imprisonment:
Paul wrote the Books of Colossians, Philemon, Ephesians,
and Philippians during his imprisonment in Rome. The
Lord Jesus brought Paul to Rome to complete the mission
strategy that Jesus gave to his disciples just before
his ascension into heaven. Acts 1:8 states that Jesus
told his disciples they were to be his witnesses in
Jerusalem, in all Judea and Samaria, and to the ends of
the earth. Paul was brought to Rome to complete the
mission of bringing Jesus' gospel to the ends of the
earth. With the coming of Paul to Rome the gospel was
brought from the Jewish capital of Jerusalem in the east
to the Gentile capital of the world in Rome in the west.
The Lord himself had told Paul, “Take courage!
For as you have testified things about me in Jerusalem,
so you must also testify in Rome”
(Acts 23:11).
In compliance with the Lord Jesus' will to have his
gospel brought to Rome, Paul came there, not as an
apostle who was free to go about conducting his
ministry, but as an apostle in chains whose activities
were limited because he was held under house arrest and
guard.
His imprisonment began in Caesarea years earlier. At the
end of his third missionary journey, during which time
he spent more than two years working in Ephesus, Paul
revisited the churches he had established in Macedonia,
the northern province of Greece, on his second
missionary journey (cf. Acts 20:1-3). From there he
traveled to Jerusalem by way of Troas and Miletus (cf.
Acts 20:6, 13-16). In Jerusalem the Jews mobbed Paul,
because they thought he had desecrated the temple by
bringing a Gentile into it (cf. Acts 21:27-30). Roman
soldiers came to Paul's rescue and took him into their
custody (cf. Acts 21:31-33). Paul then became entangled
in the Roman judicial system. He was taken to the Roman
governor Felix in the provincial capital of Caesarea.
Felix kept Paul imprisoned there for two years, hoping
that he might receive a bribe from Paul for his freedom
(cf. Acts 24:24-27). Festus then succeeded Felix as
governor and intended to appease the Jews by having Paul
transferred for trial in Jerusalem. Paul then resorted
to his right as a Roman citizen and appealed his case to
Caesar in Rome (cf. Acts 25:9-11).
Paul was transferred by ship under guard to Rome.
Enroute his ship was wrecked in a storm off the island
of Malta. Paul finally arrived in Rome around A.D. 59 to
60. There he was held under house arrest and guard for
the next two years. His Roman imprisonment, or
captivity, has been dated as A.D. 59-61, and even as
A.D. 61-63.
The Dating Of These Letters:
While under house arrest in Rome, Paul was able to
conduct a limited ministry. He was able to receive
visitors, such as the Jewish leaders of the synagogue in
Rome (cf. Acts 28:16-29), and to minister to those who
came to him. He was also able to minister to the needs
of the churches by means of letters which he was free to
write.
Paul wrote his letters to the Colossians, to Philemon,
and to the Ephesians and Philippians while under this
house arrest in Rome. These letters were written around
A.D. 60 to 61. Because Paul was under house arrest and
imprisoned at the time, his letters have been called his
imprisonment or captivity letters.
The Internal Evidence Within The Letters:
The internal evidence within the letters clearly
indicate Paul wrote them while a prisoner in Rome. The
internal evidence is as follows:
In the letter to the Colossians:
Colossians 1:24: Now I rejoice in the things
suffered in your behalf, and I am completing in my flesh
the things lacking in the tribulations of Christ for the
sake of his body, which is the church.
Colossians 4:10: Aristarchus, my fellow prisoner,
sends you his greetings,...
Colossians 4:18: This greeting is in my own hand
writing, Paul’s. Remember my imprisonment. Grace be with
you.
In the letter to Philemon:
Philemon 1: Paul, a prisoner of Christ Jesus, and
Timothy, our brother, to Philemon our beloved friend and
fellow worker,...
Philemon 9: ...for love’s sake I rather appeal to
you, being such a one as Paul, an old man, but now also
a prisoner of Christ Jesus –
Philemon 23: Epaphras, my fellow prisoner in
Christ Jesus, sends you his greetings.
In the letter to the Ephesians:
Ephesians 3:1: For this reason I, Paul, the
prisoner of Christ Jesus for the sake of you Gentiles –
Ephesians 4:1: I urge you, therefore, I the
prisoner in the Lord, to live in a manner worthy of the
calling with which you were called.
Ephesians 6:20: ...for which I am an ambassador
in chains, that I may speak it boldly as I must.
In the letter to the Philippians:
Philippians 1:12-14: Now I want you to know,
brothers, that the things that happened to me have
rather furthered the advancement of the gospel, so that
my imprisonment has become known in the whole palace
guard and to everyone else, and most of the brothers,
having put their trust in the Lord because of my
imprisonment, have even more courage to speak the word
fearlessly.
The occasion of the writing of these letters:
Epaphras, leader of the church in Colosse in Asia Minor
(cf. Colossians 4:12), came to Paul in Rome with good
news and bad news about the church of Colosse. The good
news was the gospel had born fruit among the Colossians
(cf. Colossians 1:6), who were continuing in the faith
(cf. Colossians 1:4) in Christ and in love for their
fellow believers. The bad news was the Colossians were
being troubled by a new teaching that was contrary to
the gospel which Epaphras had been preaching to them.
The new teaching claimed a profound knowledge apart from
Christ (cf. Colossians 2:8), an emphasis on following
prescribed rituals (cf. Colossians 2:16), the worship of
angels (cf. Colossians 2:18), and ascetic self-abasement
(cf. Colossians 2:18 & 20-23). The new teaching which
included the worship of angels indicates that it invoked
spiritual powers rather than calling on Christ in whom
the fullness of God dwelt in bodily form (cf. Colossians
2:9).
To deal with this new false teaching, Paul wrote his
letter to the Colossians. In his letter Paul overwhelmed
the false teaching by proclaiming the surpassing
greatness of Christ. Paul then dispatched his co-worker
Tychicus to carry his letter to the church of Colosse
(cf. Colossians 4:7,8). Paul's letter was a circular
letter to be shared with the other churches in the area,
particularly nearby Laodicea (cf. Colossians 4:16).
With Paul in Rome was a runaway slave named Onesimus.
Onesimus had come to Paul and had become a Christian
(cf. Philemon 10). He performed valuable services for
Paul, perhaps as a runner doing errands for Paul, who
was not free to leave his house. Paul was obligated to
return Onesimus to his rightful master, a Christian
brother named Philemon. It appears that Philemon was a
member of the church of Colosse, for he was known to
Epaphras the leader of that church (cf. Philemon 23).
Paul wrote his letter to Philemon, in which he expressed
his desire to be able to retain Onesimus' valuable
services in Rome. He asked Philemon to treat Onesimus
kindly as a Christian brother. Since Tychicus would be
traveling to the church of Colosse, where Philemon was a
member, Paul sent Onesimus back to Philemon in the
company of Tychicus. Tychicus carried, in addition to
Paul's letter to the Colossians, Paul's letter to
Philemon.
The route that Tychicus and Onesimus would logically
travel to Colosse would take them through the port city
of Ephesus, where Paul had ministered for more than two
years. Paul had not revisited that church since he left
it to go to Jerusalem about three to five years earlier.
He seized the opportunity that Tychicus' passing through
Ephesus offered and wrote his letter to his beloved
Ephesians. Tychicus, then, also carried this letter for
Paul and delivered it to the church in Ephesus.
While still under house arrest in Rome, Paul received
another visitor--Epaphroditus. Epaphroditus was a member
of the church in Philippi in Macedonia, the northern
province of what is now Greece. In behalf of the
congregation he brought Paul a gift for his support and
reported that the Philippians were eager for some news
about Paul's circumstances and the outcome of his trial
before the Roman imperial court. This prompted Paul to
write the last of his imprisonment epistles to the
Philippians. He wrote to thank them for their gift, to
inform them about his circumstances in Rome and about
his trial, and to strengthen them in the hope and joy
that was theirs in Christ.
Reading Assignment 1:
Read Part 1
Paul and the Prison Epistles (The Smart Guide to the
Bible Series)
Writing Assignment 1: Write a 5-6
page essay on what you have learned from your reading
Reading Assignment 2:
Read Part 2
Paul and the Prison Epistles (The Smart Guide to the
Bible Series)
Writing Assignment 2:Write a 5-6 page
essay on what you have learned from your reading
Reading Assignment 3: Read
Part 1
Paul and the Prison Epistles (The Smart Guide to the
Bible Series)
Writing Assignment 3: Write a 5-6 page
essay on what you have learned from your reading
Reading Assignment 4:
Read The book of Ephesians section of Paul for everyone
Writing Assignment 4:
Write a 5-6 page essay on what you have learned
from your reading
Reading Assignment 5: Read The book of
Philipians section of Paul for everyone
Writing Assignment 5:
Write a 5-6 page essay on what you have learned
from your reading
Reading Assignment 6
Read The book of Colossians and Philemon sections
of Paul for everyone
Writing Assignment 6:
Write a 5-6 page essay on what you have learned
from your reading
Final Paper: Write a 12-15 page Essay on
what you have learned from this course.
For
review on MLA writing standards, go to the following
link:
MLA FORMATTING AND STYLE GUIDE (From Purdue
University)
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