Alastair's Adversaria - Biblical Reading and Reflections: July 8th (Esther 4 & Philemon)
Episode Date: July 7, 2021Mordecai tells Esther of Haman's decree. The book of Philemon and the New Testament teaching on slavery. My reflections are searchable by Bible chapter here: https://audio.alastairadversaria.com/expl...ore/. If you are interested in supporting this project, please consider supporting my work on Patreon (https://www.patreon.com/zugzwanged), using my PayPal account (https://bit.ly/2RLaUcB), or buying books for my research on Amazon (https://www.amazon.co.uk/hz/wishlist/ls/36WVSWCK4X33O?ref_=wl_share). You can also listen to the audio of these episodes on iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/gb/podcast/alastairs-adversaria/id1416351035?mt=2.
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Esther chapter 4. When Mordecai learned all that had been done, Mordecai tore his clothes and put on sackcloth and ashes,
and went out into the midst of the city, and he cried out with a loud and bitter cry. He went up to the entrance of the king's gate,
for no one was allowed to enter the king's gate, clothed in sackcloth, and in every province,
wherever the king's command and his decree reached, there was great mourning among the Jews,
with fasting and weeping and lamenting, and many of them lay in sackloth and ashcloth and
Ashes. When Esther's young women and her eunuchs came and told her, the queen was deeply distressed.
She sent garments to clothe Mordecai so that he might take off his sackcloth, but he would not
accept them. Then Esther called for Hathak, one of the king's eunuchs who had been appointed to attend her,
and ordered him to go to Mordecai to learn what this was and why it was. Hathak went out to Mordecai
in the open square of the city in front of the king's gate, and Mordecai told him all that had happened
to him.
and the exact sum of money that Haman had promised to pay into the king's treasuries for the destruction of the Jews.
Mordecai also gave him a copy of the written decree issued in Sousa for their destruction,
that he might show it to Esther and explain it to her,
and command her to go to the king to beg his favour and plead with him on behalf of her people.
And Hathak went and told Esther what Mordecai had said.
Then Esther spoke to Hathak and commanded him to go to Mordecai and say,
all the king's servants and the people of the king's provinces
know that if any man or woman goes to the king inside the inner court
without being called,
there is but one law to be put to death,
except the one to whom the king holds out the golden scepter
so that he may live.
But as for me, I have not been called to come into the king these 30 days,
and they told Mordecai what Esther had said.
Then Mordecai told them to reply to Esther,
Do not think to yourself that in the king's palace
you will escape any more than all the other Jews.
For if you keep silent at this time,
relief and deliverance will rise for the Jews from another place,
but you and your father's house will perish.
And who knows whether you have not come to the kingdom for such a time as this?
Then Esther told them to reply to Mordecai,
Go, gather all the Jews to be found in Sousa,
and hold a fast on my behalf,
and do not eat or drink for three days, night or day.
I and my young women will also fast.
as you do, then I will go to the king, though it is against the law, and if I perish, I perish.
Mordecai then went away and did everything as Esther had ordered him.
Esther chapter four opens with Mordecai's anguished response to the news of Haman's decree.
He tears his clothes, puts on sackcloth and ashes, goes out into the midst of the city,
and cries with a loud and bitter cry.
Rabbi David Foreman notes that this reference to the loud and bitter cry recalls Esau's
cry in Genesis chapter 27 verse 34. As soon as Esau heard the words of his father, he cried out
with an exceedingly great and bitter cry and said to his father, bless me, even me also, oh my father.
We have already observed allusions to the rivalry between Esau and Jacob in the character
of Haman the Agagite. Haman the Agagite is the descendant of Agag the Amalekite. King Saul,
Israel's first Benjaminite king, had failed to wipe out the Amalekites as he was in
instructed to do and was rejected from the throne as a result. The rivalry with the Amalekites went long
back in Israel's history, all the way back to the story of Esau and Jacob. Esau's response to having lost
both the birthright and the blessing was this great and bitter cry. We also see parallels between
Esau's response when he later lifts up his voice and weeps, and King Saul's response in 1 Samuel
24 verse 16, when he lifts up his voice and weeps, as he acknowledges.
that David is the true heir of the kingdom, and that the Lord will bless him and deliver the kingdom into his hand.
This great history, the history of the rivalry between Esau and Jacob,
and the tragic history of the tribe of Benjamin, can be heard in the background of this episode,
and in much of the rest of the book. Indeed, it can shed some light upon what has happened to this point.
In Genesis chapter 27, verse 29, we can see the blessing that was given to Jacob over his brother Esau.
Let people serve you and nations bow down to you, be lord over your brothers,
and may your mother's sons bow down to you, cursed be everyone who curses you,
and blessed be everyone who blesses you.
Haman's fury against Mordecai was provoked by Mordecai's refusal to bow to him,
the very blessing that Jacob had taken from Esau.
Esau's response to the loss of the blessing to Jacob was a murderous anger.
We read of this in verses 41 to 42 of that chapter.
Now Esau hated Jacob because of the blessing with which his father had blessed him,
and Esau said to himself,
The days of mourning for my father are approaching,
then I will kill my brother Jacob.
But the words of Esau her older son were told to Rebecca,
so she sent and called Jacob her younger son and said to him,
Behold your brother Esau comforts himself about you by planning to kill you.
In Haman the Eagagite, his descendant,
Esau's murderous rage against Jacob, his brother,
has blown up into a genocidal rage against an entire people,
provoked by the failure of one man to bow.
As we hear this story in the background,
perhaps we can also recognise connections between different details.
We might think about the relationship between Rebecca and Jacob
and the relationship between Esther and Mordecai.
The two competing brothers, Esau and Jacob,
are Heer, Hia, Haman and Mordecai.
Perhaps we might also see ways in which King Ahazueres is like Isaac.
Mordecai is not alone in this morning.
There is a more general despair among the Jews in every province.
Separated from the commoners and the regular life of the city in the palace,
Esther does not seem to be aware of Haman's decree.
Her impression at this point might simply be that Mordecai is destitute.
He has fallen into extreme poverty, and so she will send out clothes to assist him.
Perhaps in this gift of clothes from Esther to Mordecai,
we might hear some element of an echo of the story of Genesis chapter 27,
where Rebecca gave clothes to Jacob so that he might go before his father, in disguise as Esau.
When Esther inquires further, Mordecai informs her about the decree
and asks her to plead with the king on behalf of the people.
We must remember that to this point, Esther had not disclosed her identity
or her people of origin to the king.
She was the radiant, beautiful queen chosen from the common people.
As Rabbi Foreman notes, this would enable her to stand for the whole nation of Persia
as a common person of the realm.
If she were to out herself as belonging to this hated national group,
her symbolic role as the Queen of all Persia will be thrown into jeopardy.
Besides, she informs Mordecai,
one cannot simply enter into the king's presence.
He has to summon you,
and if you enter his presence when not summoned,
you do so in jeopardy of your life.
Esther had not been summoned at any point in the last month.
The question of approach to King Ahazuerus has been won throughout the book to this point.
Vashti had failed to approach the king when she had been summoned,
Big Thun and Terrish, two guardians of the king's threshold, had sought to transgress the threshold and lay hands upon the king.
The king's presence, an approach to the king, as James Jordan has observed, is similar to approach to the throne of God.
Those who enter unsummoned can be destroyed. Bigthin and Terish could be compared to Nadab and Abiyahue.
A similar thing is going on in Genesis chapter 27 with the blessing of Isaac.
In verses 11 and 12 of that chapter, Jacob expresses a similar hesitancy.
to Esther. But Jacob said to Rebecca his mother,
Behold my brother Esau is a hairy man, and I am a smooth man.
Perhaps my father will feel me, and I shall seem to be mocking him and bring a curse upon
myself, and not a blessing. Jacob had ended up approaching his father with food and wine,
but in a disguise as his brother. Esther's approach, the king, will have to be one in which
she removes the disguise, in which she unveils herself as a member of the Jewish people.
Mordecai responds by warning Esther, but his warning is warning as.
a surprising one. The concern that he expresses is not for the Jewish people, but for Esther and her father's
house. If she fails to act, it will be her that loses out. Deliverance will arise from another
quarter. Esther's name, if we were to render it in Hebrew, suggests the sense of hiding. The story of
Esther is in many respects a story of hiding. We might initially think of Esther hiding her identity when
she goes into the king's house. However, the greater act of hiding can be seen in the Lord's hand. The Lord is
never mentioned by name in the book of Esther, yet his presence and action is everywhere.
The book of Esther is a book in which we see the work of the Lord in acts of seeming chance.
God's providence ruled throughout. The book is packed full of seeming coincidences that advance
the Lord's purpose and deliver his people. Mordecai here expresses his confidence that the
Lord's providence will achieve his purposes for his people. The Lord's promises concerning the
Jews are an assurance that they will not finally be wiped out. Whatever Haman's decree,
deliverance will arise for them from some quarter. And Esther at this point seems to be the best
situated. The big picture is certain the Lord will deliver his people. How Esther and her family
will stand relative to this is what is really in the balance at this point. If she fails to act,
she will bring disaster upon herself and her kindred, but the Jews will be saved.
Mordecai invites her to look at her situation differently, knowing that the Lord is in
control of history and that the Jews will be delivered, it is not unreasonable to wonder whether
she has been put in the position that she has as a divinely appointed means to deliver them.
By pursuing the law's purposes where she is placed, she might prove to be a decisive instrument
of the Lord's providence. Rabbi Foreman suggests that we ought to read these verses against
the backdrop of Numbers Chapter 30, which concerns the making of vows and also their annulment.
In verses 10 to 16 it speaks of the situation of a young woman who marries a husband.
and if she vowed in her husband's house or bound herself by a pledge with an oath and her husband heard of it and said nothing to her and did not oppose her then all her vows shall stand and every pledge by which she bound herself shall stand but if her husband makes them null and void on the day that he hears them then whatever proceeds out of her lips concerning her vows or concerning her pledge of herself shall not stand her husband has made them void and the lord will forgive her any vow and any binding oath to a
afflict herself, her husband may establish, or her husband may make void. But if her husband says
nothing to her from day to day, then he establishes all her vows, or all her pledges that are upon her,
he has established them, because he said nothing to her on the day that he heard of them. But if he makes
them null and void after he has heard of them, then he shall bear her iniquity. These are the statutes
that the Lord commanded Moses about a man and his wife, and about a father and his daughter,
while she is in her youth within her father's house.
As Rabbi Foreman recognises,
several of the details of this passage in Numbers Chapter 30
are mentioned in Esther chapter 4.
There's the young woman who marries.
There are instructions concerning the relationship
with a spouse and their word.
There's the reference to the father's house.
Silence is presented as assent and affirmation.
And there's the urgency of speech.
If she does not speak, she will be seen to affirm.
Foreman notes that the vowelisation of her husband in verse 14 is not original.
Vowels are not found in the original unpointed Hebrew text,
and there is a different way of vowelising the text,
which, while clearly not the original meaning,
is a play and mirror image of it.
The word rendered her husband could be rendered a woman.
This would yield something like the meaning,
but if a woman says nothing to her husband from day to day,
then she establishes all his vows or all his pledges that are upon,
him. She has established them because she said nothing to her husband on the day that she heard of them.
Now this is clearly not the original meaning of the text, but Mordecai seems to be playing upon it.
He is inviting Esther to see herself as the person that stands in the place of being able to
annul the word of her spouse. If she speaks up at this time, she will be able to negate his word,
but if she does not, her silence will count as assent and she will be judged.
Esther responds positively to Mordecai's charge.
She will undertake this great and dangerous act of disclosing herself.
However, before she does so, she asks for Mordecai to gather all the Jews together in Sousa
and to carry out a farsed for her, and she will do the same with her young women.
This fast for three days and three nights from the time of the Passover should make us think of the story of Christ.
Esther's life will hang in the balance for this period of time,
and when the king raises her scepter, she will be, as it were, raised up.
Her words at the end of her response,
If I perish, I perish,
should also remind us of the words of Jacob,
as Judah pledged that he would bring Benjamin back safely from Egypt,
as Joseph in disguise had instructed Jacob's sons
to bring back their youngest brother with them.
In Genesis chapter 43, verses 13 to 14,
Take also your brother, and arise, go again to the man.
May God Almighty grant you mercy before the man,
and may he send back your other brother and Benjamin.
And as for me,
If I am bereaved of my children, I am bereaved.
When we hear such linguistic parallels in Scripture,
our concerns should be to discover whether they belong to a greater cluster of parallels
that connects stories and their themes, not merely turns a phrase.
In the story of Joseph, it is Judah who intercedes for Benjamin.
In the story of Esther, however, it is Benjaminites, Mordecai and Esther,
who intercede on behalf of the Jews, the Judaites.
The troubled story of Benjamin is woven throughout the back-gris.
of the story of Esther. Mordecai and Esther remind us of Joseph, the older brother of Benjamin.
Mordecai and Esther seemingly arise from the line of King Saul. Like Saul, they are facing the thread
of an Eagagite. Formerly Judah had interceded for Benjamin, and now the Benjaminites will
intercede for the Judahites. In the story of Esther, troubled legacies are being laid to rest.
Good deeds once received are being repaid, and tragically unfinished tasks are being completed.
A question to consider. How many?
unlikely or coincidental events in the book of Esther can you think of in which we can see the
hand of God's providence and action. The book of Philemon. Paul, a prisoner for Christ Jesus,
and Timothy our brother, to Philemon our beloved fellow worker, and Apia our sister,
and Archipus our fellow soldier, and the church in your house. Grace to you and peace from God
our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ. I thank my God always when I remember you in my prayers,
because I hear of your love and of the faith that you have toward the Lord Jesus and for all the saints.
And I pray that the sharing of your faith may become effective for the full knowledge of every good thing that is in us for the sake of Christ.
For I have derived much joy and comfort from your love, my brother, because the hearts of the saints have been refreshed through you.
Accordingly, though I am bold enough in Christ to command you to do what is required, yet for love's sake I prefer to appeal to you,
I, Paul, an old man, and now a prisoner also for Christ Jesus.
I appeal to you for my child, Annesimus, whose father I became in my imprisonment.
Formerly he was useless to you, but now he is indeed useful to you and to me.
I am sending him back to you, sending my very heart.
I would have been glad to keep him with me, in order that he might serve me on your behalf
during my imprisonment for the gospel.
But I preferred to do nothing without your consent, in order that your goodness might not be
by compulsion, but of your own accord. For this perhaps is why he was parted from you for a while,
that you might have him back forever. No longer as a bond servant, but more than a bond servant,
as a beloved brother, especially to me, but how much more to you, both in the flesh and in the
Lord? So if you consider me your partner, receive him as you would receive me. If he has wronged you
at all, or owes you anything, charge that to my account. I, Paul, write this with my own hand,
will repay it, to say nothing of your owing me even your own self. Yes, brother, I want some benefit
from you and the Lord. Refresh my heart in Christ. Confident of your obedience, I write to you,
knowing that you will do even more than I say. At the same time, prepare a guest room for me,
for I am hoping that through your prayers I will be graciously given to you. Epaphrus, my fellow
prisoner in Christ Jesus, sends greetings to you, as do Mark, Aristarchus, Deimos, and Luke,
my fellow workers. The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ be with your spirit.
Philemon is the shortest of Paul's epistles, and after 3rd and 2 John, the shortest book in the New
Testament. Although other theories exist, it was most likely sent to Philemon in Colossi,
at the same time as the epistle to the Colossians were sent there by the hand of Tickicus.
It is written concerning a runaway slave named Anesimus. Some in the later tradition have
identified Anesimus with the bishop of Ephesus, who was martyred in the reign of
demission, possibly in the first half of the 90s AD. Slaves were a feature of the ancient world.
When we think of slavery, we tend to think of the race-based chattel slavery of the American Antebellum
South, which was fundamentally founded upon man-stealing. Slavery in the ancient world was also
a vast and brutal institution. Much of Rome's economy depended heavily upon slavery, and hundreds
of thousands of slaves were captured in wars in Europe and elsewhere. Others had been kidnapped by
pirates. Some slaves had been rescued from exposure as infants. A few sold themselves into slavery to
improve their conditions. Some have estimated that over 30% of Roman society were slaves. It is important
that we recognise the greater complexities of the institution. In many less developed societies,
slavery could not easily be wished away. If a person was indebted or displaced, the choice
might be between being a slave or suffering an extreme hunger and want. Manumission, while an improvement
in legal status would probably not have been a step up in material conditions for many,
but would have reduced them to destitution and the terrible indignities and cruelties of poverty
in Roman society. The conditions enjoyed by slaves could vary widely. Harsh and inhumane
treatment of slaves was very common. However, in some cases, slaves of wealthy and high-status
masters could enjoy influence and even wealth of their own. Masters provided the food,
clothing and shelter that their slaves required. Other slaves could be valued and honored members,
of the households that they served. Slaves could be found doing all sorts of jobs in society,
with many levels of expertise. Epictetus, who lived around the same time as Nesimus,
became a great Stoic philosopher, for instance. In Galatians chapter 4, Paul compares the
condition of the child and his minority to the state of a slave. The comparison could also work
in the other direction. The slave was under the direct and practically absolute authority of
another party over their actions, bodies and lives. They could be corporally punished by their masters.
Their position was one of great vulnerability, and very great many were used for sexual purposes and
abused in this and other ways. However, slaves could often enjoy much greater material security
and provision than freedmen, who, without a master to provide for their essential needs,
were at greater risk of extreme poverty. In neither the Old, nor the New Testament, is slavery
rejected as illegitimate in principle. This is not, however, to suggest that either Testament
is ambivalent to the cultural practice. The Old Testament tells us stories of slaves, stories of
Hagar and Eliezer of Damascus, slaves of Abraham. The story of Joseph sold into slavery by his brothers.
Joseph illustrates both the ways that a slave could rise in their household, but also how
vulnerable slaves were to oppression and mistreatment. The story of the children of Israel brutally
oppressed by the Egyptians is another story of slavery. However, while oppression is a theme in some of
these stories, it is not a universal feature. Some slaves enjoyed great privileges. Eliezer of Damascus,
prior to the births of Ishmael and Isaac, was going to inherit the entirety of Abraham's
household. We also see in Abraham sending his servant to find a bride for Isaac, that that servant
clearly enjoys great authority to act in Abraham's name and to manage his affairs. The Egyptians were
saved from starvation in the famine through giving themselves over to slavery to Pharaoh.
Some slaves loved their masters, desired to remain in their master's households for life,
and performed a right to bind themselves to their masters.
There were forms of slavery designed to allow poor women to marry into richer families.
The law reminds Israel of their own experience of slavery in Egypt,
and while permitting them to own slaves, is concerned that the slaves are treated with justice and equity.
Deuteronomy chapter 15
versus 12 to 18 is an example
of Old Testament teaching concerning slavery
If your brother a Hebrew man or a Hebrew woman
is sold to you, he shall serve you six years
And in the seventh year you shall let him go free from you
When you let him go free from you
You shall not let him go empty-handed
You shall furnish him liberally out of your flock
Out of your threshing floor
And out of your wine press
As the Lord your God has blessed you
You shall give to him
You shall remember that you will
a slave in the land of Egypt, and the Lord your God redeemed you, therefore I command you this
today. But if he says to you, I will not go out from you, because he loves you in your household,
since he is well off with you, then you shall take an all, and put it through his ear into the door,
and he shall be your slave forever. And to your female slave you shall do the same. It shall not seem
hard to you when you let him go free from you, for at half the cost of a hired worker he has
served you six years. So the Lord your God will bless you in all that you do.
Treating slaves well was not really a matter of expediency in the law,
expecting to get more work out of them.
It was a matter of basic morality secured by the Lord as the patron of slaves,
and backed up by the rationale of Israel's own recollection of the experience of oppressive servitude.
The New Testament continues in this same vein.
Slavery is not directly condemned as an institution,
but its cultural logic is radically undermined and replaced with a Christian logic
that does not dispense with the form, but utterly changes its principles of operation.
Colossians chapter 3 versus 22 to chapter 4 verse 1.
Bond servants obey in everything those who are your earthly masters,
not by way of eye service as people pleases, but with sincerity of heart fearing the Lord.
Whatever you do work heartily, as for the Lord and not for man,
knowing that from the Lord you will receive the inheritance as your reward.
You are serving the Lord Christ, for the wrongdoer will be paid back for the
wrong he has done, and there is no partiality. Masters, treat your bond servants justly and fairly,
knowing that you also have a master in heaven. And in Ephesians chapter 6, verses 5 to 9,
bond servants, obey your earthly masters with fear and trembling, with a sincere heart, as you would
Christ, not by way of eye service as people pleases, but as bond servants of Christ doing the will
of God from the heart, rendering service with a good will as to the Lord and not to man,
knowing that whatever good anyone does, this he will receive back from the Lord, whether he is a bond servant or is free.
Masters do the same to them, and stop your threatening, knowing that he who is both their master and yours is in heaven, and there is no partiality with him.
In Paul's teaching then, servants were encouraged either to act toward their earthly masters as those living out of a more fundamental state of servanthood,
to a gracious, loving and good master, or to think of themselves as sons in relationship to Christ,
acting obediently towards their earthly masters for his sake.
Masters were to see themselves as slaves of a higher master,
having this in common with their servants and being accountable for their treatment of them.
God is impartial, and unlike Roman courts, will not favour the unjust master over his abused servant.
God is the patron and the protector of the weak.
Even more importantly, Christ himself came in the form of a servant,
and the pattern of Christian ethics is set by a master who willingly assumed the path of service.
The New Testament is not an egalitarian document. It assumes and sometimes justifies a hierarchical order in society,
with rulers, parents, husbands and masters occupying places over others, places which are not delegitimized.
Perhaps more challenging to us, nowhere does the scripture suggest that a person's soul is in jeopardy by virtue of possessing a slave.
This is not because the scriptures are hesitant in calling out sin.
However, nor is the scripture simply a book legitimating and supporting the status quo.
Slavery, while not delegitimized, is neither idealized nor meekly tolerated.
The scripture frequently speaks into the institution to transform its operations
on the basis of God's concern for the slave and the human kinship of the master and the slave,
a kinship to which the scripture constantly alerts us.
This transformation is not undertaken for the purpose of rehabilitating the institution.
though, as if slavery just needed a bit more spit and polish. Rather, throughout the
scripture the movement is towards release from slavery and into the independence, maturity, and
providence that slavery stifles, and for whose lack it could often substitute. While our
society may commit itself to equality and principle, it often struggles in practice, as people
clearly are not equal in their talents, abilities, capacities, their economic standing,
their social and family backgrounds, the authority that they
enjoy and any number of other criteria. While we talk about a quality of opportunity or a quality
of outcome, for instance, we can try to realize equality in ways that set us up for constant frustration,
as while there are areas where fairness must clearly be displayed, the natural differences
between people will constantly produce diverging outcomes, and any attempt to level these outcomes
will tend unfairly to stifle people in the expression of their gifts.
Indeed, many of these attempts at equality can produce harsher situations,
such as where the supposed justice of meritocracy,
leads to the justification of the much greater wealth or status of some
being perceived as a natural right that they enjoy,
when formerly it might have been attributed to the grace of God or unmerited fortune.
Such equality of opportunity may serve only to underline our great natural differences.
Part of the power of the teaching that we find in Paul and in the rest of the New Testament then
is the way that it speaks the levelling reality of the gospel
into situations where social hierarchies are taken for granted,
are not expected to disappear, and in some cases are even affirmed.
The gospel does not abolish slavery, but it makes it impossible ever to think about it
or practice it in the same way again, and, as many have observed,
thereby soes the seed for the progressive social delegitimization and the later abolition of the institution.
The gospel focuses its vision of equality beneath the surface of the social order.
In the process, it denies the social order finality and insists that it be approached and regarded
in terms of a more fundamental and determinative reality, given by virtue of the facts of human creation and redemption.
Every human being is beyond exchange value and is of incalculative.
worth in the sight of God.
Whoever someone is, wherever they stand
in the social order, this is true of them.
In the life of the church, in particular
in the light of redemption, this
fact is brought into fuller expression.
For an institution like slavery,
characterized by the negation of the
personhood of others, and their
reduction to mere possession, a true
recognition of this fact would over time
prove fatal. And now
we are in a better position to appreciate
the power of Paul's argument in Filemon,
which is shot through with
the logic of the gospel. Enesimus, fleeing from Philemon, came to Paul, and apparently was converted
through Paul's message. Paul sends him back to Philemon, but sends him back with an appeal.
Paul could have commanded Philemon. Philemon arguably owed Paul his spiritual life, and Paul was
in a position where he could have laid requirements upon him. However, by appealing to him,
he affords him the opportunity to act in the maturity and the freedom of love. As Paul says,
he desires Philemon's goodness not be by compulsion, but of his own accord. The gospel more generally
is characterized by a rhetoric of appeal, exhortation, and persuasion, rather than direct command. As
persons acting in the freedom of the spirit, rather than under the command of the law, we are those
who obey from the heart, and so we appeal to as those who are mature, who are to obey from the heart,
and with reasons that have been given to us and internalized. Prior to his escape, Inesimus was not
a good servant to Philemon, but since his conversion he has become of great assistance to Paul
and will likewise be of great usefulness to Philemon. Receiving Anesimus back now,
Philemon won't just be receiving a bond servant, but someone beloved, as a now reformed man
of his household, but also as a brother in Christ. Paul encourages Philemon to see God's hand in all
of this. Through Anesimus's departure, God has brought it about that Philemon is receiving him
back as something much more dear than he ever was when he left. Versus 15 to 16 are not, I believe,
referring to Manumission. Receiving Anesimus back as a brother did not mean that he ceased to be
Filemon's slave. However, it would necessarily transform the way that Anesimus and Filemon treated
each other from that point onwards. As brothers in Christ and in the new humanity in Christ, also
recognizing their common dignity as human beings more generally, the master-slave relationship would
take on a very different form, when occurring in the light of and under the rule of, a much
more fundamental reality. And at the heart of Paul's appeal is Paul's use of the work of Christ as a
paradigm for his own appeal on Anasmus's behalf. So, if you consider me your partner, receive him
as you would receive me. If he has wronged you at all, or owes you anything, charge that to my
account. I, Paul, write this with my own hand. I will repay it, to say nothing of your owing me
even your own self. Yes, brother, I want some benefit from you and the Lord. Refresh my heart in Christ.
In the gospel, Christ, who was, in the very form of God, took on the form of a servant, identifying
with us, so that we, as we are found in him, might enjoy his riches. Paul stands between
Anesimus and Philemon, assuming all of the burden of Anesimus's debts and wrongs, and offers himself
as a guarantor for them. He identifies fully with Anesimus so that a glorious exchange can occur.
Paul assumes Anesimus's debts, and Anesimus receives the welcome and the love that Paul himself
would receive. All of this rests upon the fellowship that we have in Christ, in which Christ has
identified with us so that we can enjoy his riches. However, this fellowship between head and body
also calls forth a fellowship within the body, whereby we identify with each other, in whatever
condition we may find ourselves. Rich must identify with poor, masters with slaves, men with
women, rulers with subjects. All must take concern for the other. Was Paul expecting Anesimus to be
released? Perhaps the key consideration here is the cryptic statement in verse 21. Confident of your
obedience I write to you, knowing that you will do even more than I say. What is the even more
than I say. I am not persuaded that manumission is primarily what Paul has in mind here.
There was nothing wrong in principle in Paul's mind with a Christian owning a slave, or a Christian
slave serving a master. However, the gospel necessarily transforms such situations and provokes
godly acts of gracious creativity and imagination. Fylemans' relationship with Anesimus could not be the
same after this, and Paul is certain that Philemon receiving Anesimus back will provoke Fyleiman to consider
ways that his relationship with Anesimus can become richer and more characterised by grace.
One possibility is that he might send Anesimus to Paul, who clearly has found Anesimus to be of
great assistance to him in his work, and has a deep affection for him as his son in the gospel.
Anesimus might then have accompanied Paul as he travelled, assisting him in the work of the gospel.
The possibility that Anesimus is the bishop of Ephesus mentioned by Ignatius of Antioch
invites further speculation. But whatever happened, the gospel clearly transforms the relationship
between slave and master, placing it on a completely different footing, denying it the
ultimacy that it enjoyed in pagan society, and placing it firmly under the rule of Christ's grace.
A question to consider, how might Paul's pattern of appeal here be adopted by Christians in our
mission to those on the margins of our societies?
