Bible Commentary

Colossians 4:7

The Pulpit Commentary on Colossians 4:7

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

All that relates to me (literally, the things concerning me) Tychicus, the beloved brother and faithful minister and fellow servant (bondman), will make known to you (, ; ; ; ; ; ).

Tychicus appears first in , where he is called an "Asian" (of the Roman province of Asia, of which Ephesus was capital), along with Trophimus, who, in , is styled "the Ephesian." He accompanied the apostle on his voyage to Jerusalem (A.

D. 58), with a number of others representing different Churches, and deputed, as Lightfoot thinks, in conformity with the directions of , , to convey the contributions raised for "the poor saints at Jerusalem."

Trophimus was with St. Paul in Jerusalem (), and so, probably, his colleague (the words, "as far as Asia," in , are of very doubtful authority), he is now with the apostle in his imprisonment at Rome, about to be sent home with these two letters (comp.

, ), and in charge of Onesimus, on whose account the apostle sends a private letter to Philemon. In the interval between the first (present) and second imprisonment (2 Timothy), the apostle revisited the Asiatic Churches (so we infer from ), and Tychicus rejoined him; for we find St.

Paul proposing to send him to Titus in Crete (), and finally sending him from Rome once more to Ephesus (). These facts sustain the high terms in which he is here spoken of. "In the Lord" belongs both to "minister" and "fellow servant."

This language is almost identical with that used of Epaphras in (see notes). Tychicus is "minister" ( διάκονος), not to Paul himself (; , ὑπηρέτης), nor in the official sense of , but "of Christ," "of the gospel," or "the Church" (), as St.

Paul himself (, ). He is "a beloved brother" to his fellow.believers, "a faithful minister" of the Lord Christ, and "a fellow servant" with the apostle (; ; ).

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