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GUEST
ARTICLE
Did
Paul Pray for the Dead?
Article
description: Sincere
Roman Catholics, and some Protestants, allege that Paul
uttered a prayer on behalf of a deceased brother in Christ.
Is there merit in this allegation. There is not. Study
this with us.
“Does
Paul’s prayer for Onesiphorus (2 Timothy 1:18) provide
Bible authority for praying for the dead?”
Some
have sought to argue this position. Roman Catholic theologians
frequently appeal to the text in an attempt to establish
their case for praying on behalf of the dead. Regrettably,
even some Protestants have yielded to this position, in
spite of a total lack of solid evidence for the case, and
in spite of evidence which is decidedly against it.
First,
the following article, from The Catholic Encyclopedia (online)
presents an authoritative position regarding the matter.
“
In his Second Epistle to Timothy (i, 16-18; iv, 19) St. Paul
speaks of Onesiphorus in a way that seems obviously to imply
that the latter was already dead: ‘The Lord give mercy to
the house of Onesiphorus’—as to a family in need of consolation.
Then, after mention of loyal services rendered by him to
the imprisoned Apostle at Rome, comes the prayer for Onesiphorus
himself, ‘The Lord grant unto him to find mercy of the Lord
in that day’ (the day of judgment); finally, in the salutation, ‘the
household of Onesiphorus’ is mentioned once more, without
mention of the man himself. The question is, what had become
of him? Was he dead, as one would naturally infer from what
St. Paul writes? Or had he for any other cause become separated
permanently from his family, so that prayer for them should
take account of present needs while prayers for him looked
forward to the day of judgment? Or could it be that he was
still at Rome when the Apostle wrote, or gone elsewhere for
a prolonged absence from home? The first is by far the easiest
and most natural hypothesis; and if it be admitted, we have
here an instance of prayer by the Apostle for the soul of
a deceased benefactor” (http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/04653a.htm).
The
Text
In
2 Timothy 1, there is a form of prayer on behalf of the
family of Onesiphorus (v. 16). Subsequently, in verse 18,
the apostle prays for Onesiphorus himself. He petitions
the Lord that this brother might “find mercy” in “that
day,” which obviously is the day of Judgment.
Because
the verbs regarding the brother are all in the past tense,
and since only his family is alluded to later in 4:19,
some have assumed that Onesiphorus was dead (White, p.
159; Fee, p. 237; Kelly, p. 171). The latter argues that
this reflects a New Testament example of prayer on behalf
of the dead. N.J.D. White also contended that the apocryphal
2 Maccabees (12:44-45) would allow an orthodox Jew to pray
for the dead (p. 159). Fee is more cautious.
In
response, this must be noted.
- There
is no concrete evidence at all that Onesiphorus
was dead. The arguments for his demise are all based
upon inferences,
none of which are “necessary.”
- That
his actions are spoken of in the past tense is perfectly
understandable since he was no longer in Rome (17a).
- The
fact that Paul did not mention him in 4:19, in
sending greetings to those in Ephesus, is not troubling—if
Onesiphorus himself was somewhere other than in Ephesus.
- The
fact that Paul prayed for this brother is proof
within itself that he was not dead, since there is
not a shred
of evidence in the New Testament that prayers for
the dead are acceptable. Lenski is emphatic that
the “analogy
of Scripture” is against the idea of any Christian praying
for the dead (p. 776). If the brother was dead, why did
the apostle offer no word of comfort to the family? (Note:
While some deny that this was a “prayer” (Mounce, p.
494), most scholars affirm that it is, and even Mounce
later calls it a “wish prayer” (p. 496).
- The
writers of the New Testament did not consider the
apocryphal books as inspired and authoritative. Though
they had
access to them (since they were “bound up” with
the Greek Old Testament), they never quoted from
them; this is
powerful evidence that they did not view them as
in the same class with the Old Testament documents.
- If
Onesiphorus, as a godly man, was dead, there would be
no need to petition God for mercy on his behalf; he would
have been a recipient of that mercy already.
- If
the brother died as an apostate (of which there
is no evidence), Paul’s prayer for “mercy” would be worthless
inasmuch as mercy will be bestowed on the basis of one’s
personal relationship with the Lord, not on that of another’s
actions (Ezekiel 18:20; 2 Corinthians 5:10). Moreover,
the wicked dead cannot leave their place of torment (Luke
16:26), and their punishment is “eternal” in duration
(Matthew 25:46).
Accordingly,
these texts in Paul’s second epistle to Timothy do not
come remotely close to providing the coveted evidence for
the validity of prayers for the dead.
Sources
Fee, Gordon (1988), New International Biblical Commentary—1
and 2 Timothy, Titus (Peabody, MA: Hendrickson).
Kelly,
J.N.D. (1987), A Commentary on the Pastoral Epistles—Timothy
I & II, and Titus (Peabody, MA: Hendrickson).
Lenski,
R.C.H. (1961), Paul’s Epistles to the Colossians, Thessalonians,
to Timothy, Titus, and Philemon (Minneapolis: Augsburg).
Mounce,
William (2000), Word Biblical Commentary—Pastoral Epistles (Nashville:
Word).
White,
N.J.D. (1956), “The First and Second Epistles to Timothy
and to Titus,” The Expositor’s Greek Testament, W.
Robertson Nicoll, ed. (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans), Volume
Four.
--Wayne
Jackson
© 2005
by Christian Courier Publications. All rights reserved.
http://www.christiancourier.com/articles/print/did_paul_pray_for_the_dead
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