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THE EPISTLE OF
PAUL THE APOSTLE TO THE
EPHESIANS
Commentary by A. R. FAUSSETT
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[3]
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CHAPTER 4
@Eph
4:1-32. EXHORTATIONS TO CHRISTIAN DUTIES RESTING ON OUR
CHRISTIAN PRIVILEGES, AS UNITED IN ONE BODY, THOUGH VARYING
IN THE GRACES GIVEN TO THE SEVERAL MEMBERS, THAT WE MAY COME
UNTO A PERFECT MAN IN CHRIST.
1. Translate, according to the Greek order,
"I beseech you, therefore (seeing that such is your
calling of grace, the first through third chapters) I the
prisoner in the Lord (that is, imprisoned in the Lord's
cause)." What the world counted ignominy, he counts the
highest honor, and he glories in his bonds for Christ, more
than a king in his diadem [THEODORET]. His bonds, too, are
an argument which should enforce his exhortation.
vocation--Translate,
"calling" to accord, as the Greek does,
with "called" (@Eph
4:4 Eph 1:18 Ro 8:28,30). @Col
3:15 similarly grounds Christian duties on our Christian
"calling." The exhortations of this part of the
Epistle are built on the conscious enjoyment of the
privileges mentioned in the former part. Compare @Eph
4:32 with @Eph
1:7; @Eph
5:1 with @Eph
1:5; @Eph
4:30, with @Eph
1:13; @Eph
5:15, with @Eph
1:8.
2, 3. lowliness--In classic Greek, the meaning
is meanness of spirit: the Gospel has elevated the
word to express a Christian grace, namely, the esteeming of
ourselves small, inasmuch as we are so; the thinking truly,
and because truly, therefore lowlily, of ourselves [TRENCH].
meekness--that spirit
in which we accept God's dealings with us without disputing
and resisting; and also the accepting patiently of the
injuries done us by men, out of the thought that they are
permitted by God for the chastening and purifying of His
people (@2
Sam. 16:11; compare @Ga
6:1 2Ti 2:25 Tit 3:2). It is only the lowly,
humble heart that is also meek (@Col
3:12). As "lowliness and meekness" answer to
"forbearing one another in love" (compare
"love," @Eph
4:15,16), so "long-suffering" answers to (@Eph
4:4) "endeavoring (Greek, 'earnestly'
or 'zealously giving diligence') to keep (maintain)
the unity of the Spirit (the unity between men of different
tempers, which flows from the presence of the Spirit, who is
Himself 'one,' @Eph
4:4) in (united in) the bond of peace" (the
"bond" by which "peace" is maintained,
namely, "love," @Col
3:14,15 [BENGEL]; or, "peace" itself is the
"bond" meant, uniting the members of the Church
[ALFORD]).
4. In the apostle's creed, the article as to THE
CHURCH properly follows that as to THE HOLY GHOST. To the
Trinity naturally is annexed the Church, as the house to its
tenant, to God His temple, the state to its founder
[AUGUSTINE, Enchiridion, c. 15]. There is yet to be a
Church, not merely potentially, but actually catholic or
world-wide; then the Church and the world will be
co-extensive. Rome falls into inextricable error by setting
up a mere man as a visible head, antedating that
consummation which Christ, the true visible Head, at His
appearing shall first realize. As the "SPIRIT" is
mentioned here, so the "LORD" (Jesus), @Eph
4:5, and "GOD the Father," @Eph
4:6. Thus the Trinity is again set forth.
hope--here associated
with "the Spirit," which is the "earnest of
our inheritance" (@Eph
1:13,14). As "faith" is mentioned, @Eph
4:5, so "hope" here, and "love," @Eph
4:2. The Holy Spirit, as the common higher principle of
life (@Eph
2:18,22), gives to the Church its true unity. Outward
uniformity is as yet unattainable; but beginning by having
one mind, we shall hereafter end by having "one
body." The true "body" of Christ (all
believers of every age) is already "one," as
joined to the one Head. But its unity is as yet not visible,
even as the Head is not visible; but it shall appear when He
shall appear (@Joh
17:21-23 Col 3:4). Meanwhile the rule is, "In
essentials, unity; in doubtful questions, liberty; in all
things, charity." There is more real unity where both
go to heaven under different names than when with the same
name one goes to heaven, the other to hell. Truth is the
first thing: those who reach it, will at last reach unity,
because truth is one; while those who seek unity as
the first thing, may purchase it at the sacrifice of truth,
and so of the soul itself.
of your calling--the
one "hope" flowing from our
"calling," is the element "IN" which we
are "called" to live. Instead of privileged
classes, as the Jews under the law, a unity of dispensation
was henceforth to be the common privilege of Jew and Gentile
alike. Spirituality, universality, and unity, were designed
to characterize the Church; and it shall be so at last (@Isa
2:2-4 11:9,13 Zep 3:9 Zec 14:9).
5. Similarly "faith" and
"baptism" (the sacramental seal of faith) are
connected (@Mr
16:16 Col 2:12). Compare @1Co
12:13, "Faith" is not here that which we
believe, but the act of believing, the mean by
which we apprehend the "one Lord."
"Baptism" is specified, being the sacrament
whereby we are incorporated into the "one
body." Not the Lord's Supper, which is an act of
matured communion on the part of those already incorporate,
"a symbol of union, not of unity"
[ELLICOTT]. In @1Co
10:17, where a breach of union was in question, it forms
the rallying point [ALFORD]. There is not added, "One
pope, one council, one form of government" [Cautions
for Times]. The Church is one in unity of faith
(@Eph
4:5 Jude 1:3); unity of origination (@Eph
2:19-21): unity of sacraments (@Eph
4:5 1Co 10:17 12:13): unity of "hope"
(@Eph
4:4 Tit 1:2); unity of charity (@Eph
4:3): unity (not uniformity) of
discipline and governme nt: for where there is no order,
no ministry with Christ as the Head, there is no Church
[PEARSON, Exposition of the Creed, Article IX].
6. above--"over all." The "one
God over all" (in His sovereignty and by His grace) is
the grand source and crowning apex of unity (@Eph
2:19, end).
through all--by means
of Christ "who filleth all things" (@Eph
4:10 2:20,21), and is "a propitiation" for all
men (@1Jo
2:2).
in you all--The oldest
manuscripts omit "you." Many of the oldest
versions and Fathers and old manuscripts read, "in us
all." Whether the pronoun be read or not, it must be
understood (either from the "ye," @Eph
4:4, or from the "us," @Eph
4:7); for other parts of Scripture prove that the Spirit
is not "in all" men, but only in believers (@Ro
8:9,14). God is "Father" both by generation
(as Creator) and regeneration (@Eph
2:10 Jas 1:17,18 1Jo 5:1).
7. But--Though "one" in our common
connection with "one Lord, one faith, &c., one
God," yet "each one of us" has assigned to
him his own particular gift, to be used for the good of the
whole: none is overlooked; none therefore can be dispensed
with for the edifying of the Church (@Eph
4:12). A motive to unity (@Eph
4:3). Translate, "Unto each one of us was the
grace (which was bestowed by Christ at His ascension, @Eph
4:8) given according to," &c.
the measure--the
amount "of the gift of Christ" (@Ro
12:3,6).
8. Wherefore--"For which reason," namely,
in order to intimate that Christ, the Head of the Church, is
the author of all these different gifts, and that giving of
them is an act of His "grace" [ESTIUS].
he saith--God, whose
word the Scripture is (@Ps
68:18).
When he ascended--GOD
is meant in the Psalm, represented by the ark, which was
being brought up to Zion in triumph by David, after that
"the Lord had given him rest round about from all his
enemies" (@2Sa
6:1-7:1 1Ch 15:1-29). Paul quotes it of CHRIST ascending
to heaven, who is therefore GOD.
captivity--that is, a
band of captives. In the Psalm, the captive foes of David.
In the antitypical meaning, the foes of Christ the Son of
David, the devil, death, the curse, and sin (@Col
2:15 2Pe 2:4), led as it were in triumphal procession as
a sign of the destruction of the foe.
gave gifts unto men--in
the Psalm, "received gifts for men,"
Hebrew, "among men," that is, "thou
hast received gifts" to distribute among men. As
a conqueror distributes in token of his triumph the spoils
of foes as gifts among his people. The impartation of the
gifts and graces of the Spirit depended on Christ's
ascension (@Joh
7:39 14:12). Paul stops short in the middle of the
verse, and does not quote "that the Lord God might
dwell among them." This, it is true, is partly
fulfilled in Christians being an "habitation of God
through the Spirit" (@Eph
2:22). But the Psalm (@Ps
68:16) refers to "the Lord dwelling in Zion for
ever"; the ascension amidst attendant angels,
having as its counterpart the second advent amidst
"thousands of angels" (@Ps
68:17), accompanied by the restoration of Israel (@Ps
68:22), the destruction of God's enemies and the
resurrection (@Ps
68:20,21,23), the conversion of the kingdoms of the
world to the Lord at Jerusalem (@Ps
68:29-34).
9. Paul reasons that (assuming Him to be God) His ascent
implies a previous descent; and that the language of
the Psalm can only refer to Christ, who first
descended, then ascended. For God the Father does not ascend
or descend. Yet the Psalm plainly refers to God (@Eph
4:8,17,18). It must therefore be GOD THE SON (@Joh
6:33,62). As He declares (@Joh
3:13), "No man hath ascended up to heaven, but
He that came down from heaven." Others, though they
did not previously descend, have ascended; but none save Christ
can be referred to in the Psalm as having done so; for it is
of God it speaks.
lower parts of the earth--The
antithesis or contrast to "far above all heavens,"
is the argument of ALFORD and others, to show that this
phrase means more than simply the earth, namely, the
regions beneath it, even as He ascended not merely to
the visible heavens, but "far above" them.
Moreover, His design "that He might fill all
things" (@Eph
4:10, Greek, "the whole universe of
things") may imply the same. But see on Eph 4:10 on
those words. Also the leading "captive" of the
"captive hand" ("captivity") of satanic
powers, may imply that the warfare reached to their
habitation itself (@Ps
63:9). Christ, as Lord of all, took possession first of
the earth the unseen world beneath it (some conjecture that
the region of the lost is in the central parts of our
globe), then of heaven (@Ac
2:27,28). However, all we surely know is, that
His soul at death descended to Hades, that is, underwent the
ordinary condition of departed spirits of men. The leading
captive of satanic powers here, is not said to be at His
descent, but at His ascension; so that no argument
can be drawn from it for a descent to the abodes of Satan. @Ac
2:27,28, and @Ro
10:7, favor the view of the reference being simply to
His descent to Hades. So PEARSON in Exposition of
the Creed (@Php
2:10).
10. all heavens--Greek, "all the
heavens" (@Heb
7:26 4:14), Greek, "passed through
the heavens" to the throne of God itself.
might fill--In Greek,
the action is continued to the present time, both "might"
and "may fill," namely, with His divine presence
and Spirit, not with His glorified body.
"Christ, as God, is present everywhere;
as glorified man, He can be present anywhere"
[ELLICOTT].
11. Greek, emphatical. "Himself" by
His supreme power. "It is HE that gave," &c.
gave some, apostles--Translate,
"some to be apostles, and some to be prophets,"
&c. The men who filled the office, no less than the
office itself, were a divine gift [EADIE]. Ministers did not
give themselves. Compare with the list here, @1Co
12:10,28. As the apostles, prophets, and evangelists
were special and extraordinary ministers, so "pastors
and teachers" are the ordinary stated ministers of a
particular flock, including, probably, the bishops,
presbyters, and deacons. Evangelists were itinerant
preachers like our missionaries, as Philip the deacon (@Ac
21:8); as contrasted with stationary "pastors and
teachers" (@2Ti
4:5). The evangelist founded the Church; the teacher
built it up in the faith already received. The
"pastor" had the outward rule and guidance
of the Church: the bishop. As to revelation, the
"evangelist" testified infallibly of the past; the
"prophet," infallibly of the future. The prophet
derived all from the Spirit; the evangelist, in the special
case of the Four, recorded matter of fact, cognizable to the
senses, under the Spirit's guidance. No one form of Church
polity as permanently unalterable is laid down in the
New Testament though the apostolical order of bishops, or
presbyters, and deacons, superintended by higher overseers
(called bishops after the apostolic times), has the highest
sanction of primitive usage. In the case of the Jews, a
fixed model of hierarchy and ceremonial unalterably bound
the people, most minutely detailed in the law. In the New
Testament, the absence of minute directions for Church
government and ceremonies, shows that a fixed model was not
designed; the general rule is obligatory as to
ceremonies, "Let all things be done decently and in
order" (compare Article XXXIV, Church of England); and
that a succession of ministers be provided, not self-called,
but "called to the work by men who have public
authority given unto them in the congregation, to call and
send ministers into the Lord's vineyard" [Article XXIII].
That the "pastors" here were the bishops and
presbyters of the Church, is evident from @Ac
20:28 1Pe 5:1,2, where the bishops' and presbyters'
office is said to be "to feed" the flock. The
term, "shepherd" or "pastor," is used of
guiding and governing and not merely instructing,
whence it is applied to kings, rather than prophets
or priests (@Eze
34:23 Jer 23:4). Compare the names of princes compounded
of "pharnas," Hebrew,
"pastor," Holophernes, Tis-saphernes (compare @Isa
44:28).
12. For--with a view to; the ultimate aim.
"Unto."
perfecting--The Greek
implies correcting in all that is deficient, instructing
and completing in number and all parts.
for--a different Greek
word; the immediate object. Compare @Ro
15:2, "Let every one . . . please his
neighbor for his good unto edification."
the ministry--Greek,
"ministration"; without the article. The office of
the ministry is stated in this verse. The good aimed at in
respect to the Church (@Eph
4:13). The way of growth (@Eph
4:14-16).
edifying--that is, building
up as the temple of the Holy Ghost.
13. come in--rather, "attain unto." ALFORD
expresses the Greek order, "Until we arrive all
of us at the unity," &c.
faith and . . .
knowledge--Full unity of faith is then found,
when all alike thoroughly know Christ, the object of
faith, and that in His highest dignity as "the Son of
God" [DE WETTE] (@Eph
3:17,19 2Pe 1:5). Not even Paul counted himself to have
fully "attained" (@Php
3:12-14). Amidst the variety of the gifts and the
multitude of the Church's members, its "faith" is
to be ONE: as contrasted with the state of "children
carried about with EVERY WIND OF DOCTRINE." (@Eph
4:14).
perfect man--unto the full-grown
man (@1Co
2:6 Php 3:15 Heb 5:14); the maturity of an adult;
contrasted with children (@Eph
4:14). Not "perfect men"; for the many
members constitute but one Church joined to the one
Christ.
stature, &c.--The
standard of spiritual "stature" is "the
fulness of Christ," that is, which Christ has (@Eph
1:23 3:19; compare @Ga
4:19); that the body should be worthy of the Head, the
perfect Christ.
14. Translate, "To the end that"; the aim
of the bestowal of gifts stated negatively, as in @Eph
4:13 it is stated positively.
tossed to and fro--inwardly,
even without wind; like billows of the sea. So the Greek.
Compare @Jas
1:6.
carried about--with
every wind from without.
doctrine--"teaching."
The various teachings are the "winds" which
keep them tossed on a sea of doubts (@Heb
13:9; compare @Mt
11:7).
by--Greek,
"in"; expressing "the evil atmosphere in
which the varying currents of doctrine exert their
force" [ELLICOTT].
sleight--literally,
"dice playing." The player frames his throws of
the dice so that the numbers may turn up which best suit his
purpose.
of men--contrasted
with Christ (@Eph
4:13).
and--Greek,
"in."
cunning craftiness,
whereby they lie in wait to deceive--Translate as Greek,
"craftiness tending to the methodized system of
deceit" ("the schemes of error") [ALFORD].
BENGEL takes "deceit," or "error," to
stand for "the parent of error," Satan (compare @Eph
6:11); referring to his concealed mode of acting.
15. speaking the truth--Translate, "holding the
truth"; "following the truth"; opposed to
"error" or "deceit" (@Eph
4:14).
in love--"Truth"
is never to be sacrificed to so-called "charity";
yet it is to be maintained in charity. Truth in word and
act, love in manner and spirit, are the Christian's rule
(compare @Eph
4:21,24).
grow up--from the
state of "children" to that of "full-grown
men." There is growth only in the spiritually alive,
not in the dead.
into him--so as to be
more and more incorporated with Him, and become one with
Him.
the head--(@Eph
1:22).
16. (@Col
2:19).
fitly joined together--"being
fitly framed together," as in @Eph
2:21; all the parts being in their proper position, and
in mutual relation.
compacted--implying firm
consolidation.
by that which every joint
supplieth--Greek, "by means of every joint
of the supply"; joined with "maketh increase of
the body," not with "compacted." "By
every ministering (supplying) joint." The joints are
the points of union where the supply passes to the different
members, furnishing the body with the materials of its
growth.
effectual working--(@Eph
1:19 3:7). According to the effectual working of
grace in each member (or else, rather, "according
to each several member's working"), proportioned
to the measure of its need of supply.
every part--Greek,
"each one part"; each individual part.
maketh increase--Translate,
as the Greek is the same as @Eph
4:15, "maketh (carrieth on) the growth of
the body."
17. therefore--resuming the exhortation which he had
begun with, "I therefore beseech you that ye walk
worthy," &c. (@Eph
4:1).
testify in the Lord--in
whom (as our element) we do all things pertaining to the
ministry (@1Th
4:1 [ALFORD]; @Ro
9:1).
henceforth . . .
not--Greek, "no longer"; resumed from @Eph
4:14.
other--Greek,
"the rest of the Gentiles."
in the vanity,
&c.--as their element: opposed to "in the
Lord." "Vanity of mind" is the waste
of the rational powers on worthless objects, of which
idolatry is one of the more glaring instances. The root of
it is departure from the knowledge of the true God (@Eph
4:18,19 Ro 1:21 1Th 4:5).
18. More literally, "Being darkened in their
understanding," that is, their intelligence, or perceptions
(compare @Eph
5:8 Ac 26:18 1Th 5:4,5).
alienated--This and
"darkened," imply that before the fall they (in
the person of their first father) had been partakers of life
and light: and that they had revolted from the
primitive revelation (compare @Eph
2:12).
life of God--that life
whereby God lives in His own people: as He was the life
and light in Adam before the irruption of death and
darkness into human nature; and as He is the life in the
regenerate (@Ga
2:20). "Spiritual life in believers is kindled from
the life itself of God" [BENGEL].
through--rather as Greek,
"on account of the ignorance," namely, of
God. Wilful ignorance in the first instance, their fathers
not "choosing to retain God in their knowledge."
This is the beginning point of their misery (@Ac
17:30 Ro 1:21,23,28 1Pe 1:14).
because of--"on
account of."
blindness--Greek,
"hardness," literally, the hardening of the skin
so as not to be sensible of touch. Hence a soul's callousness
to feeling (@Mr
3:5). Where there is spiritual "life"
("the life of God") there is feeling; where there
is not, there is "hardness."
19. past feeling--senseless, shameless, hopeless; the
ultimate result of a long process of "hardening,"
or habit of sin (@Eph
4:18). "Being past hope," or despairing, is
the reading of the Vulgate; though not so well
supported as English Version reading, "past
feeling," which includes the absence of hope (@Jer
2:25 18:12).
given themselves over--In
@Ro
1:24 it is, "God gave them up to
uncleanness." Their giving themselves to it was
punished in kind, God giving them up to it by
withdrawing His preventing grace; their sin thus was made
their punishment. They gave themselves up of their own
accord to the slavery of their lust, to do all its pleasure,
as captives who have ceased to strive with the foe. God
gave them up to it, but not against their will; for they
give themselves up to it [ZANCHIUS].
lasciviousness--"wantonness"
[ALFORD]. So it is translated in @Ro
13:13 2Pe 2:18. It does not necessarily include lasciviousness;
but it means intemperate, reckless readiness for it,
and for every self-indulgence. "The first beginnings of
unchastity" [GROTIUS]. "Lawless insolence, and
wanton caprice" [TRENCH].
to work all uncleanness--The
Greek implies, "with a deliberate view to
the working (as if it were their work or business,
not a mere accidental fall into sin) of uncleanness of
every kind."
with greediness--Greek,
"in greediness." Uncleanness and greediness
of gain often go hand in hand (@Eph
5:3,5 Col 3:5); though "greediness" here
includes all kinds of self-seeking.
20. learned Christ--(@Php
3:10). To know Christ Himself, is the great lesson of
the Christian life: this the Ephesians began to learn at
their conversion. "Christ," in reference to His office,
is here specified as the object of learning.
"Jesus," in @Eph
4:21, as the person.
21. If so be that--not implying doubt; assuming what
I have no reason to doubt, that
heard him--The
"Him" is emphatic: "heard Himself,"
not merely heard about Him.
taught by him--Greek,
"taught IN HIM," that is, being in vital union
with Him (@Ro
16:7).
as the truth is in Jesus--Translate
in connection with "taught"; "And in Him have
been taught, according as is truth in Jesus." There is
no article in the Greek. "Truth" is
therefore used in the most comprehensive sense, truth in its
essence, and highest perfection, in Jesus; "if according
as it is thus in Him, ye have been so taught in
Him"; in contrast to "the vanity of mind of
the Gentiles" (@Eph
4:17; compare @Joh
1:14,17 18:37). Contrast @Joh
8:44.
22. That ye--following "Ye have been
taught" (@Eph
4:21).
concerning the former
conversation--"in respect to your former way of
life."
the old man--your old
unconverted nature (@Ro
6:6).
is corrupt according to
the deceitful lusts--rather, "which is being
corrupted ('perisheth,' compare @Ga
6:8, 'corruption,' that is, destruction)
according to (that is, as might be expected from) the lusts
of deceit." Deceit is personified; lusts
are its servants and tools. In contrast to "the
holiness of the truth," @Eph
4:24, and "truth in Jesus," @Eph
4:21; and answering to Gentile "vanity," @Eph
4:17. Corruption and destruction are inseparably
associated together. The man's old-nature-lusts are his own
executioners, fitting him more and more for eternal
corruption and death.
23. be renewed--The Greek (ananeousthai)
implies "the continued renewal in the youth
of the new man." A different Greek word (anakainousthai)
implies "renewal from the old state."
in the spirit of your mind--As
there is no Greek for "in," which there is
at @Eph
4:17, "in the vanity of their mind," it
is better to translate, "By the Spirit of your
mind," that is, by your new spiritual nature; the
restored and divinely informed leading principle of the
mind. The "spirit" of man in New Testament is only
then used in its proper sense, as worthy of its place and
governing functions, when it is one spirit with the Lord.
The natural, or animal man, is described as "not having
the Spirit" (@Jude
1:19) [ALFORD]. Spirit is not in this sense attributed
to the unregenerate (@1Th
5:23).
24. put on the new man--Opposed to "the old
man," which is to be "put off" (@Eph
4:22). The Greek here (kainon) is
different from that for "re-new-ed" (@Eph
4:23). Put on not merely a renovated nature, but
a new, that is, altogether different nature, a
changed nature (compare Note,, see on Col 3:10).
after God,
&c.--Translate, "Which hath been created (once for
all: so the Greek aorist means: in Christ, @Eph
2:10; so that in each believer it has not to be created
again, but to be put on) after (the image of) God" (@Ge
1:27 Col 3:10 1Pe 1:15), &c. God's image in which
the first Adam was originally created, is restored, to us
far more gloriously in the second Adam, the image of the
invisible God (@2Co
4:4 Col 1:15 Heb 1:3).
in righteousness--"IN"
it as the element of the renewed man.
true holiness--rather,
as the Greek, "holiness of the truth";
holiness flowing from sincere following of "the truth
of God" (@Ro
1:25 3:7 15:8): opposed to "the lusts of deceit"
(Greek, @Eph
4:22); compare also @Eph
4:21, "truth is in Jesus."
"Righteousness" is in relation to our fellow men,
the second table of the law; "Holiness," in
relation to God, the first table; the religious observance
of offices of piety (compare @Lu
1:75). In the parallel (@Col
3:10) it is, "renewed in knowledge after the
image," &c. As at Colosse the danger was from false
pretenders to knowledge, the true
"knowledge" which flows from renewal of the heart
is dwelt on; so at Ephesus, the danger being from the
corrupt morals prevalent around, the renewal in
"holiness," contrasted with the Gentile
"uncleanness" (@Eph
4:19), and "righteousness," in contrast to
"greediness," is made prominent.
25. Wherefore--From the general character of
"the new man," there will necessarily result the
particular features which he now details.
putting away--Greek,
"having put away" once for all.
lying--"falsehood":
the abstract. "Speak ye truth each one with his
neighbor," is quoted, slightly changed, from @Zec
8:16. For "to," Paul quotes it
"with," to mark our inner connection with
one another, as "members one of another" [STIER].
Not merely members of one body. Union to one another
in Christ, not merely the external command, instinctively
leads Christians to fulfil mutual duties. One member could
not injure or deceive another, without injuring himself, as
all have a mutual and common interest.
26. Be ye angry, and sin not--So the Septuagint,
@Ps
4:4. Should circumstances arise to call fox anger on
your part, let it be as Christ's "anger" (@Mr
3:5), without sin. Our natural feelings are not wrong
when directed to their legitimate object, and when not
exceeding due bounds. As in the future literal, so in the
present spiritual, resurrection, no essential constituent is
annihilated, but all that is a perversion of the original
design is removed. Thus indignation at dishonor done to God,
and wrong to man, is justifiable anger. Passion is
sinful (derived from "passio," suffering:
implying that amidst seeming energy, a man is really passive,
the slave of his anger, instead of ruling it).
let not the sun go down
upon your wrath--"wrath" is absolutely
forbidden; "anger" not so, though, like poison
sometimes used as medicine, it is to be used with extreme
caution. The sense is not, Your anger shall not be
imputed to you if you put it away before nightfall; but
"let no wrath (that is, as the Greek,
personal 'irritation' or 'exasperation') mingle with your
'anger,' even though, the latter be righteous, [TRENCH, Greek
Synonyms of the New Testament]. "Put it away before
sunset" (when the Jewish day began), is proverbial
for put it away at once before another day begin
(@De
24:15); also before you part with your brother for the
night, perhaps never in this world to meet again. So JONA,
"Let not night and anger against anyone sleep with you,
but go and conciliate the other party, though he have been
the first to commit the offense." Let not your
"anger" at another's wickedness verge into hatred,
or contempt, or revenge [VATABLUS].
27. Neither give place--that is, occasion, or scope,
to the devil, by continuing in "wrath." The
keeping of anger through the darkness of night, is giving
place to the devil, the prince of darkness (@Eph
6:12).
28. Greek, "Let him that stealeth."
The imperfect or past tense is, however, mainly
meant, though not to the exclusion of the present. "Let
the stealing person steal no more." Bandits
frequented the mountains near Ephesus. Such are meant by
those called "thieves" in the New Testament.
but rather--For it is
not enough to cease from a sin, but the sinner must also
enter on the path that is its very opposite [CHRYSOSTOM].
The thief, when repentant, should labor more than he would
be called on to do, if he had never stolen.
let him labour--Theft
and idleness go together.
the thing which is good--in
contrast with theft, the thing which was evil in his past
character.
with his hands--in
contrast with his former thievish use of his hands.
that he may have to give--"that
he may have wherewith to impart." He who
has stolen should exercise liberality beyond the restitution
of what he has taken. Christians in general should make not
selfish gain their aim in honest industry, but the
acquisition of the means of greater usefulness to their
fellow men; and the being independent of the alms of others.
So Paul himself (@Ac
20:35 2Th 3:8) acted as he taught (@1Th
4:11).
29. corrupt--literally, "insipid," without
"the salt of grace" (@Col
4:6), so worthless and then becoming corrupt:
included in "foolish talking" (@Eph
5:4). Its opposite is "that which is good to
edifying."
communication--language.
that which, &c.--Greek,
"whatever is good."
use of edifying--literally,
"for edifying of the need," that is, for
edifying where it is needed. Seasonably edifying;
according as the occasion and present needs of the hearers
require, now censure, at another time consolation. Even
words good in themselves must be introduced seasonably lest
by our fault they prove injurious instead of useful. TRENCH
explains, Not vague generalities, which would suit a
thousand other cases equally well, and probably equally ill:
our words should be as nails fastened in a sure place, words
suiting the present time and the present person, being
"for the edifying of the occasion" (@Col
4:6).
minister--Greek,
"give." The word spoken "gives grace to the
hearers" when God uses it as His instrument for
that purpose.
30. grieve not--A condescension to human modes of
thought most touching. Compare "vexed His Holy
Spirit" (@Isa
63:10 Ps 78:40); "fretted me" (@Eze
16:43: implying His tender love to us); and of hardened
unbelievers, "resist the Holy Ghost" (@Ac
7:51). This verse refers to believers, who grieve
the Spirit by inconsistencies such as in the context are
spoken of, corrupt or worthless conversation, &c.
whereby ye are sealed--rather,
"wherein (or 'in whom') ye were sealed." As
in @Eph
1:13, believers are said to be sealed "in"
Christ, so here "in the Holy Spirit,"
who is one with Christ, and who reveals Christ in the soul:
the Greek implies that the sealing was done already
once for all. It is the Father "BY" whom
believers, as well as the Son Himself, were sealed (@Joh
6:27). The Spirit is represented as itself the seal
(@Eph
1:13, for the image employed, see on Eph
1:13). Here the Spirit is the element IN which
the believer is sealed, His gracious influences being the
seal itself.
unto--kept safely
against the day of redemption, namely, of the completion
of redemption in the deliverance of the body as well as the
soul from all sin and sorrow (@Eph
1:14 Lu 21:28 Ro 8:23).
31. bitterness--both of spirit and of speech: opposed
to "kind."
wrath--passion for a
time: opposed to "tender-hearted." Whence BENGEL
translates for "wrath," harshness.
anger--lasting
resentment: opposed to "forgiving one another."
clamour--compared by
CHRYSOSTOM to a horse carrying anger for its rider:
"Bridle the horse, and you dismount its rider."
"Bitterness" begets "wrath";
"wrath," "anger"; "anger,"
"clamor"; and "clamor," the more chronic
"evil-speaking," slander, insinuations, and
surmises of evil. "Malice" is the secret root of
all: "fires fed within, and not appearing to
by-standers from without, are the most formidable" [CHRYSOSTOM].
32. (@Lu
7:42 Col 3:12).
even as--God hath
shown Himself "kind, tender-hearted, and forgiving to
you"; it is but just that you in turn shall be so to
your fellow men, who have not erred against you in the
degree that you have erred against God (@Mt
18:33).
God for Christ's sake--rather
as Greek, "God in Christ" (@2Co
5:19). It is in Christ that God vouchsafes
forgiveness to us. It cost God the death of His Son, as man,
to forgive us. It costs us nothing to forgive our fellow
man.
hath forgiven--rather
as Greek, "forgave you." God has, once
for all, forgiven sin in Christ, as a past historical
fact.
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