Passage
For euen when I was in Thessalonica, yee sent once, and afterward againe for my necessitie,
For euen when I was in Thessalonica, yee sent once, and afterward againe for my necessitie,
Philippians 4:14 Notwithstanding yee haue well done, that yee did communicate to mine affliction.
Philippians 4:15 And yee Philippians knowe also that in the beginning of the Gospell, when I departed from Macedonia, no Church communicated with me, concerning the matter of giuing and receiuing, but yee onely.
Philippians 4:16 For euen when I was in Thessalonica, yee sent once, and afterward againe for my necessitie,
Philippians 4:17 Not that I desire a gift: but I desire the fruit which may further your reckoning.
Philippians 4:18 Now I haue receiued all, and haue plentie: I was euen filled, after that I had receiued of Epaphroditus that which came from you, an odour that smellleth sweete, a sacrifice acceptable and pleasant to God.
The verse centers on "euen", "thessalonica", "sent", "once", "afterward", "againe", and "necessitie". It is saying that the verse draws attention to "euen" and "thessalonica", so its meaning should be read from those terms before moving to application.
The nearby context moves from verse 15's "And yee Philippians knowe also that in..." into verse 17's "Not that I desire a gift but...", so "euen" and "thessalonica" belong inside that flow. In Philippians context, the local focus is Christ, faith, and discipleship.
A plain takeaway is to answer the verse's own emphasis on "euen" and "thessalonica" with trust shaped by these words, not by a vague optimism outside the passage.