PREVIOUS CHAPTER - NEXT CHAPTER - HELP - GR VIDEOS - GR YOUTUBE - TWITTER - SD1 YOUTUBE Chapter 3The whole of chapter 3 is a parenthesis unfolding the mystery; and presenting at the same time, in the prayer that concludes it, the second character of God set before us at the beginning of the epistle, namely, that of Father of our Lord Jesus Christ; and this is the way in which it is here introduced. Chapter 1 gives the counsels of God as they are in themselves, adding His raising Christ and setting Him above all on high at the end. Chapter 2, His work in quickening others with Him and forming the whole assembly of those who are risen in Christ, taken by grace from among Jews and Gentiles; these are God's thoughts and work. Chapter 3 is Paul's administration of it; it speaks especially of the bringing in of the Gentiles on the same footing as the Jews. This was the entirely new part of the ways of God. Paul was a prisoner for having preached the gospel to the Gentiles-a circumstance that brought out his particular ministry very clearly. Thus ministry in the main is presented as in Colossians 1. Only in the latter epistle the whole subject is treated more briefly, and the essential principle and character of the mystery according to its place in the counsels of God is less explained, is viewed only on a special side of it, suited to the purpose of the epistle, that is, Christ and the Gentiles. Here the apostle assures us that he had received it by a special revelation, as he had already taught them in words which, though few, were suited to give a clear understanding of his knowledge of the mystery of Christ-a mystery never made known in the past ages, but now revealed by the Spirit to the apostles and prophets. Here it will be observed that the prophets are most evidently those of the New Testament, since the communications made to them are put in contrast with the degree of light granted in the previous ages. Now the mystery had been hidden in all former times; and in fact it needed so to be; for to have put the Gentiles on the same footing as the Jews would have been to demolish Judaism, such as God had Himself established it. In it He had carefully raised a middle wall of partition. The duty of the Jew was to respect this separation; he sinned, if he did not strictly observe it. The mystery set it aside. The Old Testament prophets, and Moses himself, had indeed shewn that the Gentiles should one day rejoice with the people: but the people remained a separate people. That they should be co-heirs, and of the same body, all distinction being lost, had indeed been entirely hid in God (part of His eternal purpose before the world was), but formed no part of the history of the world, nor of the ways of God respecting it, nor of the revealed promises of God. It is a marvellous purpose of God which, uniting redeemed ones to Christ in heaven as a body to its head, gave them a place in heaven. For, although we are journeying on the earth, and although we are the habitation of God by the Spirit on the earth, yet in the mind of God our place is in heaven. In the age to come the Gentiles will be blessed; but Israel will be a special and separate people. In the assembly all earthly distinction is lost; we are all one in Christ, as risen with Him. He made known to the Gentiles the unsearchable riches of Christ, which gave
them a portion in the counsels of God in grace. He enlightened all with
regard, not precisely, to the mystery, but to the administration [14]
of the mystery; that is to say, not only the counsel of God, but the
accomplishment in time of that counsel by bringing the assembly together
under Christ its head. He who had created all things, as the sphere of the
development of His glory, had kept this secret in His own possession, in
order that the administration of the mystery, now revealed by the
establishment of the assembly on earth, should be in its time the means of
making known to the most exalted of created beings the manifold and various
wisdom of God. They had seen creation arise and expand before their eyes;
they had seen the government of God, His providence, His judgment; His
intervention in lovingkindness on the earth in Christ. Here was a kind of
wisdom altogether new; a thing outside the world, hitherto shut up in the
mind of God, hid in Himself so that there was no promise or prophecy of it,
but the special object of His eternal purpose; connected in a peculiar way
with the One who is the centre and the fulness of the mystery of godliness;
which had its own place in union with Him; which, although it was
manifested on earth and set with Christ at the head of creation, formed
properly no part of it. It was a new part of it. It was a new creation, a
distinct manifestation of the wisdom of God; a part of His thoughts which
until then had been reserved in the secret of His counsels; the actual
administration of which, on the earth in time by the apostle's work, made
known the wisdom of God according to His settled purpose, according to His
eternal purpose in Christ Jesus. "In whom," the apostle adds, "we draw nigh
with all boldness by faith in him": and it is according to this
relationship that we do so.
Therefore these Gentile believers were not to be discouraged on account of
the imprisonment of him who had proclaimed to them this mystery; for it was
the proof and the fruit of the glorious position which God had granted
them, and of which the Jews were jealous.
This revelation of the ways of God does not, as the first chapter, present
Christ to us as man raised up by God from the dead, in order that we should
be raised up also to have part with Him, and that the administration of the
counsels of God should thus be accomplished. It presents Him as the centre
of all the ways of God, the Son of the Father, the Heir of all things as
the Creator Son, and the centre of the counsels of God. It is to the Father
of our Lord Jesus Christ that the apostle now addresses himself; as in
chapter 1 it was to the God of our Lord Jesus Christ. Every family (not
"the whole family") ranges itself under this name of Father of our Lord
Jesus Christ. Under the name of Jehovah there were only the Jews. "You only
have I known of all the families of the earth," had Jehovah said to the
Jews in Amos, "therefore will I punish you for your iniquities"; but under
the name of Father of Jesus Christ all families-the assembly, angels, Jews,
Gentiles, all-range themselves. All the ways of God in that which He had
arranged for His glory were co-ordained under this name, and were in
relation with it; and that which the apostle asked for the saints to whom
he addressed himself was, that they should be enabled to apprehend the
whole import of those counsels, and the love of Christ which formed the
assured centre for their hearts.
For this purpose he desires that they should be strengthened with all might
by the Spirit of the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, and that the Christ,
who is the centre of all these things in the counsels of God the Father,
should dwell also in their hearts, and thus be the intelligent centre of
affection to all their knowledge-a centre which found no circle to limit
the view that lost itself in infinitude which God alone filled-length,
breadth, height, depth.[15]
But this centre gave them at the same time a sure place, a support
immovable and well known, in a love which was as infinite as the unknown
extent of the glory of God in its display around Himself. "That Christ,"
says the apostle, "may dwell in your hearts." Thus He, who fills all things
with His glory, fills the heart Himself, with a love more powerful than all
the glory of which He is the centre. He is to us the strength which enables
us in peace and love to contemplate all that He has done, the wisdom of His
ways, and the universal glory of which He is the centre.
I repeat it-He who fills all things fills above all our hearts. God
strengthens us according to the riches of that glory which He displays
before our wondering eyes as rightly belonging to Christ. He does it, in
that Christ dwells in us, with tenderest affection, and He is the strength
of our heart. It is as rooted and grounded in love; and thus embracing as
the first circle of our affections and thoughts, those who are so to
Christ-all the saints the objects of His love: it is as being filled with
Him, and ourselves as the centre of all His affections, and thinking His
thoughts, that we throw ourselves into the whole extent of God's glory; for
it is the glory of Him whom we love. And what is its limit? It has none; it
is the fulness of God. We find it in this revelation of Himself. In Christ
He reveals Himself in all His glory. He is God over all things, blessed for
ever.
But dwelling in love we dwell in God and God in us: and that in connection
with the display of His glory, as He develops it in all that He has formed
around Himself, to exhibit Himself in it, in order that Christ, and Christ
in the assembly, His body, should be the centre of it, and the whole the
manifestation of Himself in His entire glory. We are filled unto all the
fulness of God; and it is in the assembly that He dwells for this purpose.
He works in us by His Spirit with this object. Therefore Paul's desire and
prayer is that glory may be unto God in the assembly throughout all ages by
Jesus Christ: Amen. And note, it is here realisation of what is spoken of
that is desired. It is not, as chapter 1, objective, that they may know
what is certainly true, but that it may be true for them, they being
strengthened with might by His Spirit. It is very beautiful to see how,
after launching us into the infinitude of God's glory, he brings us back to
a known centre in Christ-to know the love of Christ, but not to narrow us.
It is more properly divine, though familiar to us, than theglory. It
passes knowledge.
Observe too here, that the apostle does not now ask that God should act by
a power, as it is often expressed, which works for us, but by a power that
works in us.[16]
He is able to do above all that we can ask or think according to His power
that works in us. What a portion for us! What a place is this which is
given us in Christ! But he returns thus to the thesis proposed at the end
of chapter 2, God dwelling in the assembly by the Spirit, and Christians,
whether Jews or Gentiles, united in one. He desires that the Ephesian
Christians (and all of us) should walk worthy of this vocation. Their
vocation was to be one, the body of Christ; but this body in fact
manifested on earth in its true unity by the presence of the Holy Ghost. We
have seen (chap. 1) the Christian brought into the presence of God Himself;
but the fact that these Christians formed the body of Christ, and that they
were the dwelling-place of God here below, the house of God on the earth-in
a word, their whole position-is comprised in the expression, "their
vocation." Chapter 1, note, gives the saints before God; the prayer of
chapter 3, Christ in them.
Chapter 4. Now the apostle was in prison for the testimony which he had
borne to this truth, for having maintained and preached the privileges that
God had granted to the Gentiles, and in particular that of forming by
faith, together with the believing Jews, one body united to Christ. In his
exhortation he makes use of this fact as a touching motive. Now the first
thing that he looked for on the part of his beloved children in the faith,
as befitting this unity and as a means of maintaining it in practice, was
the spirit of humility and meekness, forbearance with one another in love.
This is the individual state which he desired to be realised among the
Ephesians. It is the true fruit of nearness to God, and of the possession
of privileges; if they are enjoyed in His presence.
At the end of chapter 2 the apostle had unfolded the result of the work of
Christ in uniting the Jew and the Gentile, in making peace, and in thus
forming the dwelling-pla
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