Summary of 1 Thessalonians
Paul writes this letter to the church at Thessalonica, the capital and principal city of the Roman province of Macedonia, making it one of the earliest of his surviving epistles — composed around A.D. 49–51, likely from Corinth during his second missionary journey. The letter carries a warmth and pastoral tenderness that set it apart, reading almost like a father writing to beloved children whom he has been too long separated from. It is not primarily a letter of correction, as some of Paul's other letters are, but a letter of encouragement, thanksgiving, and instruction — written to a young congregation that had received the gospel with joy under intense pressure and had already become, in Paul's words, a model to believers throughout Macedonia and Achaia. The background is important. Paul and his companions, Silas and Timothy, had come to Thessalonica on the second missionary journey after their imprisonment and mistreatment at Philippi. They preached in the synagogue f...