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Commentary on Ephesians (Commentary on the New Testament Book #10)
About this book
Delve Deeper into God's Word
In this verse-by-verse commentary, Robert Gundry offers a fresh, literal translation and a reliable exposition of Scripture for today's readers.
This letter contains a meditation on the high privileges of Christian believers, plus instruction on how they should conduct themselves in the face of hostile spiritual forces.
Pastors, Sunday school teachers, small group leaders, and laypeople will welcome Gundry's nontechnical explanations and clarifications. And Bible students at all levels will appreciate his sparkling interpretations.
This selection is from Gundry's Commentary on the New Testament.
In this verse-by-verse commentary, Robert Gundry offers a fresh, literal translation and a reliable exposition of Scripture for today's readers.
This letter contains a meditation on the high privileges of Christian believers, plus instruction on how they should conduct themselves in the face of hostile spiritual forces.
Pastors, Sunday school teachers, small group leaders, and laypeople will welcome Gundry's nontechnical explanations and clarifications. And Bible students at all levels will appreciate his sparkling interpretations.
This selection is from Gundry's Commentary on the New Testament.
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Yes, you can access Commentary on Ephesians (Commentary on the New Testament Book #10) by Robert H. Gundry in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Theology & Religion & Biblical Commentary. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
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Ephesians
GREETINGS
Ephesians 1:1â2
1:1â2: Paul, an apostle of Christ Jesus through Godâs will, to the saints who are . . . and [who are] believers in Christ Jesus: 2Grace and peace to you from God, our Father, and the Lord, Jesus Christ. Paulâs self-designation matches his self-designation in 2 Corinthians 1:1; Colossians 1:1; 2 Timothy 1:1 exactly, but see the comments on 1 Corinthians 1:1 for the meanings of the terms used. As usual, âthe saintsâ describes the addressees as consecrated by God to himself. The very earliest and best manuscripts lack the phrase âin Ephesusâ after âwe areââhence the elliptical dots (â. . .â)âand this lack corresponds to Paulâs having âheardâ about the addresseesâ faith (1:15) and to their having âheardâ about his ministry (3:2). By contrast, heâd evangelized the city of Ephesus for more than two years and therefore knew the Ephesian Christians intimately, as they also knew him (Acts 18:18â21; 19:1â20:1, 17â38). Probably, then, so-called Ephesians was a letter circulated from Ephesus to outlying churches, so that the geographical location of the saints was to be filled in by the reader in accordance with the city where they were living. Compare Colossians 4:16, where Paul refers to a letter (quote possibly our very âEphesiansâ) thatâs coming to Colossae from Laodicea, in which case the reader in Laodicea would have filled the blank with âto the saints who are in Laodicea,â and the reader in Colossae would have filled the blank with âto the saints who are in Colossae.â Paul balances his description of the addressees as consecrated by God with a description of them as âbelievers,â which refers to their exercise of faith. âIn Christ Jesusâ locates their faith and thus the believers themselves (compare 1:13, 15 and see the comments on Romans 8:8â11 for the meaning and rationale of believersâ location in Christ Jesus). The placement of âChristâ before âJesusâ gives âChristâ the connotation of a title: âMessiah Jesus.â For the rest of the greeting, see the comments on Romans 1:7; 1 Peter 1:2; 2 John 3.
THE PRIVILEGES OF CHRISTIANS
Ephesians 1:3â3:21
Roughly the first half of Ephesians (after the greeting) deals with the privileges of Christians as a basis for exhortations in the second half.
BLESSING GOD FOR BLESSINGS PLANNED BY GOD THE FATHER, ACCOMPLISHED BY HIS BELOVED SON, AND APPLIED BY THE HOLY SPIRIT
Ephesians 1:3â14
1:3â6: Blessed [be] the God and Father of our Lord, Jesus Christ, who [referring to God] has blessed us in every Spiritual blessing in the heavenly [realms] in Christ, 4just as he [God] selected us in him [Christ] before the founding of the world that we might be sacred and blameless in his sight in love, 5by predestining us for adoption as [his] sons through Jesus Christ for himself [that is, for God] in accordance with the good pleasure of his will, 6for the praise of the glory of his grace, with which he graced us in [his] beloved [Son] . . . . Here begins a sentence that extends all the way though 1:14. The very length of the sentence indicates how much God deserves to be blessed for the blessings he has bestowed on us, the saints, the believers, of 1:1. âBlessed [be] . . .â doesnât mean only that God deserves to be blessed, though. It means also that God is being blessed in what Paul writes throughout 1:3â14. To bless God is to favor him with praise (see the comments on 1 Peter 1:3 concerning the whole initial phrase). For him to bless âusâ (referring to the addressees, Paul, and all other Christians) is for him to shower favors on us, so that those favors constitute the very environment in which we liveâhence, âin every Spiritual blessing,â the first of three successive âinâ-phrases telling the location of us the saints. âEvery Spiritual blessingâ means every kind of favor bestowed by God through the agency of his Spirit, as specified in the rest of 1:3â14.
âIn the heavenly [realms],â a fancy way of saying âin heaven,â plays up our location as saints in heaven. Since Christ is in heaven and we are in him, we too are in heaven. So just as despite our still living on earth God looks on us as crucified, buried, and resurrected with Christ by virtue of our being in Christ (see, for example, Romans 6:4â6; Galatians 2:20), so too God looks on us as exalted in Christ to the heavenly realms despite our still living on earth (compare 2:6; Colossians 3:1â3). Paul traces our Spiritual blessings back to Godâs having selected us out of the mass of humanity, and having done so âbefore the founding of the world,â so that the selection didnât depend on anything meritorious which weâd done (see Romans 9). âIn himâ indicates that even our location in Christ was planned by God before his âfounding of the world.â The selectionâs purpose was Godward: âthat we might be sacred [that is, saints, holy, consecrated to him (1:1)] and blameless in his sight [as saints are and will in fact be at the Last Judgment (5:27), because God looks on us as in Christ, who is blameless].â If God sees nothing blameworthy, salvation is assured; and if our sacredness, our consecration, to God and blamelessness are due to his having âselected us in him [Christ],â âin loveâ is likely to reference Godâs loving us because of our sacredness and blamelessness in Christ. The selection of us entailed predestination âfor [the purpose of] adoption as [Godâs] sonsâ (compare âour Fatherâ in 1:2; also Romans 8:29).
âThrough Jesus Christâ makes him the agent of adoption in that as believers we are in him and in that he is himself Godâs Son quite apart from adoption (4:13). âFor himselfâ makes clear that âadoption as sonsâ means adoption as Godâs sons. âIn accordance with the good pleasure of his willâ personifies Godâs will, makes it take pleasure in the predestining of us for adoption, and attributes the predestinating to Godâs will as distinct from our will as human beings. âFor the praise of the glory of his graceâ adds to predestination another purpose besides that of adoption. Grace, Godâs ill-deserved favor as shown in the adoption, isnât the object of praise. âThe glory of his graceâ is the object, which way of putting it accents Godâs grace as glorious. The addition to âhis graceâ of the clause, âwith which he graced us,â doubles the accent on the glory of his grace. âIn [his] beloved [Son]â locates us again in Christ, but calls him the one whom God loved to confirm that God loves us because of our sacredness and blamelessness in Christ (compare, for example, Mark 1:11; 9:7; 12:6; 2 Peter 1:17).
Paulâs sentence continues in 1:7â10: in whom [referring to Christ as Godâs beloved Son] we have redemption through his blood, the forgiveness of trespasses in accordance with the wealth of his grace, 8which [grace] he lavished on us in all wisdom and discernment 9when making known to us the secret of his will in accordance with his good pleasure, which he [God] planned in him [Christ] 10for the administration of the fullness of the seasons, [that is,] to head up all things for himself in the Christâthe things in the heavens and the things on the earth . . . . âRedemptionâ means liberation from slavery. âThrough his bloodâ marks Christâs blood as the cost of this liberation, and âbloodâ implies a violent death (compare the connotation of violence in our expression âbloodshedâ) and, given his blamelessness, a sacrificial death. As sacrificial, Christâs death also brings âthe forgiveness of trespasses,â which means their discharge, so that the trespasser doesnât have to suffer punishment for them. Christ suffered it for us. âThe forgiveness of trespassesâ also suggests that the redemption consists in liberation from slavery to those trespasses (compare Romans 6:12â23). This redemption and forgiveness accord with Godâs graceâno, with âthe wealth of his grace,â more than enough to provide redemption and forgiveness, as further indicated by his having âlavishedâ that grace âon usâ or, more literally, âinto us,â as though filling us to overflowing with a favor thatâs ill-deserved because of our trespasses. âIn all wisdom and discernmentâ refers to all the wisdom and discernment required to understand âthe secret of his [Godâs] will,â a secret he has âmade known to us.â Such wisdom and discernment are the mental environment within which God lavished his grace on us. Without this environment we wouldnât have recognized and received his grace for what it is. The use of two synonyms, âwisdomâ and âdiscernment,â underlines their accompaniment of grace.
Paul mentions âthe secret of his [Godâs] willâ as a teaser that heâll explain in 2:11â3:13. Meanwhile, the making known âto usâ of âthe secretâ which consists in âhis willâ enhances âthe wealth of his grace.â The accordance of his making the secret known with âhis good pleasureâ enhances further âthe wealth of his graceâ by putting a happy face on God in his lavishing the grace (see also the comments on 1:5 for this phrase). That God âplannedâ his good pleasure âin him [Christ]â dovetails with Godâs having âselected us in him [Christ] before the founding of the worldâ (1:4) and with his having âpredestin[ed] us for adoption as [his] sons through Jesus Christ for himself in accordance with the good pleasure of his willâ (1:5). The purpose of Godâs plan in Christ was âthe administration of the fullness of the seasons,â which means the imposition of his government when the epochs of human history have reached their full extent according to Godâs plan. Heâll do this âfor himselfâ (in the sense of carrying out his plan) by putting the entirety of creation (âthe things in the heavens and the things on the earthâ) under the Christâs headship. âThe Christâ adds the formality of a title to his headship.
Paulâs sentence takes up again in 1:11â12: in him in whom we were also allotted [to God] by being predestined in accordance with the plan of him who is working all things in accordance with the intention of his will 12that we whoâve hoped in the Christ beforehand might be for the praise of his glory . . . . Paul correlated our being in Christ with Godâs having blessed us in every Spiritual blessing (1:3), having selected us for consecration and blamelessness (1:4), having graced us (1:6), and having redeemed and forgiven us (1:7). Now Paul correlates our being in Christ with our also having been allotted to God, which means that in his Son, Jesus Christ, God has acquired Christian believers as his own possession (see 1:14). This allotment occurred in conjunction with our being predestined (âfor adoption as sons through Jesus Christâ according to 1:5), and this predestination triggered the carrying out of Godâs plan. To assure us that the execution of this plan hasnât been frustrated, Paul refers to God as âhim who is working all things in accordance with the intention of his will.â âAll thingsâ leaves nothing outside his plan. To stress Godâs will as determinative, Paul personifies Godâs âwillâ by ascribing to it an âintention.â There follows a definition of Godâs will, namely, that âwe . . . might be for the praise of his glory.â Earlier, the glory of Godâs grace was to be the object of praise (1:6). Now itâs the glory of God himself thatâs to be the object of praise. But why his glory rather than him himself? Because the praise of his glory has to do with the brilliance of his plan and of his working it out (compare Romans 11:33â36). Paul doesnât say that we are to praise Godâs glory. He says that God willed us to be for the praise of his glory. That is to say, our very existence as those âwhoâve hoped in the Christ beforehandâ is to be for the praise of Godâs glory. âHopeâ carries the note of confidence in relation to Christâs return and attendant events, so that âhoped . . . beforehandâ means to have put confidence in the Christ prior to his coming back as the one who will come back when âthe fullness of the seasonsâ (1:10) has been reached.
1:13â14: in whom [referring to âthe Christâ] also you, when hearing the word of truth, [that is,] the gospel of your salvation, in whom also [you], when believing [the gospel], were sealed with the Spirit of promise, the Holy [Spirit], 14who is the downpayment on our inheritance till the redemption of the acquisition, [which redemption will be] for the praise of his glory. Here we have in Christ a sealing of Christians with the Holy Spiritâquite naturally, since the Spirit is Christâs Spirit (Romans 8:9). This sealing occurred when they heard âthe word of truthâ and believed it (in confirmation of the translation âbelieversâ rather than âfaithfulâ in 1:1). Paul identifies this word as the gospel and describes the word as a message containing truth. Then he describes the gospel, which means âgood news,â as âof salvation,â which means âof deliverance.â But deliverance from what? Paul reserves the answer to this question till 2:1â10, where salvation turns out to be deliverance from Godâs wrath, the just desert of our sins, trespasses, and fleshly lusts. âYour salvationâ limits this deliverance to those whoâve heard and believed the gospel. âAlso . . . alsoâ doesnât mean âyou as well as usâârather, hearing and believing as well as hoping (1:12). The temporary shift from âwe,â âour,â and âusâ to âyouâ and âyourâ highlights for the addressees what happened to them at their conversion.
âWere sealed with the Spiritâ means being stamped with the Spirit, so to speak, as a sign of being owned by God. âOf promiseâ is usually interpreted to be describing the Spirit as promised (as, for example, in Galatians 3:14; Luke 24:49; Acts 2:33; Ezekiel 36:26â27; 37:14). In view of the immediately following description of the Spirit as âthe downpayment on our inheritance,â however, itâs better to interpret âthe Spirit of promiseâ as the Spirit who, because heâs the downpayment, is himself the promise of our inheritance thatâs yet to come in the form of resurrection to eternal life (compare 2 Corinthians 1:22; 5:5). Paul supplements âof promiseâ with âthe Holyâ to make the sealing of believers with the Spirit the basis of calling them âsaints,â which means âholy ones, consecrated onesâ (1:1, 4). âTill the redemptionâ supplements a past liberation from enslavement to trespasses (1:7) with a future liberation. Paul probably has in mind our liberation from mortality at the resurrection (Romans 8:23), but he avoids defining the liberation in terms of what it will mean for us and thus centers attention on what it will mean for God. It will mean his getting âthe praise of his gloryâ (about which see the comm...
Table of contents
- Cover
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Ephesians
- Notes
- Back Cover