Abstract

Despite the fact that Phil 4:6-7 and 4:8-9 both conclude with similar promises of divine peace and thus appear to be part of the same line of reasoning, modern scholarship has yet to offer a compelling account of the relationship between these two texts. Indeed, for most scholars Phil 4:6-9 remains a kind of redactional hodgepodge, 4:6-7 and 4:8-9 being drawn from what were originally separate letters.' In this short note I argue, to the contrary, that Phil 4:69 constitutes a unified consolation.2 The burden of my argument will be to show

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