Be ye therefore followers of God, as dear children;
Be ye therefore followers of God, as dear children;
1. therefore—seeing that "God
in Christ forgave you" ().
followers—Greek,
"imitators" of God, in respect to "love" (): God's essential character ().
as dear children—Greek,
"as children beloved"; to which refers, "As Christ also loved us" (). "We are sons of men, when we do ill; sons of God,
when we do well" [AUGUSTINE,
on Psalm 52]; (compare Matthew 5:44;
Matthew 5:45; Matthew 5:48).
Sonship infers an absolute necessity of imitation, it being
vain to assume the title of son without any similitude of the Father
[PEARSON].
And walk in love, as Christ also hath loved us, and hath given himself for us an offering and a sacrifice to God for a sweetsmelling savour.
2. And—in proof that you are
so.
walk in love—resuming
Ephesians 4:1, "walk
worthy of the vocation."
as Christ . . . loved us—From
the love of the Father he passes to the love of the Son, in whom God
most endearingly manifests His love to us.
given himself for us—Greek,
"given Himself up (namely, to death, Ephesians 4:1) for us," that is, in our behalf: not here
vicarious substitution, though that is indirectly implied, "in
our stead." The offerer, and the offering that He
offered, were one and the same (John 15:13;
Romans 5:8).
offering and a
sacrifice—"Offering" expresses generally His
presenting Himself to the Father, as the Representative undertaking
the cause of the whole of our lost race (Romans 5:8), including His life of obedience; though not
excluding His offering of His body for us (Romans 5:8). It is usually an unbloody offering, in the more
limited sense. "Sacrifice" refers to His death for
us exclusively. Christ is here, in reference to Romans 5:8 (quoted again in Romans 5:8), represented as the antitype of all the offerings of the
law, whether the unbloody or bloody, eucharistical or propitiatory.
for a sweet-smelling
savour—Greek, "for an odor of a sweet smell,"
that is, God is well pleased with the offering on the ground of its
sweetness,and so is reconciled to us (Ephesians 1:6;
Matthew 3:17; 2 Corinthians 5:18;
2 Corinthians 5:19; Hebrews 10:6-17).
The ointment compounded of principal spices, poured upon Aaron's
head, answers to the variety of the graces by which He was enabled to
"offer Himself a sacrifice for a sweet-smelling savor."
Another type, or prophecy by figure, was "the sweet savor"
("savor of rest," Margin) which God smelled
in Noah's sacrifice (Genesis 8:21).
Again, as what Christ is, believers also are (Genesis 8:21), and ministers are: Paul says (Genesis 8:21) "we are unto God a sweet savor of Christ."
But fornication, and all uncleanness, or covetousness, let it not be once named among you, as becometh saints;
3. once named—Greek,
"Let it not be even named" (Ephesians 5:4;
Ephesians 5:12). "Uncleanness"
and "covetousness" are taken up again from Ephesians 5:12. The two are so closely allied that the Greek for
"covetousness" (pleonexia) is used sometimes in
Scripture, and often in the Greek Fathers, for sins of
impurity. The common principle is the longing to fill one's desire
with material objects of sense, outside of God. The expression, "not
be even named," applies better to impurity, than to
"covetousness."
Neither filthiness, nor foolish talking, nor jesting, which are not convenient: but rather giving of thanks.
4. filthiness—obscenity in act
or gesture.
foolish talking—the
talk of fools, which is folly and sin together. The Greek
of it, and of "filthiness," occurs nowhere else in the New
Testament.
nor—rather, "or"
(compare Ephesians 5:3).
jesting—Greek,
"eutrapelia"; found nowhere else in the New
Testament: implying strictly that versatility which turns
about and adapts itself, without regard to principle, to the shifting
circumstances of the moment, and to the varying moods of those with
whom it may deal. Not scurrile buffoonery, but refined "persiflage"
and "badinage," for which Ephesus was famed [PLAUTUS,
A Boastful Soldier, 3.1,42-52], and which, so far from being
censured, was and is thought by the world a pleasant accomplishment.
In Colossians 3:8, "filthy
communication" refers to the foulness; "foolish
talking," to the folly; "jesting," to the false
refinement (and trifling witticism [TITTMANN])
Of discourse unseasoned with the salt of grace [TRENCH].
not convenient—"unseemly";
not such "as become saints" (Colossians 3:8).
rather giving of thanks—a
happy play on sounds in Greek, "eucharistia"
contrasted with "eutrapelia"; refined "jesting"
and subtle humor sometimes offend the tender feelings of grace;
"giving of thanks" gives that real cheerfulness of spirit
to believers which the worldly try to get from "jesting"
(Ephesians 5:19; Ephesians 5:20;
James 5:13).
For this ye know, that no whoremonger, nor unclean person, nor covetous man, who is an idolater, hath any inheritance in the kingdom of Christ and of God.
5. this ye know—The oldest
manuscripts read, "Of this ye are sure knowing"; or as
ALFORD, "This ye know
being aware."
covetous . . . idolater—
(Colossians 3:5). The best reading may
be translated, That is to say, literally, which is (in other
words) an idolater. Paul himself had forsaken all for Christ
(2 Corinthians 6:10; 2 Corinthians 11:27).
Covetousness is worship of the creature instead of the Creator, the
highest treason against the King of kings (1 Samuel 15:3;
Matthew 6:24; Philippians 3:19;
1 John 2:15).
hath—The present
implies the fixedness of the exclusion, grounded on the eternal
verities of that kingdom [ALFORD].
of Christ and of God—rather,
as one Greek article is applied to both, "of Christ and
God," implying their perfect oneness, which is consistent only
with the doctrine that Christ is God (compare 2 Thessalonians 1:12;
1 Timothy 5:21; 1 Timothy 6:13).
Let no man deceive you with vain words: for because of these things cometh the wrath of God upon the children of disobedience.
6. vain—empty, unreal words,
namely, palliations of "uncleanness," Ephesians 5:3;
Ephesians 5:4; Isaiah 5:20
(that it is natural to indulge in love), "covetousness"
(that it is useful to society that men should pursue gain), and
"jesting" (that it is witty and clever, and that God will
not so severely punish for such things).
because of these
things—uncleanness, covetousness, c. (Isaiah 5:20).
cometh—present, not
merely "shall come." Is as sure as if already come.
children—rather, "sons
of disobedience" (Ephesians 2:2
Ephesians 2:3). The children of
unbelief in doctrine (Deuteronomy 32:20)
are "children of disobedience" in practice, and
these again are "children of wrath."
Be not ye therefore partakers with them.
7. Here fellowship with wicked
workers is forbidden; in Ephesians 5:11,
with their wicked works.
For ye were sometimes darkness, but now are ye light in the Lord: walk as children of light:
8. sometimes—"once."
The emphasis is on "were." Ye ought to have no fellowship
with sin, which is darkness, for your state as darkness is now PAST.
Stronger than "in darkness" ().
light—not merely
"enlightened"; but light enlightening others ().
in—in union with the
Lord, who is THE LIGHT.
children of light—not
merely "of the light"; just as "children of
disobedience" is used on the opposite side; those whose
distinguishing characteristic is light. PLINY,
a heathen writing to Trajan, bears unwilling testimony to the
extraordinary purity of Christians' lives, contrasted with the people
around them.
(For the fruit of the Spirit is in all goodness and righteousness and truth;)
9. fruit of the Spirit—taken
by transcribers from Galatians 5:22.
The true reading is that of the oldest manuscripts, "The fruit
of THE LIGHT"; in
contrast with "the unfruitful works of darkness" (Galatians 5:22). This verse is parenthetic. Walk as children of light, that
is, in all good works and words, "FOR the fruit of the light is
[borne] in [ALFORD; but
BENGEL, 'consists in'] all
goodness [opposed to 'malice,' Galatians 5:22], righteousness [opposed to 'covetousness,' Galatians 5:22] and truth [opposed to 'lying,' Galatians 5:22]."
Proving what is acceptable unto the Lord.
10. Proving—construed with
"walk" (Ephesians 5:8;
Romans 12:1; Romans 12:2).
As we prove a coin by the eye and the ear, and by using it, so by
accurate and continued study, and above all by practice and
experimental trial, we may prove or test "what is acceptable
unto the Lord." This is the office of "light," of
which believers are "children," to manifest what each thing
is, whether sightly or unsightly.
And have no fellowship with the unfruitful works of darkness, but rather reprove them.
11. unfruitful works of
darkness—Sins are terminated in themselves, and therefore are
called "works," not "fruits" (Galatians 5:19;
Galatians 5:22). Their only fruit is
that which is not in a true sense fruit (Galatians 5:22), namely, "death" (Romans 6:21;
Galatians 6:8). Plants cannot bear
"fruit" in the absence of light. Sin is "darkness,"
and its parent is the prince of darkness (Galatians 6:8). Graces, on the other hand, as flourishing in "the
light," are reproductive, and abound in fruits; which, as
harmoniously combining in one whole, are termed (in the
singular) "the FRUIT
of the Spirit" (Ephesians 5:9).
rather, c.—Translate as
Greek, "rather even reprove them" (compare Ephesians 5:9). Not only "have no fellowship, but even
reprove them," namely, in words, and in your deeds, which,
shining with "the light," virtually reprove all that is
contrary to light (Ephesians 5:13
John 3:19-21). "Have no
fellowship," does not imply that we can avoid all intercourse
(1 Corinthians 5:10), but "avoid
such fellowship as will defile yourselves"; just as light,
though it touch filth, is not soiled by it; nay, as light detects
it, so, "even reprove sin."
For it is a shame even to speak of those things which are done of them in secret.
12. The Greek order is,
"For the things done in secret by them, it is a shame even to
speak of." The "for" gives his reason for "not
naming" (compare Ephesians 5:3)
in detail the works of darkness, whereas he describes definitely (Ephesians 5:3) "the fruit of the light" [BENGEL].
"Speak of," I think, is used here as "speaking of
without reproving," in contrast to "even reprove
them." Thus the "for" expresses this, Reprove them,
for to speak of them without reproving them, is a shame
(Ephesians 5:3). Thus "works of
darkness" answers to "things done in secret."
But all things that are reproved are made manifest by the light: for whatsoever doth make manifest is light.
13. that are reproved—rather,
"when they are reproved," namely, by you ().
whatsoever doth make
manifest—rather, "everything that is (that is, suffers
itself to be) made manifest (or 'shone upon,' namely, by your
'reproving,' Ephesians 5:11) is
(thenceforth no longer 'darkness,' Ephesians 5:11, but) light." The devil and the wicked will not suffer
themselves to be made manifest by the light, but love darkness,
though outwardly the light shines round them. Therefore,
"light" has no transforming effect on them, so that
they do not become light (John 3:19;
John 3:20). But, says the apostle,
you being now light yourselves (John 3:20), by bringing to light through reproof those who are in
darkness, will convert them to light. Your consistent lives and
faithful reproofs will be your "armor of light" (John 3:20) in making an inroad on the kingdom of darkness.
Wherefore he saith, Awake thou that sleepest, and arise from the dead, and Christ shall give thee light.
14. Wherefore—referring to the
whole foregoing argument (Ephesians 5:8;
Ephesians 5:11; Ephesians 5:13).
Seeing that light (spiritual) dispels the pre-existing darkness, He
(God) saith . . . (compare the same phrase, Ephesians 5:13).
Awake—The reading of
all the oldest manuscripts is "Up!" or, "Rouse thee!"
a phrase used in stirring men to activity. The words are a paraphrase
of Isaiah 60:1; Isaiah 60:2,
not an exact quotation. The word "Christ," shows that in
quoting the prophecy, he views it in the light thrown on it by its
Gospel fulfilment. As Israel is called on to "awake"
from its previous state of "darkness" and "death"
(Isaiah 59:10; Isaiah 60:2),
for that her Light is come; so the Church, and each individual is
similarly called to awake. Believers are called on to "awake"
out of sleep; unbelievers, to "arise" from the dead
(compare Matthew 25:5; Romans 13:11;
1 Thessalonians 5:6; Ephesians 2:1).
Christ—"the true
light," "the Sun of righteousness."
give thee light—rather,
as Greek, "shall shine upon thee" (so enabling thee
by being "made manifest" to become, and be, by the very
fact, "light," Ephesians 5:13;
then being so "enlightened," Ephesians 5:13, thou shalt be able, by "reproving," to enlighten
others).
See then that ye walk circumspectly, not as fools, but as wise,
15. that—rather as Greek,
"See how ye walk," &c. The double idea is
compressed into one sentence: "See (take heed) how ye
walk," and "See that ye walk circumspectly."
The manner, as well as the act itself, is included. See
how ye are walking, with a view to your being
circumspect (literally, accurate, exact) in your walk. Compare
Colossians 4:5, "Walk in wisdom
(answering to 'as wise' here) toward them that are without"
(answering to "circumspectly," that is, correctly, in
relation to the unbelievers around, not giving occasion of
stumbling to any, but edifying all by a consistent walk).
not as fools—Greek,
"not as unwise, but as wise."
Redeeming the time, because the days are evil.
16. Redeeming the time— (). Greek, "Buying up for yourselves the seasonable
time" (whenever it occurs) of good to yourselves and to others.
Buying off from the vanities of "them that are without"
(Colossians 4:5), and of the "unwise"
(here in Ephesians), the opportune time afforded to you for the work
of God. In a narrower sense, special favorable seasons for good,
occasionally presenting themselves, are referred to, of which
believers ought diligently to avail themselves. This constitutes true
"wisdom" (Ephesians 5:15).
In a larger sense, the whole season from the time that one is
spiritually awakened, is to be "redeemed" from vanity
for God (compare 2 Corinthians 6:2;
1 Peter 4:2-4). "Redeem"
implies the preciousness of the opportune season, a jewel to be
bought at any price. WAHL
explains, "Redeeming for yourselves (that is, availing
yourselves of) the opportunity (offered you of acting aright), and
commanding the time as a master does his servant." TITTMANN,
"Watch the time, and make it your own so as to control it; as
merchants look out for opportunities, and accurately choose out the
best goods; serve not the time, but command it, and it shall do what
you approve." So PINDAR
[Pythia, 4.509], "The time followed him as his servant,
and was not as a runaway slave."
because the days are evil—The
days of life in general are so exposed to evil, as to make it
necessary to make the most of the seasonable opportunity so long as
it lasts (Ephesians 6:13; Genesis 47:9;
Psalms 49:5; Ecclesiastes 11:2;
Ecclesiastes 12:1; John 12:35).
Besides, there are many special evil days (in persecution,
sickness, c.) when the Christian is laid by in silence therefore he
needs the more to improve the seasonable times afforded to him (John 12:35), which Paul perhaps alludes to.
Wherefore be ye not unwise, but understanding what the will of the Lord is.
17. Wherefore—seeing that ye
need to walk so circumspectly, choosing and using the right
opportunity of good.
unwise—a different
Greek word from that in . Translate, "foolish," or "senseless."
understanding—not
merely knowing as a matter of fact (), but knowing with understanding.
the will of the Lord—as
to how each opportunity is to be used. The Lord's will, ultimately,
is our "sanctification" (); and that "in every thing," meantime, we should
"give thanks" (1 Thessalonians 5:18;
compare above, Ephesians 5:10).
And be not drunk with wine, wherein is excess; but be filled with the Spirit;
18. excess—worthless,
ruinous, reckless prodigality.
wherein—not in the wine
itself when used aright (1 Timothy 5:23),
but in the "excess" as to it.
but be filled with the
Spirit—The effect in inspiration was that the person was
"filled" with an ecstatic exhilaration, like that caused by
wine; hence the two are here connected (compare 1 Timothy 5:23). Hence arose the abstinence from wine of many of the
prophets, for example, John the Baptist, namely, in order to keep
distinct before the world the ecstasy caused by the Spirit, from that
caused by wine. So also in ordinary Christians the Spirit dwells not
in the mind that seeks the disturbing influences of excitement, but
in the well-balanced prayerful mind. Such a one expresses his joy,
not in drunken or worldly songs, but in Christian hymns of
thankfulness.
Speaking to yourselves in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, singing and making melody in your heart to the Lord;
19. ().
to yourselves—"to
one another." Hence soon arose the antiphonal or responsive
chanting of which PLINY
writes to Trajan: "They are wont on a fixed day to meet before
daylight [to avoid persecution] and to recite a hymn among
themselves by turns, to Christ, as if being God." The Spirit
gives true eloquence; wine, a spurious eloquence.
psalms—generally
accompanied by an instrument.
hymns—in direct praise
to God (compare Acts 16:25;
1 Corinthians 14:26; James 5:13).
songs—the general term
for lyric pieces; "spiritual" is added to mark their being
here restricted to sacred subjects, though not merely to direct
praises of God, but also containing exhortations, prophecies, c.
Contrast the drunken "songs," James 5:13.
making melody—Greek,
"playing and singing with an instrument."
in your heart—not
merely with the tongue but the serious feeling of the heart
accompanying the singing of the lips (compare 1 Corinthians 14:15;
Psalms 47:7). The contrast is
between the heathen and the Christian practice, "Let your songs
be not the drinking songs of heathen feasts, but psalms and hymns;
and their accompaniment, not the music of the lyre, but the melody
of the heart" [CONYBEARE
and HOWSON].
to the Lord—See PLINY'S
letter quoted above: "To Christ as God."
Giving thanks always for all things unto God and the Father in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ;
20. thanks . . . for all things—even
for adversities; also for blessings, unknown as well as known
(Colossians 3:17; 1 Thessalonians 5:18).
unto God and the Father—the
Fountain of every blessing in Creation, Providence, Election, and
Redemption.
Lord Jesus Christ—by
whom all things, even distresses, become ours (Romans 8:35;
Romans 8:37; 1 Corinthians 3:20-23).
Submitting yourselves one to another in the fear of God.
21. (Philippians 2:3;
1 Peter 5:5.) Here he passes from our
relations to God, to those which concern our fellow men.
in the fear of God—All
the oldest manuscripts and authorities read, "in the fear of
CHRIST." The believer
passes from under the bondage of the law as a letter, to be "the
servant of Christ" (1 Peter 5:5), which, through the instinct of love to Him, is really to
be "the Lord's freeman"; for he is "under the law to
Christ" (1 Corinthians 9:21;
compare John 8:36). Christ, not
the Father (John 5:22), is to be
our judge. Thus reverential fear of displeasing Him is the motive for
discharging our relative duties as Christians (1 Corinthians 10:22;
2 Corinthians 5:11; 1 Peter 2:13).
Wives, submit yourselves unto your own husbands, as unto the Lord.
22. (.) The Church's relation to Christ in His everlasting purpose,
is the foundation and archetype of the three greatest of earthly
relations, that of husband and wife (), parent and child (), master and servant (). The oldest manuscripts omit "submit yourselves";
supplying it from Ephesians 5:21, "Ye
wives (submitting yourselves) unto your own husbands." "Your
own" is an argument for submissiveness on the part of the wives;
it is not a stranger, but your own husbands whom you are
called on to submit unto (compare Genesis 3:16;
1 Corinthians 7:2; 1 Corinthians 14:34;
Colossians 3:18; Titus 2:5;
1 Peter 3:1-7). Those subject
ought to submit themselves, of whatever kind their superiors are.
"Submit" is the term used of wives: "obey,"
of children (Ephesians 6:1), as
there is a greater equality between wives and husbands, than between
children and parents.
as unto the
Lord—Submissiveness is rendered by the wife to the husband
under the eye of Christ, and so is rendered to Christ Himself. The
husband stands to the wife in the relation that the Lord does to the
Church, and this is to be the ground of her submission: though that
submission is inferior in kind and degree to that which she owes
Christ (Ephesians 5:24).
For the husband is the head of the wife, even as Christ is the head of the church: and he is the saviour of the body.
23. (.)
even as—Greek,
"as also."
and he is—The oldest
manuscripts read, "Himself (being) Saviour," omitting
"and," and "is." In Christ's case, the Headship
is united with, nay gained by, His having SAVED the body in the
process of redemption; so that (Paul implies) I am not alleging
Christ's Headship as one entirely identical with that other, for He
has a claim to it, and office in it, peculiar to Himself [ALFORD].
The husband is not saviour of the wife, in which particular Christ
excels; hence, "But" () follows [BENGEL].
Therefore as the church is subject unto Christ, so let the wives be to their own husbands in every thing.
24. Therefore—Translate, as
Greek, "But," or "Nevertheless," that is,
though there be the difference of headships mentioned in , nevertheless, thus far they are one, namely, in the
subjection or submission (the same Greek stands for "is
subject," as for "submit," Ephesians 5:21;
Ephesians 5:22) of the Church to
Christ, being the prototype of that of the wife to the husband.
their own—not in most
of the oldest manuscripts, and not needed by the argument.
in every thing—appertaining
to a husband's legitimate authority; "in the Lord" (Ephesians 5:22); everything not contrary to God.
Husbands, love your wives, even as Christ also loved the church, and gave himself for it;
25. "Thou hast seen the
measure of obedience; now hear also the measure of love. Do you wish
your wife to obey you, as the Church is to obey Christ? Then have a
solicitude for her as Christ had for the Church (, "Himself the Saviour of the body"); and "if
it be necessary to give thy life for her, or to be cut in ten
thousand pieces, or to endure any other suffering whatever, do not
refuse it; and if you suffer thus, not even so do you do what Christ
has done; for you indeed do so being already united to her, but He
did so for one that treated Him with aversion and hatred. As,
therefore, He brought to His feet one that so treated Him, and that
even wantonly spurned Him, by much tenderness of regard, not by
threats, insults, and terror: so also do you act towards your wife,
and though you see her disdainful and wantonly wayward, you will be
able to bring her to your feet by much thoughtfulness for her, by
love, by kindness. For no bound is more sovereign in binding than
such bonds, especially in the case of husband and wife. For one may
constrain a servant by fear, though not even he is so to be bound to
you; for he may readily run away. But the companion of your life, the
mother of your children, the basis of all your joy, you ought to bind
to you, not by fear and threats, but by love and attachment"
[CHRYSOSTOM].
gave himself—Greek,
"gave Himself up."
for it—Translate, "for
her." The relation of the Church to Christ is the ground
of Christianity's having raised woman to her due place in the social
scale, from which she was, and is, excluded in heathen lands.
That he might sanctify and cleanse it with the washing of water by the word,
26. sanctify—that is,
consecrate her to God. Compare , meaning, "I devote Myself as a holy
sacrifice, that My disciples also may be devoted or consecrated as
holy in (through) the truth" [NEANDER]
(Hebrews 2:11; Hebrews 10:10;
Hebrews 13:12 see on Hebrews 13:12).
and cleanse—rather, as
Greek, "cleansing," without the "and."
with the washing of
water—rather as Greek, "with," or "by the
laver of the water," namely, the baptismal
water. So it ought to be translated in Hebrews 13:12, the only other passage in the New Testament where it occurs.
As the bride passed through a purifying bath before marriage, so the
Church (compare Revelation 21:2). He
speaks of baptism according to its high ideal and design,
as if the inward grace accompanied the outward rite; hence he asserts
of outward baptism whatever is involved in a believing appropriation
of the divine truths it symbolizes, and says that Christ, by baptism,
has purified the Church [NEANDER]
(1 Peter 3:21).
by the word—Greek,
"IN the word."
To be joined with "cleansing it," or "her." The
"word of faith" (Romans 10:8;
Romans 10:9; Romans 10:17),
of which confession is made in baptism, and which carries the real
cleansing (John 15:3; John 17:17)
and regenerating power (1 Peter 1:23;
1 Peter 3:21) [ALFORD].
So AUGUSTINE [Tract 80,
in John], "Take away the word, and what is the water save water?
Add the word to the element, and it becomes a sacrament, being itself
as it were the visible word." The regenerating efficacy of
baptism is conveyed in, and by, the divine word alone.
That he might present it to himself a glorious church, not having spot, or wrinkle, or any such thing; but that it should be holy and without blemish.
27. he—The oldest manuscripts
and authorities read, "That He might Himself present unto
Himself the Church glorious," namely, as a bride (). Holiness and glory are inseparable.
"Cleansing" is the necessary preliminary to both. Holiness
is glory internal; glory is holiness shining
forth outwardly. The laver of baptism is the vehicle, but the
word is the nobler and true instrument of the cleansing
[BENGEL]. It is Christ
that prepares the Church with the necessary ornaments of grace, for
presentation to Himself, as the Bridegroom at His coming again
(Matthew 25:1; Revelation 19:7;
Revelation 21:2).
not having spot— (Revelation 21:2). The visible Church now contains clean and unclean together,
like Noah's ark; like the wedding room which contained some that had,
and others that had not, the wedding garment (Revelation 21:2; compare 2 Timothy 2:20);
or as the good and bad fish are taken in the same net because it
cannot discern the bad from the good, the fishermen being unable to
know what kind of fish the nets have taken under the waves. Still the
Church is termed "holy" in the creed, in reference to her
ideal and ultimate destination. When the Bridegroom comes, the bride
shall be presented to Him wholly without spot, the evil being cut off
from the body for ever (2 Timothy 2:20). Not that there are two churches, one with bad and good
intermingled, another in which there are good alone; but one and the
same Church in relation to different times, now with good and evil
together, hereafter with good alone [PEARSON].
So ought men to love their wives as their own bodies. He that loveth his wife loveth himself.
28. Translate, "So ought
husbands also (thus the oldest manuscripts read) to love their
own (compare Note, see on ) wives as their own bodies."
He that loveth his wife
loveth himself—So there is the same love and the same union of
body between Christ and the Church (Ephesians 5:30;
Ephesians 5:32).
For no man ever yet hated his own flesh; but nourisheth and cherisheth it, even as the Lord the church:
29. For—Supply, and we all
love ourselves: "For no man," c.
his own flesh— (, end).
nourisheth—Greek,
"nourisheth it up," namely, to maturity. "Nourisheth,"
refers to food and internal sustenance "cherisheth," to
clothing and external fostering.
even as—Translate,
"even as also."
the Lord—The oldest
manuscripts read, "Christ." prescribes three duties to the husband. The two former
(food and raiment) are here alluded to in a spiritual sense, by
"nourisheth and cherisheth"; the third "duty of
marriage" is not added in consonance with the holy propriety of
Scripture language: its antitype is, "know the Lord"
(Hosea 2:19; Hosea 2:20)
[BENGEL].
For we are members of his body, of his flesh, and of his bones.
30. For—Greek,
"Because" (1 Corinthians 6:15).
Christ nourisheth and cherisheth the Church as being of one flesh
with Him. Translate, "Because we are members of His body (His
literal body), being OF
His flesh and of His bones" [ALFORD]
(Genesis 2:23; Genesis 2:24).
The Greek expresses, "Being formed out of" or
"of the substance of His flesh." Adam's deep sleep, wherein
Eve was formed from out of his opened side, is an emblem of Christ's
death, which was the birth of the Spouse, the Church. John 12:24;
John 19:34; John 19:35,
to which Ephesians 5:25-27
allude, as implying atonement by His blood, and sanctification
by the "water," answering to that which flowed from His
side (compare also John 7:38;
John 7:39; 1 Corinthians 6:11).
As Adam gave Eve a new name, Hebrew, "Isha,"
"woman," formed from his own rib, Ish, "man,"
signifying her formation from him, so Christ, Revelation 2:17;
Revelation 3:12. Genesis 2:21;
Genesis 2:23; Genesis 2:24
puts the bones first because the reference there is to the
natural structure. But Paul is referring to the flesh of
Christ. It is not our bones and flesh, but "we"
that are spiritually propagated (in our soul and spirit now,
and in the body hereafter, regenerated) from the manhood of Christ
which has flesh and bones. We are members of His glorified body (Genesis 2:24). The two oldest existing manuscripts, and Coptic or
Memphitic version, omit "of His flesh and of His bones";
the words may have crept into the text through the Margin from
Genesis 2:23, Septuagint.
However, IRENÆUS, 294,
and the old Latin and Vulgate versions, with some good
old manuscripts, have them.
For this cause shall a man leave his father and mother, and shall be joined unto his wife, and they two shall be one flesh.
31. For—The propagation of the
Church from Christ, as that of Eve from Adam, is the foundation of
the spiritual marriage. The natural marriage, wherein "a man
leaves father and mother (the oldest manuscripts omit 'his') and is
joined unto his wife," is not the principal thing meant here,
but the spiritual marriage represented by it, and on which it
rests, whereby Christ left the Father's bosom to woo to Himself the
Church out of a lost world: proves this: His earthly mother as such, also, He
holds in secondary account as compared with His spiritual Bride
(Luke 2:48; Luke 2:49;
Luke 8:19-21; Luke 11:27;
Luke 11:28). He shall again leave
His Father's abode to consummate the union (Matthew 25:1-10;
Revelation 19:7).
they two shall be one
flesh—So the Samaritan Pentateuch, the Septuagint, c.,
read (Genesis 2:24), instead of "they
shall be one flesh." So Genesis 2:24. In natural marriage, husband and wife combine the elements
of one perfect human being: the one being incomplete without the
other. So Christ, as God-man, is pleased to make the Church, the
body, a necessary adjunct to Himself, the Head. He is the archetype
of the Church, from whom and according to whom, as the pattern, she
is formed. He is her Head, as the husband is of the wife (Romans 6:5
1 Corinthians 11:3; 1 Corinthians 15:45).
Christ will never allow any power to sever Himself and His bride,
indissolubly joined (Matthew 19:6;
John 10:28; John 10:29;
John 13:1).
This is a great mystery: but I speak concerning Christ and the church.
32. Rather, "This mystery
is a great one." This profound truth, beyond man's power of
discovering, but now revealed, namely, of the spiritual
union of Christ and the Church, represented by the marriage union, is
a great one, of deep import. See on . So "mystery" is used of a divine truth not to be
discovered save by revelation of God (Romans 11:25;
1 Corinthians 15:51). The Vulgate
wrongly translates, "This is a great sacrament,"
which is made the plea by the Romish Church (in spite of the blunder
having been long ago exposed by their own commentators, CAJETAN
and ESTIUS) for making
marriage a sacrament; it is plain not marriage in general, but
that of Christ and the Church, is what is pronounced to be a "great
mystery," as the words following prove, "I
[emphatic] say it in regard to Christ and to the Church" (so the
Greek is best translated). "I, while I quote these words
out of Scripture, use them in a higher sense" [CONYBEARE
and HOWSON].
Nevertheless let every one of you in particular so love his wife even as himself; and the wife see that she reverence her husband.
33. Nevertheless—not to pursue
further the mystical meaning of marriage. Translate, as Greek,
"Do ye also (as Christ does) severally each one so love,"
&c. The words, "severally each one," refer to them in
their individual capacity, contrasted with the previous
collective view of the members of the Church as the bride of
Christ.