Commentaries:
Barnes' Notes
Who died for us - That is, to redeem us. He designed by his death that we should ultimately live with him; and this effect of his death could be secured only as it was an atoning sacrifice.
Whether we wake or sleep - Whether we are found among the living or the dead when he comes. The object here is to show that the one class would have no advantage over the other. This was designed to calm their minds in their trials, and to correct an error which seems to have prevailed in the belief that those who were found alive when he should return would have some priority over those who were dead; see the notes on I Thessalonians 4:13-18.
Should live together with him - See the notes at John 14:3. The word rendered "together" ( ̔ hama ) is not to be regarded as connected with the phrase "with him" - as meaning that he and they would be "together," but it refers to those who "wake and those who sleep" - those who are alive and those who are dead - meaning that they would be "together" or would be with the Lord "at the same time;" there would be no priority or precedence. Rosenmuller.
Other Barnes' Notes entries containing 1 Thessalonians 5:10:
Job 3:13
John 11:11
Acts 7:60
1 Corinthians 11:30
1 Thessalonians 1:10
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