Based on the text of "Epistles to the Apostle" in which Colin Morris extrapolates letters Paul might have recieved from the responses he gives. In this case, this man is part of his warning against idleness, and thinking he knows when Jesus will return.
This is our Thessalonian's solicitor drafting a letter to Paul explaining how the man will sue Paul for the non-appearence of the promised paradise, which has not yet balenced his loss selling all he has to the poor.
This could also be used to consider any part of the bible referring to materialism, such as Jesus' conversations with Nicodemus or Levi/Matthew.
This is our Thessalonian's solicitor drafting a letter to Paul explaining how the man will sue Paul for the non-appearence of the promised paradise, which has not yet balenced his loss selling all he has to the poor.
This could also be used to consider any part of the bible referring to materialism, such as Jesus' conversations with Nicodemus or Levi/Matthew.
Log in to create a review