Epistles
Epistles
Consideration
Reading the Epistles without their audience in mind is like intercepting a note meant for someone else. The message may be clear, but the meaning shifts when the recipient changes.
The letters of the New Testament were written with purpose, tone, and situation in view. When those are ignored, commands feel harsher, promises feel misplaced, and interpretation becomes unsure.
Those who fear you shall see me and rejoice, because I have hoped in your word. –Psalm 119:74
Information
What the Epistles Are
- Pastoral letters written to specific churches or individuals
- Address real problems, questions, and pressures
- Apply theological truth to lived Christian experience
How Epistles Function
- They assume shared beliefs and shared struggles
- Commands are often corrective, not universal slogans
- Encouragement is often situational, not abstract
Why Audience Matters
- Meaning is shaped by who is being addressed
- Instructions must be read before they are applied
- Overhearing a letter requires awareness, not assumption
Epistles guide the church by teaching believers how doctrine shapes behavior in community.
Pauline Epistles
Letters to Churches
- Romans – Explains the gospel
- 1 Corinthians – Addresses immaturity
- 2 Corinthians – Encourages perseverance
- Galatians – Confronts legalism
- Ephesians – Celebrates our new identity
- Philippians – Encourages joy
- Colossians – Proclaims the sufficiency of Christ
- 1 Thessalonians – Clarifies hope in Christ’s return
- 2 Thessalonians – Corrects misunderstandings about His return
Letters to Individuals (Pastoral Epistles)
- 1 Timothy – Instructs church leadership
- 2 Timothy – Calls for pastoral faithfulness
- Titus – Emphasizes godly leadership
- Philemon – Appeals for reconciliation
General Epistles
- Hebrews – Presents Christ as superior
- James – Calls for authentic faith
- 1 Peter – Encourages to suffer well
- 2 Peter – Warns against false teachers
- 1 John – Assures salvation
- 2 John – Beware teachers who deny the truth about Christ
- 3 John – Commends faithful hospitality
- Jude – Urges believers to contend for the faith
Demonstration
1 Corinthians 13
Key Observations
- The passage sits between chapters on spiritual gifts
- The audience is a divided church, not a wedding ceremony
- Love is described as the necessary posture for using gifts rightly
Interpretive Insight
- Paul is correcting the misuse of spiritual gifts
- Love is presented as the governing ethic of church life
- The passage addresses maturity, not romance
Summation
The Epistles show how God’s truth works itself out in ordinary, messy church life. They were written to shape communities, correct errors, and encourage faithfulness, not to provide detached spiritual slogans. When read as letters, their guidance becomes clearer and more trustworthy.
Next week focuses on Apocalyptic literature, exploring how symbolic language communicates hope to suffering believers rather than confusion or fear.
























