Colossians 4:10 - Exposition
Aristarchus, my fellow prisoner, saluteth you ( Philemon 1:2 , Philemon 1:23 ; Philippians 2:25 ; Romans 16:7 ). Aristarchus, as a Thessalonian, accompanied the apostle to Jerusalem, along with Tychicus the Asian ( Acts 20:4 ), and was his companion at least during the first part of his voyage to Rome ( Acts 27:2 ). In Philemon 1:23 , Philemon 1:24 his name follows that of Mark as a "fellow worker" (comp. verse 11) and of Epaphras "my fellow prisoner" (comp. Romans 16:7 ). "Fellow prisoner" ( αἰχμαλωτός , captive, prisoner of war ) differs from the "prisoner" ( δέσμιος , one in bonds ) of Ephesians 3:1 ; Ephesians 4:1 ; Philemon 1:9 ; 2 Timothy 1:8 . The supposition that these men were permitted as friends to share St. Paul's captivity in turn, is conjectural (see Meyer). Possibly the incident recorded in Acts 19:29 was attended by some temporary joint imprisonment of St. Paul and Aristarchus. As "a soldier of Christ Jesus," the apostle was himself now "a prisoner of war" ( 2 Timothy 2:3 , 2 Timothy 2:4 ; 2 Corinthians 10:3-6 ); and therefore those who shared his sufferings were his "fellow prisoners," as they were his" fellow soldiers" ( Philemon 1:2 ; Philippians 1:30 ) and his "fellow servants" ( Colossians 1:7 ; Colossians 4:7 ). And Mark, the cousin of Barnabas, about whom you received commandments—if he should come to you, welcome him ( Philemon 1:24 ; 2 Timothy 4:11 ; 1 Peter 5:13 ). It is pleasant to find John Mark, who deserted the apostle in his first missionary journey ( Acts 13:13 ), and on whose account he separated from Barnabas ( Acts 15:37-40 ) ten years before, now taken again into his confidence and friendship. And indeed it is evident that there was no permanent estrangement between the two great Gentile missionaries; for Mark is called "cousin of Barnabas" by way of recommendation. Mary, the mother of John Mark, was a person of some consideration in the Church at Jerusalem ( Acts 12:12 ), and through her he may have been related to Barnabas, who, though a Cypriot Jew, had property near Jerusalem ( Acts 4:36 , Acts 4:37 ), and was also highly honoured by the mother Church ( Acts 9:27 ; Acts 11:22-24 ; Acts 15:25 , Acts 15:26 ). Mark is, moreover, a link between the Apostles Paul and Peter. It is to the house of his mother that the latter betakes himself on his escape from Herod's prison ( Acts 12:12 ). In 1 Peter 5:13 he appears, along with Silvanus (Silos), St. Paul's old comrade, in St. Peter's company, who calls him "my son." St. Peter was then at Babylon, where Mark may have arrived at the end of the journey eastwards which St. Paul here contemplates his undertaking. The striking correspondence of language and thought between St. Peter's First Epistle (addressed, moreover, to Churches of Asia Minor) and those of St. Paul to the Ephesians and Colossians (and, in an equal degree, that to the Romans) suggests the existence of some special connection at this time between the two writers, such as may well have been afforded by Mark, if, leaving Rome soon after the despatch of these letters, he travelled in their track by way of Asia Minor to join St. Peter at Babylon. At the time of St. Paul's second imprisonment, about four years later, Mark is again in Asia Minor in the neighbourhood of Timothy, and the apostle desires his services at Rome ( 2 Timothy 4:11 ). When or how the Colossians had received already directions concerning Mark, we have no means of knowing. His journey appears to have been postponed. The apostle must before this have communicated with the Colossians. The visit of Epaphras to Rome may have been due to some communication from him. "If he should come to you, give him a welcome," is the request the apostle now makes.
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