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Who Is Theophilus?

Chopper

Member
Currently, I am studying the history of Israel as it pertains to what pleases God and what brings Him pleasure, something like what would be a "pleasing aroma to the Lord"....At the same time, I'm studying the Gospel of Luke and the book of Acts which was written by this same Luke. Acts presents the history of the Church of Jesus, the Son of God. My interest is in what pleases Jesus as to its history.

I would really like to know just who this Theophilus is. There is not a lot of information on this man, or men. Some say that he was a very close friend of Luke, while others say it is anyone who was a friend of God. This book of Acts, some say "Acts of the Apostles" is a very important history of the establishment of THE Church of the resurrected Lord Jesus Christ and it seems to me that who ever it's written too should not be left to speculation.

Does anyone have any reliable information, other than the two that I listed? Help? Help?
 
I don't know honestly brother, lately I've been studying on Mephibosheth. But I would love it if you could make a thread soon and reveal things which are pleasing to God and arise before Him a pure fragrance. :)
 
Dear Brother Chopper, from what I have been able to gather, the word Theophilus is not the name of a person, but the meaning of a friend of God being addressed, possibly to any that love God and are His.. Being capitalized may be the thought of the interpreters.

The following quote from Wikipedia may be of help.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theophilus_(biblical)
Honorary title
Honorary title (academia) tradition maintains that Theophilus was not a person. The word in Greek means "Friend of God" and thus both Luke and Acts were addressed to anyone who fits that description. In this tradition the author's targeted audience, as with all other canonical Gospels, were the learned (academic) but unnamed males and females of the era. Likewise the non-canonical Gospel of Thomas,Gospel of Peter, and Gospel of James are not addressed to any particular gender, or any specific person.
 
Yep. I can agree with that
Dear Brother Chopper, from what I have been able to gather, the word Theophilus is not the name of a person, but the meaning of a friend of God being addressed, possibly to any that love God and are His.. Being capitalized may be the thought of the interpreters.

The following quote from Wikipedia may be of help.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theophilus_(biblical)
Honorary title
Honorary title (academia) tradition maintains that Theophilus was not a person. The word in Greek means "Friend of God" and thus both Luke and Acts were addressed to anyone who fits that description. In this tradition the author's targeted audience, as with all other canonical Gospels, were the learned (academic) but unnamed males and females of the era. Likewise the non-canonical Gospel of Thomas,Gospel of Peter, and Gospel of James are not addressed to any particular gender, or any specific person.
 
Currently, I am studying the history of Israel as it pertains to what pleases God and what brings Him pleasure, something like what would be a "pleasing aroma to the Lord"....At the same time, I'm studying the Gospel of Luke and the book of Acts which was written by this same Luke. Acts presents the history of the Church of Jesus, the Son of God. My interest is in what pleases Jesus as to its history.

I would really like to know just who this Theophilus is. There is not a lot of information on this man, or men. Some say that he was a very close friend of Luke, while others say it is anyone who was a friend of God. This book of Acts, some say "Acts of the Apostles" is a very important history of the establishment of THE Church of the resurrected Lord Jesus Christ and it seems to me that who ever it's written too should not be left to speculation.

Does anyone have any reliable information, other than the two that I listed? Help? Help?

Chopper,

The most extensive article I have in my library on Theophilus - brief though it is - is by A. M. Ross in The Zondervan Pictorial Encyclopedia of the Bible.This is the article in its entirety:

'THEOPHILUS the ŏf’ ə ləs (Θεόφιλος, friend of God or lover of God). The one to whom Luke addressed his gospel (1:3) and the Acts of the Apostles (1:1). His identity is uncertain; it may be only conjectured from the literary conventions of the time and the purposes for which Luke-Acts was written. It has been suggested that Luke wrote to a Christian audience and that a name with this meaning is a generic term for all of Luke’s Christian readers. Appropriately, the book would then be addressed to any “friend of God” who wanted more detailed and accurate information concerning the origin and meaning of his faith.

On the other hand, books intended for the general public were sometimes dedicated to a friend and patron who might be able to contribute to the cost of disseminating an otherwise unknown work, or who had suggested its composition. Furthermore, in the gospel Theophilus is called kratiste, “most excellent,” a title of conspicuous rank or office as used of Felix the governor of Judaea (Acts 23:26; 24:3) and of Festus his successor (Acts 26:25). This points to the view that Luke had a definite person in mind, prob. a respected Rom. official who had been informed (or catechized as a convert) of Christianity and the life of Christ. If he was a questioning catechumen in preparation for christian baptism, Luke writes “in order that you may have certainty concerning the doctrines in which you have been instructed” (1:4). However, kratiste also can be used in a friendly way as a form of polite or flattering address with no official connotation. If it is regarded here as official, it is unlikely that Theophilus was a Christian at this time “since there is no instance in the Christian literature of the first two centuries where a Christian uses a secular title in addressing another Christian, to say nothing of a title of this character, which may be said to correspond in a general way to ‘Your Excellency’” (Zahn, Introduction to the New Testament III, 42). In the Acts (1:1) this title is omitted. Uncertainty can only speculate that friendship had deepened by the time the second book was dedicated, or that Theophilus had become a Christian in the interim and the title was too honorific for a brother Christian, or that Theophilus had either given up his office or been dismissed under persecution for his Christian profession.

Theophilus is found as a proper name as early as the 3rd cent. b.c. both in the papyri and inscrs. (J. H. Moulton and G. Milligan, The Vocabulary of the Greek Testament, 288) and as a Jewish name in the Flinders Petrie Papyri (II, 28 ii 9), also 3rd cent. b.c. Theophilus may well have been a baptismal name used among Christians, since a Rom. official in the 1st cent. could hardly be expected to be known in public by such a name. If this is the case, it is the only instance of such in the Acts and may be the same as a pseudonym to conceal his real identity, due to the need for secrecy under tense conditions between church and state (W. M. Ramsay, St. Paul the Traveller and Roman Citizen, 388). According to Eusebius and Jerome, Luke was a Syrian of Antioch. A Theophilus who held some high distinction at Antioch is mentioned in the Clementine Recognitions. This may be the person for whom Luke wrote.

There remains the possibility that Theophilus was a pagan and not a Christian at all. This depends on the significance of katēchēthēs, “You have been informed” (Luke 1:4), and Luke’s purpose for writing. In a general sense Luke may want to set forth “the reliability of the stories which have been reported to you,” or it could mean that he had received vague or hostile reports of Christianity as a subversive and troublesome movement, which reports Luke sets out to correct. Luke-Acts, therefore, would be an apologetic for the peaceableness of Christianity and the loyalty of its adherents to the imperial government. These themes occur repeatedly, esp. in the Acts.

Bibliography
W. M. Ramsay, St. Paul The Traveler and Roman Citizen, 3rd ed. (1898), 388, 389; T. Zahn, Introduction to the New Testament, III (1909), 42; F. H. Colson, “Notes on St. Luke’s Preface,” JTS, XXIV (1923), 300-309; J. H. Moulton and G. Milligan, The Vocabulary of the Greek New Testament (1930), 288, 358; R. B. Rackham, The Acts of the Apostles, 14th ed. (1951), xxxvii; E. W. Beyer, “κατηχέω, G2994,” TDNT, edit. by G. Kittel and tr. by G. W. Bromiley, III (1965), 638-640; J. Munck, Introduction to the Acts of the Apostles, rev. by W. F. Albright and C. S. Mann in The Anchor Bible (1967), xvi' (Ross 1976:721-722).​

I hope that that helps.

In Christ,
Oz

Works consulted
Ross, A M 1976. Theophilus, in M C Tenney (gen. ed.), The Zondervan Pictorial Encyclopedia of the Bible, vol 5, Q-Z, 721-722. Grand Rapids, Michigan: Zondervan Publishing House.
 
I see more meaning in the name, than perhaps as a person. As a writing addressed to a or any companion in faith. So I don't discount that it was generically implied, to every believer, by the Holy Spirit.
 
I see more meaning in the name, than perhaps as a person. As a writing addressed to a or any companion in faith. So I don't discount that it was generically implied, to every believer, by the Holy Spirit.

The designation, 'most excellent', seems to point to a designated person rather than any companion.
 
The designation, 'most excellent', seems to point to a designated person rather than any companion.
I'm not discounting it was a real person, who happened to have a name that could be taken generically, to any believer, as well. :nod

Engaging scripture from an allegorical perspective lends various sights that are less restricted than the purely physical aspects of personage. There is more information conveyed in the scriptures from the allegorical direction than most might see, with literal glasses only.
 
I'm not discounting it was a real person, who happened to have a name that could be taken generically, to any believer, as well. :nod

Engaging scripture from an allegorical perspective lends various sights that are less restricted than the purely physical aspects of personage. There is more information conveyed in the scriptures from the allegorical direction than most might see, with literal glasses only.

To the contrary.

In the article, 'The rise of allegorical interpretation', allegorical interpretation is defined by Roy Zuck as,

'Allegorizing is searching for a hidden or secret meaning underlying but remote from and unrelated in reality to the more obvious meaning of a text. In other words the literal reading is a sort of code, which needs to be deciphered to determine the more significant and hidden meaning. In this approach the literal is superficial, the allegorical is the true meaning'.​

BibleStudyTools has rightly concluded that 'the net result of allegorical interpretation is to place a veil of darkness over God’s divine Word. It takes that which God has graciously revealed to the saints and subjects it to the dark vagaries of human imagination and speculation'.

If you want to go with allegorical interpretation, your interpretation is as good or as bad as mine. It shoots to bits the plain meaning of the text. Allegorical or figurative interpretation of the text, manipulates the meaning to suit the interpreter's mind's eye.

Yes, there is allegory in the biblical text, in examples such as the parables. See the Parable of the sower and the seed in Matt 13:3-9 (ESV), with Jesus' interpretation of it in Matt 13:18-23 (ESV). The story of the eagles and the vine in Ezekiel 17 is an allegory, as is the vision of the dragon and the woman according to Revelation 12:1-6. However, this allegorical, figurative meaning is indicated in the text.

To interpret a literal text with allegorical meaning is to invent a meaning that is idiosyncratic to the reader/preacher. There were early church fathers who did this, one of the most prominent being Origen (ca. AD 184/185 – 253/254), in their interpretations, but that does not make it a legitimate hermeneutic. See Christian History's assessment: 'Origen: Friend or Foe?'

Oz
 
I disagree with the claim: "the net result of allegorical interpretation is to place a veil of darkness over God’s divine Word"

Gods Word Is Light, and therefore, allegorical Spiritual light, not literal particles of same.

You are free to impose whatever sights you please. I go where He Leads, by His Light.

John 8:12
Then spake Jesus again unto them, saying, I am the light of the world: he that followeth me shall not walk in darkness, but shall have the light of life.

1 John 2:10
He that loveth his brother abideth in the light, and there is none occasion of stumbling in him.
 
This is one of those times when I wish that the Scriptures were more precise. As I ponder the two major theories of who or what Theophilus is, I begin to wonder if our Lord intentionally did it this way to cause us to, as Winnie the Pooh would say Think, think, think. The more I consider this name and the circumstances that surround it, I think, this is not just a story that Luke is telling, it's a Gospel! it's Good News! it has been divinely inspired and transmitted from the Heart and mind of the Almighty God thru the Holy Spirit to the heart/mind of Luke for God's children.

If Theophilus is the name of an individual, he must have been a very close and trusted Brother! This person would be responsible for getting Luke's Gospel and the Book of Acts into just the right hands. Again, this is Holy Scripture, not just a friendly letter to some good folk. I guess that the best explanation that I have studied came from Dr. Wayne Grudem, University of Cambridge and Dr. Thomas R. Schreiner, Southern Baptist Theological Seminary. They report, "Theophilus was probably a man of wealth and social standing, and "most excellent" served as a respectful form of address."

"Luke's broader intended audience consisted primarily of Gentile Christians like Theophilus who had already "been taught" (1:4) about Jesus. But Luke no doubt realized that his recounting of Jesus' life and message would also be useful for evangelism among non-Christians."

Whoever this is of whom Luke is addressing his Gospel too remains one of those mysteries that will have to be made known when we get "Home". Another thought is, whoever or whatever Theophilus is, the Holy Spirit used that name.
 
Whoever this is of whom Luke is addressing his Gospel too remains one of those mysteries that will have to be made known when we get "Home". Another thought is, whoever or whatever Theophilus is, the Holy Spirit used that name.

:thumbsup Light On!
 
I disagree with the claim: "the net result of allegorical interpretation is to place a veil of darkness over God’s divine Word"

Gods Word Is Light, and therefore, allegorical Spiritual light, not literal particles of same.

You are free to impose whatever sights you please. I go where He Leads, by His Light.

John 8:12
Then spake Jesus again unto them, saying, I am the light of the world: he that followeth me shall not walk in darkness, but shall have the light of life.

1 John 2:10
He that loveth his brother abideth in the light, and there is none occasion of stumbling in him.

You have just proven what I stated about allegorical interpretation imposing your own view on Scripture.

You have confused the difference between allegorical interpretation and the use of metaphors in Scripture. 'I am the light of the world' is an example of the use of a metaphor.
 
You have just proven what I stated about allegorical interpretation imposing your own view on Scripture.

You have confused the difference between allegorical interpretation and the use of metaphors in Scripture. 'I am the light of the world' is an example of the use of a metaphor.

Really not all that picky between metaphor, parable, similitude and allegory. It's all the same theological genre with the same rules, applied.
 
Really not all that picky between metaphor, parable, similitude and allegory. It's all the same theological genre with the same rules, applied.

That demonstrates your lack of carefulness in biblical interpretation when you don't know the differences among these categories. The rules ARE NOT the same. Using an allegory in Scripture is very different from allegorical interpretation in which an interpreter imposes an interpretation on the text that is not there in a plain reading of the text.
 
That demonstrates your lack of carefulness in biblical interpretation when you don't know the differences among these categories. The rules ARE NOT the same. Using an allegory in Scripture is very different from allegorical interpretation in which an interpreter imposes an interpretation on the text that is not there in a plain reading of the text.

God in Christ, by His Spirit and His Word, teaches us, Actively within us, to love one another and to resist the devil(s). All Living Activity of Christ and His Word revolves around this simplicity, to this day. It is simple enough for any child to understand, at least on the Light Side, the Loving Side of His Ledgers. On the other side, it's a bit more complicated, but there is no ill will there, from His Word, to us who believe. The difficult part is understanding that the "resisting" of Satan is done, personally, within, because the tempter is also both active and activated to resist by The Word. This is the Divine Tension that still factually exists when anyone picks up His Words and what makes Gods Scriptures so interesting.

There really isn't any cause for any of us to continually bang our theological heads against the walls, In His Light. If any believers read with His Two Eyes, they will see all things. The first thing they will see in His Light, by His Spirit is that these Two Eyes are Shed on us, even through us, within us. These are what is taught, to Theophilus, the friend, the student of God in Christ, by His Word.

Luke 1:3
It seemed good to me also, having had perfect understanding of all things from the very first, to write unto thee in order, most excellent Theophilus,

In this treatise from Luke, by the Holy Spirit, Theophilus is shown many matters on both sides of God in Christ's Ledgers by Luke. Even in "God's Order."

Acts 1:
1 The former treatise have I made, O Theophilus, of all that Jesus began both to do and teach,
2 Until the day in which he was taken up, after that he through the Holy Ghost had given commandments unto the apostles whom he had chosen:

In this we see that the former treatise, Luke, were the accounts of Jesus, primarily the matters from His Birth, to the Resurrection. In the 2nd treatise, Acts, again written to Theophilus, we are engaged with matters, post Resurrection, in His People, The Acts of His Apostles, and even patterns for ourselves, again, in Gods Order.

If anyone thinks that the Words of the scriptures of Luke are or were for only some person named Theophilus, they are not. Luke teaches Theophilus, this, from Jesus:

Luke 4:4
And Jesus answered him, saying, It is written, That man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word of God.

So, yes, every Word of Him is for you, I, Chopper, and anyone else who enters into engagements. Therefore isolating or even having to know much, if anything about Theophilus, other than the meaning of his name, is not of significant proportions, other than to see it is written to a friend, and we are all friends, in belief in Christ. There is no more to be wrenched out of Theophilus, from His Word anyway, that I can tell or have found. And even less reason to nitpick over it.
 
Sounds good to me smaller and everyone else. Lets not :horse I'm satisfied that we have looked at all available resources on the subject of Theophilus. Unless something else comes up, we're done. Thank you all for your reply's.
 
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