         
• Key
Chapter 5
Christians should imitate their heavenly Father, and
walk in love, after the example of Christ, 1,2.
They should avoid all uncleanness, impurity, covetousness,
and foolish jesting, and idolatry, because these things
exclude from the kingdom of God, 3-7. The
Ephesians were once in darkness, but being now light in
the Lord, they are exhorted to walk in that light, and
bring forth the fruits of the Spirit; and to have no
fellowship with the workers of iniquity, whose evil
deeds are manifested by the light, 8-13. All are
exhorted to awake; to walk circumspectly; to redeem the
time; and to learn what the will of the Lord is, 14-17.
The apostle gives particular directions relative to
avoiding excess of wine, 18. To singing and
giving thanks, 19,20. Submission to each other, 21.
To husbands that they should love their wives, as Christ
loved the Church; for by the marriage union, the union
between Christ and the Church is pointed out; and wives
are exhorted to reverence their husbands, 22-33.
Notes on Chapter 5
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Verse 1. Be ye therefore followers
of God The beginning of this chapter is
properly a continuation of the preceding, which should have
ended with the second verse of this. The word μιμηται, which
we translate followers, signifies such as personate
others, assuming their gait, mode of speech, accent,
carriage, and it is from this Greek word that we have the word
mimic. Though this term is often used in a ludicrous
sense, yet here it is to be understood in a very solemn and
proper sense. Let your whole conduct be like that of your
Lord; imitate him in all your actions, words, spirit,
and inclinations; imitate him as children do their beloved
parents, and remember that you stand in the relation of
beloved children to him. It is natural for children to
imitate their parents; it is their constant aim to learn of
them, and to copy them in all things; whatever they see the
parent do, whatever they hear him speak, that they endeavour
to copy and imitate; yea, they go farther, they insensibly
copy the very tempers of their parents. If ye therefore
be children of God, show this love to your heavenly Father,
and imitate all his moral perfections, and acquire the mind
that was in Jesus.
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Verse 2. And walk in
love Let every act of life be dictated by
love to God and man.
As Christ-hath loved
us Laying down your lives for your brethren
if necessary; counting nothing too difficult to be done in
order to promote their eternal salvation.
Hath given himself for
us Christ hath died in our stead, and
become thereby a sacrifice for our sins.
An offering
προσφορα. An oblation, an eucharistic offering; the same
as minchah, Leviticus
2:1, an offering made unto the Lord, of fine flour,
with oil and frankincense. It means, any offering
by which gratitude was expressed for temporal blessings
received from the bounty of God.
A sacrifice
θυσια. A sin-offering, a victim for sin; the
same as zebach, which almost universally means that
sacrificial act in which the blood of an animal was
poured out as an atonement for sin. These terms may be justly
considered as including every kind of sacrifice,
offering, and oblation made to God on any account;
and both these terms are with propriety used here, because the
apostle's design was to represent the sufficiency of
the offering made by Christ for the sin of the world. And the
passage strongly intimates, that as man is bound to be
grateful to God for the good things of this
life, so he should testify that gratitude by suitable
offerings; but having sinned against God, he has
forfeited all earthly blessings as well as those that
come from heaven; and that Jesus Christ gave himself
υπερημων, in our stead and on our account, as
the gratitude-offering, προσφορα, which we owed
to our MAKER, and, without which a continuance of temporal
blessings could not be expected; and also as a
sacrifice for sin, θυσια, without which we could never
approach God, and without which we must be punished with an
everlasting destruction from the presence of God and the glory
of his power. Thus we find that even our temporal
blessings come from and by Jesus Christ, as well
as all our spiritual and eternal mercies.
For a sweet-smelling
savour. ειςοσμηνευωδιας. The same as is
expressed in Genesis
8:21; ; Leviticus
1:9;; 3:16:
reiach nichoach laihovah, "a sweet savour unto the
Lord;" i.e. an offering of his own prescription, and one with
which he was well pleased; and by accepting of which he showed
that he accepted the person who offered it. The
sweet-smelling savour refers to the burnt-offerings,
the fumes of which ascended from the fire in the act of
burning; and as such odors are grateful to man, God
represents himself as pleased with them, when offered by an
upright worshipper according to his own appointment.
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Verse 3. But
fornication It is probable that the
three terms used here by the apostle refer to different
species of the same thing. The word fornication,
πορνεια, may imply not only fornication but
adultery also, as it frequently does;
uncleanness, ακαθαρσια may refer to all abominable and
unnatural lusts-sodomy, bestiality, covetousness,
πλεονεξια, to excessive indulgence in that
which, moderately used, is lawful. As the covetous man never
has enough of wealth, so the pleasure-taker and the libertine
never have enough of the gratifications of sense, the appetite
increasing in proportion to its indulgence. If, however,
simple covetousness, i.e. the love of gain, be
here intended, it shows from the connection in which it
stands, (for it is linked with fornication, adultery,
and all uncleanness,) how degrading it is to the soul
of man, and how abominable it is in the eye of God. In other
places it is ranked with idolatry, for the man who has
an inordinate love of gain makes money his god.
Let it not be once
named Let no such things ever exist among
you, for ye are called to be saints.
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Verse 4. Neither
filthiness αισχροτης. Any thing base or
vile in words or acts.
Foolish talking
μωρολογια. Scurrility, buffoonery, ridicule, or what tends
to expose another to contempt.
Nor jesting
ευτραπελια. Artfully turned discourses or words, from ευ,
well or easily, and τρεπω, I turn; words
that can be easily turned to other meanings; double
entendres; chaste words which, from their connection,
and the manner in which they are used, convey an obscene or
offensive meaning. It also means jests, puns, witty
sayings, and mountebank repartees of all kinds.
Which are not
convenient ουκανηκοντα. They do not come
up to the proper standard; they are utterly improper in
themselves, and highly unbecoming in those who profess
Christianity.
But rather giving of
thanks. ευχαριστια. Decent and
edifying discourse or thanksgiving to God.
Prayer or praise is the most suitable language
for man; and he who is of a trifling, light disposition, is
ill fitted for either. How can a man, who has been talking
foolishly or jestingly in company, go in private to magnify
God for the use of his tongue which he has abused, or his
rational faculties which he has degraded?
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Verse 5. For this ye
know Ye must be convinced of the dangerous
and ruinous tendency of such a spirit and conduct, when ye
know that persons of this character can never inherit the
kingdom of God. See Clarke on Ephesians
5:3.; and see the observations on the Greek article
at the end of this epistle. See Clarke on Ephesians
6:24.
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Verse 6. Let no man deceive
you Suffer no man to persuade you that any
of these things are innocent, or that they are unavoidable
frailties of human nature; they are all sins and
abominations in the sight of God; those who practise
them are children of disobedience; and on account of
such practices the wrath of God-Divine punishment, must
come upon them.
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Verse 7. Be not ye therefore
partakers with them Do not act as your
fellow citizens do; nor suffer their philosophy, to it in
vain words, κενοιςλογοις, with empty and
illusive doctrines, to lead you astray from the path of
truth.
That there was much need for such directions and cautions
to the people of Ephesus has been often remarked. It appears,
from Athenaeus, that these people were addicted to luxury,
effeminacy Aspasia, who was herself of the
Socratic sect, brought a vast number of beautiful women
into Greece, and by their means filled the country with
prostitutes, καιεπληθυνεναποτωνταυτηςεταιριδωνηελλας, lib.
xiii. cap. 25. Ibid. cap. 31, he observes that the Ephesians
had dedicated temples εταιρααφροδιτη, to the prostitute Venus;
and again, cap. 32, he quotes from Demosthenes, in Orat.
contra Neaeram: τασμεν
εταιραςηδονηςενεκαεχομενταςδεπαλλακαςτηςκαθημεραν
παλλακειαςταςδεγυναικαςτουπαιδοποιεισθαιγνησιεςκαιτων
ενδονφυλακαφιστηνεχειν. "We have whores for our
pleasure, harlots for daily use, and wives for
the procreation of legitimate children, and for the faithful
preservation of our property." Through the whole of this 13th
book of Athenaeus the reader will see the most melancholy
proofs of the most abominable practices among the
Greeks, and the high estimation in which public
prostitutes were held; the greatest lawgivers and the
wisest philosophers among the Greeks supported this
system both by their authority and example. Is it not in
reference to their teaching and laws that the
apostle says: Let no man deceive you with vain
words?
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Verse 8. For ye were sometimes
(ποτε, formerly) darkness While
ye lived in darkness, ye lived in these crimes.
But now are ye light in the
Lord When ye were in heathenish
darkness ye served divers lusts and pleasures, but now
ye have the light-the wisdom and teaching which come
from God; therefore walk as children of the
light-let the world see that ye are not slaves to the
flesh, but free, willing, rational servants of the Most High;
not brutish followers of devil gods.
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Verse 9. For the fruit of the
Spirit Instead of Spirit, πνευματος,
ABD*EFG, the Syriac, Coptic, Sahidic, AEthiopic,
Armenian, Vulgate, and Itala, together with
several of the fathers, read φωτος, light, which
is supposed by most critics to be the true reading,
because there is no mention made of the Spirit in any
part of the context. As light, Ephesians
5:8, not only means the Divine influence upon the soul,
but also the Gospel, with great propriety it may be
said: The fruit of the light, i.e. of the Gospel, is
in all goodness, and righteousness, and truth.
Goodness, αγαθωσυνη, in the principle and
disposition; righteousness, δικαιοσυνη, the
exercise of that goodness in the whole
conduct of life; truth, αληθεια, the
director of that principle, and its
exercise, to the glorification of God and the good of
mankind.
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Verse 10. Proving what is
acceptable By walking in the light-under
the influence of the Divine Spirit, according to the dictates
of the Gospel, ye shall be able to try, and bring to
full proof, that by which God is best pleased.
Ye shall be able to please him well in all things.
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Verse 11. Have no
fellowship Have no religious connection
whatever with heathens or their worship.
Unfruitful works of
darkness Probably alluding to the
mysteries among the heathens, and the different
lustrations and rites through which the initiated went
in the caves and dark recesses where these mysteries were
celebrated; all which he denominates works of darkness,
because they were destitute of true wisdom; and
unfruitful works, because they were of no use to
mankind; the initiated being obliged, on pain of death, to
keep secret what they had seen, heard, and done:
hence they were called απορρηταμυστηρια, unspeakable
mysteries-things that were not to be
divulged. That the apostle may refer to magic and
incantations is also probable, for to these the Ephesians were
greatly addicted. See the proofs in Clarke's notes on "Ac
19:19".
Rather reprove
them. Bear a testimony against them;
convince them that they are wrong; confute them
in their vain reasons; reprove them for their vices,
which are flagrant, while pretending to superior illumination.
All these meanings has the Greek word ελεγχω, which we
generally render to convince or reprove.
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Verse 12. For it is a shame even to
speak This no doubt refers to the
Eleusinian and Bacchanalian mysteries, which
were performed in the night and darkness, and were known to be
so impure and abominable, especially the latter, that
the Roman senate banished them both from Rome and Italy. How
the discovery of these depths of Satan was made, and the whole
proceedings in that case, may be seen in Livy, Hist. lib.
xxxix. cap. 8-19, where the reader will see the force of what
the apostle says here: It is a shame even to speak
of those things which are done of them in secret;
the abominations being of the most stupendous kind, and of the
deepest dye.
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Verse 13. But all things that are
reproved Dr. Macknight paraphrases this
verse as follows: "Now all these reprovable
actions, ελεγχομενα, which are practised in celebrating
these mysteries, are made manifest as sinful by the
Gospel; and, seeing every thing which discovers the
true nature of actions is light, the Gospel, which
discovers the evil nature of the actions performed in these
mysteries, is light."
The apostle speaks against these mysteries as he speaks
against fornication, uncleanness, and covetousness; but by no
means either borrows expression or similitude from them to
illustrate Divine truths; for, as it would be a shame
even to speak of those things, surely it would be an
abomination to allude to them in the illustration of
the doctrines of the Gospel.
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Verse 14. Wherefore he
saith It is a matter of doubt and
controversy whence this saying is derived. Some think it taken
from Isaiah
26:19: Thy dead men shall live; with my dead body shall
they arise; Awake and sing, ye that dwell in the
dust, taken from Isaiah
60:1-3: Arise, shine; for thy light is come,
neither give the words nor the meaning of the apostle.
Epiphanius supposed them to be taken from an ancient
prophecy of Elijah, long since lost: Syncellus
and Euthalius think they were taken from an apocryphal
work attributed to Jeremiah the prophet: others, that
they made part of a hymn then used in the Christian
Church; for that there were, in the apostle's time, hymns and
spiritual songs, as well as psalms, we learn from himself, in
Ephesians
5:19, and from Colossians
3:16. The hymn is supposed to have begun thus:-
εγειραιοκαθευδων καιανασταεκτωννεκρων επιφαυσεισοιοχριστος
Awake, O thou who sleepest, And from the dead arise thou,
And Christ shall shine upon thee.
See Rosenmuller, Wolf, and others. But it seems more
natural to understand the words he saith as referring
to the light, i.e. the Gospel, mentioned Ephesians
5:13. And the διολεγει should be translated,
Wherefore IT saith, Awake thou, the general, the
strong, commanding voice of the Gospel in every part-Receive
instruction; leave thy sins, which are leading thee to
perdition; believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, and he will
enlighten and save thee.
As a man asleep neither knows nor does any thing
that can be called good or useful, so the Gentiles and all
others, while without the knowledge of Christianity, had not
only no proper knowledge of vice and virtue, but they had no
correct notion of the true God.
As the dead can perform no function of life, so the
Gentiles and the unconverted were incapable of performing any
thing worthy either of life or being. But though
they were asleep-in a state of complete spiritual torpor, yet
they might be awoke by the voice of the Gospel; and though
dead to all goodness, and to every function of the
spiritual life, yet, as their animal life was whole in
them, and perception and reason were still left,
they were capable of hearing the Gospel, and under that
influence which always accompanies it when faithfully
preached, they could discern its excellency, and find it to be
the power of God to their salvation. And they are addressed by
the apostle as possessing this capacity; and, on their using
it properly, have the promise that Christ shall enlighten
them.
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Verse 15. Walk
circumspectly Our word circumspect,
from the Latin circirmspicio, signifies to look round
about on all hands; to be every way watchful, wary, and
cautious, in order to avoid danger, discern enemies before
they come too nigh, and secure a man's interest by every
possible and lawful means. But the original word ακριβως
signifies correctly, accurately, consistently,
or perfectly. Be ye, who have received the truth,
careful of your conduct; walk by the rule which God has given
you; do this as well in little as in great matters; exemplify
your principles, which are holy and good, by a corresponding
conduct; do not only profess, but live the Gospel. As
you embrace all its promises, be careful also to
embrace all its precepts; and behave yourselves so,
that your enemies may never be able to say that ye are
holy in your doctrines and profession,
but irregular in your lives.
Not as fools, but as
wise μηωςασοφοιαλλωςσοφοι. The heathens
affected to be called σοφοι, or wise men. Pythagoras
was perhaps the first who corrected this vanity, by assuming
the title of φιλοσοφος, a lover of wisdom; hence our
term philosopher, used now in a much prouder
sense than that in which the great Pythagoras wished it to be
applied. The apostle here takes the term σοφος, and applies it
to the Christian; and, instead of it, gives the empty
Gentile philosopher the title of ασοφος, without
wisdom, fool.
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Verse 16. Redeeming the
time εξαγοραζομενοιτονκαιρον. Buying up
those moments which others seem to throw away; steadily
improving every present moment, that ye may, in some measure,
regain the time ye have lost. Let time be
your chief commodity; deal in that alone; buy it all up, and
use every portion of it yourselves. Time is that on
which eternity depends; in time ye are to get a
preparation for the kingdom of God; if you get not this
in time, your ruin is inevitable; therefore, buy up the
time.
Some think there is an allusion here to the case of
debtors, who, by giving some valuable consideration to
their creditors, obtain farther time for paying their debts.
And this appears to be the sense in which it is used by the
Septuagint, Daniel
2:8: επ αληθειαςοιδαεγωοτικαιρονυμειςεξαγοραζετε. I
know certainly that ye would gain or buy
time-ye wish to have the time prolonged, that ye
may seek out for some plausible explanation of the dream.
Perhaps the apostle means in general, embrace every
opportunity to glorify God, save your own souls, and do
good to men.
Because the days are
evil. The present times are dangerous, they
are full of trouble and temptations, and only the watchful and
diligent have any reason to expect that they shall keep their
garments unspotted.
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Verse 17. Wherefore be ye not
unwise μηγινεσθεαφρονες. Do not
become madmen. Here is a most evident allusion to the
orgies of Bacchus, in which his votaries acted
like madmen; running about, tossing their heads from shoulder
to shoulder, appearing to be in every sense completely
frantic. See the whole of the passage in Livy, to which
I have referred on Ephesians
5:12.
But understanding what the will of
the Lord is. It is the will of God that ye
should be sober, chaste, holy, and pure. Get a
thorough understanding of this; acquaint yourselves with God's
will, that ye may know how to glorify him.
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Verse 18. Be not drunk with wine,
wherein is excess This is a farther
allusion to the Bacchanalian mysteries; in them his
votaries got drunk, and ran into all manner of excesses.
Plato, though he forbade drunkenness in general,
yet allowed that the people should get drunk in the
solemnities of that god who invented wine. And indeed this was
their common custom; when they had offered their sacrifices
they indulged themselves in drunkenness, and ran into
all kinds of extravagance. Hence it is probable that μεθυω,
to get drunk, is derived from μετα, after, and
θυω, to sacrifice; for, having completed their
sacrifices, they indulged themselves in wine.
The word ασωτια, which we translate excess, means
profligacy and debauchery of every kind; such as are the
general concomitants of drunkenness, and especially among the
votaries of Bacchus in Greece and Italy.
But be filled with the
Spirit The heathen priests pretended to be
filled with the influence of the god they worshipped; and it
was in these circumstances that they gave out their oracles.
See a remarkable instance of this quoted in the note on "Lu
9:39", where the case of a Bacchanalian is
described. The apostle exhorts the Ephesians not to resemble
these, but, instead of being filled with wine, to be filled
with the Spirit of God; in consequence of which, instead of
those discoveries of the Divine will to which in their
drunken worship the votaries of Bacchus pretended, they should
be wise indeed, and should understand what the will of the
Lord is.
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Verse 19. Speaking to yourselves in
psalms We can scarcely say what is the
exact difference between these three expressions.
Psalms, ψαλμοι, may probably mean those of David.
Hymns υμνοις.
Extemporaneous effusions in praise of God, uttered under the
influence of the Divine Spirit, or a sense of his especial
goodness. See Acts
16:25.
Songs ωιδαις.
Odes; premeditated and regular poetic compositions;
but, in whatever form they were composed, we learn that they
were all πνευματικα, spiritual-tending to magnify God
and edify men.
Singing and making melody in your
heart The heart always going with
the lips. It is a shocking profanation of Divine
worship to draw nigh to God with the lips, while the
heart is far from him. It is too often the case that,
in public worship, men are carried off from the sense
of the words by the sounds that are put to them. And
how few choirs of singers are there in the universe whose
hearts ever accompany them in what they call
singing the praises of God!
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Verse 20. Giving thanks
always God is continually loading you with
his benefits; you deserve nothing of his kindness;
therefore give him thanks for his unmerited bounties.
God and the Father
That is: God, who is your Father, and the Father of
mercies. See the observations on the Greek article at
the end of this epistle. "Eph 6:24" In the name of our Lord
Jesus He is the only mediator; and
through him alone can ye approach to God; and it is for his
sake only that God will hear your prayers or receive
your praises.
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Verse 21. Submitting-one to
another Let no man be so tenacious of his
own will or his opinion in matters indifferent, as to disturb
the peace of the Church; in all such matters give
way to each other, and let love rule.
In the fear of God.
Setting him always before your eyes, and considering that
he has commanded you to love one another, and to
bear each other's burdens; and that what you do in this
or any other commanded case, you do as unto the Lord. Instead
of ενφοβω θεου, in the fear of GOD, ενφοβωχριστου,
in the fear of CHRIST, is the reading of ABDEFG, with
all others of most value; besides the Syriac, Coptic,
Sahidic, AEthiopic, Armenian, Vulgate, and Itala;
Basil the Great, and Chrysostom. Neither reading
makes any difference in the sense.
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Verse 22. Wives, submit yourselves
unto your own husbands As the Lord,
viz. Christ, is the head or governor of the
Church, and the head of the man, so is the man the
head or governor of the woman. This is
God's ordinance, and should not be transgressed. The husband
should not be a tyrant, and the wife should not be the
governor. Old Francis Quarles, in his homely
rhymes, alluding to the superstitious notion, that the
crowing of a hen bodes ill luck to the family,
has said:-
"Ill thrives the hapless family that shows A cock
that's silent, and a hen that crows: I
know not which live most unnatural lives,
Obeying husbands or commanding wives."
As unto the Lord.
The word Church seems to be necessarily understood
here; that is: Act under the authority of your husbands, as
the Church acts under the authority of Christ. As the
Church submits to the Lord, so let wives submit to
their husbands.
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Verse 23. For the husband is the
head of the wife This is the reason which
the apostle gives for his injunctions. See above.
He is the Saviour of the
body. As Christ exercises authority over
the Church so as to save and protect it, so let
the husband exercise authority over his wife by protecting,
comforting, and providing her with every
necessary and comfort of life, according to his
power.
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Verse 24. In every
thing. That is, every lawful thing;
for it is not intimated that they should obey their husbands
in any thing criminal, or in any thing detrimental to
the interests of their souls. The husband may be
profligate, and may wish his wife to become such also; he may
be an enemy to true religion, and use his authority to prevent
his wife from those means of grace which she finds salutary to
her soul; in none of these things should she
obey him.
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Verse 25. Husbands, love your
wives Here is a grand rule, according to
which every husband is called to act: Love your wife
as Christ loved the Church. But how did Christ
love the Church? He gave himself for it-he laid down
his life for it. So then husbands should, if necessary, lay
down their lives for their wives: and there is more implied in
the words than mere protection and support; for, as Christ
gave himself for the Church to save it, so husbands
should, by all means in their power, labour to promote the
salvation of their wives, and their constant edification in
righteousness. Thus we find that the authority of the man over
the woman is founded on his love to her, and this love
must be such as to lead him to risk his life for her. As the
care of the family devolves on the wife, and the children must
owe the chief direction of their minds and formation of their
manners to the mother, she has need of all the assistance and
support which her husband can give her; and, if she performs
her duty well, she deserves the utmost of his love and
affection.
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Verse 26. That he might sanctify and
cleanse it The Church is represented as the
spouse of Christ, as the woman is the spouse of
the man; and, to prepare this Church for himself, he
washes, cleanses, and sanctifies it.
There is certainly an allusion here to the ancient method of
purifying women, who were appointed to be consorts to
kings; twelve months, it appears, were in some
instances spent in this purification: Six months with oil
of myrrh, and six months with sweet odours and with
other things, for the purifying of women. See the
case of Esther, Esther
2:12; see also Psalms
45:13,14; ; Ezekiel
16:7-14.
With the washing of
water Baptism, accompanied by the purifying
influences of the Holy Spirit.
By the word The
doctrine of Christ crucified, through which baptism is
administered, sin cancelled, and the soul purified from all
unrighteousness; the death of Christ giving efficacy to
all.
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Verse 27. That he might present it
to himself It was usual to bring the royal
bride to the king in the most sumptuous apparel; and is
there not here an allusion to Psalms
45:13,14: The king's daughter (Pharaoh's) is all
glorious within, her clothing is of wrought gold; she
shall be brought unto the king (Solomon) in raiment of
needlework? This presentation here spoken of by the
apostle will take place on the last day. See Clarke on 2 Corinthians
11:2.
A glorious Church
Every way splendid and honourable, because pure and holy.
Not having spot
σπιλος. No blemish on the face; no spots
upon the garment; the heart and life both
holy.
Wrinkle ρυτιδα.
No mark of superannuation or decay. The word is
commonly applied to wrinkles on the face, indicative of
sickness or decrepitude.
Holy and without
blemish. In every sense holy, pure, and
perfect. Now it was for this purpose that Christ gave
himself for the Church; and for this purpose he
continues the different ordinances which he has appointed;
and, particularly, the preaching of the word-the
doctrine of reconciliation through faith in his blood. And it
is in this life that all this purification is to take
place; for none shall be presented at the day of
judgment to him who has not here been sanctified,
cleansed, washed, made glorious, having
neither spot, wrinkle, blemish, nor any such
thing. How vain is the pretension of multitudes to be
members of the true Church while full of spots,
wrinkles, blemishes, and MANY such things;
fondly supposing that their holiness is in their surety,
because not in themselves! Reader, lay thy hand on thy
conscience and say, Dost thou believe that this is St. Paul's
meaning? See Clarke on Ephesians
3:14.
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Verse 28. As their own
bodies For the woman is, properly speaking,
a part of the man; for God made man male and
female, and the woman was taken out of his side; therefore
is she flesh of his flesh, and bone of his bone;
and therefore, he that loveth his wife loveth himself, for
they two are one flesh. The apostle, in all these verses,
refers to the creation and original state of the first
human pair.
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Verse 29. No man ever yet hated his
own flesh And this is a natural reason why
he should love his wife, and nourish and cherish her.
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Verse 30. We are members of his
body He has partaken of our nature,
as we have partaken of the nature of Adam. And as he is
the head of the Church and the Saviour of this body; so
we, being members of the Church, are members of his mystical
body. That is, we are united to him by one Spirit in the
closest intimacy, even similar to that which the members have
with the body.
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Verse 31. Shall be joined unto his
wife προσκολληθησεται. He shall be
glued or cemented to her; and, as a
well-glued board will sooner break in the
whole wood than in the glued joint, so death
alone can part the husband and wife; and nothing but
death should dissolve their affection. See
Clarke's notes on Genesis
2:21-24.
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Verse 32. This is a great
mystery τομυστηριοντουτομεγα εστιν. This
mystery is great. Sacramentum hoc magnum est; this
sacrament is great.-VULGATE. And on the evidence of
this version the Church of Rome has made matrimony a
sacrament, which, as they use it, is no meaning of the
original. By mystery, here, we may understand a natural
thing by which some spiritual matter is signified,
which signification the Spirit of God alone can give. So,
here, the creation and union of Adam and Eve, were intended,
in the design of God, to point out the union of Christ and the
Church: a union the most important that can be conceived; and
therefore the apostle calls it a great mystery. See the
observations at the end of this chapter.
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Verse 33.
Nevertheless πλην. Moreover, or
therefore, on the consideration of God's design in the
institution of marriage, let every one of you love his wife as
himself, because she is both naturally and by a
Divine ordinance a part of himself.
That she reverence her
husband. Let the wife ever consider the
husband as her head, and this he is, not only by nature, but
also by the ordinance of God. These are very important
matters, and on them the apostle lays great stress. See the
following observations.
THERE is one subject in the preceding verse on which I
could not enlarge sufficiently in the notes, and which I have
reserved for this place; viz. what the apostle says concerning
the mystery of marriage, which certainly has a
deeper meaning than what is generally apprehended. Dr.
Macknight has some good observations on this part of the
subject, which I shall beg leave to lay before my readers.
- 1. "The apostle calls the formation of Eve from Adam's
body, his marriage with her; and the intimate union
established between them by that marriage, a great
mystery, because it contained an important emblematical
meaning concerning the regeneration of believers, and their
union with Christ, which hitherto had been kept secret, but
which he had discovered in the 30th verse. Ephesians
5:30 For there, in allusion to what Adam said concerning
Eve, 'This now is bone of my bones, and flesh of my flesh,'
the apostle says, concerning Christ and believers: We are bone
of his bones, and flesh of his flesh: that is, we are parts of
his body, the Church. And by this application of Adam's words
concerning Eve to Christ and to his Church, he intimates,
First, That the formation of Eve of a rib taken out of Adam's
body was a figure of the regeneration of believers by the
breaking of Christ's body, mentioned Ephesians
5:25. Secondly, That Adam's love to Eve, on account of her
being formed of his body, was a figure of Christ's love to
believers because they are become his body, Ephesians
5:30. Thirdly, That Adam's marriage with Eve was a figure
of the eternal union of Christ with believers in heaven,
mentioned Ephesians
5:27. For he left his Father to be united to his Church.
- 2. "In giving this emblematical representation of these
ancient facts, the apostle has not exceeded the bounds of
probability. In the first age, neither the art of writing, nor
any permanent method of conveying instruction, being invented,
it was necessary to make such striking actions and events as
could not easily be forgotten emblems of the instruction meant
to be perpetuated. On this supposition, Adam, in whom the
human race began, was a natural image of Christ, in whom the
human race was to be restored; and his deep sleep, the opening
of his side, and the formation of Eve of a rib taken out of
his side, were fit emblems of Christ's death, of the opening
of his side on the cross, and of the regeneration of believers
by his death. The love which Adam expressed towards Eve, and
his union with her by marriage, were lively images of Christ's
love to believers, and of his eternal union with them in one
society after their resurrection; and Eve herself, who was
formed of a rib taken from Adam's side, was a natural image of
believers, who are regenerated, both in their body and in
their mind, by the breaking of Christ's side on the cross.
Thus, the circumstances which accompanied the formation of Eve
being fit emblems of the formation of the Church, we may
suppose they were brought to pass to prefigure that great
event; and, by prefiguring it, to show that it was decreed of
God from the very beginning.
- 3. "The aptness, however, of these images is not the only
reason for supposing that the formation of Eve, and her
marriage with Adam in paradise, were emblems of the
regeneration of believers by the death of Christ, and of their
eternal union with him in heaven. The singular manner in which
Eve was formed, and the declaration at her marriage with Adam,
'Therefore shall a man leave his father and his mother, and
cleave unto his wife, and they shall be one flesh,' strongly
lead to that conclusion. Eve was not formed of the dust of the
earth, as all other living things were made, (not excepting
Adam himself,) but of a rib taken from Adam's side while he
was in a deep sleep. Now, for this diversity, what reason can
be assigned, if that which the apostle hath suggested is not
admitted? Farther: unless some deep instruction were couched
under the formation of Eve, what occasion was there for Adam,
at his marriage with her, to declare, 'This is now bone of my
bones, and flesh of my flesh; she shall be called woman,
because she was taken out of man: therefore shall a man
leave,' a reason for Adam's affection towards her, it was no
reason for the affection of his posterity towards their wives,
who were not so formed. The reason of their love to their
wives is their being creatures of the same species with
themselves. This Eve might have been, though, like Adam, she
had been formed of the dust of the earth. Wherefore Adam's
declaration concerning Eve being taken out of his body, and
concerning his love to her on that account, was intended for
some purpose peculiar to himself; namely, as he was a type of
Him who was to restore the human race by the breaking of his
body on the cross, and who on that account loves them, and
will unite them to himself for ever. Upon the whole, the
formation of Eve and her marriage with Adam, and his love to
and union with her because she was taken out of his side, and
the declaration that, on that account, all his posterity
should love their wives, and continue united to them through
life, (a union which does not subsist among other animals,)
are events so singular, that I do not see what account can be
given of them, unless, with the Apostle Paul, we suppose that,
agreeably to the most ancient method of instruction, God
intended these things as figurative representations of the
regeneration of believers by the death of Christ, and of his
eternal union with them in heaven; and that Adam and Eve were
taught by God himself to consider them as such.
- 4. "It is no small confirmation of the apostle's
emblematical interpretation of the formation and marriage of
Eve, that in Scripture we find a variety of images and
expressions founded on that interpretation. For example, Romans
5:14, Adam is expressly called a type of him who was to
come, on which account, 1 Corinthians
15:45, Christ is called the last Adam. Next, the
catholic Church, consisting of believers of all nations, is
called the body of Christ, and the members
thereof are said to be members of his body, of his
flesh, and of his bones; in allusion to the formation of
Eve, the emblem of the Church. For, as Eve was formed of a rib
taken out of Adam's body during his deep sleep, so believers
are regenerated both in mind and body, and formed into one
great society, and united to Christ as their head and
governor, by the breaking of his body on the cross. Thirdly,
to this emblematical meaning of the formation of Eve, our
Lord, I think, alluded when he instituted his supper. For
instead of appointing one symbol only of his death, he
appointed two; and, in explaining the first of them, he
expressed himself in such a manner as to show that he had his
eye on what happened to Adam when Eve was formed: This
is my body which is broken for you-for your
regeneration. Fourthly, the eternal union of the regenerated
with Christ after the resurrection is called a marriage, Revelation
19:7; and the new Jerusalem, that is, the
inhabitants of the new Jerusalem, the society of the
redeemed, is termed the bride, the Lamb's wife;
and the preparing of men for that happy union, by introducing
them into the Church upon earth through faith, and by
sanctifying them through the word, is called, 2 Corinthians
11:2, A fitting them for one husband, that at the
resurrection they may be presented a chaste virgin
to Christ; in allusion, I suppose, to the presenting of
Eve to Adam, in order to her marriage with him; and to show
that, in this expression, the apostle had the figurative
meaning of Eve's marriage in his mind, he mentions, 2 Corinthians
11:3, the subtlety of the devil in deceiving Eve. Finally,
the union of the Jewish Church with God, as the figure of the
catholic Church, consisting of the regenerated of all nations,
is by God himself termed a marriage, Jeremiah
3:14; ; Ezekiel
16:8-32; and God is called the husband of that
people, Isaiah
54:5; and their union to him by the law of Moses is
termed, The day of their espousals, Jeremiah
2:2."
- 1. A truly Christian marriage has an excellence, holiness,
and unity in it, that cannot be easily described; and let it
be observed that, while it prefigures the union of Christ with
his Church, it is one means of giving children to the Church,
and members to the mystical body of Christ. It is an ordinance
of God, and, cannot be too highly honoured; endless volumes
might be written on its utility to man: without marriage, by
which every man is assigned his own wife, and every
woman her own husband, even the multitude of spurious
births which would take place would fail to keep up the
population of the earth; and natural, moral, and political
wretchedness would be the consequence of promiscuous,
fortuitous, and transitory connections. For without that
ascertainment of peculiar property which marriage gives to
every man in his wife, and to every woman in her husband, the
human progeny would be unnoticed, unclaimed, uneducated, and
totally neglected. This would continually increase the
wretchedness, and in process of time bring about the total
depopulation of the world.
- 2. The husband is to love his wife, the wife to obey and
venerate her husband; love and protection on the one hand,
affectionate subjection and fidelity on the other. The husband
should provide for his wife without encouraging profuseness;
watch over her conduct without giving her vexation; keep her
in subjection without making her a slave; love her without
jealousy; oblige her without flattery; honour her without
making her proud; and be hers entirely, without becoming
either her footman or her slave. In short, they have equal
rights and equal claims; but superior strength gives the man
dominion, affection and subjection entitle the woman to love
and protection. Without the woman, man is but half a human
being; in union with the man, the woman finds her safety and
perfection.
In the above remarks there are many things solid and
useful; there are others which rest more on
fancy than judgment.
- 3. Of marriage the Church of Rome has made a
sacrament, and it is one of the seven which that
Church acknowledges. That it is an ordinance of
God is sufficiently evident; that he has
not made it a sacrament is not less so. Though
the minister of religion celebrates it, yet the
regulation of it, in reference to inheritance, state.
This is of great moment, as by it many evils are prevented,
and many political and domestic advantages secured. If a man
enter hastily into this state it is at his own risk; after he
has once entered it, the seal of the legislature is imposed
upon it, and with his engagements, he cannot trifle. A
consideration of this has prevented many hasty and
disproportionate alliances. Though they might hope to trifle
with the Church, they dare not do it with the
state.
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Copyright Statement The Adam Clarke Commentary is a derivative of an
electronic edition prepared by GodRules.net.
Bibliography
Information Clarke, Adam. "Commentary
on Ephesians 5". "The Adam Clarke Commentary".
<http://www.studylight.org/com/acc/view.cgi?book=eph&chapter=005>.
1832.
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