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Smith's Bible Dictionary.pdf - Online Christian Library

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<strong>Smith's</strong> <strong>Bible</strong> <strong>Dictionary</strong><br />

strictly Philadelphi’a (brotherly love), a town on the confines of Lydia and Phrygia<br />

Catacecaumene, 25 southeast of Sardis, and built by Attalus II., king of Pergamos, who died B.C.<br />

138. It was situated on the lower slopes of Tmolus, and is still represented by a town called<br />

Allah-shehr (city of God). Its elevation is 952 feet above the sea. The original population of<br />

Philadelphia. Seems to have been Macedonian; but there was, as appears from (Leviticus 3:9) a<br />

synagogue of Hellenizing Jews there, as well as a <strong>Christian</strong> church. (It was the seat of one of “the<br />

seven churches of Asia.”) The locality was subject to constant earthquakes, which in the time of<br />

Strabo rendered even the town walls of Philadelphia unsafe. The expense of reparation was constant,<br />

and hence perhaps the poverty of the members of the church. (Revelation 3:8) (The church was<br />

highly commended.) (Revelation 3:7-13) Even Gibbon bears the following well-known testimony<br />

to the truth of the prophecy, “Because thou hast kept the word of my patience, I also will keep thee<br />

in the hour of temptation”: “At a distance from the sea, forgotten by the (Greek) emperor<br />

encompassed, all sides by the Turks, her valiant citizens defended their religion and freedom above<br />

fourscore years. Among the Greek colonies and churches of Asia, Philadelphia is still erect, a<br />

column in a scene of ruins.” “The modern town (Allah-shehr, city of God), although spacious,<br />

containing 3000 houses and 10,000 inhabitants, is badly built; the dwellings are mean and the streets<br />

filthy. The inhabitants are mostly Turks. A few ruins are found, including remains of a wall and<br />

about twenty-five churches. In one place are four strong marble pillars, which once supported the<br />

dome of a church. One of the old mosques is believed by the native <strong>Christian</strong>s to have been the<br />

church in which assembled the primitive <strong>Christian</strong>s addressed in the Apocalypse.” Whitney’s <strong>Bible</strong><br />

Geography.)<br />

Philemon<br />

the name of the <strong>Christian</strong> to whom Paul addressed his epistle in behalf of Onesimus. He was a<br />

native probably of Colosse, or at all events lived in that city when the apostle wrote to him: first,<br />

because Onesimus was a Colossian, (Colossians 4:9) and secondly because Archippus was a<br />

Colossian, (Colossians 4:17) whom Paul associates with Philemon at the beginning of his letter.<br />

(Philemon 1:1,2) It is related that Philemon became bishop of Colosse, and died as a martyr under<br />

Nero. It is evident from the letter to him that Philemon was a man of property and influence, since<br />

he is represented as the head of a numerous household, and as exercising an expensive liberality<br />

toward his friends and the poor in general. He was indebted to the apostle Paul as the medium of<br />

his personal participation in the gospel. It is not certain under what circumstances they became<br />

known to each other. It is evident that on becoming a disciple he gave no common proof of the<br />

sincerity and power of his faith. His character as shadowed forth in the epistle to him, is one of the<br />

noblest which the sacred record makes known to us.<br />

Philemon, The Epistle Of Paul To<br />

is one of the letters which the apostle wrote during his first captivity at Rome A.D. 63 or early<br />

in A.D. 64. Nothing is wanted to confirm the genuineness of the epistle: the external testimony is<br />

unimpeachable; nor does the epistle itself offer anything to conflict with this decision. The occasion<br />

of the letter was that Onesimus, a slave of Philemon, had run away from him to Rome, either<br />

desiring liberty or, as some suppose, having committed theft. (Philemon 1:18) Here he was converted<br />

under the instrumentality of Paul. The latter; intimately connected with the master and the servant,<br />

was naturally anxious to effect a reconciliation between them. He used his influence with Onesimus,<br />

ver. 12, to induce him to return to Colosse and place himself again at the disposal of his master.<br />

On his departure, Paul put into his hand this letter as evidence that Onesirnus was a true and approved<br />

563<br />

William Smith

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