Chapter 2:
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Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 Galatians Philippians
Ephesians 2
Verse 1. And he hath quickened you - In the nineteenth and twentieth
verses of the preceding chapter, St. Paul spoke of God's working
in them by the same almighty power whereby he raised Christ
from the dead. On the mention of this he, in the fulness of his
heart, runs into a flow of thought concerning the glory of Christ's
exaltation in the three following verses. He here resumes the
thread of his discourse. Who were dead - Not only diseased, but
dead; absolutely void of all spiritual life; and as incapable of
quickening yourselves, as persons literally dead. In trespasses and
sins-Sins seem to be spoken chiefly of the gentiles, who knew not
God; trespasses, of the Jews, who had his law, and yet regarded it
not, ver. 5. The latter herein obeyed the flesh; the former, the
prince of the power of the air.
Verse 2. According to the course of this world - The word translated
course properly means a long series of times, wherein one corrupt
age follows another. According to the prince of the power of the
air - The effect of which power all may perceive, though all do
not understand the cause of it: a power unspeakably penetrating
and widely diffused; but yet, as to its baneful influences, beneath
the orb of believers. The evil spirits are united under one head, the
seat of whose dominion is in the air. Here he sometimes raises
storms, sometimes makes visionary representations, and is
continually roving to and fro. The spirit that now worketh - With
mighty power; and so he did, and doth in all ages. In the sons of
disobedience - In all who do not believe and obey the gospel.
Verse 3. Among whom we - Jews. Also, formerly had our conversation:
doing the will of the flesh - In gross, brutal sins. And of the mind -
By spiritual, diabolical wickedness. In the former clause, flesh
denotes the whole evil nature; in the latter, the body opposed to
the soul. And were by nature - That is, in our natural state.
Children of wrath - Having the wrath of God abiding on us, even
as the gentiles. This expression, by nature, occurs also, Gal. iv, 8;
Rom. ii, 14; and thrice in the eleventh chapter. But in none of
these places does it signify, by custom, or practice, or customary
practice, as a late writer affirms. Nor can it mean so here For this
would make the apostle guilty of gross tautology, their customary
sinning having been expressed already, in the former part of the
verse. But all these passages agree in expressing what belongs to
the nature of the persons spoken of.
Verse 4. Mercy removes misery: love confers salvation.
Verse 5. He hath quickened us together with Christ - In conformity to
him, and by virtue of our union with him. By grace ye are saved -
Grace is both the beginning and end. The apostle speaks
indifferently either in the first or second person; the Jews and
gentiles being in the same circumstance, both by nature and by
grace. This text lays the axe to the very root of spiritual pride, and
all glorying in ourselves. Therefore St. Paul, foreseeing the
backwardness of mankind to receive it, yet knowing the absolute
necessity of its being received, again asserts the very same truth,
ver. 8, in the very same words.
Verse 6. And hath raised us up together - Both Jews and gentiles already
in spirit; and ere long our bodies too will be raised. And made us
all sit together in heavenly places - This is spoken by way of
anticipation. Believers are not yet possessed of their seats in
heaven; but each of them has a place prepared for him.
Verse 7. The ages to come - That is, all succeeding ages.
Verse 8. By grace ye are saved through faith - Grace, without any
respect to human worthiness, confers the glorious gift. Faith, with
an empty hand, and without any pretense to personal desert,
receives the heavenly blessing. And this is not of yourselves -
This refers to the whole preceding clause, That ye are saved
through faith, is the gift of God.
Verse 9. Not by works - Neither this faith nor this salvation is owing to
any works you ever did, will, or can do.
Verse 10. For we are his workmanship - Which proves both that
salvation is by faith, and that faith is the gift of God. Created unto
good works - That afterwards we might give ourselves to them.
Which God had before preprepared - The occasions of them: so
we must still ascribe the whole to God. That we might walk in
them - Though not be justified by them.
Verse 11. Wherefore remember - Such a remembrance strengthens faith,
and increases gratitude. That ye being formerly gentiles in the
flesh - Neither circumcised in body nor in spirit. Who were
accordingly called the uncircumcision - By way of reproach. By
that which is called the circumcision - By those who call
themselves the circumcised, and think this a proof that they are
the people of God; and who indeed have that outward
circumcision which is performed by hands in the flesh.
Verse 12. Were at that time without Christ - Having no faith in, or
knowledge of, him. Being aliens from the commonwealth of Israel
- Both as to their temporal privileges and spiritual blessings. And
strangers to the covenants of promise - The great promise in both
the Jewish and Christian covenant was the Messiah. Having no
hope - Because they had no promise whereon to ground their
hope. And being without God - Wholly ignorant of the true God,
and so in effect atheists. Such in truth are, more or less, all men,
in all ages, till they know God by the teaching of his own Spirit.
In the world - The wide, vain world, wherein ye wandered up and
down, unholy and unhappy.
Verse 13. Far off - From God and his people. Nigh - Intimately united to
both.
Verse 14. For he is our peace - Not only as he purchased it, but as he is
the very bond and center of union. He who hath made both - Jews
and gentiles, one church. The apostle describes,
1. The conjunction of the gentiles with Israel, ver. 14, 15. And,
2. The conjunction of both with God, ver. 15-18. Each description
is subdivided into two parts. And the former part of the one,
concerning abolishing the enmity, answers the former part of the
other; the latter part of the one, concerning the evangelical
decrees, the latter part of the other. And hath broken down the
middle wall of partition - Alluding to that wall of old, which
separated the court of Israel from the court of the gentiles. Such a
wall was the ceremonial law, which Christ had now taken away.
Verse 15. Having abolished by his suffering in the flesh the cause of
enmity between the Jews and gentiles, even the law of ceremonial
commandments, through his decrees - Which offer mercy to all;
see Colossians ii, 14. That he might form the two - Jew and
gentile. Into one new man - one mystical body.
Verse 16. In one body - One church. Having slain - By his own death on
the cross. The enmity - Which had been between sinners and God.
Verse 17. And he came - After his resurrection. And preached peace -
By his ministers and his Spirit. To you - Gentiles. That were afar
off - At the utmost distance from God. And to them that were nigh
- To the Jews, who were comparatively nigh, being his visible
church.
Verse 18. For through him, we both - Jews and gentiles. Have access -
Liberty of approaching, by the guidance and aid of one Spirit to
God as our Father. Christ, the Spirit, and the Father, the three-one
God, stand frequently in the same order.
Verse 19. Therefore ye are no longer strangers, but citizens of the
heavenly Jerusalem; no longer foreigners, but received into the
very family of God.
Verse 20. And are built upon the foundation of the apostles and prophets
- As the foundation sustains the building, so the word of God,
declared by the apostles and prophets, sustains the faith of all
believers. God laid the foundation by them; but Christ himself is
the chief corner-stone of the foundation. Elsewhere he is termed
the foundation itself, 1 Cor. iii, 11.
Verse 21. On whom all the building fitly framed together - The whole
fabric of the universal church rises up like a great pile of living
materials. Into an holy temple in the Lord - Dedicated to Christ,
and inhabited by him, in which he displays his presence, and is
worshipped and glorified. What is the temple of Diana of the
Ephesians, whom ye formerly worshipped, to this?
Chapter 2:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Johnson
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 Galatians Philippians
This version of Wesley's Notes on the Bible is a derivative of an electronic version, Copyright 1997, by Sulu D. Kelley. All rights reserved. Used by permission. It may not be modified or used commercially without permission of Wesleyan Heritage Publishing and Sulu Kelley. A special thanks to Mr. Kelley and Wesleyan Heritage Publishing for permission to create and post this version of Wesley's Notes on the Bible.
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