Bible Commentary

Colossians 3:24

The Pulpit Commentary on Colossians 3:24

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

Knowing that from (the) Lord you will receive the just recompense of the inheritance (; ; ; ; ). "Knowing" ( εἰδότες)—that of which one is aware, not merely learning or "getting to know" ( γινώσκω): see both words in and , Revised Text; also and ; .

"The absence of the definite article" before κυρίου "is the more remarkable, because it is studiously inserted in the context" (Lightfoot). St. Paul virtually says, "There is a Master who will recompense you, if your earthly masters never do" (comp.

). "Just" renders the ἀντὶ in ἀνταπόδοσιν (a word common in LXX), implying "equivalence" or "correspondence" (comp. ἀνταναπληρῶ in ; also ; ; ; ; ; , )—a reward in the case of each individual, and in each particular, answering to the service rendered to "the Lord" (comp.

). The opposite truth is asserted in verse 25; combines them both. The recompense of the faithful Christian slave is nothing less than "the inheritance" of God's children (; ,, ; ; ; ; ; , ; ; ; ), which the apostle has so often under other terms assured to his readers (, , ; ; , ).

For a slave to be heir was "a paradox" (Lightfoot): see ,; . No form of praise could be more cheering and ennobling to the despised slave than this. "In Christ," Onesimus is "no longer as a slave, but a brother beloved" (), and if a brother, then a joint heir with his master Philemon in the heavenly inheritance ().

"For" is probably a correct gloss, though a corrupt reading. Its insertion indicates that the sentence was read indicatively (Lightfoot, and R.V.); not imperatively ("serve the Lord Christ"), as Meyer, Alford, Ellicott, with the Vulgate, construe it.

The verse amounts to this: "Work as for the Lord: he will repay you; you are his servants."

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