Bible Commentary

Colossians 2:4

The Pulpit Commentary on Colossians 2:4

The Pulpit Commentary · Joseph S. Exell and contributors · Public domain

In this verse the apostle first definitely indicates the cause of his anxiety, and the Epistle begins to assume a polemic tone. This verse is, therefore, the prelude of the impending attack on the false teachers ().

This was the danger which made a more adequate comprehension of Christianity so necessary to the Colossians (verses 2, 3). πιθανολογία, one of the numerous hapax logo-menu of this Epistle (words only used here in the New Testament), compounds into one word the πειθοῖ λόγοι ("persuasive words") of (compare "word of wisdom," verse 23).

In classical writers it denotes plausible, ad captandum reasoning. παραλογίζομαι (only here and in the New Testament) is "to use bad logic," "to play off fallacies (paralogisms)." The new teachers were fluent, specious reasoners, and had a store of sophistical arguments at command.

The tense of the verb indicates an apprehension as to what may be now going on (, , 18, 20; ). We shall see afterwards ( -23) what was the doctrine underlying this "persuasive speech."

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