Verse 1
Ephesians 4:1. I therefore, the
prisoner of the Lord —
Imprisoned for his sake and for
yours; for the sake of the
gospel which he had preached to
them and other Gentiles: see
note on Ephesians 3:1 : this was
therefore a powerful motive to
them to comfort him under his
sufferings by their obedience;
beseech you that ye walk worthy
of the vocation, &c. — That is,
in a manner suitable to the
privileges which you enjoy, and
to the state of grace and favour
with God into which you have
been brought by hearing and
believing the gospel. As if he
had said, Let there be nothing
in your spirit or conduct
beneath the dignity to which you
are raised, and the illustrious
hopes which are set before you;
but show that the crown of glory
is ever in your eye, and that
your hearts are duly impressed
with it. Thus we see the great
discoveries in the foregoing
part of this epistle, to which
the apostle has given the
appellation of the mystery of
God and of Christ, were set
forth by him, not merely for the
purpose of enlightening the
Ephesian believers in the
knowledge of these sublime
truths, and fixing them in the
belief and profession thereof;
but also to give him an
elevation of sentiment and
affection becoming those to
whose minds such glorious
discoveries were made; and at
the same time to lead them to a
proper behaviour toward God, one
another, and all men, and that
in every circumstance and
relation of life wherein they
were placed; the various
particulars of which are
specified in the very excellent
summary of practical religion
contained in the remaining
chapters of this epistle.
Verse 2-3
Ephesians 4:2-3. With all
lowliness — Or humility of mind,
having mean thoughts of
yourselves because of your
former sinfulness and guilt,
depravity, weakness, and misery,
and your unworthiness of that
mercy which God hath exercised
toward you; and meekness —
Maintaining calmness, serenity,
and peace of mind, amid the
infirmities and indiscretions of
your Christian friends, and even
amid the affronts and injuries
of your enemies; with
long-suffering — Toward all men,
whether saints or sinners,
always possessing your souls in
patience, and whatever
provocations you receive, never
seeking revenge, or yielding to
resentment or ill-will toward
any. Forbearing — Greek,
ανεχομενοι, bearing with; one
another in love — That is, out
of a principle of love to God,
your fellow-Christians, and all
men; endeavouring, so far as in
you lies, to keep the unity of
the Spirit — That mutual union,
concord, and harmony, which is
the fruit of the Spirit; in the
bond of peace — In a peaceable,
kind, and affectionate
disposition toward one another.
Verses 4-6
Ephesians 4:4-6. The apostle
proceeds to remind the believers
at Ephesus of some of the many
very powerful considerations
which had force enough, if
attended to and laid to heart,
to induce them to cultivate and
preserve the unity to which he
exhorts them. There is one body
— One mystical body of Christ,
of which he is the living head,
and ye all are members; and as
such should sympathize with,
care for, and assist one
another, as the members of the
human body do. And in this one
body there is one Divine Spirit
— Which enlivens, actuates, and
fills it, and under his
influence it should be your
constant concern to act; even as
ye are called in one hope of
your calling — To the
expectation of one and the same
common heaven, one and the same
glorious abode in the eternal
world. One Lord — And Master, of
whom you are all servants; one
Redeemer and Saviour, who hath
assumed our frail nature, lived
and died for us, that he might
unite us in bonds of mutual,
fervent, and everlasting love;
one faith — In that one Lord,
and in the truths of one and the
same divine revelation, all
which are designed and
calculated to bind the disciples
together in the pleasing bonds
of love and unity; one outward
baptism — Or seal of the
covenant of grace, and emblem of
the washing of regeneration. One
God and Father of all — Whose
real people, whose true
worshippers, whose beloved
children, whose living temples
you are; who is above you all —
Ruling you as his subjects, and
presiding over you as his
children; through you all — By
his enlightening and directing
word; and in you all — By his
quickening, sanctifying, and
comforting Spirit. Such are the
reasons and motives obliging the
true disciples of Christ to love
and unity with one another;
reasons and motives most
powerful surely to bind them
together in peace and harmony,
and such as manifest discord,
contention, strife, and
division, to be unspeakably
unreasonable.
Verses 7-10
Ephesians 4:7-10. But — Though
there be so many, and those
infinitely important
particulars, in which the true
members of the church agree, and
which furnish such powerful
motives to love and unity, yet
there are some things wherein
they differ. For they occupy, by
God’s appointment, different
stations in the church, and for
these they are fitted by
different gifts. These
distinctions, however, ought to
be regarded by them, not as
matters of emulation, and causes
of contention, but rather as
additional obligations to love
and union, considering the great
source and design of them all.
For unto every one is given
grace — Or some particular
endowment proceeding from grace;
according to the measure of the
gift of Christ — In such a
measure as seems best to him,
the great Head and Governor of
the church, to bestow it; whose
distributions, we know, are
always guided by consummate
wisdom and goodness; so that all
his disciples have the highest
reason to acquiesce entirely in
what he does. Wherefore he saith
— That is, in reference to which
God saith by David, When he
ascended up on high, he led
captivity captive — He took
captive those who had held
mankind in captivity; he
conquered and triumphed over all
our spiritual enemies,
especially Satan, sin, and
death, which had before enslaved
all the world. This is spoken in
allusion to the custom of
ancient conquerors, who led
those they had conquered in
chains after them. And as they
also used to give donatives to
the people at their return from
victory, so Christ gave gifts
unto men — Namely, both the
ordinary and extraordinary gifts
of the Spirit: of the propriety
of applying these words of the
psalmist to the ascension of
Christ, see note on Psalms
68:18. Now this expression, that
he ascended, what is it? — What
does it imply, but that he
descended first? — Certainly it
does, on the supposition of his
pre- existence as the Son of
God, who had glory with the
Father before the world was, and
who came forth from the Father,
and came into the world:
otherwise it would not imply
that he descended first, since
all the saints will ascend to
heaven, though none of them
descend thence. Into the lower
parts of the earth — That is,
into the womb of the virgin at
his incarnation, and into the
grave at his passion; including,
however, all the other steps of
his humiliation. Bishop Pearson
(on the Creed, p. 229) hath
shown how very precariously this
text is urged as a proof of
Christ’s descent into hell, this
phrase, the lower parts of the
earth, in some other passages of
Scripture plainly signifying the
womb, as Psalms 139:15, and the
grave, Psalms 63:9; Matthew
12:40. He that descended — That
thus amazingly humbled himself;
is the same that ascended up —
That was so highly exalted; far
above all heavens — Above the
aerial and starry heavens, into
the heaven of heavens; or, as
the meaning rather is, above all
the inhabitants of the heavens,
above all the angelical hosts;
which is the meaning also of
Hebrews 7:26, where he is said
to be made higher than the
heavens: that he might fill all
things — The whole church with
his Spirit, presence, and
operations.
Verse 11
Ephesians 4:11. And — Among
other his free gifts; he gave
some, apostles — His chief
ministers and special witnesses,
as having seen him after his
resurrection, and received their
commission immediately from him.
The office of an apostle was to
declare, in an infallible
manner, the whole gospel
doctrine: to qualify them for
which they were endowed with the
plenary and most abundant
inspiration of the Holy Spirit,
imparting to them a perfect
knowledge of all those truths
and mysteries which they were to
publish to the world. And some
he gave to be prophets — Whose
office it was to explain
infallibly the true meaning of
the ancient prophecies, and also
themselves to predict future
events, by virtue of the
extraordinary revelations made
to them. And some, evangelists —
Who were to preach the gospel in
different Gentile nations,
either before or after the
apostles, under whose direction
they seem generally to have
acted. To fit them for this
office Christ gave them the gift
of tongues, and such other
miraculous endowments as were
necessary for the exercise of
their ministry, and the
confirmation of their doctrine.
All these were extraordinary
officers: the ordinary were
some, pastors, (called
επισκοπους, bishops, Acts
20:28,) watching over and
feeding their several flocks. To
fit them for which work, it
appears from 1 Corinthians
12:28-31; 1 Corinthians 14:1-5;
1 Corinthians 14:23-26, that
Christ bestowed, at least on
some of them, the gifts of
miracles and tongues, also the
gift of prudence, to enable them
to govern their particular
churches in a proper manner. And
teachers — Whether of the same
or a lower order, to assist them
as occasion might require. It is
probable the peculiar office of
those here termed teachers, as
distinguished from those called
pastors, was to instruct the
young and ignorant in the first
principles of the Christian
religion. And they likewise were
doubtless fitted for their work,
by such gifts as were necessary
to the right discharging
thereof; and some infer from 1
Corinthians 12:28, that
supernatural gifts, such as
those of miracles and tongues,
were also conferred on some of
them.
Verse 12-13
Ephesians 4:12-13. For the
perfecting — προς τον
καταρτισμον των αγιων; in order
to, or, for the sake of;
completing of the saints — Both
in number, and in the various
branches of true Christianity,
namely, in the knowledge of all
Christian doctrines, the
possession of all Christian
graces, the enjoyment of all
Christian privileges, the
performance of all Christian
duties. Now in order to the
attainment of these ends, and
thereby the completing the
Christian character of each
individual member of the church,
and of all in general, he
appointed the sundry officers
above named, whether ordinary or
extraordinary, (several of the
latter having left their
writings for the instruction of
the faithful in all ages,) for
the work of the ministry — The
serving of God and his church,
in their various ministrations,
especially in dispensing the
word, administering the
ordinances, maintaining
Christian discipline, and
performing all other ministerial
duties. For the edifying of the
body of Christ — The building up
Christ’s mystical body, in
faith, love, and universal
holiness: or by ministering to
the increase of the graces of
such as were already converted,
and by the addition of new
members to the true church. Till
we all come — Which gifts,
offices, and ministrations, are
to continue in the church, till
every member thereof come to the
unity of the faith, and
knowledge of the Son of God — To
both an exact agreement in the
Christian doctrine, and an
experimental, practical
knowledge, or acknowledgment, of
Christ as the Son of God; to a
perfect man — To a state of
spiritual manhood, both in
understanding and strength, to
the measure of the stature of
the fulness of Christ — Or, to
the full measure of his stature,
that is, to that maturity of age
and spiritual stature, wherein
we shall be possessed of his
whole mind, and fully conformed
to him. But the words εις την
ενοτητα της
πιστεως, &c., which we translate
in the unity of the faith, &c.,
ought rather to be rendered, to
the unity, or union, of the
faith, or that union which is
the fruit or consequence of the
faith, namely, of perfect faith,
even the faith spoken of by our
Lord in his intercessory prayer,
recorded John 17:20-23, where he
says, I pray for them which
shall believe on me, that they
all may be one, as thou Father
art in me and I in thee, that
they may be made perfect in one,
that is, may be perfectly united
in love to us and one another.
The following verses lead us to
this meaning of the passage.
Verse 14
Ephesians 4:14. That we
henceforth be no more children —
Mere babes in Christian
knowledge, experience, and
practice; weak and unstable;
tossed — κλυδωνιζομενοι,
fluctuating from within, through
various restless lusts and
passions working in our hearts,
even when there is nothing
external to agitate or excite
them; and carried about with
every wind of doctrine — And
temptation from without, when we
are assaulted by others who are
themselves unstable as the wind;
by the sleight, or subtlety, of
men — Greek, εν τη κυβεια των
ανθρωπων, which words Chandler
proposes rendering, by the
dicing of men; the expression
referring to the artifice of
those infamous gamesters, who
know how to cog the dice. So
that the deceitful arts of false
teachers and others, who
endeavour to draw men from the
belief and practice of the truth
as it is in Jesus, by their
insinuations and wiles, are here
compared to the tricks of
gamesters, who, by using false
dice, and by various arts, cheat
those with whom they play. And
cunning craftiness, whereby they
lie in wait to deceive — Greek,
εν πανουργια προς την μεθοδειαν
της πλανης, a clause which Beza
renders, “veteratoria ad
insidiose fallendum versutia,”
by the tricking of those long
exercised in craftily deceiving
others; Doddridge’s translation
is, by their subtlety in every
method of deceit; and
Macknight’s, by craftiness
formed into a subtle scheme of
deceit. The former noun,
πανουργια, signifies the doing
of things by trick and sleight
of hand, and the latter,
μεθοδεια, (which, Ephesians
6:11, is applied to the wiles
and subtle contrivances of the
devil, in order to deceive and
ruin men,) properly signifies a
regular plan of proceeding in
any affair, and is here used for
a regular plan of deceit, formed
either for upholding people in
their ignorance of, and
opposition to the gospel, or for
drawing them from their faith
in, or obedience to, some
article of it. “The men,”
Macknight thinks, “whose base
arts the apostle describes in
this passage, were the
unbelieving Jews and the heathen
philosophers, who opposed the
gospel by sophistry and calumny;
also such false teachers as
arose in the church itself, and
corrupted the doctrines of the
gospel for worldly purposes,
while at the same time they
assumed the appearance of great
disinterestedness and piety.”
Verse 15-16
Ephesians 4:15-16. But speaking
the truth — Or, as αληθευοντες
may be rendered, teaching, or
maintaining the truth; in love —
To God and one another, or in
that charitable temper which the
gospel enjoins, and without
which our clearest and most
extensive knowledge will be but
of little use to us; may grow up
into him — Into his image and
Spirit, and into a full union
with him; who is the head of
guidance, as well as of
government, to all the members
of his mystical body, the chief
teacher and director, as well as
ruler of his churches; from whom
— That is, by wisdom and grace
derived from him; the whole body
— Of true Christians; fitly — Or
orderly; joined together — Every
one being put in his proper
place and station: or all the
parts of his mystical body being
fitted for, and adapted to each
other, and most exactly
harmonizing with the whole; and
compacted — Knitted and cemented
together with the utmost
firmness; that is, closely and
firmly united to Christ and each
other, by the Holy Spirit, in
faith and love; by that which
every joint, or part, supplieth
— Through proper channels of
communication; according to the
effectual working in the measure
of every part — According as
every part, in its measure,
effectually works for the
support and growth of the whole;
maketh increase of the body — Of
the whole church, collectively
considered, and of each
particular member; to the
edifying — Or building up; of
itself in love — So that all the
members may attain unto a
greater measure of love to God,
one another, and all men; or, by
the exercise of love. For, as no
animal body can either have
health or growth, unless the
members thereof continue in
union with each other, each
performing its office; so
neither can Christ’s mystical
body possess spiritual health or
growth, unless its members
cleave to each other in love.
The passage, as the reader sees,
is a beautiful allusion to our
natural bodies, composed of
different joints and members,
knit together by various
ligaments, and furnished with
vessels of communication from
the head and heart to every
other part. And the apostle’s
meaning, explained more at
large, is, “That as the human
body is formed by the union of
all the members to each other
under the head, and by the
fitness of each member for its
own office and place in the
body, so the church is formed by
the union of its members under
Christ the head. Further, as the
human body increases, till it
arrives at maturity, by the
energy of every part in
performing its proper function,
and by the sympathy of every
part with the whole; so the
body, or Church of Christ, grows
to maturity by the proper
exercise of the gifts and graces
of individuals for the benefit
of the whole. By comparing the
church to the human body, the
apostle teaches, that there
ought to be no envy nor ill-will
among Christians, on account of
the gifts which individuals
possess, Ephesians 4:3. That
every one should pay to others
that respect and obedience which
they owe to them on account of
their station and office,
Ephesians 4:11. That no teacher
should pervert the doctrine of
the gospel, Ephesians 4:15. And
that each, by employing his
gifts and graces properly,
should extend the knowledge and
influence of the Christian
religion to the utmost of his
power.” — Macknight.
Verses 17-19
Ephesians 4:17-19. This I say,
therefore — For your further
instruction, how to walk worthy
of your calling; (he returns to
the subject which he began,
Ephesians 4:1;) and testify in
the Lord — In the name and by
the authority of the Lord Jesus,
that ye, being now happily
brought into the Christian
Church, and made partakers of
all the privileges and
advantages belonging to its
members; henceforth walk not as
other Gentiles — That ye live no
longer as the unconverted
heathen; in the vanity of their
mind — Amused with the empty
trifles of this world, and
enslaved to low and mean
pursuits, utterly unworthy of
their rational and immortal
nature; having the understanding
darkened — With respect to all
spiritual and divine things,
which is the source of all
foolish desires and pursuits;
see Romans 1:21; being alienated
from the life of God — Being
estranged in affection, as well
as in practice, from the divine
and spiritual life, from all
union with, and conformity to,
the living and true God; or,
from that noble principle of all
piety and virtue, the life of
God in the soul of man, forming
it to the love, imitation, and
service of him by whom it is
implanted; through the ignorance
— Of God and his will, and of
their duty and happiness; that
is inherent in them — Or natural
to them, as fallen and depraved
creatures; because of the
blindness — την πωρωσιν, the
callousness, or insensibility;
of their hearts — This is
explained by Chrysostom, Whitby,
and some other commentators, as
referring to their Gentile
state; but though there is no
doubt but it partly refers to
that, yet there can be no
sufficient reason to limit such
a description to dark and
ignorant heathen; it is but too
just a representation of all
unregenerate men. Who being past
feeling — The original word,
απηλγηκοτες, is peculiarly
significant, properly meaning,
past feeling pain, or void of
distress — Pain urges the sick
to seek a remedy, and distress,
the distressed to endeavour, if
possible, to procure relief;
which remedy or relief is little
thought of where pain and
distress are not felt. Thus,
those who are hardened against
all impressions of grief on
account of their former sins,
are not excited to seek either
for the pardon of them or
deliverance from them. Some MSS.
read απηλπικοτες, hoping for
nothing. These wicked men,
disbelieving the resurrection of
the body, and the immortality of
the soul, have no hope of any
happiness after this life, and
therefore they have given
themselves over — Have abandoned
themselves freely, of their own
accord; to lasciviousness — To
wantonness, to unchaste
imaginations and desires, words
and actions; to work all
uncleanness — Impurity of every
kind; with greediness — The word
εν πλεονεξια, thus rendered, is
commonly used to denote
covetousness; because the more
the covetous man possesses, the
more he desires. Hence the word
is used (2 Peter 2:14) to denote
inordinate desire in general.
Verses 20-24
Ephesians 4:20-24. But ye —
Believers at Ephesus; have not
so learned Christ — Or
Christianity; that is, ye cannot
act thus, now ye are acquainted
with Christ and his gospel,
which, you know, allows of no
sin. If so be — Or rather,
seeing that, as ει γε, it seems,
should be here rendered; ye have
heard him — Teaching you
inwardly by his Spirit, as well
as outwardly by his word; and
have been taught by him — Have
been instructed in his religion;
as the truth is in Jesus —
According to his own gospel, and
not in that imperfect and
adulterated form, in which some
presume to deliver what they
call his doctrine: that ye put
off — Entirely lay aside;
concerning — Or with respect to;
the former conversation — That
is, those sinful habits and
practices to which you were
accustomed in your heathen
state; the old man — Your old
nature and character; or the
whole body of sin: which old
nature is corrupt — Depraved in
every part, so that its
dispositions and actions are
directed, not by the rules of
right reason, or by the word and
will of God, but according to
the deceitful lusts — Which
generally prevail in the
unregenerate, and once prevailed
in you. Observe, reader, all
sinful desires are deceitful,
promising the happiness which
they cannot give, and deceiving
men. And be renewed in the
spirit of your mind — That is,
in all the faculties of your
souls, by seeking and obtaining
an enlightened understanding, a
rectified will, and holy,
well-regulated affections. And
that ye put on the new man —
That ye apply to God for, and
receive from him, a new nature;
which after God — That is, after
a conformity to his image; is
created — For it is his
workmanship, see Ephesians 2:10;
in righteousness — Toward your
fellow-creatures; and true
holiness — Toward God. He says
true holiness, in opposition to
that which is only ceremonial or
external, and in appearance. The
dispositions of the mind are in
Scripture compared to clothes,
for two reasons: 1st, Because
they render persons beautiful or
deformed, according to their
nature: 2d, Because they may be
put off or on, while we remain
in a state of trial, according
as we yield to and obey, or
resist and reject, the truth and
grace of God.
Verses 25-27
Ephesians 4:25-27. Wherefore —
Since you have been thus taught
what is your duty and interest,
let it appear in your tempers,
words, and works, that there is
such a change wrought in them;
and that, having received a new
nature, you live in a new
manner. The apostle now proceeds
to caution them against
particular sins, to which they
had been habituated, and to urge
them to the pursuit of
particular graces, and the
practice of particular virtues,
which they had formerly
neglected. Putting away lying —
Which many of your philosophers
have thought allowable, in
certain cases; (so Whitby has
shown in his note here;) speak
every man truth with his
neighbour — In your converse
with your fellow-creatures; for
we are members one of another —
By virtue of our union with
Christ our common head, to which
intimate union, all deceit is
quite repugnant. Be ye angry,
and sin not — That is, if at any
time ye are angry, take heed ye
do not sin. We may be angry, as
Christ was, and not sin; when he
looked round about upon the
people with anger, being grieved
for the hardness of their
hearts; (Mark 3:5;) that is, we
may be displeased and grieved at
the sin or folly of others, and
not sin by being so. Indeed, if
we should observe people to do
or say what we know to be
sinful, or should see them
indulging evil tempers and vile
affections, and should not be
displeased and grieved, we would
commit sin. For to be
insensible, and without emotion,
when we observe God to be
dishonoured, his laws violated,
his presence, power, and
holiness disregarded, and his
justice and wrath contemned,
certainly manifests a state of
soul devoid of all proper
religious feeling. But in what
sense we may be angry and not
sin, see explained more at large
in the note on the above-cited
text. Let not the sun go down on
your wrath — If at any time you
be in such a sense angry as to
sin — if your anger imply
resentment of an injury or
affront received, or ill-will
and bitterness of spirit, look
to God for grace to enable you
to suppress this kind of anger
or wrath speedily: reprove your
brother for the offence he has
given you, and be reconciled
immediately: lose not one day. A
clear, express command this;
but, alas! how few observe it.
Neither give place to the devil
— By delaying to cast the fire
out of your bosom; remembering
how much that enemy of mankind
labours to inflame the spirits
of men with mutual animosity,
malevolence, and hatred; and, in
order thereto, induces them to
give ear to slanderous reports
and accusations, that he may
make their state and character
miserable and detestable, like
his own.
Verse 28
Ephesians 4:28. Let him that
stole — While he was in his
heathen condition of ignorance
and vice; steal no more — Under
a conviction that God is the
avenger of all such injuries, 1
Thessalonians 4:6. Stealing, as
Macknight justly observes, “is a
vice most pernicious to the
thief himself. For finding it
more easy to supply his
necessities by stealing than by
working, he falls into a habit
of idleness, which, among the
lower classes of mankind, is an
inlet to all manner of
wickedness. Next, the ease with
which the thief gets, disposes
him to squander thoughtlessly
his unjust gain in the
gratification of his lusts.
Hence such persons are commonly
addicted to lewdness and
drunkenness.” But rather let him
labour — In some honest calling;
working with his hands — Which
he formerly employed in
stealing; the thing which is
good — And creditable. The same
command the apostle gave to the
Thessalonians, 2 Thessalonians
3:11-12; that he may have to
give to him that needeth — May
be able even to spare something
out of what he gains by industry
in his calling, for the relief
of such as stand in need of it;
and so may be no longer a burden
and a nuisance, but a blessing
to his neighbours. Thus every
one who has sinned in any kind,
ought the more zealously to
practise the opposite virtue.
Verse 29-30
Ephesians 4:29-30. Let no
corrupt communication — Or
discourse, dictated by
corruption in the heart of the
speaker, and tending to corrupt
the minds or manners of hearers;
proceed out of your mouth — At
any time, or on any occasion.
The original expression, λογος
σαπρος, is literally, rotten or
putrid speech; that is, speech
offensive to the hearers, or
calculated to infect them with
sin; and is in direct opposition
to that which is seasoned with
salt, and is recommended
(Colossians 4:6) as tending to
preserve persons from
corruption. The apostle does not
merely include in this
expression obscene discourse of
every kind, but also all
flattery, calumny, railing,
boasting, tale-bearing,
backbiting, commendations of
vice and impiety, profane
jestings on religion, its
ministers and professors,
trifling conversation; and,
indeed, all discourse that is
not either about necessary
business, or, as the next clause
expresses it, is not good to the
use of edifying — Calculated to
instruct, direct, reprove,
encourage, excite to duty,
comfort, or in some way edify
and minister grace to the
hearers. And grieve not — By any
act of disobedience,
particularly by any kind of
corrupt discourse, or by any of
the following sins; the Holy
Spirit of God — The original
expression is very emphatical,
το πνευμα, το αγιον, του θεου,
the Spirit, the Holy Spirit, of
God. Grief is ascribed to the
Holy Spirit here metaphorically;
for, strictly speaking, he is
incapable of pain or disquiet of
any kind. But he acts, on the
occasion referred to, as men do
who are grieved. And the purport
of the caution is, Do not cause
him, by any sinful temper, word,
or work, to withdraw from you,
as a friend does whom you grieve
by unkind or improper behaviour.
The expression conveys a strong
idea of the love which the Holy
Spirit bears to men in general,
and to the disciples of Christ
in particular; and of his desire
to promote their salvation.
Whereby ye are sealed unto the
day of redemption — The time
when you shall receive the
redemption of your bodies from
the grave; (Romans 8:23;) shall
be acquitted at the
judgment-seat of Christ, fully
delivered from all the
consequences of sin, and made
perfectly and unchangeably
happy: the day when your
redemption will be fully
completed. See note on Ephesians
1:13.
Verse 31-32
Ephesians 4:31-32. Let all
bitterness — Of disposition or
expression, or, as some render
the word, all peevishness; and
wrath — Or indignation, as θυμος
seems here to signify; that is,
anger mingled with contempt or
disgust; the next expression in
the original, οργη, rather
signifying wrath, or lasting
displeasure; and clamour — Loud
threatenings, brawlings, or
other intemperate speeches,
whereby inward anger vents
itself. And evil speaking —
Mentioning the faults of absent
persons, be it in ever so mild
and soft a tone, or with ever
such professions of kindness;
with all malice — Every unkind
disposition, every temper
contrary to love. Here appears
to be a beautiful
retrogradation, beginning with
the highest and descending to
the lowest degree of the want of
love. Or perhaps, as Dr.
Doddridge observes, “it was not
the apostle’s intention that a
different idea should be annexed
to each different word here
used: Possibly it might only be
his intention, in amassing so
many almost synonymous
expressions together, to show
that he would have them to be on
their guard against all the
malevolent passions, and those
outrages of speech and
expression which they tend to
produce. And the like remark may
be applied to many other
passages of Scripture, and
particularly to those where all
kinds of lewdness are forbidden
in such a variety of phrase and
language.” And be ye kind one to
another — Courteous and obliging
in your daily deportment;
tender-hearted — Greek,
ευσπλαγχνοι, tenderly
compassionate; especially toward
those that are in any affliction
or distress; forgiving one
another the injuries done, or
supposed to be done you; even as
God — Showing himself kind and
tender-hearted in the highest
degree; for Christ’s sake —
Through his atonement and
intercession, by which God could
exercise his mercy to you in a
way consistent with his holiness
and justice; hath forgiven you —
Such inexcusable and heinous
injuries and affronts, as are
infinitely greater than any
which it is possible for you to
receive from your
fellow-creatures. |