2 Thessalonians 3 | |
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A page of Codex Vaticanus containing Second Epistle to the Thessalonians 3:11-18 and Epistle to the Hebrews 1:1-2:2, from AD 325-350.
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Book | Second Epistle to the Thessalonians |
Bible part | New Testament |
Order in the Bible part | 14 |
Category | Pauline epistles |
2 Thessalonians 3 is the third (and the last) chapter of the Second Epistle to the Thessalonians in the New Testament of the Christian Bible. It is authored by Paul the Apostle, Silas, and Saint Timothy.
This chapter can be grouped (with cross references to other parts of the Bible):
Given at Thessalonica in person, it was when the Gospel was first preached to them. The Ethiopic version reads in the singular number, "when I was with you, I commanded you";
The above words were a sort of a proverb with the Jews, and is frequently used by them, (lyka al yad), or (oygn al yel), "that if a man would not work, he should not eat". And again,
“he that labours on the evening of the sabbath (or on weekdays), he shall eat on the sabbath day; and he who does not labour on the evening of the sabbath, from whence shall he eat (or what right and authority has he to eat) on the sabbath day?”
Not he that could not work through weakness, bodily diseases, or old age, the necessities of such are to be distributed to, and they are to be taken care of, and provided with the necessaries of life by the officers of the church; but those that can work, and will not, ought to starve, for any assistance that should be given them by the members of the church, or the officers of it.