Philemon Chapter 1 verse 8 Holy Bible

ASV Philemon 1:8

Wherefore, though I have all boldness in Christ to enjoin thee that which is befitting,
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BBE Philemon 1:8

And so, though I might, in the name of Christ, give you orders to do what is right,
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DARBY Philemon 1:8

Wherefore having much boldness in Christ to enjoin thee what is fitting,
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KJV Philemon 1:8

Wherefore, though I might be much bold in Christ to enjoin thee that which is convenient,
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WBT Philemon 1:8


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WEB Philemon 1:8

Therefore, though I have all boldness in Christ to command you that which is appropriate,
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YLT Philemon 1:8

Wherefore, having in Christ much boldness to command thee that which is fit --
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Pulpit Commentary

Pulpit CommentaryVerse 8. - Render: Although I have abundant freedom [boldness, or. even license] in Christ to enjoin upon thee that which is fitting. It was only in Christ, and by his authority as an apostle, that he could claim to come between a slave and his master. Secular warrant for doing so he had none. Such authority and license, however, he would not use on this occasion. He prefers to rely wholly on the respect and personal attachment felt towards him by Philemon, for the granting of his request, which he now proceeds to state.

Ellicott's Commentary

Ellicott's Commentary for English Readers(8-20) Here St. Paul enters on the main subject of his Letter--the recommendation to Philemon of his runaway slave, Onesimus. All thoughtful readers of the Epistle must recognise in this a peculiar courtesy and delicacy of tone, through which an affectionate earnestness shows itself, and an authority all the greater because it is not asserted in command. The substance is equally notable in its bearing on slavery. Onesimus is doubly welcomed into the Christian family. He is St. Paul's son in the faith: he is to Philemon a brother beloved in the Lord. In that recognition is the truth to which, both in theory and in practice, we may look as being the destruction of slavery.(8, 9) Wherefore . . . for love's sake . . .--Still the same idea runs on. Philemon's love, shown in Christian fellowship, is in the Apostle's mind; "therefore," he adds, "for love's sake"--speaking in the spirit of love, to which he knew there would be a ready response--he will not command, as an Apostle, what is "convenient," i.e., seemly, in a Christian (comp. Ephesians 5:14; Colossians 3:18), but will "entreat" as a brother.(9) Paul the aged, and now also a prisoner of Jesus Christ.--At this time St. Paul must have been between fifty and sixty, and after a life of unexampled labour and suffering he might well call himself "aged," not, perhaps, in comparison with Philemon, but in relation to his need of ministry from his "son" Onesimus. It has been suggested by Dr. Lightfoot that we should read here (by a slight change, or without any change, in the original), the ambassador, and also the prisoner, of Jesus Christ. The parallel with Ephesians 6:20--"for which I am an ambassador in bonds"--and, indeed, with the tone in which St. Paul in the other Epistles speaks of his captivity as his glory, is tempting. But the change seems to take much from the peculiar beauty and pathos of the passage; which fr