Macedo'nia. (extended land). A large and celebrated country lying north of
Greece, the first part of Europe which received the gospel directly from St.
Paul, and an important scene of his subsequent missionary labors and those of
his companions. It was bounded by the range of Haemus or the Balkan northward,
by the chain of Pindus westward, by the Cambunian hills southward, by which it
is separated from Thessaly, an is divided on the east from Thrace by a less
definite mountain boundary running southward from Haemus.
Of the space thus enclosed, two of the most remarkable physical features
are two great plains, one watered by the Axius, which comes to the sea, at the
Thermaic Gulf, not far from Thessalonica; the other by the Strymon, which after
passing near Philippi, flows out below Amphipolis. Between the mouths of these
two rivers, a remarkable peninsula projects, dividing itself into three points,
on the farthest of which Mount Athos rises nearly into the region of perpetual
snow. Across the neck of this peninsula, St. Paul travelled, more than once,
with his companions.
This general sketch sufficiently describes the Macedonia which was ruled
over by Philip and Alexander and which the Romans conquered from Perseas. At
first, the conquered country was divided by Aemilius Paulus into four
districts, but afterward, was made one province and centralized under the
jurisdiction of a proconsul, who resided at Thessalonica.
The character of the Christians of Macedonia is set before us in
Scripture in a very favorable light. The candor of the Bereans is highly
commented, Act_17:11, the Thessalonians
were evidently objects of St. Paul's peculiar affection, 1Th_2:8; 1Th_2:17-20;
1Th_3:10, and the Philippians, besides
their general freedom from blame, are noted as remarkable for their liberality
and self-denial. Phm_4:10; Phm_4:14-19; 2Co_9:2;
2Co_9:11:9.
Source:
Smith’s Bible Dictionary
Macedonia
mas-ḗ-dō´ni-a (Μακεδονία,
Makedonía, ethnic Μακεδών,
Makedṓn):
I. THE MACEDONIAN PEOPLE AND LAND
II. HISTORY OF MACEDONIA
1. Philip and Alexander
2. Roman Intervention
3. Roman Conquest
4. Macedonia a Roman Province
5. Later History
III. PAUL AND MACEDONIA
1. Paul's First Visit
2. Paul's Second Visit
3. Paul's Third Visit
4. Paul's Later Visits
IV. THE MACEDONIAN CHURCH
1. Prominence of Women
2. Marked Characteristics
3. Its Members
LITERATURE
A country lying to the North of Greece, afterward enlarged and formed
into a Roman province; it is to the latter that the term always refers when
used in the New Testament.
I. The Macedonian People and Land.
Ethnologists differ about the origin of the Macedonian race and the
degree of its affinity to the Hellenes. But we find a well-marked tradition in
ancient times that the race comprised a Hellenic element and a non-Hellenic,
though Aryan, element, closely akin to the Phrygian and other Thracian stocks.
The dominant race, the Macedonians in the narrower sense of the term, including
the royal family, which was acknowledged to be Greek and traced its descent
through the Temenids of Argos back to Heracles (Herodotus v. 22), settled in
the fertile plains about the lower Haliacmon (Karasu or Vistritza)
and Axius (Vardar), to the North and Northwest of the Thermaic Gulf.
Their capital, which was originally at Edessa or Aegae (Vodhena), was
afterward transferred to Pella by Philip II. The other and older element - the
Lyncestians, Orestians, Pelagonians and other tribes - were pushed back
northward and westward into the highlands, where they struggled for generations
to maintain their independence and weakened the Macedonian state by constant
risings and by making common cause with the wild hordes of Illyrians and
Thracians, with whom we find the Macedonian kings in frequent conflict. In
order to maintain their position they entered into a good understanding from
time to time with the states of Greece or acknowledged temporarily Persian
suzerainty, and thus gradually extended the sphere of their power.
II. History of Macedonia.
Herodotus (viii. 137-39) traces the royal line from Perdiccas I through
Argaeus, Philip I, Aeropus, Alcetas and Amyntas I to Alexander I, who was king
at the time of the Persian invasions of Greece. He and his son and grandson,
Perdiccas II and Archelaus, did much to consolidate Macedonian power, but the
death of Archelaus (399 BC) was followed by 40 years of disunion and weakness.
1. Philip and Alexander:
With the accession of Philip II, son of Amyntas II, in 359 BC, Macedonia
came under the rule of a man powerful alike in body and in mind, an able
general and an astute diplomatist, one, moreover, who started out with a clear
perception of the end at which he must aim, the creation of a great national
army and a nation-state, and worked consistently and untiringly throughout his
reign of 23 years to gain that object. He welded the Macedonian tribes into a
single nation, won by force and fraud the important positions of Amphipolis,
Pydna, Potidaea, Olynthus, Abdera and Maronea, and secured a plentiful supply
of gold by founding Philippi on the site of Crenides. Gradually extending his
rule over barbarians and Greeks alike, he finally, after the battle of
Chaeronea (338 BC), secured his recognition by the Greeks themselves as
captain-general of the Hellenic states and leader of a Greco-Macedonian crusade
against Persia. On the eve of this projected eastern expedition, however, he
was assassinated by order of his dishonored wife Olympias (336 BC), whose son,
Alexander the Great, succeeded to the throne. After securing his hold on
Thrace, Illyria and Greece, Alexander turned eastward and, in a series of
brilliant campaigns, overthrew the Persian empire. The battle of the Granicus
(334 BC) was followed by the submission or subjugation of most of Asia Minor.
By the battle of Issus (333), in which Darius himself was defeated, Alexander's
way was opened to Phoenicia and Egypt; Darius' second defeat, at Arbela (331),
sealed the fate of the Persian power. Babylon, Susa, Persepolis and Ecbatana
were taken in turn, and Alexander then pressed eastward through Hyrcania, Aria,
Arachosia, Bactria and Sogdiana to India, which he conquered as far as the
Hyphasis (Sutlej): thence he returned through Gedrosia, Carmania and
Persis to Babylon, to make preparations for the conquest of Arabia. A sketch of
his career is given in 1 Macc 1:1-7, where he is spoken of as “Alexander the
Macedonian, the son of Philip, who came out of the land of Chittim” (1:1): his
invasion of Persia is also referred to in 1 Macc 6:2, where he is described as “the
Macedonian king, who reigned first among the Greeks,” i.e. the first who united
in a single empire all the Greek states, except those which lay to the West of
the Adriatic. It is the conception of the Macedonian power as the deadly foe of
Persia which is responsible for the description of Haman in Additions to Esther
16:10 as a Macedonian, “an alien in truth from the Persian blood,” and for the
attribution to him of a plot to transfer the Persian empire to the Macedonians
(verse 14), and this same thought appears in the Septuagint's rendering of the
Hebrew Agagite (אגגי, 'ăghāghī) in Est_9:24 as Macedonian (Makedōn).
2.
Roman Intervention:
Alexander died in June 323 BC, and his empire fell
a prey to the rivalries of his chief generals (1 Macc 1:9); after a period of
struggle and chaos, three powerful kingdoms were formed, taking their names
from Macedonia, Syria and Egypt. Even in Syria, however, Macedonian influences
remained strong, and we find Macedonian troops in the service of the Seleucid
monarchs (2 Macc 8:20). In 215 King Philip V, son of Demetrius II and successor
of Antigonus Doson (229-220 BC), formed an alliance with Hannibal, who had
defeated the Roman forces at Lake Trasimene (217) and at Cannae (216), and set
about trying to recover Illyria. After some years of desultory and indecisive
warfare, peace was concluded in 205, Philip binding himself to abstain from
attacking the Roman possessions on the East of the Adriatic. The Second
Macedonian War, caused by a combined attack of Antiochus III of Syria and
Philip of Macedon on Egypt, broke out in 200 and ended 3 years later in the
crushing defeat of Philip's forces by T. Quinctius Flamininus at Cynoscephalae
in Thessaly (compare 1 Macc 8:5). By the treaty which followed this battle,
Philip surrendered his conquests in Greece, Illyria, Thrace, Asia Minor and the
Aegean, gave up his fleet, reduced his army to 5,000 men, and undertook to
declare no war and conclude no alliance without Roman consent.
3.
Roman Conquest:
In 179 Philip was succeeded by his son Perseus, who
at once renewed the Roman alliance, but set to work to consolidate and extend
his power. In 172 war again broke out, and after several Roman reverses the
consul Lucius Aemilius Paulus decisively defeated the Macedonians at Pydna in
168 BC (compare 1 Macc 8:5, where Perseus is called “king of Chittim “). The
kingship was abolished and Perseus was banished to Italy. The Macedonians were
declared free and autonomous; their land was divided into four regions, with
their capitals at Amphipolis, Thessalonica, Pella and Pelagonia respectively,
and each of them was governed by its own council; commercium and connubium
were forbidden between them and the gold and silver mines were closed. A
tribute was to be paid annually to the Roman treasury, amounting to half the
land tax hitherto exacted by the Macedonian kings.
4.
Macedonia a Roman Province:
But this compromise between freedom and subjection
could not be of long duration, and after the revolt of Andriscus, the
pseudo-Philip, was quelled (148 BC), Macedonia was constituted a Roman province
and enlarged by the addition of parts of Illyria, Epirus, the Ionian islands
and Thessaly. Each year a governor was dispatched from Rome with supreme
military and judicial powers; the partition fell into abeyance and
communication within the province was improved by the construction of the Via
Egnatia from Dyrrhachium to Thessalonica, whence it was afterward continued
eastward to the Nestus and the Hellespont. In 146 the Acheans, who had declared
war on Rome, were crushed by Q. Caecilius Metellus and L. Mummius, Corinth was
sacked and destroyed, the Achean league was dissolved, and Greece, under the
name of Achea, was made a province and placed under the control of the governor
of Macedonia. In 27 BC, when the administration of the provinces was divided
between Augustus and the Senate, Macedonia and Achea fell to the share of the
latter (Strabo, p. 840; Dio Cassius liii. 12) and were governed separately by
ex-praetors sent out annually with the title of proconsul. In 15 AD, however,
senatorial mismanagement had brought the provinces to the verge of ruin, and
they were transferred to Tiberius (Tacitus, Annals, i. 76), who united
them under the government of a legatus Augusti pro praetore until, in 44
AD, Claudius restored them to the Senate (Suetonius, Claudius 25; Dio
Cassius lx .24). It is owing to this close historical and geographical
connection that we find Macedonia and Achia frequently mentioned together in
the New Testament, Macedonia being always placed first (Act_19:21; Rom_15:26;
2Co_9:2; 1Th_1:7,
1Th_1:8).
5.
Later History:
Diocletian (284-305 AD) detached from Macedonia
Thessaly and the Illyrian coast lands and formed them into two provinces, the
latter under the name of Epirus Nova. Toward the end of the 4th century what
remained of Macedonia was broken up into two provinces, Macedonia prima
and Macedonia secunda or salutaris, and when in 395 the
Roman world was divided into the western and eastern empires, Macedonia was
included in the latter. During the next few years it was overrun and plundered
by the Goths under Alaric, and later, in the latter half of the 6th century,
immense numbers of Slavonians settled there. In the 10th century a large part
of it was under Bulgarian rule, and afterward colonies of various Asiatic
tribes were settled there by the Byzantine emperors. In 1204 it became a Latin
kingdom under Boniface, marquis of Monferrat, but 20 years later Theodore, the
Greek despot of Epirus, founded a Greek empire of Thessalonica. During the 2nd
half of the 14th century the greater part of it was part of the Servian dominions,
but in 1430 Thessalonica fell before the Ottoman Turks, and from that time down
to the year 1913 Macedonia has formed part of the Turkish empire. Its history
thus accounts for the very mixed character of its population, which consists
chiefly of Turks, Albanians, Greeks and Bulgarians, but has in it a
considerable element of Jews, Gypsies, Vlachs, Servians and other races.
III. Paul and Macedonia.
In the narrative of Paul's journeys as given us in
Acts 13 through 28 and in the Pauline Epistles, Macedonia plays a prominent
part. The apostle's relations with the churches of Philippi, Thessalonica, and
Berea will be found discussed under those several headings; here we will merely
recount in outline his visits to the province.
1.
Paul's First Visit:
On his 2nd missionary journey Paul came to Troas,
and from there sailed with Silas, Timothy and Luke to Neapolis, the nearest
Macedonian seaport, in obedience to the vision of a Macedonian (whom Ramsay
identifies with Luke: see under the word “Philippi”) urging him to cross to
Macedonia and preach the gospel there (Act_16:9).
From Neapolis he journeyed inland to Philippi, which is described as “a city of
Macedonia, the first of the district” (Act_16:12).
Thence Paul and his two companions (for Luke appears to have remained in
Philippi for the next 5 years) traveled along the Ignatian road, passing
through Amphipolis and Apollonia, to Thessalonica, which, though a “free city,”
and therefore technically exempt from the jurisdiction of the Roman governor, was
practically the provincial capital. Driven thence by the hostility of the Jews,
the evangelists preached in Berea, where Silas and Timothy remained for a short
time after a renewed outbreak of Jewish animosity had forced Paul to leave
Macedonia for the neighboring province of Achaia (Act_17:14).
Although he sent a message to his companions to join him with all speed at
Athens (Act_17:15), yet so great was
his anxiety for the welfare of the newly founded Macedonian churches that he
sent Timothy back to Thessalonica almost immediately (1Th_3:1, 1Th_3:2),
and perhaps Silas to some other part of Macedonia, nor did they again join him
until after he had settled for some time in Corinth (Act_18:5; 1Th_3:6).
The rapid extension of the Christian faith in Macedonia at this time may be
judged from the phrases used by Paul in his 1st Epistle to the Thessalonians,
the earliest of his extant letters, written during this visit to Corinth. He
there speaks of the Thessalonian converts as being an example “to all that believe
in Macedonia and in Achaia” (1Th_1:7),
and he commends their love “toward all the brethren that are in all Macedonia”
(1Th_4:10). Still more striking are the
words, “From you hath sounded forth the word of the Lord, not only in Macedonia
and Achaia, but in every place your faith to God-ward is gone forth” (1Th_1:8).
2.
Paul's Second Visit:
On his 3rd missionary journey, the apostle paid two
further visits to Macedonia. During the course of a long stay at Ephesus he
laid plans for a 2nd journey through Macedonia and Achaia, and dispatched two
of his helpers, Timothy and Erastus, to Macedonia to prepare for his visit (Act_19:21, Act_19:22).
Some time later, after the uproar at Ephesus raised by Demetrius and his
fellow-silversmiths (Acts 19:23-41), Paul himself set out for Macedonia (Act_20:1). Of this visit Luke gives us a very
summary account, telling us merely that Paul, “when he had gone through those
parts, and had given them much exhortation,... came into Greece” (Act_20:2); but from 2 Cor, written from
Macedonia (probably from Philippi) during the course of this visit, we learn
more of the apostle's movements and feelings. While at Ephesus, Paul had
changed his plans. His intention at first had been to travel across the Aegean
Sea to Corinth, to pay a visit from there to Macedonia and to return to
Corinth, so as to sail direct to Syria (2Co_1:15,
2Co_1:16). But by the time at which he
wrote the 1st Epistle to the Corinthians, probably near the end of his stay at
Ephesus, he had made up his mind to go to Corinth by way of Macedonia, as we
have seen that he actually did (1Co_16:5,
1Co_16:6). From 2Co_2:13 we learn that he traveled from Ephesus
to Troas, where he expected to find Titus. Titus, however, did not yet arrive,
and Paul, who “had no relief for (his) spirit,” left Troas and sailed to
Macedonia. Even here the same restlessness pursued him: “fightings without,
fears within” oppressed him, till the presence of Titus brought some relief (2Co_7:5, 2Co_7:6).
The apostle was also cheered by “the grace of God which had been given in the
churches of Macedonia” (2Co_8:1); in
the midst of severe persecution, they bore their trials with abounding joy, and
their deep poverty did not prevent them begging to be allowed to raise a
contribution to send to the Christians in Jerusalem (Rom_15:26; 2Co_8:2-4).
Liberality was, indeed, from the very outset one of the characteristic virtues
of the Macedonian churches. The Philippians had sent money to Paul on two
occasions during his first visit to Thessalonica (Phi_4:16),
and again when he had left Macedonia and was staying at Corinth (2Co_11:9; Phi_4:15).
On the present occasion, however, the Corinthians seem to have taken the lead
and to have prepared their bounty in the previous year, on account of which the
apostle boasts of them to the Macedonian Christians (2Co_9:2). He suggests that on his approaching visit to Achaia
he may be accompanied by some of these Macedonians (2Co_9:4),
but whether this was actually the case we are not told.
3.
Paul's Third Visit:
The 3rd visit of Paul to Macedonia took place some
3 months later and was occasioned by a plot against his life laid by the Jews
of Corinth, which led him to alter his plan of sailing from Cenchrea, the
eastern seaport of Corinth, to Syria (2Co_1:16;
Act_20:3). He returned to Macedonia
accompanied as far as Asia by 3 Macedonian Christians - Sopater, Aristarchus
and Secundus - and by 4 from Asia Minor. Probably Paul took the familiar route
by the Via Egnatia, and reached Philippi immediately before the days of
unleavened bread; his companions preceded him to Troas (Act_20:5), while he himself remained at Philippi
until after the Passover (Thursday, April 7, 57 AD, according to Ramsay's
chronology), when he sailed from Neapolis together with Luke, and joined his
friends in Troas (Act_20:6).
4.
Paul's Later Visits:
Toward the close of his 1st imprisonment at Rome
Paul planned a fresh visit to Macedonia as soon as he should be released (Phi_1:26; Phi_2:24),
and even before that he intended to send Timothy to visit the Philippian church
and doubtless those of Berea and Thessalonica also. Whether Timothy actually
went on this mission we cannot say; that Paul himself went back to Macedonia
once more we learn from 1Ti_1:3, and we
may infer a 5th visit from the reference to the apostle's stay at Troas, which
in all probability belongs to a later occasion (2Ti_4:13).
IV. The Macedonian Church.
1. Prominence of Women:
Of the churches of
Macedonia in general, little need be said here. A striking fact is the
prominence in them of women, which is probably due to the higher social
position held by women in this province than in Asia Minor (Lightfoot,
Philippians4, 55 ff). We find only two references to women in connection with
Paul's previous missionary work; the women proselytes of high social standing
take a share in driving him from Pisidian Antioch (Act_13:50),
and Timothy's mother is mentioned as a Jewess who believed (Act_16:1). But in Macedonia all is changed. To
women the gospel was first preached at Philippi (Act_16:13);
a woman was the first convert and the hostess of the evangelists (Act_16:14, Act_16:15);
a slave girl was restored to soundness of mind by the apostle (Act_16:18), and long afterward Paul mentions two
women as having “labored with (him) in the gospel” and as endangering the peace
of the church by their rivalry (Phi_4:2,
Phi_4:3). At Thessalonica a
considerable number of women of the first rank appear among the earliest
converts (Act_17:4), while at Berea
also the church included from the outset numerous Greek women of high position
(Act_17:12).
2. Marked Characteristics:
The bond uniting Paul and
the Macedonian Christians seems to have been a peculiarly close and
affectionate one. Their liberality and open-heartedness, their joyousness and
patience in trial and persecution, their activity in spreading the Christian
faith, their love of the brethren - these are a few of the characteristics
which Paul specially commends in them (1 and 2 Thessalonians; Philippians; 2Co_8:1-8), while they also seem to have been
much freer than the churches of Asia Minor from Judaizing tendencies and from
the allurements of “philosophy and vain deceit.”
3. Its Members:
We know the names of a few
of the early members of the Macedonian churches - Sopater (Act_20:4) or Sosipater (Rom_16:21 : the identification is a probable,
though not a certain, one) of Berea; Aristarchus (Act_19:29;
Act_20:4; Act_27:2;
Col_4:10; Phm_1:24),
Jason (Act_17:5-9; Rom_16:21?) and Secundus (Act_20:4) of Thessalonica; Clement (Phi_4:3), Epaphroditus (Phi_2:25; Phi_4:18),
Euodia (Phi_4:2; this, not Euodias (the
King James Version), is the true form), Syntyche (same place) , Lydia (Act_16:14, Act_16:40;
a native of Thyatira), and possibly Luke (Ramsay, St. Paul the Traveler,
201 ff) of Philippi. Gaius is also mentioned as a Macedonian in Act_19:29, but perhaps the reading of a few
manuscripts Μακεδόνα
is to be preferred to the Textus Receptus of the New Testament Μακεδόνας
in which case Aristarchus alone would be a Macedonian, and this Gaius would
probably be identical with the Gaius of Derbe mentioned in Act_20:4 as a companion of Paul (Ramsay, op.
cit., 280). The later history of the Macedonian churches, together with lists
of all their known bishops, will be found in Le Quien, Oriens Christianus,
II, 1 ff; III, 1089 ff 1045 f.
Literature.
General: C. Nicolaides, Macedonien, Berlin,
1899; Berard, La Macedoine, Paris, 1897; “Odysseus,” Turkey in Europe,
London, 1900. Secular History: Hogarth, Philip and Alexander of Macedon,
London, 1897, and the histories of the Hellenistic period by Holm, Niese,
Droysen and Kaerst. Ethnography and Language: O. Hoffmann, Die Makedonen,
ihre Sprache und ihr Volkstum, Gottingen, 1906. Topography and Antiquities:
Heuzey and Daumet, Mission archeologique de Macedoine, Paris, 1876;
Cousinery, Voyage dans la Macedoine, Paris, 1831; Clarke, Travels 4,
VII, VIII, London, 1818; Leake, Travels in Northern Greece, III, London,
1835; Duchesne and Bayet, Memoire sur une mission en Macedoine et au Mont Athos,
Paris, 1876; Hahn, Reise von Belgrad nach Saloniki, Vienna, 1861. Coins:
Head, Historia Nummorum, 193 f; British Museum Catalogue of Coins:
Macedonia, etc., London, 1879. Inscriptions: CIG, numbers 1951-2010;
CIL, III, 1 and III, Suppl.; Dimitsas,Ἡ
Μακεδονία
Athens, 1896.
Source:
International Standard Bible Encyclopedia
Macedonia
In New Testament times, was a Roman province lying north of Greece. It
was governed by a propraetor with the title of proconsul. Paul was summoned by
the vision of the “man of Macedonia” to preach the gospel there (Act_16:9). Frequent allusion is made to this
event (Act_18:5; Act_19:21; Rom_15:26;
2Co_1:16; 2Co_11:9;
Phi_4:15). The history of Paul's first
journey through Macedonia is given in detail in Acts 16:10 - 17:15. At the
close of this journey he returned from Corinth to Syria. He again passed
through this country (Act_20:1-6),
although the details of the route are not given. After many years he probably
visited it for a third time (Phi_2:24; 1Ti_1:3). The first convert made by Paul in
Europe was (Act_16:13-15) Lydia (q.v.),
a “seller of purple,” residing in Philippi, the chief city of the eastern
division of Macedonia.
Source:
Easton’s Bible Dictionary