Summary of Philemon
The Letter to Philemon is the shortest of Paul's epistles and one of the most personal documents in the entire New Testament. Written during one of Paul's imprisonments — most likely in Rome, though Caesarea and Ephesus have also been proposed — the letter addresses a specific, delicate situation involving three individuals: Paul the apostle, Philemon, a wealthy Christian slave-owner, and Onesimus, Philemon's runaway slave. The Setting Philemon was apparently a prominent member of a house church, likely located in Colossae, and was personally converted through Paul's ministry. He was known for his love and faith toward both the Lord Jesus and the saints, and Paul speaks warmly of the refreshment Philemon's generosity had brought to fellow believers. Into this relationship of mutual affection and spiritual debt, Paul introduces a matter requiring considerable grace on Philemon's part. Onesimus had fled from Philemon — possibly having stolen from him in th...