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REVELATION 10

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SETTING OF THE CHAPTER
Chapters 10,11, and 12 form a distinct section in the Book of Revelation, for they deal with the question of Israel’s involvement in the events in the end times.  Chapter 11 deals with events in the first half of the Tribulation period, whereas chapter 12 deals with the second half.  In this chapter we are given insight into God’s attitude to the nation.

THE WORDS OF THE BIBLE, THE CHRISTIAN SCRIPTURES, AS FOUND IN THE BOOK OF REVELATION CHAPTER 10, VERSES 1 TO 11:

10:1  And I saw another mighty angel come down from heaven, clothed with a cloud: and a rainbow was upon his head, and his face was as it were the sun, and his feet as pillars of fire:

10:2  And he had in his hand a little book open: and he set his right foot upon the sea, and his left foot on the earth,

10:3  And cried with a loud voice, as when a lion roareth: and when he had cried, seven thunders uttered their voices.

10:4  And when the seven thunders had uttered their voices, I was about to write: and I heard a voice from heaven saying unto me, Seal up those things which the seven thunders uttered, and write them not.

10:5  And the angel which I saw stand upon the sea and upon the earth lifted up his hand to heaven,

10:6  And sware by him that liveth for ever and ever, who created heaven, and the things that therein are, and the earth, and the things that therein are, and the sea, and the things which are therein, that there should be time no longer:

10:7  But in the days of the voice of the seventh angel, when he shall begin to sound, the mystery of God should be finished, as He hath declared to His servants the prophets.

10:8  And the voice which I heard from heaven spake unto me again, and said, Go and take the little book which is open in the hand of the angel which standeth upon the sea and upon the earth.

10:9  And I went unto the angel, and said unto him, Give me the little book. And he said unto me, Take it, and eat it up; and it shall make thy belly bitter, but it shall be in thy mouth sweet as honey.

10:10  And I took the little book out of the angel’s hand, and ate it up; and it was in my mouth sweet as honey: and as soon as I had eaten it, my belly was bitter.

10:11  And he said unto me, Thou must prophesy again before many peoples, and nations, and tongues, and kings. 

10:1  And I saw another mighty angel come down from heaven, clothed with a cloud: and a rainbow was upon his head, and his face was as it were the sun, and his feet as pillars of fire:

And I saw another mighty angel come down from heaven- there are those who think this personage is Christ, but that cannot be so for at least two reasons.  First, the word for another means “another of the same sort”, and since the previous angel as mentioned in 5:2 was not Christ, because he asked the question, “Who is worthy”, and it was Christ who stepped forward.  He cannot be Christ, then.  The second reason is that he swears by God in verse 6.  Now it is true that God swears by Himself, Hebrews 6:13, but this angel is not doing that, but swearing by One who is outside of himself. 
That he comes down from heaven indicates that our attention is now going to be drawn to the earth, and in particular to God’s earthly people, Israel.  That he is a mighty angel, (and the word is the same as “strong” in 5:2), shows that God intends to put forth His power in relation to the nation of Israel.
Clothed with a cloud- the word for cloud John uses means a thin high cloud; not a black storm cloud.  This is the sort of word the psalmist used when he wrote, “Thy faithfulness reacheth unto the clouds”. Psalm 36:5.  Or when he said, “Thy mercy is great in the heavens, and Thy truth unto the clouds”. Psalm 57:10.  Or again, “His excellency is over Israel, and His strength is in the clouds”, Psalm 68:34.  These metaphors express the greatness and the loftiness of God’s plans for Israel.
So the thin high cloud that clothes the angel tells us of the faithfulness, mercy, and strength of the God of Israel, and that He intends to display those features even in the midst of judgement. 
And a rainbow was upon his head, and his face was as it were the sun- in Psalm 89:35-37, David wrote of God’s promise to his house, “Once have I sworn by My holiness that I will not lie unto David.  His seed shall endure for ever, and his throne as the sun before Me.  It shall be established for ever as the moon, and as a faithful witness in heaven”.  The faithful witness refers to the rainbow.  God is here signalling that he has not forgotten His promises to the nation and to David, and is moving to bring them to fulfilment, despite what the appearances may be. 
And his feet as pillars of fire- when Israel were coming out of Egypt and were being pursued by their enemies, God interposed for them, and the pillar of fire removed from its position at the head of the company, to stand between them and the Egyptian forces.  Then when they had safely reached the wilderness, the pillar of fire guided them during the night.  Israel will certainly be surrounded by their foes, and will pass through the night-season of the Tribulation Period, but God will be there for them, to protect and preserve.

10:2  And he had in his hand a little book open: and he set his right foot upon the sea, and his left foot on the earth,

And he had in his hand a little book open- in chapter 5 it was the question of an sealed book, and who was worthy to open and to read what was written.  Here, the book is open, and it becomes clear that this was to show that there was nothing written on it.  That it was a little book showed it had to do with a limited subject.
And he set his right foot upon the sea, and his left foot on the earth- we shall learn in chapter 13 about two beasts, and one of them comes out of the sea, the other, out of the earth.  God is here proclaiming that he has control of both events, and those two beasts can only emerge and do their evil work if He allows it.

10:3  And cried with a loud voice, as when a lion roareth: and when he had cried, seven thunders uttered their voices.

And cried with a loud voice, as when a lion roareth- a lion roars to show he is the king of the forest, and also to terrify its prey.  This is a reminder from the angel that the Lion of tribe of Judah has prevailed in past, 5:5, and is about to prevail again, this time on behalf of the nation of Israel. 
And when he had cried, seven thunders uttered their voices- this is the sure sign that a severe storm is approaching, as indeed it is, in the form of the seven vial judgements.  Psalm 29 is a graphic description of a storm sweeping through the land of Israel, and the psalmist tells us that “the God of glory thundereth”.  The expression “the voice of the Lord” occurs seven times in that psalm, hence we may say that the thunder is the voice of the Lord in judgement.  The first two verses call upon those in heaven to worship God, and the last verse tells us “the Lord will give strength unto His people; the Lord will bless His people with peace”.  This would remind us that at Christ’s first coming there was “a multitude of the heavenly host praising God, and saying, ‘Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace, good will toward men'”, Luke 2:13,14.  Sadly, the nation rejected the One who came as Shiloh, the peace-bringer, and crucified Him.  But He will come again to them, and this time they will receive Him, and He will bless the people with peace, but not until the storm of judgement has swept through the land. 

10:4  And when the seven thunders had uttered their voices, I was about to write: and I heard a voice from heaven saying unto me, Seal up those things which the seven thunders uttered, and write them not.

And when the seven thunders had uttered their voices, I was about to write- just as the sealed book of chapter 5, when read, disclosed God’s judgements on the earth, so these thunders, when heard, tell John of further judgements.  John only heard the voices, however, and did not have a vision depicting what was said.  He had been told, “what thou seest, write in a book”, 1:11, so John takes his pen to write what the thunder-voices said.
And I heard a voice from heaven saying unto me, Seal up those things which the seven thunders uttered, and write them not- this situation is different, for he has seen nothing; the matters the thunders speak of have not been brought before his eyes.  Hence he is told not to write.  It may be that whether or not these thunder-judgements are inflicted on israel depends on their reaction to the other things that come upon them.  If they had been seen in vision by John and written down for all to see, God would have committed Himself to enacting them.  As it is, they are there as a threat which may or may not be carried out.  At the beginning of the book John tells us that the purpose of the book is to “shew unto His servants the things which must shortly come to pass”, 1:1.  Note the word “shew”, and the word “must”.  The things that are shewn must come to pass, but those that are not shewn, but are mentioned, may or may not come to pass.  This may have something to do with the words of the Lord Jesus when He said “And except those days should be shortened, there should no flesh be saved: but for the elect’s sake those days shall be shortened”, Matthew 24:22.  The apostle Paul wrote of this with the words, “Esaias also crieth concerning Israel, ‘Though the number of the children of Israel be as the sand of the sea, a remnant shall be saved: For He will finish the work, and cut it short in righteousness: because a short work will the Lord make upon the earth'”, Romans 9:27,28.  Perhaps the days will be shortened by not inflicting the judgements of the seven thunders.

10:5  And the angel which I saw stand upon the sea and upon the earth lifted up his hand to heaven,

And the angel which I saw stand upon the sea and upon the earth lifted up his hand to heaven- although standing upon the earth and the sea, the angel is going to utter  solemn oath in relation to heaven, and its purpose for the earth.  His hand figuratively links the two.

10:6  And sware by Him that liveth for ever and ever, who created heaven, and the things that therein are, and the earth, and the things that therein are, and the sea, and the things which are therein, that there should be time no longer:

And sware by Him that liveth for ever and ever- the fact that the angel swears by God shows he is not the Lord Jesus, for He is equally God.  God lives for ever and ever, so he inhabits eternity, but this does not mean He takes no account of time.  He is never in a hurry, nor is He late, but at the precise moment of His choosing He culminates His purpose.  Because He is eternal, He will certainly outlast His enemies.
Who created heaven, and the things that therein are, and the earth, and the things that therein are, and the sea, and the things which are therein- this is a summary of what is described in Genesis chapter 1.  We learn from Hebrews 4:3,4 that there is a connection between the creation of the earth and the kingdom of the Messiah.  Just as God rested from all His work on the seventh day, which became the Sabbath day, there is to be a Sabbath for the earth under the Messiah.  The apostle Paul tells us on the basis of what the Lord Jesus did on the cross, God will “reconcile all things unto Himself: by Him, I say, whether they be things in earth or things in heaven”, Colossians 1:20. They shall be reinstated to the state they were in before man sinned, for “the creature itself also shall be delivered from the bondage of corruption into the glorious liberty of the children of God”, Romans 8:21. 
That there should be time no longer- although we have only reached chapter 10 in the Book, the judgements of God are nearly finished, as the next verse says.  God is about to call a halt to the wicked rebellion of man.  In particular, this means that the purpose of God with regard to the mystery of God is about to reach its climax.  The timing of this is completely in God’s control.

10:7  But in the days of the voice of the seventh angel, when he shall begin to sound, the mystery of God should be finished, as He hath declared to His servants the prophets.

But in the days of the voice of the seventh angel, when he shall begin to sound- the seventh angel sounds in 15:15, and summons the seven angels with the last seven judgements, that of the vials or bowls of wrath, which are detailed in chapter 16.  The mention of the days of the voice of the angel suggest that the seven judgements shall come upon the earth in swift succession at the end, perhaps even over seven days, hence the expression in verse 6, “time no longer”, for the end of the tribulation period is drawing near.
The mystery of God should be finished, as He hath declared to His servants the prophets- the angel makes a solemn affirmation on behalf of God that two things should happen because He decrees it.  First, that there be time no longer, verse 6.  Second, that the mystery of God should be finished.  The finishing or culmination of the mystery of God is here said to have been declared by God to His servants the prophets.  The word for declare means “to tell good news”.  So the prophets were given good news about Israel, which they duly recorded in their writings. 
There was something they did not know, however, and this was the bringing in of Gentiles into blessing without having to become Jews.  Connected with this, there was the national unbelief of Israel imposed on them for crucifying their Messiah.  As the apostle Paul wrote, “For I would not, brethren, that ye should be ignorant of this mystery, lest ye should be wise in your own conceits; that blindness in part is happened to Israel, until the fulness of the Gentiles be come in.  And so all Israel shall be saved: as it is written, ‘There shall come out of Zion the deliverer, and shall turn away ungodliness from Jacob: for this is My covenant unto them, when I shall take away their sins'”, Romans 11:25-27.  So the glad news was known to the prophet, that the Messiah-Deliverer would come, and the nation would have their sins forgiven.  But what was not known was the mystery of the blessing to Gentiles.  John is learning that as the Tribulation Period draws to an end, this mystery is about to be finished, as it reaches its Divinely ordained climax, and the fulness of the Gentiles comes in.

10:8  And the voice which I heard from heaven spake unto me again, and said, Go and take the little book which is open in the hand of the angel which standeth upon the sea and upon the earth.

And the voice which I heard from heaven spake unto me again- the first time, the voice instructed John to not write the contents of the seven thunders, verse 4.  Now he hears the same voice again.
And said, Go and take the little book which is open in the hand of the angel which standeth upon the sea and upon the earth- unlike the book in chapter 5, this one is open, and does not have to be unsealed.  No doubt there is some connection between the mystery of God being about the finish, and the fact that the book is open.  All can now be revealed as to God’s purpose for Israel once their national blindness in removed in the mercy of God. 

10:9  And I went unto the angel, and said unto him, Give me the little book. And he said unto me, Take it, and eat it up; and it shall make thy belly bitter, but it shall be in thy mouth sweet as honey.
10:10  And I took the little book out of the angel’s hand, and ate it up; and it was in my mouth sweet as honey: and as soon as I had eaten it, my belly was bitter.

And I went unto the angel, and said unto him, Give me the little book- John is confident that the one whose voice he heard had authority to direct him; he commands the angel in the exercise of that authority he has received.
And he said unto me, Take it, and eat it up; and it shall make thy belly bitter, but it shall be in thy mouth sweet as honey.  And I took the little book out of the angel’s hand, and ate it up; and it was in my mouth sweet as honey: and as soon as I had eaten it, my belly was bitter- the angel warns him about the bitterness first, so that he does not get carried away by the initial sweetness.  Ezekiel had a similar experience to this, as recorded in Ezekiel 2:9-3:3.  He too was given a roll that was sweet to the taste, but which had words of “lamentation and mourning, and woe”.  Ezekiel is about to have disclosed to him the sins of his own people, culminating with a vision of their wickedness as the high priests and the other priests worshipped idols in the temple courts in Jerusalem, with an image of jealousy near the altar, and women weeping for Tammuz, and the priests worshipping the sun.  Then came the command that those who worshipped idols in Israel should be slain.  This experiences will be John’s as well, as it is disclosed to him the depths of wickedness the majority of Israel shall sink to, as they enter into a covenant with the Antichrist.  They will be deceived, however, as in the midst of the Tribulation period he breaks that covenant, and sets up idolatry in the very temple, just as in Ezekiel’s day.  No wonder the book was bitter to his taste. 
But there was a sweetness about it too.  The last part of Ezekiel’s prophecy is taken up with a description of the Millenial Temple, into which the glory of God shall come.  And John also knew that glorious times were ahead for the nation of Israel, once they have repented of the sin of crucifying their Messiah, and owning allegiance to Antichrist.  Perhaps John does not tell us what is written in the book because we already know the character of its content through reading Ezekiel’s prophecy.

10:11  And he said unto me, Thou must prophesy again before many peoples, and nations, and tongues, and kings.

And he said unto me, Thou must prophesy again before many peoples, and nations, and tongues, and kings- the book of the Revelation is described as a prophecy, 1:3; 22:18, so up to this point John has been prophesying.  But as he wrote down what he saw and was told, he had not foretold anything about specific nations or kings.  All had been general, but that is to change, and he will deal from chapter 13 onwards with Antichrist, and the ten kings that are in league with him, and the kings of the east.  We should not think that John will have to actually be in the presence of these kings.  The idea is that he will prophesy again “as to”, or “in connection with”, nations and kings. 

EPHESIANS 4

EPHESIANS 4

The epistle to the Ephesians takes us to the heights, both of Christ’s exaltation to heaven, and the believer’s place with Him there.

The apostle Paul begins the epistle by describing the wealth God has given us in Christ. Using words and phrases such as “sonship”, (adoption of children), “redemption”, “obtained an inheritance”, “earnest of our inheritances”, “redemption of the purchased possession”, he is clearly contrasting the believer’s spiritual inheritance in heavenly places with Israel’s earthly inheritance in Canaan. Whereas their blessings depended on their obedience to the law, as Moses made clear to them in Deuteronomy 28, ours are secured in Christ, by grace, verse 3. The nation of Israel was chosen because of the fathers, Deuteronomy 7:8, whereas believers of this age are chosen “in Him”, verse 4. Israel were accepted if they kept the law, whereas believers are accepted in “the Beloved”, verse 6. Israel were redeemed nationally by the Passover lamb, whereas we have redemption “through his blood”, verse 7. As God’s national son, (Hosea 11:1; Matthew 2:15), Israel had been redeemed from slavery and eventually brought to the Promised Land, the land God pledged to give to Abraham for an inheritance, Hebrews 11:8-10, whereas we have obtained an inheritance in Christ, verse 11. Israel’s continuance in the inheritance depended on their obedience to God, and their success in driving out the enemy, whereas we are sure of the inheritance, for the Spirit within is pledge or guarantee of it.

The apostle then proceeds to show how that Christ has led the way to the heavenly inheritance, having been elevated to unsurpassable heights of heavenly glory, supreme over all. Yet amazingly, the Divine power which thus elevated Christ, is the power that is “to usward who believe”, 1:19, associating believers with Christ in the heavenly places. In Him there now, and with Him there hereafter.

Both Jew and Gentile were dead in trespasses and sins, yet the power that raised Christ from physical death, has raised those who believe from moral death. This is Divine work, and eternity will be needed to tell the ways in which He has shown kindness to us, 2:7.

So much for the relationship of Jew and Gentile with God, both before and after conversion, but what of their relationship with one another? This the apostle deals with in 2:11-22. Gentiles were formerly outsiders, having no claim on Christ, commonwealth, covenants, confident expectation, or the covenant-keeping God of Israel. Christ’s cross, however, brings both Jew and Gentile together when they believe, 2:16.

Having empowered His servants to preach in His name, (“preaching peace by Jesus Christ”, as Peter said to the first Gentile convert, Acts 10:36), He, through them, (see Mark 16:20) came both to those far off and those near with the gospel message of peace and forgiveness.

Furthermore, the Spirit was given, whereby every believer is able to access all that the Father has in store for us.

To the Jews, this would seem to contradict all that God had been working towards in Old Testament times, when the supremacy of Israel under the Messiah was a leading theme of prophecy. Hence the apostle unfolds Divine wisdom in chapter 3. Certain parts of God’s plans were hidden from Old Testament saints, but are now revealed through Paul to the New Testament apostles and prophets, and through them to all the saints of this age. The idea that Gentiles should be fellow-heirs, fellow-members of the body of Christ, the church, and fellow-partakers of God’s promises as found in the gospel, (as opposed to promises found in Old Testament scripture), was a complete mystery in olden times, but has now been revealed.

Setting of the chapter
The apostle now begins to explain the practical implications of the truth he has been explaining in chapters 1-3. Having spoken of the wealth of blessing that God gives to the believer in chapter 1, and the ways of God with both Christ and those who believe in chapter 2, and the wisdom of God imparted through the apostle in chapter 3, he now proceeds to enlarge upon the expected walk of the believer in chapters 4, 5 and the first part of 6. The last verses of the epistle being taken up with the warfare of the believer, and the weapons God makes available to His people so that they may defend the spiritual territory He has granted them, and repulse those evil forces which seek to deprive them of the enjoyment of spiritual things.

The chapter may be divided into two, with verses 1-16 concerned with a walk worthy of the Christian vocation, and verses 17-32 with a walk worthy of Christ.

Summary of the chapter
The first concern of the apostle in this passage is that believers walk together in unity. By so doing, they will progress together until the goal of complete and final unity is reached, when all believers of this present age are conformed to the image of Christ. So there is the unity of the Spirit in verse 3, which relates to now, and the unity of the faith in verse 13, which will be


To this end, believers are to:

(a) Relate to one another in a spiritual way, verses 1-3.
(b) Keep the unity of the Spirit, bearing in mind those unifying factors mentioned in verses 4-6.
(c) Respond to the ministry of the men the ascended Christ has given as gifts to the church, verses 7-12.
(d) Have before them the goal of collective likeness to Christ, verses 13, 15.
(e) So respond to the word of God that the attempts of the enemy to drive them off-course are all unsuccessful, verse 14.
(f) Make sure that there is increase in maturity by through the means of supply Christ has set in place, verse 16.
(g) Have a clear understanding of what being in Adam involves, and then, turning from that, appreciate the life of Jesus, and see in it the way to walk before God.


Structure of the passage

Verse 1(a) Faithfulness of the apostle to the cause of Christ.
Verse 1(b)-2 Features that should mark believers as the body of Christ.
Verse 3 Fervour that should mark their keeping of unity.
Verses 4-6 Factors which are unique and unifying.
Verses 7-12 Fulness of the provision Christ has made for progress towards maturity.
Verses 13-16 Final end of the progress towards maturity.
Verses 17-19 Failure of man in Adam.
Verses 20-32 Full display of truth in Jesus.

Verse 1(a)
Faithfulness of the apostle to the cause of Christ

4:1
I therefore, the prisoner of the Lord, beseech you that ye walk worthy of the vocation wherewith ye are called,

I therefore- By writing “I therefore”, instead of simply “therefore”, the apostle means us to take account of who he is as he writes. He is the apostle whom God has used to unfold truth unknown to Old Testament saints. As such, he is in a unique position, and his words should carry weight with us. He was also the apostle to the Gentiles, and the Ephesian believers would have been mainly from the Gentiles.

The prisoner of the Lord- it is not simply that Paul was specially gifted, as chapter 3 shows, but he was severely tested, too. He has been a prisoner since Acts 22, when he enraged the Jews by stating that God had sent him to preach to the Gentiles, Acts 22:21,22. In Acts 23:18 he is called “Paul the prisoner”, and this position is referred to here to show his commitment to the cause of Christ. As such, he is a good example to follow, see 1 Corinthians 11:1.

In chapter 3:1 he linked being a prisoner with his special ministry to the Gentiles, and this should influence believers who formerly were Gentiles to heed his exhortations. Here the sense is different, for he is not simply a prisonor belonging to Jesus Christ and not belonging to Caesar, here he is a prisoner “in” the Lord, which means that what he does as a prisoner is bounded by the authority and will of the Lord. If Caesar asks him to go outside that boundary, he will not comply. His consciousness of the Lordship of Christ comes out especially in this chapter, for He is ascended up on high, and His enemies have been subdued, verse 8.

Romans 13: 1-7 and 1 Peter 2:13-15 caution us against being found guilty by the authorities. But Peter also declared the principle, and acted upon it, that “We ought to obey God rather than men”, Acts 6:29. See also Acts 4:19. If man’s laws conflict with God’s commands, we are to obey the latter.

Verse 1(b)
Features that should mark believers

Beseech you- to beseech is to call a person to one’s side in order to produce an effect upon them. We might ask ourselves the question whether we are truly affected by the teaching of the Word of God. That ye walk worthy- we learn from 2:10 that God has prepared beforehand good works for His people to be engaged in, and now we are to learn what those things are. By “walk” is meant our whole manner of proceeding through this world. The word worthy is very significant here. It is the word “axios”, which, as we might guess, gives us the word “axle”, the point about which a wheel turns. Originally it referred to the fulcrum about which the scales of the apothecary turned. Paul has weighted one pan of the scales right down with the glorious truths he has been expounding in chapters 1-3. He now places on us the responsibility of responding to that truth. The weight of Divine revelation is to be balanced by our responsible acting, so that the scales are evenly balanced. This will result in our walk being a worthy one.

Of the vocation wherewith ye are called- note that this worthy walk is part of the call of the gospel. We are saved not just for our own benefit, but also, and primarily, for God’s glory, and He is looking for a response to His rich grace in terms of a manner of life that pleases Him. This should be our main vocation in life, for everything else is secondary. When the believers were called Christians at Antioch, Acts 11:26, the word used means that this was their chief business.

4:2
With all lowliness and meekness, with longsuffering, forbearing one another in love;

With all lowliness and meekness- in view of the exaltation of Christ mentioned in 1:19-23, and the grace that has reached down to us to lift us up to association with Him in His ascended glory, we should be truly humbled, and consequently exhibit lowliness of spirit. We should learn from the mistakes others have made. Lucifer was an elevated creature, but fell into the sin of pride, seeking a higher place still, see Isaiah 14:12-14; 1 Timothy 3:6. The latter Scripture reminding us that pride is to be guarded against by those given a ministry to exercise which brings them into prominence amongst the people of God. Adam, too, was given dominion over the earth, but fell to the temptation to be as God, Genesis 3:5. Nebuchadnezzar also fell in this matter, as Daniel 4:29-31 explains.

Meekness, too, should mark us, for association with a rejected Christ brings its hardships, but we should be prepared to accept them as being the will of God, which is what a meek spirit does. These two features were seen perfectly in Christ, Matthew 11:29. They are the reverse of the attitude of the natural man. We are to exhibit all meekness and lowliness, in every situation letting these features characterise us.

With longsuffering- the opposite of being short-tempered. We may become agitated over the things we see in one another which are not Christ-like, but just as God is longsuffering with us, (for God is love, and love suffers long, 1 Corinthians 13:4), so we should be longsuffering too.

Forbearing one another in love- we should check natural responses, and let love dictate our actions. This is to be done, not in a spirit of resignation, as if nothing better can be expected from fellow-believers than matters we need to be forbearing about; nor in condescension, as if such behaviour is totally absent from us; nor yet in apathy, caring little about the failures of others, and their impact on the testimony. Rather, the forbearance should be exercised in a spirit of love, which combines a desire for the well-being of believers with the determination never to compromise, for love rejoices in the truth, 1 Corinthians 13:6. The fruit of the Spirit is self-control, Galatians 5:22.

Verse 3
Fervour that should mark the keeping of unity

4:3
Endeavouring to keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace.

Endeavouring to keep the unity of the Spirit- the word endeavour has a certain half-heartedness about it nowadays, signifying only that we will make an attempt. No such notion attached to this word in former times. The word Paul uses here is the cry shouted by the spectators as they urged on their favourite athletes in the public games. “Spoude!” would ring out around the stadium, “Give diligence”, “Strain every sinew”, “Speed on!” Such is to be our attitude in the matter of keeping the unity of the Spirit.

In His prayer to the Father recorded in John 17, the Lord Jesus prayed about unity in connection with three things:
In verse 11 He prayed for the unity of the apostles. He asked that they be kept united in their testimony to the truth at the beginning of the church age.

In verse 21 for the unity of those who would believe through their testimony.

In verses 22,23, that the whole company of the redeemed might be perfected into one.

There is an increasing detail given to us in His prayer with regard to this unity. In verse 11 the word is simply “that they may be one, as we are”. In verse 21 it is “that they all may be one; as thou, Father, art in me, and I in thee, that they also may be one in us”. So the oneness is that sort of union and concord which pertains between the Persons of the Godhead. Such is that oneness that the Father can be said to be in the Son, and the Son in the Father. There is identity of nature and essence, so there is perfect oneness between them. As the Lord Jesus declared in John 10:30, “I and my Father are one”. The immediate response of the Jews was to take up stones to stone Him for blasphemy, for they recognised He was claiming Deity. A person who is one in essence with God must be God as well. The remarkable thing is that the oneness of believers is based on this. They are not one with one another to the same degree as the Persons of the Godhead are, for that would be impossible, but they are one after that likeness. This is why the word “hosper” is not used here, because that means “exactly as”; the word that is used is “kathos”, meaning “according to the manner in which”.

Divine Persons are one because they share the same life. In God’s rich grace that life is granted to those who believe on the Son. “God hath given unto us eternal life, and this life is in his Son”, 1 John 5:11. “He that heareth my word, and believeth on him that sent me, hath everlasting life, and shall not come into condemnation, but is passed from death unto life”, John 5:24. “But as many as received him…which were born…of God”, John 1:12,13. It can be said of such persons that they are “one in us”. Their oneness derives from their oneness with God. Now in His ministry in the upper room the Lord spoke of these things. He said, “At that day ye shall know that I am in my Father, and ye in me, and I in you”, John 14:20. And He explained the “I in you” by saying, “If a man love me, he will keep my words: and my Father will love him, and we will come unto him, and make our abode with him”, John 14:23. The day referred to in verse 20 is the day the Holy Spirit descended at Pentecost, which event characterises the whole of the age in which we live; it is the age of the Spirit. So when the Holy Spirit indwells a person, it can be said that the Father and the Son are now indwelling them since each one of the persons of the Godhead may represent the others. So it is that in Romans 8:9 we learn that if the Spirit of Christ dwells in us, then Christ dwells in us.

In verses 22 and 23 of John 17 the idea is of being perfected into one, suggesting a process. This takes place on the basis of the fact that the glory given to Christ He shares with His own, for He connects this oneness with glory in verse 22. As Romans 8:30 says, “Whom he justified, them he also glorified”. To be glorified in this context is to be credited with all the benefits that the purpose of God intends for His people in Christ, so that He may be conformed to His image. But this glory means oneness, for the word is “that they may be one, even as we are one”. And then comes the amplification of that statement, “I in them, and thou in me, that they may be made perfect in one”. Instead of “as thou, Father, art in me, and I in Thee”, it is “I in them, and thou in me”. We could say that the first statement is horizontal, the Father and the Son on the same level, and the Spirit coming down to us to link us to that. Whereas the second statement is vertical, a chain of oneness between the believer and the Son, by the Spirit, and then the oneness between the Son and the Father.

Now these two aspects of things are presented to us in their practical outworking in Ephesians chapter 4. There is the unity of the Spirit, which we are to strive to keep; this corresponds to the unity of John 17:21. Then there is a unity of the faith, which will be attained when all believers are conformed to the image of God’s Son, and they can be said to have grown up into Him, which corresponds to John 17:22,23. This process happens as we respond to the doctrine of the apostles, so that the oneness of thought that governed them, governs us also.

We are now ready to return to the words of Ephesians 4:3, knowing that the unity spoken of can be summed up as follows:

1. The unity is between persons, whether the Persons of the Godhead, or persons making up the church.

2. May be expressed in acts, just as the works the Son did were an expression of the working of the Father, “The Father which sent me, he doeth the works”, John 14:10. So believers are to express the unity that is made between them, for they are “created in Christ Jesus unto good works, which God hath before ordained that we should walk in them”, Ephesians 2:10.

3. Does not displace individuality. The Father is still the Father, the Son is still the Son, even whilst being perfectly one. So believers, whilst they say “not I but Christ”, and are part of the one body, nevertheless, they are to express that unity in individual ways, as the Spirit directs. “But the manifestation of the Spirit is given to every man (person), as He wills”, 1 Corinthians 12:7. “To one is given…to another (of a different sort) is given…” 1 Corinthians 12:8-10.

4. Is absolute. This goes without saying with regard to the persons of the Godhead, for “the Lord our God is one Lord”, Deuteronomy 6:4; Mark 12:29. It is also true that “there is one body”, formed by Divine persons, and therefore also absolute.

4. Is known through the Spirit. The unity of the Father and the Son is known when they come by the Spirit, John 14:20. The unity of the one body is the unity of he Spirit, that is, the unity the Spirit makes. The unity of the faith is arrived at when we respond to the Spirit’s ministry through the gifts the ascended Christ has given.

So it is that by means of the Spirit of God, Christ has baptized His people into one body. Just as John used water to baptized converts in his day, so Christ has used the element of the Spirit to immerse His people, so they lose their personal identity in favour of Himself, John 1:32-34; Acts 1:5.

In the bond of peace- we learn from 2:16 that one of the purposes for which Christ died on the cross was that His people might be joined together in one body, so He had the unity of His people on His mind as He died. The peace He has made is not just between the believer and God, but also between believers and one another. This uniting bond of the peace He has formed is to influence us all as we seek to maintain the unity of the Spirit in practical terms. If He was concerned about unity when enduring the agonies of Calvary, should not we be concerned about it, now that we have peace with God through Him?

Verses 4-6
Factors which are unique and unifying.

4:4
There is one body, and one Spirit, even as ye are called in one hope of your calling;

There is one body- by virtue of His ascent to heaven, Christ was made the head of His people, the church. See Ephesians 1:19-23; Colossians 1:18. Since there is only one Head, there can only be one body. God has ensured that those potential sources of division which existed at the time of Pentecost, have been dealt with.

The Samaritans
The Jews had no dealings with the Samaritans as a nation, so the Spirit deliberately guided the apostles to remain in Jerusalem in Acts 8:1, whilst the disciples were scattered abroad preaching. Philip went down to Samaria and saw souls saved, but they were not given the Spirit of God immediately. That happened only after Peter and John had gone from Jerusalem as the representatives of the apostles, to lay hands on them in a gesture of fellowship, and to bestow the gift of the Spirit on them.

In Luke 9:54, John, with his brother James, (“sons of thunder”), had wanted to call fire from heaven upon the Samaritans who had not welcomed the Lord Jesus amongst them. He was rebuked for his attitude then, and now is able to show he had learnt his lesson.

The Gentiles
Gentiles, too, were anathema to the Jews, and so when Cornelius, the first Gentile convert, believed the gospel, it was necessary for him to speak with tongues, so that Peter might be convinced that he had indeed received the Spirit of God. When he was called to account for his actions that day, Peter quotes the words of the Lord Jesus about being baptized with the Holy Spirit.

Disciples of John the Baptist
There was another company that might have been a source of division in later days, and that consisted of the converts of John the Baptist who did not know that the Spirit of God had come. Significantly, it was at Ephesus that this matter came up, and the apostle was able to baptize them in the name of the Lord Jesus, and lay hands on them so that they received the Holy Spirit. All possible sources of division from the past were now dealt with, and the apostle can say with confidence, “there is one body”.

Here the apostle uses the figure of speech which is unique to his writings. The human body supplies the apostle with the example he needs to show that the church is both unified and living. The human body has unity, yet diversity; it has a plurality of members, yet solidarity of members too. Those members has an equality of importance, yet some have a priority in function.

Beyond all this, the major feature of the human body is that it is controlled by the head, and without that head it cannot exist as a body. The apostle uses all these features in 1 Corinthians 12:14-30 in connection with the local assembly, (for he tells the Corinthian assembly that they are “the body of Christ”, and as such represented and manifested Christ in the locality), and he uses them here in the context of the church which is Christ’s body. We should remember, however, to work these things out in a local context. The local assembly is the setting in which this unity should be expressed. Most of the members of the church which is Christ’s body are not available to us, either because they have died, or because they live far from us. It is comparatively easy to get on with those we see only occasionally, but what of those we see constantly? Much grace is needed, and thankfully much grace is available to enable the unities listed in verse 4-6 to be in evidence.

And one Spirit- In Revelation 1:4 there is mention made of the seven Spirits before the throne of God. We can readily understand that in a book so full of symbolism as the Revelation, this signifies the seven-fold fulness of the actions of the Spirit of God, especially in the area of judgement. See Isaiah 4:4; 11:2, etc. Here, however, there is the reminder that there is but one Spirit of God, and it is through Him that the one body was formed and is maintained. Since He is the sole source of the unity of the members of the body, in the measure in which we are spiritual, (which is the same as saying, in the measure in which we respond to the guidance of the Spirit of God through the Word of God), we shall be enabled to keep the unity of the Spirit. Sadly, some at Corinth were preaching “another spirit”, 2 Corinthians 11:4, and because of this there was division and defeat.

Even as ye are called in one hope of your calling- the one body is a present reality; the one Spirit was responsible for forming the one body in the past, and now the prospect for the future is emphasized. How unifying is a common prospect! Even on a natural level this is true. How much more on the spiritual. The Christian hope is not a “maybe”, or a “perhaps”, but a certain expectation, for the simple reason that Christ is our hope, 1 Timothy 1:1, so our hope cannot fail to be realised. In the context here, the hope is the full appreciation of Christ that we are called to by the gospel. It is summed up in verse 13 as “the knowledge of the Son of God…a perfect man…the measure of the stature of the fulness of Christ”. The calling also involves complete likeness to Christ, in line with Romans 8:29, which reads, “whom he did foreknow, them he also did predestinate to be conformed to the image of his Son.” It also involves full possession and enjoyment of the blessings detailed in chapter one of the Ephesian epistle. It was the apostle’s prayer that the Spirit of God in His capacity as the Spirit of wisdom and revelation might give the saints understanding and enlightenment regarding the hope that calling holds out to them, Ephesians 1:17,18.

The apostle stated elsewhere, “For the gifts and calling of God are without repentance”, Romans 11:29,. This was said in connection with the future of the nation of Israel, but the principle holds true in any situation, that God does not repent or change His mind about His purpose. So the hope of the calling of believers in this present age is sure and certain. Believers from Israel have exchanged an earthly hope for a heavenly one; believers from the Gentiles now have that same hope, who before had none at all, 2:12.

4:5
One Lord, one faith, one baptism,

One Lord- subjection to the lordship of Christ is a powerful incentive to unity. If all believers are in subjection to the same Lord, in accordance with the Scriptures, then unity will result. The apostle mentions the lordship of Christ seven times in the first two chapters of the First Epistle to the Corinthians, to counteract their tendency to elevate men as party leaders. All believers have the same Lord, and willing subjection to Him and His authority will result in unity of action and reaction. Neglect of submission to Him is the root cause of division amongst the saints.

One faith- the fact that there is one body of truth to receive, believe, practice, and contend for is calculated to impart cohesion to believers as they seek to continue together in the apostles’ doctrine and fellowship, Acts 2:42, believing what the apostles believed and taught, and sharing it with fellow-believers. It is noticeable that there is no comma between “doctrine and fellowship”. This signifies that both the doctrine and the fellowship were connected with the apostles. This makes deciding what to have fellowship with very easy. We should only have fellowship in those things that the apostles would have had fellowship in. How can there be anything other than unity when these things pertain?

One baptism- there are two views held about this. Some believe that because the element in which the baptism takes place is not specified, it must be water baptism. We should notice, however, that all the other six unifying factors are entirely God’s responsibility. This is not true of water baptism, for although it is a Divine requirement, it does depend upon a believer’s personal exercise. The words of Ananias to Saul were “be baptized”, and are in the Middle Voice, meaning “get thyself baptized”. Furthermore, water baptism does not introduce into the one body. It does not even introduce into a local assembly, that being a separate and subsequent exercise. Water baptism is connected by the Lord Jesus in Mark 16:16 with an individual’s salvation.

This would explain why the apostle does not say “There is one Lord’s Supper”, for although the Supper is collective, as 1 Corinthians 10:15-17 shows, yet it is still in the area of the believer’s responsibility to obey the command of the Lord Jesus to remember Him.

The alternative view, then, is that this is the baptism effected by the ascended Christ as He immersed His people into the one element of the Spirit, thus bonding them together when they believe. As the result, the apostle can say in 1 Corinthians 12:13 that, as a matter of accomplished fact, all the believers at Corinth, (however carnal some may have been), were baptised into one body. All divisions of earth, whether Divinely-made such as Jew and Gentile, or man-made, such as bond or free, lose their relevance here.

Because it is Divine Persons who effect this baptism, then this is the way the unity the Lord Jesus prayed for is brought about, as we have seen in verse 3 in connection with the unity of the Spirit. Just as the life of man was breathed into him by God, so the life of God is in Christ’s mystical body, the church of which He is the head. In this way the members of the body are one as the Godhead are one, since the Godhead has effected that oneness.

4:6
One God and Father of all, who is above all, and through all, and in you all.

One God and Father of all- the seventh unifying factor the apostle lists is the glorious truth that every believer has the same God and Father, and hence has equal claim on His power and love. As God, He has the power to enable His people to maintain unity despite the strong pressures to do otherwise. As Father, He surrounds us with His affection, so that we may respond to that love by showing love to fellow-believers. The Lord Jesus commanded His disciples to love one another as He had loved them, and also said that He had loved them as His Father loved Him, John 15:9.

Who is above all- God is not only the source of all that the believer needs, however, but He is supreme, too, being above all. We must submit to His supremacy, for then we shall be united. Division-making is an attack upon God. We shall also find that if our God is supreme in our lives, then His interests will be paramount in our hearts, and self’s interests will recede. And in the measure that this is true, we shall be enabled to put others first and so promote unity.

And through all- God is sovereign in the way He works out His purpose. He can use whom He pleases to foster the cause of unity. Every gift He has given to the members of the body has this unity in mind, just as every ability the individual members of the human body have serve the interests of the whole body. “God hath tempered the body together, having given more abundant honour to that part which lacked: that there be no schism in the body”, 1 Corinthians 12:24,25.

And in you all- finally, God is in all believers, in fulfilment of the prophecy of the Lord Jesus in the upper room. His words were, “We will come and make our abode with him”, John 14:23. This is realised through the permanent indwelling of the Holy Spirit in each and every true believer. Not only are resources to enable us to keep the unity assured by His indwelling presence, but also the motivation to keep the unity.

Verses 7-12
Fulness of the provision made for maturity

4:7
But unto every one of us is given grace according to the measure of the gift of Christ.

But unto every one of us is given grace- verse seven begins with “but”, and introduces a fresh aspect on things. Before, it was Divine working to produce the unity of the Spirit, and seven things that consolidate that unity, but now it is the believer’s individual responsibility to arrive at the unity of the faith mentioned in verse 13.

Every one is given grace to make use of the giving of Christ in ascended glory and triumph, so that all other believers are in some way profited. It is only by grace that anything worthwhile can be achieved for God, for we have neither merit nor strength of our own. God’s unmerited favour to His people is shown when He allows them to exercise their gift, Ephesians 3:2; gives opportunities to do so, Ephesians 3:8; and gives power to carry out the work involved, Ephesians 3:7. Whilst it is true that only four gifts are mentioned in this passage, yet there is the general principle set out here that all believers are favoured by God so that they may discharge the responsibility which having a gift from God places upon them.

According to the measure of the gift of Christ- that favour is suited to the nature of the gift, and the particular needs at the time of the one exercising it, so that the gift and the grace are of equal measure, or perfectly matched. There is also the fact that, keeping strictly to the context here, believers who are not apostles, prophets, evangelists, pastor or teachers, are given grace to enable them to benefit from the ministry of those particular persons.

4:8
Wherefore he saith, When he ascended up on high, he led captivity captive, and gave gifts unto men.

Wherefore he saith- at this point the apostle marshalls support from the Old Testament. This might seem surprising to us, given the nature of the epistle, with its emphasis on matters that were undisclosed in former ages. But he needs to convince his readers that whilst the church is not in the Old Testament, it is possible to establish three principles from Old Testament scripture which are relevant to the doctrine he is setting forth at this point. It is especially important to do this because the mention of New Testament prophets in the next verses might concern those who revered the prophets of the Old Testament.

When he ascended up on high- the apostle now alludes to Psalm 68. The psalm begins with words reminiscent of Numbers 10:35 and Psalm 132:8, when the ark was setting out on a stage of its journey through the wilderness. The psalm traces the way in which God, represented by the ark, had triumphed in Israel in the past, culminating in the bringing up of the ark to Zion. The gifts mentioned by the psalmist would be David’s gifts for the building of the temple. Those gifts in large part being the spoils of war, as a reading of 2 Samuel 8:9-12 will show. The bringing up of the ark and David’s triumph coincide.

Three ideas come together in the verse, therefore. That of ascension, of the defeat of opposing forces, and the distribution of gifts. These are exactly the three principles the apostle is using in Ephesians 4. First, the absolute triumph of Christ, as indicated by the fact that having been crucified on a cross, He has now ascended to the very throne of God. Second, the utter defeat of Satan and his forces, crippling them to such an extent that, even though they are allowed a certain amount of latitude, they are easily defeated by means of the resources Christ gives. And third, the bestowal of gifts in grace, to enable believers to grow.

It is clear that the apostle does not quote the psalm in a word-for-word fashion. The same Spirit that inspired David now inspires him, and he gives the main elements of David’s words, but does so in a way which suits his purpose. David had listed three things that had happened, namely ascended, led, gave. Paul, however, makes the latter two consequent upon the first. In other words the ascension is the main thought, and the leading captive and giving of gifts follow. The sense is, “Having ascended up on high, he lead captivity captive, and gave gifts”. The leading captive and giving gifts take place after the ascension. In fact, are taking place now.

He led captivity captive- captivity is personified here to represent all that had held the Ephesians captive as unbelievers, and would try to lead them captive as believers. Such is the triumph of Christ that He can move through the sphere of the prince of the power of the air unhindered. In Daniel 10:12,13 we read of the way in which the progress of the angel Gabriel was hindered by an evil angel-prince, and he had to be assisted by Michael the archangel. No such delay is suffered by Christ, who rises to heaven with “angels and authorities and powers being made subject unto Him”, 1 Peter 3:22.

It is clear from Scripture that the Lord Jesus has defeated the enemy in all of his guises:

The Prince of this world came to Christ when He was down here, yet He could say he “hath nothing in me”, John 14:30. As a result of Calvary the prince of this world shall be cast out, John 12:31.

As the Devil, and wielding the power of death, he has been utterly defeated by the death and resurrection of Christ, Hebrews 2:14.

As god of this age he is defeated every time a blinded mind is made to see the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ, 2 Corinthians 4:4-6.

As Satan he is defeated when Christ intercedes for His own, Luke 22:31,32.

As Devil, the accuser, he is defeated by Christ our advocate, 1 John 2:1.

There is no reference here to any supposed transfer of Old Testament saints to heaven when Christ ascended. Why would saints personify captivity? Or why would they be called captives? When Paul is writing about the resurrection of church saints he uses a scripture in application and illustration, but which in interpretation refers to Old Testament saints. In Hosea 13:14, from whence the quotation comes, the previous words are, “I will ransom them from the power of the grave (sheol); I will redeem them from death”. So when the time of the resurrection of the Old Testament saints comes they will still be in sheol. They have not, therefore, been transported to heaven.

And gave gifts unto men- in Psalm 68, which the apostle uses here, the gifts David gave were as a result of his victory in battle. We read in 1 Chronicles 18 that he smote Moab, and “the Moabites brought gifts”, verse 2. The Syrians “became David’s servants, and brought gifts”, verse 6. Tou, King of Hamath sent his son to David to congratulate him, “and with him all manner of vessels of gold and silver and brass”, verse 10. And what did David do with these gifts? “These also King David dedicated unto the Lord”, verse 11. By this is meant that he gave them to Solomon to build the temple.

So the illustration is very apt. The gifts dedicated to the temple were the result of David subduing his foes. So the gifts Christ gifts in ascended glory are the spoils of war, for He has defeated His foes, and each gift is the sign that this has happened. For the gifts are men who have been delivered from captivity to Satan, and brought into the service of God so that the “holy temple unto the Lord” of this age may be built and edified. And the fact that Christ is able to freely give them is the sign of His complete victory. We do well then, to seek to benefit from the ministry of these men-gifts, ontained by Christ at such cost to Himself.

4:9
(Now that he ascended, what is it but that he also descended first into the lower parts of the earth?

(Now that he ascended, what is it but that- this could be expressed as “what else can it mean than that”. Verses 9 and 10 form a parenthesis, in which the apostle shows the completeness of the triumph of Christ, for all areas of the universe have felt the influence of His presence. Even the realm of the dead has known that presence temporarily, so there is no place the forces of evil can hide from His supreme power. That is not to say that the Devil has any sway in hades, or even goes there. The notion that he is King of Hell is a pagan fiction.

He also descended first into the lower parts of the earth? That Christ’s soul went to hades seems certain from Peter’s use of Psalm 16 on the Day of Pentecost. Peter’s words may be summed up as follows; David’s tomb is occupied; David’s throne is unoccupied; Christ’s tomb is unoccupied; God’s throne is occupied. If Christ is to occupy David’s throne on earth, He must first of all rise from the dead to die no more, for His kingdom is an everlasting kingdom, and must not be interrupted by death.

David’s sepulchre was with them to that day, so his flesh did see corruption, and his soul did stay in hades. Not so the Messiah’s flesh and soul. He had no corruption within, but God saw to it that no external corruption touched Him, for He was laid in a new and unused tomb. A tomb, moreover, that was protected by a sealed stone, which barred any unclean person or animal from intruding. In addition, because He rose again so soon, there was no time for Joseph of Arimathea to die, and be deposited in the sepulchre.

Just as His flesh was preserved from corruption, so His soul was not left in hades. Peter used Psalm 16 not to show that something was prevented from happening, as if the psalm said “Thou wilt not abandon my soul to hades”, but rather, to show that something had indeed happened, namely that Christ’s soul had returned from hades and He was risen from the dead. The apostle Paul used Psalm 16 to the same end in Acts 13:34-37. How could Psalm 16 be thought of as referring to Christ’s resurrection if it stated that His souold did not go to sheol, or hades.

Perhaps the reticence of some to accept these things is based on a false notion of hell, or hades. That place should not be confused with Gehenna, the Lake of Fire. The Greek word hades is the equivalent of the Hebrew word sheol, as the quotation of Psalm 16 by Peter in Acts 2:27 shows. There is no suggestion in the Old Testament that sheol was a place of suffering for believers. In fact, for Lazarus the beggar it was a place of comfort, Luke 16:25.

In Deuteronomy 32:22 God speaks of His anger burning to the lowest hell, suggesting that there are levels in sheol, perhaps corresponding to “the pit” spoken of in Ezekiel 26:20; 31:14,16; 32:18,25,29,30. The psalmist was glad that God had saved his soul from the lowest hell, Psalm 86:13,

It is sometimes objected that the spirit and the soul are inseparable, and therefore where Christ’s spirit went His soul went too. And since we know His spirit returned to the Father, then His soul must have done so also. However, Ecclesiastes 12:7 is clear that when a man dies “Then shall the dust return to the dust as it was: and the spirit shall return unto God who gave it”. So the spirits of all men go back to God, awaiting the resurrection day when they shall be reunited with their bodies, yet the souls of men go to hades. They are separable then. If Christ is to be shown to be true man, He must experience what they experience, sin apart. He was made in all points like unto His brethren, Hebrews 2:17, and this includes where He went at death.

Those who understand the verse to mean “lower parts, even the earth”, must show how that is relevant to the subject in hand, which is the complete triumph of Christ. The expression “that he might fill all things” seems conclusive that every part of God’s universe must be under Christ’s control. His influence pervades every sphere, and this not only because of His Deity, (for Psalm 139 makes clear that no place in creation is out of reach of God, even sheol, for the psalmist said, “If I make my bed in hell, thou art there”, verse 8)), but now also because of His manhood, and the fact that He has passed through death, been raised, and has ascended to heaven. The range of thought in both chapter 1:20-21, and 2:4-7, is between Christ in death, and Christ in heaven, not between Christ on earth and then in heaven.

4:10
He that descended is the same also that ascended up far above all heavens, that he might fill all things.)

He that descended is the same also that ascended up far above all heavens- Solomon built the temple when there was no adversary (same word as Satan) occurrent, 1 Kings 5:4. “Fill all things” seems to imply that every sphere is under the influence of Christ, and His soul went to hades temporarily to establish this. The Lord Jesus compared the experience of Jonah in the whale’s belly with His when He would be in the heart of the earth, Matthew 12:40. Jonah thought of that experience in terms of being in sheol, for he said, “out of the belly of hell cried I”, Jonah 2:2. In no way can Christ’s words “in the heart of the earth” refer to being in a tomb. In any case, it is His soul in relation to sheol that is in view in Psalm 16, not His body.
That he might fill all things- Christ fills all things in the sense that He does not allow any evil force to invade His domain. The enemy is completely vanquished.

4:11
And he gave some, apostles; and some, prophets; and some, evangelists; and some, pastors and teachers;

And he gave some, apostles; and some, prophets- the apostle is now resuming his argument of verse 8 on the subject of the gifts the ascended Christ has given, after the parenthesis of verses 9 and 10. Some of them were apostles, some were prophets, etc. In this passage the gifts are the men themselves, not ignoring the fact that they had gifts, of course. In Romans 12 and 1 Corinthians 12, the gifts are given to believers in general. Here the emphasis is on that which consolidates the unity that God has formed, and which enables the saints to progress towards the unity of the faith.

And some, evangelists- the apostles and prophets are the foundation of the temple, and the evangelists bring stones into the temple, and the pastors and teachers adorn the temple, just as Solomon’s temple was adorned with costly stones, 2 Chronicles 3:6. Compare 1 Corinthians 3:4-17.

Being foundational, we would not expect the apostles and prophets still to be given nearly two thousand years later, especially as Peter warns, not against false prophets counterfeiting true prophets, but false teachers counterfeiting true teachers, 2 Peter 2:1. We can expect the continuous giving of evangelists, and pastor-teachers, however. Thankfully there are still true evangelists, who pioneer in the world, preaching Christ where He has not been named. Solomon brought stones from beneath the temple site in Israel, and cedar wood from the world of the Gentiles, and evangelists do the same on a higher level, bringing suitable material from both Jew and Gentile into the spiritual temple, the church.

And some, pastors and teachers- once the new converts have been brought in by the evangelist, the work of the pastor-teacher begins. The fact that there is no “and” between the words pastor and teacher strongly suggests that it is the same man looked at from different angles.

A pastor will see to it that those newly saved are encouraged and protected. He will have both a rod and a staff. A rod to ward off evil teachers, a staff to lead into green pastures. David knew as a shepherd lad the need to function in both ways. As he led his flock through the valley to another pasture, he was aware that it was the valley of the shadow of death for the flock. Around, in the scrub along the path, there would be adders, but a swift stroke of his rod would deal with these. Above, the vultures hovered, ready to swoop on the stragglers. The flock needed to be protected from these also, not to speak of the lion and the bear. True pastors will be alert to danger in the spiritual realm, and will realize that the enemy can strike from different directions, and in different ways. It will not always be “as a roaring lion”, 1 Peter 5:8. It may be a more subtle, serpent-like approach. But whichever way the danger comes, the pastor must be ready for it. Well might the apostle say to the Ephesian elders, “Watch!” Acts 20:31.

As teacher, he will see to it the truths of the faith are taught. There is an ongoing and pressing need for the Scriptures to be expounded systematically and in depth. The flock cannot survive the onslaughts of the enemy if they are only fed a diet of exhortation and anecdote. There is no substitute for the ministry of the word by those gifted to give it. It was only in the days of the apostles that the gift of prophecy was available. Those with that gift were able to stand up and tell the mind of God without prior notice. They would have to be prepared in heart, of course, but they did not prepare their message. This gift is not available today, which is why there are teachers given by Christ to His people, so that they may expound the scriptures after careful and diligent preparation. May the Ascended Christ be pleased to continue to give His people such gifts, and may the Lord’s people value them and benefit from their God-given ability.

4:12
For the perfecting of the saints, for the work of the ministry, for the edifying of the body of Christ:

For the perfecting of the saints- the overriding reason for the giving of the gifts is to enable believers to reach perfection, being fully equipped to progress in Divine things. This end is reached by the secondary actions of fostering the work of the ministry. There are three occurrences of the word “for” in this verse. The first is more general than the others. The grand goal in view in the giving of these gifts is the eventual perfection of the saints. The other two phrases begun by the preposition “for” are the ways in which that perfection is achieved.

For the work of the ministry- this refers to the service of the apostles etc, as they serve the saints by their teaching.

For the edifying of the body of Christ- this is the result when the teaching of the apostles and prophets is heeded, and acted upon.

Verses 13-16
Final end of the progress towards maturity

4:13
Till we all come in the unity of the faith, and of the knowledge of the Son of God, unto a perfect man, unto the measure of the stature of the fulness of Christ:

Till we all come in the unity of the faith- just as the unity of the Spirit is the unity that the Spirit of God produces and promotes, so the unity of the faith is that unity which the faith, (the body of Christian doctrine), is sure to achieve. In a day to come all the differences of interpretation, and the difficulties and disarray those differences bring with them, will be forever gone. All God’s people will then be in full agreement with one another as to the truths of the faith. There is no suggestion that these differences will increasingly disappear as the age draws to a close, culminating with a state of things on earth where all believers are in agreement. That is not a possibility all the time we have the flesh within. It does encourage a state of mind, however, which would love to see that happen if it were a possibility.

And of the knowledge of the Son of God- not only shall we arrive at the unity of the faith, but we shall arrive at the full knowledge of the Son of God. We shall never know the Son as the Father knows Him, Matthew 11:27, but we shall have the most extensive knowledge of Him that believers can have. Delivered from this body of clay with all its hindrances and frailties, and bearing the image of the heavenly, 1 Corinthians 15:49, we shall be enabled as never before to enjoy and appreciate Him.

Having received eternal life when we believed, John 3:36, (which life enables us to know God and Jesus Christ who revealed Him, John 17:3), we are to “lay hold on eternal life”, 1 Timothy 6:12. Meanwhile we are “looking for the mercy of our Lord Jesus Christ unto eternal life”, Jude 21. So we have life, we should hold life, and we hope for life.

Unto a perfect man- at the Lord’s coming we shall not only be changed as to the body, with a body like Christ’s, Philippians 3:20,21; 1 Corinthians 15:45-54, but we shall be changed morally, too, so as to be like Christ who is righteous and pure, 1 John 3:1-3. With all hindrances removed we shall have the most extensive knowledge of Him that is possible for us to have. This will enable us to fully represent Him, as we shall be conformed (a word which speaks of inward conformity) to His image. We shall not be conformed to His Sonship, for that is not transferable, but rather to the image of Himself as a Son, representing sonship in our measure. A full measure, indeed, as far as is possible, but not the personal measure of Christ, which is unique. This will result in the perfect man. In other words, the new order of manhood which Christ displayed when down here in Adam’s old world, will also be perfectly displayed in His people in that day. The measure of the moral height of Christ’s glorious person is the measure to which we shall be conformed.

Unto the measure of the stature of the fulness of Christ- we should notice that this phrase does not begin with “and”, as if the measure of the stature is a further thing to which we shall arrive. We are justified in thinking that the perfect man is a man who is marked by the measure of the stature of the fulness of the Christ. This is a long phrase, and it is often helpful when handling such expressions to begin at the end and work backwards. The apostle now describes the condition believers will arrive at as “the perfect man”, a fully mature and developed state. In verse 12 he had spoken of the perfecting of the saints, and the word he used had to do with being fully equipped for a particular purpose. Here the idea behind the word “perfect” is of maturity, and is in direct contrast to the infancy of the next verse.

We begin then with Christ, the Anointed One. When a man was anointed in Old Testament times it meant that God approved of him, whether he was anointed to be a prophet, a priest or a king. Whether that man lived up to the position was a different matter, Saul being a case in point.

Jesus of Nazareth was anointed on the banks of the river Jordan, Acts 10:38. Whereas, however, men of old were anointed with physical oil by fellow-men, in this case, things were different. The anointing was by means of the Holy Spirit Himself, the one symbolized by the oil, and it was the Father who did the anointing. There was another major difference, even the fact that this anointed one would not fail and disappoint.

So when the apostle speaks here of Christ, he speaks of one who had the Father’s full approval. That full approval was not only because He is God’s beloved Son, but also because all the features that the Father was looking for in a man upon the earth were found in Christ. These features could be summed up in the expression the apostle John uses of Him in John 1:14, “full of grace and truth”. All that was pleasurable to the God who is love and light, were found in Him as He manifested grace and truth in His life down here. He is no longer down here, however, but has ascended up on high, for the heavens must receive such a man as this. Peter’s words on the day of Pentecost were, “God hath made that same Jesus, whom ye crucified, both Lord and Christ”, Acts 2:36. He was Christ when He was born, as the angel declared in Luke 2:11, He was Christ because of His anointing at Jordan, and now God has re-affirmed His approval of Him as one who had lived blamelessly upon the earth, and by so doing became the supreme example for His people to follow.

Continuing to work backwards through our verse, we come to the word stature. This can mean physical height, as in 1 Samuel 16:7. It can also be used in another sense, as when in John 9:21,23 the parents of the blind man said, “He is of age, ask him”. “Of age” translates our word stature. It denotes that stage at which a person can be thought of as fully-developed. Moral fulness and completeness was seen in Christ down here, and should be seen increasingly in His people as they “grow up into him”, verse 15, and will be fully attained when we arrive in heaven. Then we shall have reached the measure of His fulness.

4:14
That we henceforth be no more children, tossed to and fro, and carried about with every wind of doctrine, by the sleight of men, and cunning craftiness, whereby they lie in wait to deceive;

That we henceforth be no more childrenthis verse presents us with the four ways in which the purpose of God can be hindered at the present time. There are waves tossing us to and fro; winds of doctrine that can blow us off-course; the sleight of men; and those who cunningly lie in wait in order to deceive us. No wonder we need the ministry from God’s word, which alone will build us up so that we grow and mature.

The apostle now pinpoints some of the features that mark those that are immature, and still in infancy as far as growth in Divine things is concerned. Infants are unstable, uncertain, unwise and unwary. The Devil knows this, and exploits the situation. The apostle describes how he does it.

Tossed to and fro- this is Satan’s attempt to agitate and de-stabilize the believer. He may use many circumstances to do this, yet we may be sure that there is no situation that is not covered in some way by the teaching of scripture, either by direct instruction, or some incident from which we may derive a principle. Pastors and teachers should ensure that those under their care are well versed in the truth, which gives stability and steadfastness.

And carried about with every wind of doctrine- continuing his maritime theme, the apostle speaks of being carried about or round in circles by every wind of doctrine. By which he means wrong doctrine. Right doctrine will ensure we steer a straight course. This highlights the fact that infants are often in a state of uncertainty. Not having much experience of life, they are constantly confronted with new situations that they do not know how to handle. Winds of doctrine do not always blow from the same direction, which is why the apostle warns us against every one of them. Sometimes there are south winds which lull into a false sense of security and complacency. The apostle had experienced this himself just a year or two before writing this epistle. On his way by ship to Rome, the mariners put out to sea when the south wind blew softly, Acts 27:13, but they were soon in trouble. The apostle’s rebuke to them was, “Ye should have hearkened unto me”. How often we would have escaped difficulty if we had listened more to the apostle! At other times “the wind is contrary” from another direction, Matthew 14:24, but from whatever quarter it comes we may be sure that the enemy of our souls is attempting to blow us off course.

We should remember that holy men of old spake as they were moved or borne along by the Spirit of God, 2 Peter 1:21. They were borne along by the wind of the Spirit, as a sailing ship is borne along by the wind, and this was also true of the New Testament apostles and prophets, for they spoke “not in the words which man’s wisdom teacheth, but which the Holy Spirit teacheth”, 1 Corinthians 2:13. As such, they are reliable and trustworthy, and guided by them, we shall make a straight course.

By the sleight of men, and cunning craftiness- not only are infants unstable and uncertain, but they are unwise too, being prone to put their confidence in those who do not act in their best interests. This is true in the spiritual realm also. The Devil is not interested in fair play or honesty. He loads the dice against God’s people, such is the inference we may draw from the word sleight. His strategy is to cheat believers of the satisfaction that comes from progress in spiritual things. It is as if Satan prepares sea-charts for God’s people that lead the unwary voyager dangerously near treacherous shoals and hidden rocks. We must beware, and so acquaint ourselves with the truth of scripture that we easily discern the false charts of the enemy.

Whereby they lie in wait to deceive this is the infant’s lack of wariness. So often young children display an unhealthy disregard for danger. So we may, too, if we are not maturing in Divine things. The apostle warns here of those lie in wait to deceive, and who systematically lead into error. One of the cardinal rules of ancient seafarers was to avoid plotting one’s course by the planets, but always by the “fixed” stars. Planets were so called because they were wanderers across the sky. Because they revolve around the sun, and the stars do not, they change their relative position nightly. The word for deceive the apostle uses here is “plane”, error, a wandering from the true course.

The Devil is systematically and persistently seeking to get believers to wander off course. If they listen to his wiles they will do this, but if they are guided by the fixed light of Scripture, they will arrive at the situation described in verse 13. When this happens, those forces that would lead us captive and prevent our progress in Divine things, are themselves led captive by the power of the ascended Christ.

4:15
But speaking the truth in love, may grow up into him in all things, which is the head, even Christ:

But speaking the truth in love- the apostle is now able to return to a happier theme in verse 15, that of growth and progress in the truth. He insists that it is not enough to simply speak the truth in the sense of not telling lies. Lies are the Devil’s stock in trade, and should have no place in the believer’s life. The meaning is deeper than this, however, for he has in mind that we not only utter truth, but are affected in the whole of our being by the truth. In contrast to those who set out to deceive and cheat, believers should conduct themselves in an attitude and atmosphere of genuine love, not only for one another, but also for the truth itself. The apostle made it clear in 1 Corinthians 13:6 that love rejoices in the truth. That is not Christian love that compromises with error.

May grow up into him in all things, which is the head, even Christ- when the happy situation prevails where truth is lived out and spoken in love, then believers will grow up. What they grow up into is stated by the apostle to be “Him”, that is, Christ. The stage of maturity we have reached can be surely known by reference to Christ in all His moral perfection. In the measure in which we are like Him, we shall have grown up. We should not be satisfied with being morally like Him in some things, for the apostle insists we should grow up in all things, or in every respect. This is a strong challenge, but it is one we can meet if we take advantage of the resources He makes available to us, as the next verse goes on to say.

So the remedy for this immaturity is found in the truth of the faith, when it is spoken in an atmosphere of love by those who are qualified to do so. This is where the pastors and teachers come in today, as they unfold to the saints the truth found in the writings of the apostles and prophets. Their task is to minister Christ to their hearers, so that He may be known and imitated. So shall the body grow up into “Him”, that is, likeness to Him. He is the head, controlling all things, including this process whereby we mature into His likeness, as the next verse indicates.

4:16
From whom the whole body fitly joined together and compacted by that which every joint supplieth, according to the effectual working in the measure of every part, maketh increase of the body unto the edifying of itself in love.

From whom- it is from Christ, as Head of the body, the church, that resources come for spiritual growth to take place. Just as the head of the human body is the centre of control, so the head of the church directs from His place of supremacy in heaven, ensuring that the supplies we need are brought to us. This verse tells us how it happens.

The whole body fitly joined together- the entire human body is fitly joined together and compacted, and this is true also of the body of Christ. The phrase “fitly joined together” represents a word which was originally used in architecture, and related to the way in which one stone, skillfully worked upon by the stonemason, would fit closely with the adjoining stone.

And compacted by that which every joint supplieth- the word compacted extends and intensifies this idea, for it means to join together as one. Ancient stonemasons were able to square stones so skillfully that it was impossible to insert a sheet of paper between the joins. So it is with the members of the church, the living stones, 1 Peter 2:5, for they have been fitted together by the Master Artificer, Christ Himself. Perhaps the fitly joined together is the initial bonding together of believers, and the compacting is the ongoing work of consolidating in practice that which has been done in principle. Notice that the whole body is involved, for this is not truth for a select few, but concerns all believers.

We might think it strange that the apostle uses words that relate to the stones of a building when he is referring to the church which is Christ’s body, until we remember that when Eve was made, the word used in Genesis 2:22 can be literally rendered, “builded he a woman”.

This compaction is achieved by that which every joint supplieth. In particular, this refers to the apostles, prophets, evangelists and pastor-teachers that the risen head of the church has given for the building up of His people. The word joint has the idea of touching or connecting. The human body has four sorts of connective tissue, namely bone, which is rigid, blood vessel walls which are elastic, cartilage which is compressible, and synovial fluid for the lubrication of the joints. Just as the human body is kept functional by means of these connecting agents, so the church which is Christ’s body is maintained by the men-gifts Christ has given.

According to the effectual working in the measure of every part- in particular, “every part” refers to the apostles, prophets, evangelists and pastor-teachers that the risen head of the church has given for the building up of His people. The Lord Jesus specifically prayed for the unity of the apostles in John 17:6-19, that they might be one, united in the carrying out of the task of setting forth to others the word He had given. He then prayed for believers who were not apostles, that they might be one too. Every part of the body has a responsibility to respond to the ministry of these important connecting gifts, either through the apostles and prophets who are no longer with us, but whose written words are, or the spoken word of evangelists and pastor-teachers who unfold that written word to us verbally.

Maketh increase of the body unto the edifying of itself in love- growth cannot take place unless all parts of the body are functioning properly, but when they are, there is increase and edification, so that Christ-likeness is produced. Only in an atmosphere of love can this take place. When the human body is distressed or disturbed in some way, normal functioning is not possible; such is the case also with the church which is Christ’s body.

May the Lord help us to be exercised about keeping the unity of the Spirit, and at the same time grow in Christ-likeness, until that glorious day when we shall see Him and be made like Him.

Verses 17-19
Failure of man in Adam

4:17
This I say therefore, and testify in the Lord, that ye henceforth walk not as other Gentiles walk, in the vanity of their mind,

This I say therefore, and testify in the Lord- the chapter began with an exhortation on the basis of the teaching in chapters 1-3, and now a new section begins in a similar way. The practical exhortations of chapters 4-6 are solidly and logically based on the teaching of chapters 1-3. Paul solemnly testifies in full recognition of the Lordship of Christ. When He is gladly owned as Lord the exhortations of the passage will be willingly complied with.

That ye henceforth walk not as other Gentiles walk- he begins with a negative example, and one they will easily recognize from their pre-conversion days. Henceforth means no longer, suggesting a clean break with the past. That they have to be exhorted like this even though they are believers shows they had not fully realized the implications of faith in Christ. In verse 1 we are exhorted to walk worthily, now we are to walk differently.

In the vanity of their mind- the apostle begins with the mind, because that is the seat of the thoughts, and as a man thinketh in his heart, so is he, Proverbs 23:7. Vanity as used here means emptiness of results, and is in stark contrast to the reality that is found in Christ. Whereas the natural man produces nothing that is pleasing to God, He was altogether pleasing to His Father.

4:18
Having the understanding darkened, being alienated from the life of God through the ignorance that is in them, because of the blindness of their heart:

Having the understanding darkened- understanding is literally a thinking through, so here the apostle reminds us that the thought processes of the unbeliever are darkened, or covered over, not allowing the light of God’s truth to penetrate.

Being alienated from the life of God- when Adam sinned the threatened punishment fell upon him, and he died. Despite continuing in the body for 930 years, he died the day he sinned. The Lord Jesus taught this in John 5: 24 when He spoke of men passing from death unto life. And since the life is spiritual life, then the death must be spiritual death. Not that man’s spirit is dead, for spirits cannot die, and man is able to use his spirit to worship demons, but as far as communion with God is concerned, man is dead.

Through the ignorance that is in them, because of the blindness of their heart- this ignorance exists because eternal life involves knowing God, and Jesus Christ, John 17:3, so those who have not this life are ignorant, however qualified they may be in the things of this world. Because men have closed their minds to the revelation of God, they are blind in heart. This situation is not without remedy, as John 9 illustrates. Reading verses 17-19 should makes us truly thankful that the grace of God has reached us, and should also make us more concerned about the plight of those still in their sins all around us. It is solemn to think that the population of the world increases by 270,000 people every day. (That is not the number of people who are born each day, but rather the number of people who are born over and above the number of those who die each day). May the Lord give us wisdom in this situation.

4:19
Who being past feeling have given themselves over unto lasciviousness, to work all uncleanness with greediness.

Who being past feeling- as a result of this willing heart-blindness, men are not sensitive to the truth of God, and what is acceptable behaviour with Him.

Have given themselves over unto lasciviousness, to work all uncleanness with greediness- lasciviousness is lack of restraint, the direct result of refusing the Divine laws which should govern life on earth. See Psalm 2:3, and Romans 1:18-32. This in its turn results in uncleanness of every and any sort, and that with an attitude of heart which longs for more and more.

Verses 20-32
Full display of truth in Jesus

4:20
But ye have not so learned Christ;

But ye have not so learned Christ- again the emphasis on the mind. We learn how to sin from Adam and his race, we learn how to live worthily through Christ’s example when here on earth. It is not simply that He taught how to live, but that He is the Life, John 14:6, for true life finds its fullest expression in Him; He is the subject of the lesson.

4:21
If so be that ye have heard him, and have been taught by him, as the truth is in Jesus:

If so be that ye have heard him- through the personal testimony of apostles and prophets, and the preaching of evangelists, pastors and teachers, the Ephesian believers had heard Him, as much as if they had been on earth when Christ was.

And have been taught by him- they had not only heard, but what they heard had deep meaning for them. But more than this, what they heard encouraged them to look at the record of Christ’s life and learn lessons from it directly. As He Himself said, “Take my yoke upon you, and learn of me; for I am meek and lowly in heart; and ye shall find rest unto your souls. For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light”, Matthew 11:28-30. The thought of two oxen being yoked together was used as a figure of speech for a disciple being yoked to his teacher.

As the truth is in Jesus- the true life is expressed in Jesus, the Man upon the earth who pleased God fully. This phrase is often misquoted as “the truth as it is in Jesus”, but this implies that truth in someone else is different. Christ alone is the full expression of the truth. Paul longed that the life of Jesus might be manifest in his mortal body, 2 Corinthians 4:10; . He could tell the Galatian believers that he “travailed in birth again until Christ be formed in you”, Galatians 4:19.

4:22
That ye put off concerning the former conversation the old man, which is corrupt according to the deceitful lusts;

That ye put off concerning the former conversation the old man- as we learn Christ through His example, and are taught of Him through His word, we are taught to put off the old man. In principle we did this when we turned to Christ in repentance, but there is an ongoing need for readjustment to Christ. The words “put off” mean to take off and lay aside, and are used of those who stoned Stephen, Acts 7:58. They took off their garments and laid them aside as being unsuitable for the task in hand. Clothing speaks of character in the Scriptures, and so we should take off and discard the characteristics of Adam, the old and out-of-date man, for those garments are not suitable for the task in hand of living like Christ. Our old man has been crucified with Christ, for Christ undertook to deal with what we were in Adam, and by association with Him in His death and resurrection we are freed from the consequences of what Adam did when he fell. See Romans 6. Even though that is the case, believers still have the flesh within, which likes to wear the old man’s clothes.

Which is corrupt according to the deceitful lusts- because the human heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked, it deceives the unbeliever into doing corrupting things, even things which will bring into ruin. We should not allow anything in our lives which is corrupt, for that is a characteristic of our pre-conversion selves.

4:23
And be renewed in the spirit of your mind;

And be renewed in the spirit of your mind- instead of being corrupted by a deceitful mind, we should be constantly adjusting to the new things that are found to perfection in Christ. The spirit of our mind is our attitude of mind, which is so governed by the Spirit of God that it can be called the mind of the Spirit, Romans 8:5. We must adopt the right attitude to the things mentioned here, if we are to be in the good of them.

4:24
And that ye put on the new man, which after God is created in righteousness and true holiness.

And that ye put on the new man- this is the other side to the truth that we have been taught in Christ, for we have not only to put on, but put off as well. It is not expected that we wear both the clothes of the old man and those of the new man at the same time. Sadly, that is what we often do, but they cannot really be worn together. We must put off the old so that we may wear the new. We said we would put off the old man when we repented. We said we would put on the new man when we believed. Let us make good our intention.

The new man is the believer considered ideally, the man God sees us to be in Christ. It is our task to put on the features of Christ’s character. Character is symbolised by clothing in scripture, and we are to wear appropriate clothes, metaphorically speaking. No doubt the garments of the two malefactors as well as Christ’s became the property of the soldiers at the foot of the cross. The question for us is which garments shall we put on, Christ’s, or the malefactors?

Which after God is created- the apostle wrote elsewhere, “if any man be in Christ, he is a new creature”, 2 Corinthians 5:17. So it is not that God has modified the old man to make him respectable, but that God has created us anew, and since “after God” means with God as the model, there is an obvious parallel with what happened at the beginning of the world. We read, “And God said, Let us make man in our image, after our likeness…so God created man in his own image”, Genesis 1:26,27. Image tells of representation, likeness tells us of replication. Man was to represent God to the rest of creation, and replicate and reproduce His character in his life. Sadly, Adam failed, and when he begat Seth we read, “And Adam lived an hundred and thirty years, and begat a son in his own likeness, after his image”, Genesis 5:3. Moses very pointedly refers in verse 1 to the fact that at the beginning God made man in His likeness, but now that likeness has been spoiled by sin. We see the need, therefore, for God to create anew after His likeness as it was expressed fully in Christ.

In righteousness and true holiness- this is the condition in which the new man is by God’s creation. It is our responsibility to put off all those things which are incompatible with righteousness and holiness. True holiness is holiness which is produced when we allow the truth to govern us. The truth in question being the truth in Jesus.

The word for holiness here is not the usual one meaning separation. It has been defined as “that quality of holiness which is manifested in those who have regard equally to grace and truth”, Vine. Notice the three ideas of righteousness, holiness and truth, which could be used as summaries of the next few verses. They are in opposition to the corruption, lusts and deceit mentioned at the end of verse 22.

4:25
Wherefore putting away lying, speak every man truth with his neighbour: for we are members one of another.

Wherefore putting away lying, speak every man truth with his neighbour- it is not suitable for those who claim to know Him who is the truth, to be found lying. As verse 15 has already told us, we should not only be truthful, but live the truth. In fact the word for lying used here suggests this, being the word for falsehood. May we be like the psalmist and hate every false way, Psalm 119:104,128. The apostle quotes here from Zechariah 8:16. As an Old Testament statement, it is a requirement under the law. How much more now that Christ has come, and grace reigns. Zechariah has fellow-Israelites in view when he speaks of neighbours, those who hope to enter the kingdom of the Messiah.

For we are members one of another- as fellow-members of the body of Christ we are members of His body, (for we are more than just neighbours), and what we do even with our bodies, 1 Corinthians 6:15, affects other members of the body.

4:26
Be ye angry, and sin not: let not the sun go down upon your wrath:

Be ye angry, and sin not- sometimes the cause of truth demands that we be angry, with the sort of anger that Christ showed when He saw within the hardened hearts of men, Mark 3:5. That it is permissible for a believer to be angry at times is shown in that a bishop must not be soon angry, Titus 1:7, thus showing that controlled anger is permitted at times. One has said, “He that would be angry at sin, let him be angry at nothing but sin”.

Let not the sun go down upon your wrath- justified anger is not to degenerate into that which smoulders in our hearts, for the apostle is quoting from Psalm 4:4, and the psalmist goes on to say, “Commune in your own heart on your bed”. We are to have quiet spirits, even in times when we have strong feelings about matters which affect the honour of Christ. “Anger resteth in the bosom of fools”, Ecclesiastes 7:9, with the emphasis on resteth. Anger is a condition of mind, whereas wrath is an expression of that condition at a particular time. If we need to express righteous anger, let not the expression of it linger with us.

4:27
Neither give place to the devil.

Neither give place to the devil- the Devil delights to provoke us into emotional outbursts, and we should be aware of this, and not give him any opportunities to exploit situations, perhaps by exaggerated language or behaviour whilst under stress.

The word devil means a false accuser, and the apostle is not only warning against this in general, but more particularly when we need to express righteous anger about a matter. The devil would love to incite us to go further than we should, and instead of dealing with the facts of the matter, stray into false statements.

4:28
Let him that stole steal no more: but rather let him labour, working with his hands the thing which is good, that he may have to give to him that needeth.

Let him that stole steal no more- in some cultures stealing is thought of lightly, but such is the transforming power of the gospel, that it enables a person to renounce that unlawful activity, even though he may have gained a living by it.

But rather let him labour, working with his hands the thing which is good- he must begin to make a living in an honest and God-fearing way for the sake of the testimony. The gospel is marked by Divine persons giving. Those who believe should not do the opposite and steal, whether it be other’s goods, or employer’s time, or men’s reputation.

Hard work is a noble occupation, and the gospel requires it, for the apostle wrote, “For even when we were with you, this we commanded you, that if any would not work, neither should he eat”, 2 Thessalonians 3:10. After all, the Founder of Christianity was found working hard at His carpenter’s bench for many years, why should His followers think themselves to be exempt? The apostle Paul said of himself and Barnabas, “Or I only and Barnabas, have we not power to forbear working?” 1 Corinthians 9:6. Apart from the twelve apostles, only Paul and Barnabas had the right to eat and drink at others’ expense, but they did not use that power, verse 12, lest they should “hinder the gospel of Christ”. And the gospel has been hindered down the centuries because funds have been diverted from worthy causes, to support those who should have been maintaining themselves.

That he may have to give to him that needeth- so the one-time thief now begins to earn his living, (“that which is good”), in an honest way, but he must go further, and seek to make recompense as a believer for the sins of the past by meeting the needs of the poor. It may not be possible to recompense exactly the same people who he had robbed, (although if it is possible it should be done), but the debt to society must be paid.

This is in the spirit of the trespass offering, which required that one who had stolen should pay back what was stolen, and add the fifth part thereto. Note Zacchaeus’ attitude after he had become a true son of Abraham by faith. He said, “Behold, Lord, the half of my goods I give to the poor; and if I have taken anything from any man by false accusation, I restore him fourfold”, Luke 19:8. The response of the Lord Jesus to that statement was, “This day is salvation come to this house”, verse 9, for he had brought forth the fruits of repentance.

4:29
Let no corrupt communication proceed out of your mouth, but that which is good to the use of edifying, that it may minister grace unto the hearers.

Let no corrupt communication proceed out of your mouth- note the absolute terms the apostle uses. A corrupt communication is a statement which is bad and unprofitable. To steal from another is bad, but to destroy a reputation, or to ruin a life, is far worse, and this we may do by corrupt communications. The modern world has every facility for people to communicate with one another instantaneously, and this presents a real challenge to us. We should use the world, (for the modern means of contact can be used to further Christian things), but not abuse it, 1 Corinthians 7:31.

But that which is good to the use of edifying- when we see gaps in the lives of fellow-saints, we should be concerned to fill them with words that build and encourage.

That it may minister grace unto the hearers- so we may not only benefit our fellow-believers by giving them material things, as verse 28 indicates, but we also have the opportunity of ministering to their spiritual needs too, by those things that we say. By this means those things which God is looking for from His people in response to His grace are fostered and encouraged.

4:30
And grieve not the holy Spirit of God, whereby ye are sealed unto the day of redemption.

And grieve not the holy Spirit of God- every true believer is indwelt by the Spirit of God, who is a Divine person. To grieve means to make sorry, to cause pain or grief. Note the connection with the foregoing references to corrupt communication. The Spirit is grieved by such a thing, for He is the Spirit of grace, Hebrews 10:29.

The usual title of the Spirit is the Holy Spirit, but here He is called the Spirit of God, and the adjective “holy” is added by the apostle, to emphasise the holiness that marks Him. The fact that the Spirit dwells within us should be a strong incentive to holiness, as the apostle makes clear in 1 Thessalonians 4:7,8, “for God hath not called us unto uncleanness, but unto holiness. He therefore that despiseth, despiseth not man, but God, who hath also given us His Holy Spirit”. The expression used of the Holy Spirit here is very strong, being literally, “His Spirit, the Holy One”.

The following things may be said about the indwelling of the Spirit of God:

1. The Lord Jesus promised His own that the Holy Spirit would be given, John 14:16. He is not earned or merited, but given by God in grace. Also, He dwells within the believer, in his heart, and is not merely an external influence upon him.

2. The Spirit of God indwells the believer the moment he believes, Galatians 3:2, where the question is rhetorical, i.e. the answer is so obvious that it needs not to be stated. The Lord Jesus told His apostles to tarry at Jerusalem until the Spirit came, which they did. He had said to them in the Upper Room, “If ye love me, keep my commandments. And I will pray the Father, and he shall give you another Comforter, that he may abide with you for ever”, John 14:15,16. They did keep His commandments, and the Spirit came. Now that the Spirit has come at Pentecost, when a person believes he becomes part of the one body, and is made personally to drink into one Spirit, 1 Corinthians 12:13, John 4:10,13,14.

3. The Lord Jesus promised that once given, the Spirit would never leave them, John 14:16. The Spirit left King Saul, 1 Samuel 16:14, and David implored the Lord not to take His Holy Spirit from him, Psalm 51:11. These references remind us that the Holy Spirit was given in Old Testament times to empower for special tasks, in these cases to be king in Israel. If the Spirit had been taken, David would no longer have been king. As for ourselves, the permanent indwelling of the Spirit should not be used as an excuse for unspiritual behaviour.

4. The Spirit was to be personally in the believer. See John 14:17, where the contrast is between the Spirit being alongside of them as He indwelt Christ who was with them, and the Spirit abiding in them, when Christ was no longer walking physically with them.

5. The presence of the Spirit is known by the believer, John 14:17. The worldling can only appreciate things by the physical senses because he is not born of God. Because the Spirit cannot be physically seen, then the unbeliever cannot know Him. The Spirit makes His presence felt in the believer’s heart by encouraging spiritual exercises, Romans 8:16.

6. The Spirit acts as a comforter, strengthener and encourager, in the same way as the Lord Jesus acted towards His disciples when down here. This is the force of the word “another” in John 14:16, meaning “another of the same sort”.

7. The Spirit enables the believer to see Christ, John 14:19. He does this by announcing the things of Christ to us, John 16:14, so that Christ is glorified. Through this ministry of the Spirit, the Lord Jesus may be seen with spiritual insight just as really as the apostles saw Him with natural eyesight. John writes in 1 John 1:3 so that we may share the things he saw and heard, but he gives to us no physical description of the Lord. Spiritual views of Him are what really matter.

Whereby ye are sealed unto the day of redemption- the Lord Jesus has purchased His people, and we have redemption through His blood, even the forgiveness of sins. Redemption of the body we do not yet have, however, for that will happen at His coming, see Philippians 3:20,21; 1 Corinthians 15:48-53. Note that it is unto the day of redemption, and not simply until, as if it is only a question of time. What happened when we were saved and sealed was in view of, (hence the “unto”), the redemption in the future. This is a strong reason to believe in the eternal security of the true believer, for God has done something in the past which guarantees the future.

4:31
Let all bitterness, and wrath, and anger, and clamour, and evil speaking, be put away from you, with all malice:

Let all bitterness- there are mentioned here features which the Spirit finds grieving, and which are contrary to Christ’s example. The truth in Jesus is totally opposed to these things. The believer should kind and benevolent, not harbouring bitterness in his spirit.

And wrath, and anger- clearly the anger referred to here is unrighteous anger, or else there would be a contradiction with verse 26. We should only be angry at things Christ would be angry about. Wrath is an outburst, whereas anger can be ongoing.

And clamour- this may bring in other people, banding together to make their views known.

And evil speaking, be put away from you, with all malice- words may be spoken in anger, or they may be spoken quietly, in secret, but with evil intent. All these things should not just be put off, but put away, signalling that we do not intend to wear such clothes any more. We need to cultivate a spirit of goodwill towards all, and dispense with malice.

4:32
And be ye kind one to another, tenderhearted, forgiving one another, even as God for Christ’s sake hath forgiven you.

And be ye kind one to another, tenderhearted- this is the positive side, as verse 31 is the negative side. We should avoid being unkind, but also set out to be kind, for that is what God has done, taking the initiative in the matter. Hardheartedness was a feature of Pharoah; do we really want to be likened to him in his arrogance?

Forgiving one another, even as God for Christ’s sake hath forgiven you- God forgave in Christ, meaning He forgave in view of, and in the context of, all Christ is to Him, and all He did for us. Those who have been forgiven by God should be the special objects of our care, for this is Christ-like, and is the mark of a worthy walk before God.

Notice how high the standard of forgiveness is, being nothing less than the standard God has set. This reminds us of Peter’s question, “Lord, how oft shall my brother sin against me, and I forgive him? Till seven times? Jesus saith unto him, I say not unto thee, Until seven times: but, Until seventy times seven”, Matthew 18:21,22. Then He told the parable of the ten thousand talent debt and the one hundred pence debt. Peter no doubt thought that to forgive seven times would be commendable; the Lord raised the standard not to 7 x 7 = 49, but to 70 to the power of 7, which is 8,235,430. This is a lifetime of forgiveness. There are 25,550 days in 70 years. There are 322 times that number in 8,235,430. So if the same man came to Peter 322 times every day for 70 years, (that is every three minutes during his waking hours for the whole of his lifetime), and asked his forgiveness, then he was to forgive him. And so are we.

It is worth remembering that genuine forgiveness on the part of the one sinned against can only follow genuine repentance on the part of the one sinning. In the parallel passage this is emphasized- “Take heed to yourselves: If thy brother trespass against thee, rebuke him; and if he repent, forgive him. And if he trespass against thee seven times in a day, and seven times in a day turn again to thee, saying, ‘I repent;’ thou shalt forgive him”, Luke 17:3,4. So both grace and truth are to be in exercise; truth which rebukes and requires repentance, grace which grants that forgiveness when these conditions are met. Forgiveness must be on a righteous basis. If the same man comes to ask for the same sin seven times a day, one is justified in asking if he is really sorry. If he is not, then he has not repented.

So it has been with God. His rich grace has forgiven us for the sake of Christ. His truth demanded that we repent before we knew that forgiveness.

 

 

God and the ages of time. Part 2: The present age.

It is vitally important to have an understanding of the nature of this present age, because that will deliver us from the errors that are taught in some circles. For example, there are those who teach that the present age is simply a continuation of the dealings of God as they were in Old Testament times. That this is not so will be apparent as we study Ephesians chapter 3. The church is a distinct entity, unknown in Old Testament times, and is not to be confused with Israel. Whilst it is true that the nation of Israel has been cast away for a time, it has not been cast away finally, for God intends to recover the nation, so that Christ may rule over it as their Messiah.

A proper understanding of this chapter will deliver us from the notion that God will have dealings with the nation of Israel at the same time as He is calling out the church. The logical outcome of understanding Ephesians 3 is that we realise the Lord Jesus must come for His people at the rapture, (as described in 1 Thessalonians 4:13-18; 1 Corinthians 15:51-58), before the last seven years of Daniel’s 70 weeks begin to run their course. This means that such chapters as Matthew 24 and 25 make no reference to the church, and we should avoid quoting them as if they did.

SURVEY OF EPHESIANS 3:1-13

In this section the apostle sets out the details relative to the mystery that he was responsible for explaining to the believers. This mystery, or hitherto unknown truth, had to do with the relationship between believers who had been Jews, and believers who had been Gentiles.

It was revealed to Daniel in Daniel 9:24-27, that from the going forth of the commandment to restore and build Jerusalem unto the reign of the Messiah would be a period of 490 years. This period was divided into three very unequal blocks of time. The first block was of 49 years, and extended down to the prophecy of Malachi, with which the Old Testament closes. The second block, consisting of 434 years, extended until the cutting off of Messiah at Calvary. At this point there remained one 7 year period still to elapse. Unknown to Daniel, it was God’s plan to have another period of time between the death of the Messiah and the final seven years. This is the present age. In Ephesians chapter 3 and Colossians 1:23-29, the apostle explains the mystery about this church age of grace in more detail.

The main subjects covered are as follows:

The steward of the mystery:

Verse 1        Paul’s sufferings.

Verses 7,8 Paul’s humility

Verse 13     Paul’s endurance.

The hiding of the mystery:

Verse 5 It was not known in other ages.

Verse 5 It was not passed on down the generations.

Verse 9 It was hid in God.

Verse 8 Its riches are unsearchable, even by saints of Old Testament.

The revelation of the mystery:

Verse 2 Paul given grace to reveal it.

Verse 3 Revealed to Paul at first.

Verse 4 Written down so that we may understand.

Verse 5 Revealed to other apostles and prophets as well.

The substance of the mystery:

Verse 6

Gentile believers are fellow-heirs with Jewish believers.

Gentile believers are fellow-members of the body of Christ.

Gentile believers are fellow-partakers of God’s promise by the gospel.

The result of the mystery:

Verse 4 Believers are able to understand.

Verse 8 Believers are able to appreciate the rich truth as before they could not.

Verse 10 Angels are able to see the wisdom of God through the church.

Verse 11 God’s eternal purpose is put into effect.

Verse 11 The Lordship of Christ is made known.

Verse 12 Believers may confidently approach God, conscious of their position.

Verse 13 Believers are saved from despair by the glorious truth of the mystery.

SUMMARY OF THE SECTION:

Verses 1-4 The mystery unveiled to Paul.
Verse 5 The mystery unknown by Old Testament saints.
Verse 6 The mystery unfolded to New Testament saints.
Verses 7-10  The mystery understood by the saints.
Verses 10,11  The mystery understood by the angels.
Verses 12,13  The mystery underpinning boldness and confidence.

Verses 1-4 THE MYSTERY UNVEILED TO PAUL

3:1 For this cause I Paul, the prisoner of Jesus Christ for you Gentiles,

By “for this cause” the apostle means “for the sake of this”, and not simply “because”. The cause Paul was promoting was that of the truth of the church, as spoken of in 2:11-22. In Acts 21:28,29 Paul was accused of taking Trophemus, an Ephesian, past the middle wall of partition in the Temple at Jerusalem, and we read that “forthwith the doors were shut”, verse 30. From this point on in the book of the Acts, the apostle is a prisoner. The charge the Jews brought against him was provoked by his statement that the Lord had sent him to the Gentiles, Acts 22:21. Soon after this comes the first mention of the phrase “Paul the prisoner”, Acts 23:18. Rome may have bound Paul with a chain, but really he is a prisoner belonging to Christ Jesus, the man who is risen from the dead and ascended in glory to heaven. Because Christ is risen, the ultimate prison house, the grave, has been destroyed. All lesser imprisonments now become bearable. Paul was prepared to suffer for the sake of the truth; how much are we prepared to suffer for it? Or are we going to compromise in the face of opposition?

3:2 If ye have heard of the dispensation of the grace of God which is given me to you-ward:

The sufferings Paul endured as he travelled amongst the Gentiles were only worthwhile, from a human standpoint, if the believers heard with interest the things he had to say and write to them.

A dispensation is the handling of household affairs as a trusted steward. The word as used here does not denote a period of time, but rather, the administration of divine things during a particular period of time. So as the dispenser or administer of the benefits God had for His people in terms of instruction in His ways, Paul so served that what God had for them was duly passed on to them. So the grace or favour of God in this instance consisted of doctrine, and Paul was the one chosen to pass on that doctrine. God’s grace also enabled Paul to teach the truths of this passage- they could only be known as God in grace revealed them to him, and were not the result of the research he had done.

3:3,4 How that by revelation He made known unto me the mystery; (as I wrote afore in few words, whereby, when ye read, ye may understand my knowledge in the mystery of Christ)

In chapter 2 the apostle had likened the church to a temple, which was a habitation of God through the Spirit, 2:21,22. Now in those times there was, in connection with the heathen temples, (and Ephesus was famed for its temple to Diana), a body of doctrine that was known as the mysteries of the god. Revelation 2:24 calls these the deep things of Satan, things that were revealed, not to the common worshippers, but only to a favoured few. The mysteries were mysterious only to those not initiated into them. But to those who were thus initiated, they were fully revealed. These doctrines were imparted by a specially selected interpreter of the gods, called a hierophant. When they had been instructed into the secrets of their god, the initiates would be allowed in to his immediate presence as those who were “perfected”.

Now the Spirit of God lifts these concepts from their pagan setting, and sanctifies them to their proper use. Paul was the interpreter, and the saints, once instructed, would have perfect knowledge in those things imparted to the apostle.

Note that he received these things by revelation, for he could not study the Old Testament scriptures and discover them, for they were not found there. As far as saints of old time were concerned, these truths were hidden; now that the apostle has exercised his stewardship, they are made known to church saints.

Ananias told Paul that “The God of our fathers hath chosen thee, that thou shouldest know His will, and see that Just One, and shouldest hear the voice of His mouth. For thou shalt be a witness unto all men of what thou hast seen and heard”, Acts 22:14,15.

The few words he speaks of would include the following:

1. The words of chapter 2, where he shows that the cross of Christ is the basis whereby Jew and Gentile may be brought together into unity. This gives details about being “fellow-heirs”.

2. The words of Galatians 3 where Gentiles are brought into blessing as heirs. This gives details about being “partakers of His promise through the gospel”.

3. The words of 1 Corinthians 12 where Gentiles are shown to be part of the body of Christ, the church. See on verse 6. He is enabled to give a coherent explanation for the fact that Jew and Gentile are united in one body. This gives details about being “fellow-members of the same body”.

Verse 5 THE MYSTERY UNKNOWN BY OLD TESTAMENT SAINTS

3:5 Which in other ages was not made known unto the sons of men, as it is now revealed unto His holy apostles and prophets by the Spirit;

The word for ages originally meant a begetting, being derived from the word to become. The meaning was transferred from the people to the time in which they lived, inasmuch as a period of time is often described in terms of what happened to the people during it. Paul is emphasising the heavenly origin of these mysteries, and that they are unique to this particular age.

The phrase “sons of men” reminds us that the truths in question were not handed down from father to son in Old Testament times.

The apostle makes it clear in Galatians 1:15-24 that he had visited Jerusalem on two occasions, and had deliberately avoided contact with most of the apostles. Fourteen years later, however, he went up “by revelation”. Now this may simply mean that he went to Jerusalem because Christ revealed to him that this was His will. Or it could mean that he went up according to, or in connection with, the revelation that he had been given about the mystery, which it was now the time to pass on to his fellow apostles. This he did when he “communicated unto them that gospel which I preach among the Gentiles”, Galatians 2:1,2. If this is correct, then it shows how the holy apostles and prophets had the truth of the mystery revealed to them.

It also shows that Paul’s conception of the gospel was of far greater scope that we may sometimes think, for it included insight into God’s ways with men. This also disposes of the notion that the apostle Peter did not understand the church. When he writes that Paul taught things “hard to be understood”, 2 Peter 3:16. it does not necessarily mean he found them hard to understand. It was “the unlearned and unstable” who did this.

The order, “apostles and prophets” is significant, for it prevents us thinking that the prophets were those of Old Testament times. These prophets were those that the church was built upon, as to its doctrine, 2:20. They were holy men, set apart to God’s interests, and not in the least inferior to the Old Testament “holy men of God” that Peter speaks about, 2 Peter 1:21. Now that these hitherto unknown truths have been revealed, and also written down, we have no need for apostles and prophets.

Note the following:

  • The faith, or body of truth, has been once for all delivered to the saints, Jude 3 margin, so that they may earnestly contend for it.
  • The Lord Jesus promised the apostles in the upper room that the Holy Spirit would lead them into all truth, John 16:13, and this promise has been fulfilled.
  • The apostle Paul was the one who “fulfilled the word of God”, Colossians 1:25. That is, the doctrines he instructed the saints in was the climax, the fully filling up, of the body of truth we need to know whilst we are down here. “That which is perfect” has come, 1 Corinthians 13:10.
  • When believfers in Christ get to heaven, fresh truths will be revealed, for we shall then fully know as we are fully known by God now, 1 Corinthians 13:12; but we do not need that knowledge yet, even if we could understand it.
  • We should not expect fresh revelations of doctrine today. Those who declare they have a fresh word from the Lord, however acquired, should be asked what it is. If it turns out to be in the Scriptures anyway, their claim is pointless. If it is something outside of Scripture, then they fall foul of the curse pronounced on those who add to the word of God, Revelation 22:18.

Verse 6 THE MYSTERY UNFOLDED TO NEW TESTAMENT SAINTS

3:6 That the Gentiles should be fellow-heirs, and of the same body, and partakers of His promise in Christ by the gospel:

We come now to the substance of the mystery. At first sight it might seem to be insignificant, until we realise how far-reaching and different these truths are. It is contained in three phrases: “fellow-heirs”; “of the same body”; and “partakers of His promise”. Each of the three expressions has the idea of togetherness about it. So in effect the Gentiles are said to be fellow-heirs, fellow-members of the same body, and fellow-partakers of His promise in Christ by the gospel.

FELLOW-HEIRS

The apostle Paul had begun the epistle by describing the wealth God has given us in Christ. Using words and phrases such as “sonship”, (adoption of children), “redemption”, “obtained an inheritance”, “earnest of our inheritance”, “redemption of the purchased possession”, he is clearly contrasting the believer’s spiritual inheritance in heavenly places with Israel’s earthly inheritance in Canaan. Whereas their blessings depended on obedience to the law, as Moses made clear to them in Deuteronomy 28, ours are secured in Christ, by grace, verse 3. The nation of Israel was chosen because of the fathers, Deuteronomy 7:8, whereas believers of this age are chosen “in Him”, verse 4. Israel were accepted if they kept the law, whereas believers are accepted “in the Beloved”, verse 6. Israel were redeemed nationally by the Passover lamb, whereas we have redemption “through His blood”, verse 7. Israel’s continuance in the inheritance depended on their obedience to God, and their success in driving out the enemy, whereas we are sure of the inheritance, for the Spirit within is earnest or pledge of it.

So those who formerly were Gentiles, now they have believed, come into the inheritance because they are heirs of God just as much as believers who formerly were Jews. Their relationship with these Jewish believers is not a one-sided one. The believing Gentiles have equal share with the one-time Jews, since they are all joint heirs with Christ, Romans 8:17, and He does not discriminate between them.

FELLOW-MEMBERS OF THE SAME BODY

The apostle Paul is the only one to use the figure of a human body and its head to illustrate the relation between Christ and the church. Now that He is risen from the dead and ascended, Christ has become head of the body, the church, Colossians 1:18. Every true believer of this present age is linked to the Head in heaven, for “he that is joined to the Lord is one spirit”, 1 Corinthians 6:17, and “He that established us with you in Christ, (or, as it may be rendered, ‘firmly joined us to Christ’), and hath anointed us, is God”, 2 Corinthians 1:21.

FELLOW-PARTAKERS OF HIS PROMISE IN CHRIST BY THE GOSPEL

In 2:12 we learn that the Gentiles had no claim on the covenants that God made with Israel. These covenants were:

1. The Abrahamic covenant, Genesis 12:1-3), which promised them the land of Canaan.

2. The Mosaic covenant, Deuteronomy 6:3, which promised blessings if they obeyed His law.

3. The Palestinian covenant, Deuteronomy 29 and 30, with its promise of restoration to the land if they rebelled but then repented.

4. The Davidic covenant, 2 Samuel 7:12-17, which promised a king to reign over them.

And all this lack of blessing was because they were “without Christ”, that is, apart from, or cut off from any relationship with Israel’s Messiah. It is through the Christian gospel that they have arrived at their present happy position of having a share in the spiritual and heavenly blessings Christ secures and guarantees. They do not come into blessing by being a convert to Judaism, but by conversion to Christ.

Verses 7-10 THE MYSTERY UNDERSTOOD BY THE SAINTS

3:7 Whereof I was made a minister, according to the gift of the grace of God given unto me by the effectual working of His power.

It was the apostle Paul who was entrusted with the ministry of unfolding these truths to the other apostles, (when he went up to Jerusalem, if the view expressed in the notes on verse 5 about Galatians 2:1,2 is correct), and to the saints. He could not do so in his own strength, or by his own ability; he could not, for instance, rely on his expertise as a trained rabbi, for these truths were unknown to the rabbis. To discharge his stewardship in a spiritual manner he needed, not the skill of men, but the help of God in the form of grace. The effectual working of Divine power is needed, because Satan is opposed to the progress of Divine truth. The power of God which He put forth to raise Christ from the dead, Ephesians 1:19,20, is put forth again, to thwart the Devil’s hindering tactics.

3:8 Unto me, who am less than the least of all saints, is this grace given, that I should preach among the Gentiles the unsearchable riches of Christ;

The apostle is almost overwhelmed by the responsibility laid upon him. When it was a question of him being a sinner, he said he was chief, 1 Timothy 1:15, but now that he has been made an apostle by the glorified Christ, he is deeply humbled. So much so that he invents a word to describe his status- “leaster”. No doubt the thing which humbled him in this context is the exceptional character of the truth he was commissioned to make known. The rich truth about Christ, and in particular, His relationship with His people at the present time.

This truth was unsearchable, a word which literally means untraceable, untrackable. Paul was enabled to announce truths that it is impossible to either discover or understand with the unaided human mind, and which, moreover, were untraceable by Old Testament saints. Only the believer of this age, energised by the Spirit of God, can enter into the deep things of God, see 1 Corinthians 2:9-16.

3:9 And to make all men see what is the fellowship of the mystery, which from the beginning of the world hath been hid in God, who created all things by Jesus Christ:

Not only do we need to have the truth revealed to us, we need to be enlightened as to how to handle the truth once we have got it. For it is to be worked out in fellowship with other believers, as is seen in the three-fold use of the word “fellow” in verse 6.

The mystery has been hid in God. It was not hidden in God’s word, but in His heart, ready to be disclosed at the moment of His choosing. That moment was when His Son had returned to heaven, His work on earth completely finished. Confusion will result if we try to read the church into the Old Testament. We must not confuse the church with Israel. It is interesting to notice that it is Matthew’s gospel, the gospel of the King, which alone records the prophecy of Christ about the church. Interesting also, that after this has been done in chapter 16, the next chapter records the transfiguration of Christ, which confirmed to Peter that the Old Testament prophecies about the kingdom were still valid, 2 Peter 1:16-19. The kingdom is not cancelled, nor has the church replaced it.

Through Jesus Christ all things had been created, including the ages of time, (for time is part of God’s creation). As the Architect of the Ages, He chooses to tell His secret to His people at this time.

Verses 10,11 THE MYSTERY UNDERSTOOD BY THE ANGELS

3:10 To the intent that now unto the principalities and powers in heavenly places might be known by the church the manifold wisdom of God,

The angels had desired to look into the things that the prophets wrote concerning the sufferings and glory of the Messiah, 1 Peter 1:10-12. Now they are able to plainly see the results of His sufferings. The wisdom of God is His complete insight into the true nature of things. In the present context, it has to do with His ways in this age.

The angels had witnessed the way that Eve had by-passed the authority of Adam, and accepted the authority of Satan. The church is that company which accepts the authority of Christ, and expresses it in obedience to His will. The angels take great interest in those who, despite the fact that Christ left the earth 2000 years ago, having been given insight by God into the true nature of things through Christ who is the wisdom of God, express that wisdom in obedience and love. For instance, the covered head and long hair of the sisters is an object lesson to the angels, for they thereby see Christian women acting contrary to the first woman, who failed to submit to Divine order with disastrous results. We should never underestimate the value of this testimony by the sisters, for they maintain this testimony “because of the angels”, 1 Corinthians 11:10.

3:11 According to the eternal purpose which He purposed in Christ Jesus our Lord:

Not only is the mystery hid in God, and hid from ages and generations, but it has been His purpose eternally to bless Gentiles this way. It is not an emergency plan devised after Israel refused its Messiah and crucified Him. Rather, that rejection of Christ as their Messiah was foreknown, and part of the plan. They still bear the full burden of guilt for slaying Him, but He was “delivered by the determinate counsel and foreknowledge of God” in the ultimate sense.

Verses 12,13 THE MYSTERY UNDERPINNING BOLDNESS AND CONFIDENCE

3:12 In whom we have boldness and access with confidence by the faith of Him.

Those who were initiated into the mysteries were allowed to approach into the immediate presence of the heathen idol, behind which lurked an evil spirit. The believer’s privilege is far purer and greater, even that of approaching the true God with boldness, and with confidence. Boldness is literally the “absence of fear in speaking”, and would refer to the fact that, instructed in apostolic doctrine, the believer is able to speak to God with intelligence. He also has confidence too, for the truth unfolded by the apostles serve to strengthen the believer’s faith, and assure him of the dignity of the privilege that is his. Heathen idol-worshippers were driven by fear and ignorance- how different is the attitude of the believer!

3:13 Wherefore I desire that ye faint not at my tribulations for you, which is your glory.

Having set forth the truth about the mystery in the previous verses, the apostle is now in a position to appeal to them to be encouraged in the Christian pathway. They should not allow the fact that the apostle went through tribulations and distress as he went about ministering, to make them think that what he taught was not of God. Far from being a sign of God’s disapproval, the trials of the apostle were occasioned in the main by Jewish opponents, who were angry at his emphasis on Gentiles coming into blessing. This blessing was a glorious thing, for it linked them to Christ in glory. Far from being downcast, therefore, because of the apostle’s sufferings, they should see in them a sign present and coming glories were assured.

In the parallel passage to this, Colossians 1:23-29, the apostle rejoices in his sufferings for them. He knew from the outset that he would have to suffer for the sake of Christ, being told it a few days after his conversion, Acts 9:16. He knew also that the full complement of those sufferings had not been reached, for there was “that which is behind of the afflictions of Christ”. This does not mean, of course that there was shortfall in the sufferings of Christ. The shortfall was with Paul. He rejoiced also in the riches of the glory of the mystery, verse 27. And so should we rejoice, as we contemplate the glorious things God has done, and will yet do.

CHRIST THE GIVER OF GIFTS

EPHESIANS 4:7-13

SUMMARY OF THE PASSAGE:
The apostle bases his teaching on the quotation he makes from Psalm 68.  This contains three elements:  Ascension on high; leading captivity captive; giving gifts to men.  These are the three themes of the passage before us.  The first, in verses 9 and 10, of the ascension of Christ and its implications  The second, in verse 14, where the attempts of the enemy to disrupt and destroy are thwarted, showing that Christ still leads captivity captive.  And the third, in verses 11-13, and 15-16, where the gifts Christ gives are effective in promoting the spiritual growth of His people.

STRUCTURE OF THE PASSAGE:

1(a)    Verse 7        GIFT IN THE FORM OF GRACE TO INDIVIDUAL BELIEVERS

 The gift of grace to enable us to benefit from the men-gifts Christ has given.

1 (b)    Verses 8-11    GIFTS IN THE FORM OF MEN TO BELIEVERS AS A WHOLE

 The glorious triumph of the ascended Christ.
 The great extent of Christ’s triumph.
 The gracious giving of gifts to the church.

2 (a)    Verse 12    GOALS ATTAINED THROUGH GIFTS-SHORT TERM

 Perfecting (full equipping) of the saints.  This perfecting is achieved through:
 The work of the ministry (service), as we “speak the truth in love”, verse 15.
 The edifying of the body of Christ, by means of the nourishment He gives.

2 (b)    Verse 13    GOALS ATTAINED THROUGH GIFTS- FINAL

 Unity of the faith- the unity that the doctrines of the faith produce.
 Full-knowledge of the Son of God- unhindered appreciation of His person.
 Fulness of Christ = moral features of Christ in all their completeness.

3(a)    Verse 14    GROWTH IN CHRIST-LIKENESS HINDERED

 Children = infants, (immature).
 Infants are:
            Unstable, tossed to and fro by waves.
            Uncertain, driven about by winds of doctrine.
            Unwise as to wiles of Devil.
            Unwary of being way-laid by those who deceive.

3 (b)    Verses 15,16    GROWTH IN CHRIST-LIKENESS HELPED

 Speaking the truth in love.
 Growing up into Him = likeness to Christ.
 Consolidated by truth He gives.
 Edification (building up) in love.

1(a)    Verse 7        GIFT IN THE FORM OF GRACE TO INDIVIDUAL BELIEVERS

4:7  But unto every one of us is given grace according to the measure of the gift of Christ- verse seven begins with “but”, and introduces a fresh aspect on things.  At the beginning of the chapter, the apostle writes of the way God has worked to produce what is called in verse 3 “the unity of the Spirit”, and there are seven unique things that consolidate that unity, but now it is the believer’s individual responsibility to arrive at the unity of the faith mentioned in verse 13.
Every one is given grace to make use of the giving of Christ in ascended glory and triumph.  Grace is unmerited favour, and in the context here refers to the kind disposition of Christ toward us, which enables us to benefit from the gifts of apostles, prophets, etc, He has given.  This grace takes the form of the supply of that spiritual nourishment we need for growth in Christ-likeness, as verses 13 and 16 explain.

1 (b)    Verses 8-11    GIFTS IN THE FORM OF MEN TO BELIEVERS AS A WHOLE

4:8  Wherefore He saith, When He ascended up on high, He led captivity captive, and gave gifts unto men- At this point the apostle marshalls support from the Old Testament.  This might seem surprising to us, given the nature of the epistle, with its emphasis on matters that were undisclosed in former ages.  But he needs to convince his readers that whilst the church is not in the Old Testament, it is possible to establish three principles from Old Testament scripture which are relevant to the doctrine he is setting forth at this point.  It is especially important to do this because the mention of New Testament prophets in the next verses might concern those who revered the prophets of the Old Testament.

So it is that the apostle now quotes from Psalm 68.  The psalm begins with words reminiscent of Numbers 10:35 and Psalm 132:8.  The psalm traces the way in which God, represented by the ark, had triumphed in Israel in the past, culminating in the bringing up of the ark to Zion.  The gifts mentioned by the psalmist would be David’s gifts for the building of the temple.  Those gifts in large part being the spoils of war, as a reading of 2 Samuel 8:9-12 will show.  The bringing up of the ark and David’s triumph coincide.

Three ideas come together in the verse quoted, therefore.  That of ascension, of the defeat of opposing forces, and the distribution of gifts.  These are exactly the three principles the apostle is using in Ephesians 4. 

One, the absolute triumph of Christ, as indicated by the fact that having been crucified on a cross, He has now ascended to the very throne of God. 

Two, the utter defeat of Satan and his forces, crippling them to such an extent that, even though they are allowed a certain amount of latitude, they are easily defeated by means of the resources Christ gives. 

Three, the bestowal of gifts in grace, to enable believers to grow. 
It is clear that the apostle does not quote the psalm in a word-for-word fashion.  The same Spirit that inspired David now inspires him, and he gives the main elements of David’s words, but does so in a way which suits his purpose.  David had listed three things that had happened, namely ascended, led, gave.  Paul, however, makes the latter two consequent upon the first.  In other words the ascension is the main thought, and the leading captive and giving of gifts follow.  The sense is, “Having ascended up on high, He lead captivity captive, and gave gifts”.  The leading captive and giving gifts take place after the ascension.  In fact, are taking place now. 

He led captivity captive- captivity is personified here to represent all that had held the Ephesians captive as unbelievers, (see chapter 2 verses 1 and 2), and would try to lead them captive as believers, (see chapter 4 verse 14).  Such is the triumph of Christ that He can move through the sphere of the prince of the power of the air unhindered.  In Daniel 10:12,13 we read of the way in which the progress of the angel Gabriel was hindered by an evil angel-prince, and he had to be assisted by Michael the archangel.  No such delay is suffered by Christ, who rises to heaven with “angels and authorities and powers being made subject unto Him”, 1 Peter 3:22. 

It is clear from Scripture that the Lord Jesus has defeated the enemy in all of his guises:
The Prince of this world came to Christ when He was down here, yet He could say he “hath nothing in Me”, John 14:30.  As a result of Calvary the prince of this world has been cast out, John 12:31.
As the one who wields the power of death, he has been utterly defeated by the death and resurrection of Christ, Hebrews 2:14.
As god of this age he is defeated every time a blinded mind is made to see the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ, 2 Corinthians 4:4-6.
As Satan, the adversary, he is defeated when Christ intercedes for His own, Luke 22:31,32, and thus demonstrates He is for us, Romans 8:31-34.
As Devil, the accuser, he is defeated by Christ our advocate, 1 John 2:1.

And gave gifts unto men- in Psalm 68, which the apostle uses here, the gifts David gave were as a result of his victory in battle.  We read in 1 Chronicles 18 that he smote Moab, and “the Moabites brought gifts”, verse 2.  The Syrians “became David’s servants, and brought gifts”, verse 6.  Tou, King of Hamath sent his son to David to congratulate him, “and with him all manner of vessels of gold and silver and brass”, verse 10.  And what did David do with these gifts?  “These also King David dedicated unto the Lord”, verse 11.  By this is meant that he gave them to Solomon to build the temple.

So the illustration is apt.  Gifts dedicated to the temple which were the result of David subduing his foes.  So the gifts Christ gifts in ascended glory are the spoils of war, for He has defeated His foes, and each gift is the sign that this has happened.  For the gifts are men who have been delivered from captivity to Satan, and brought into the service of God so that the “holy temple unto the Lord” of this age may be built and edified, Ephesians 2:20-22.  And the fact that Christ is able to freely give them is the sign of His complete victory. 

4:9  (Now that He ascended, what is it but that He also descended first into the lower parts of the earth?  Verses 9 and 10 form a parenthesis, in which the apostle shows the completeness of the triumph of Christ, for all areas of the universe have felt the influence of His presence.  Even the realm of the dead has known that presence temporarily, so there is no place the forces of evil can hide from His supreme power.  That is not to say that the Devil has any sway in Hades, or even goes there.  The notion that he is King of Hell is a pagan fiction. 

That Christ’s soul went to Hades seems certain from Peter’s use of Psalm 16 on the Day of Pentecost.  Peter’s words may be summed up as follows; David’s tomb is occupied; David’s throne is unoccupied; Christ’s tomb is unoccupied; God’s throne is occupied.  If Christ is to occupy David’s throne on earth, He must first of all rise from the dead to die no more, for His kingdom is an everlasting kingdom, and must not be interrupted by death.

David’s sepulchre was with them to that day, so his flesh did see corruption, and his soul did stay in hades.  Not so the Messiah’s flesh and soul.  He had no corruption within, but God saw to it that no external corruption touched Him, for He was laid in a new and unused tomb.  A tomb, moreover, that was protected by a sealed stone, which barred any unclean person or animal from intruding. In addition, because He rose again so soon, there was no time for Joseph of Arimathea to die, and be deposited in the sepulchre.

Just as His flesh was preserved from corruption, so His soul was not left in Hades.  Peter used Psalm 16 not to show that something was prevented from happening, as if the psalm said “Thou wilt not abandon My soul to Hades”, but rather, to show that something had indeed happened, namely that Christ’s soul had returned from Hades and He was risen from the dead.  The apostle Paul used Psalm 16 to the same end in Acts 13:34-37.

It is sometimes objected that the spirit and the soul are inseparable, and therefore where Christ’s spirit went His soul went too.  And since we know His spirit returned to the Father, then His soul must have done so also.  However, Ecclesiastes 12:7 is clear that when a man dies “Then shall the dust return to the earth as it was: and the spirit shall return unto God who gave it”.  So the spirits of all men go back to God, awaiting the resurrection day when they shall be reunited with their bodies, yet the souls of men go to Hades.  They are separable then.  Perhaps the reticence of some to accept these things is based on a false notion of Hell, or Hades.  That place should not be confused with Gehenna, or the Lake of Fire.  The Greek word hades is the equivalent of the Hebrew word sheol, as the quotation of Psalm 16 by Peter in Acts 2:27 shows.  There is no suggestion in the Old Testament that sheol was a place of suffering for believers.

Those who understand the verse to mean “lower parts, even the earth”, must show how that is relevant to the subject in hand, which is the complete triumph of Christ.  The expression “that He might fill all things” seems conclusive that every part of God’s universe must be under Christ’s control.  His influence pervades every sphere, and this not only because of His Deity, (for Psalm 139 makes clear that no place in creation is out of reach of God, even sheol, for the psalmist said, “If I make my bed in hell, Thou art there”, verse 8)), but now also because of His manhood, and the fact that He has passed through death, been raised, and has ascended to heaven.  The range of thought in both chapter 1:20-21, and 2:4-7, is between Christ in death, and Christ in heaven, not between Christ on earth and then in heaven.

4:10  He that descended is the same also that ascended up far above all heavens, that he might fill all things.)- Christ fills all things in the sense that He does not allow any evil force to invade His domain.  The enemy is completely vanquished.  Solomon built the temple when there was no adversary (same word as Satan) occurrent, 1 Kings 5:4.  “Fill all things” seems to imply that every sphere is under the influence of Christ, and His soul went to hades temporarily to establish this.  The Lord Jesus compared the experience of Jonah in the whale’s belly with His when He would be in the heart of the earth, Matthew 12:40.  Jonah thought of that experience in terms of being in sheol, for he said, “out of the belly of hell (sheol) cried I”, Jonah 2:2.  In no way can Christ’s words “in the heart of the earth” refer to being in a tomb.  In any case, it is His soul in relation to sheol that is in view in Psalm 16, not His body.

4:11  And He gave some, apostles; and some, prophets; and some, evangelists; and some, pastors and teachers;  The apostle is now resuming his argument of verse 8 on the subject of the gifts the ascended Christ has given, after the parenthesis of verses 9 and 10.  Some of them were apostles, some were prophets, etc.  In this passage the gifts are the men themselves, not ignoring the fact that they had gifts, of course.  In Romans 12 and 1 Corinthians 12 it is individual believers who each have a gift or gifts.  Here the emphasis is on that which consolidates the unity that God has formed, and which enables the saints to progress towards the unity of the faith.  In chapter 2:20-22, the apostle likened the church to a temple.  The apostles and prophets lay the doctrinal foundation of the temple, the evangelists bring stones into the temple, and the pastors and teachers adorn the temple, just as Solomon’s temple was adorned with costly stones, 2 Chronicles 3:6.  Compare 1 Corinthians 3:4-17.

Being foundational, we would not expect the apostles and prophets still to be given nearly two thousand years later, especially as Peter warns, not against false prophets counterfeiting true prophets, but false teachers counterfeiting true teachers, 2 Peter 2:1.  We can expect the continuous giving of evangelists, and pastor-teachers, however.  Thankfully there are still true evangelists, who pioneer in the world, preaching Christ where He has not been named. Solomon brought stones from beneath the temple site and cedar wood from the world of the Gentiles, and evangelists do the same on a higher level, bringing suitable material from both Jew and Gentile into the spiritual temple, the church. 

Once the new converts have been brought in by the evangelist, the work of the pastor-teacher begins.  The fact that there is no “and” between the words pastor and teacher strongly suggests that it is the same man looked at from different angles.  There is a rule of Greek grammar known as Sharpe’s Rule, and it runs as follows: “If two nouns of office, title or quality are joined by ‘kai’, with only the first having the definite article, they refer to one and the same person”.  Since this is the case here, the pastors and teachers are the same persons, looked at as functioning in two complementary ways.

A pastor will see to it that those newly saved are encouraged and protected.  He will have both a rod and a staff, as Psalm 23 describes.  A rod to ward off evil teachers, a staff to lead into green pastures.  David knew as a shepherd-lad the need to function in both ways.  As he led his flock through the valley to another pasture, he was aware that it was the valley of the shadow of death for the flock.  Around, in the scrub along the path, there would be adders, but a swift stroke of his rod would deal with these.  Above, the vultures hovered, ready to swoop on the stragglers.  The flock needed to be protected from these also, not to speak of the lion and the bear.  True pastors will be alert to danger in the spiritual realm, and will realize that the enemy can strike from different directions, and in different ways.  It will not always be “as a roaring lion”, 1 Peter 5:8.  It may be a more subtle, serpent-like approach, as 2 Corinthians 11:3 indicates.  But whichever way the danger comes, the pastor must be ready for it.  Well might the apostle say to the Ephesian elders, “Watch”! Acts 20:31.

As teacher, he will see to it the truths of the faith are taught.  There is an ongoing and pressing need for the Scriptures to be expounded systematically and in depth.  The flock cannot survive the onslaughts of the enemy if they are only fed a diet of exhortation and anecdote.  There is no substitute for the ministry of the word by those gifted to give it.  It was only in the days of the apostles that the gift of prophecy was available.  Those with that gift were able to stand up and tell the mind of God without prior notice.  They would have to be prepared in heart, of course, but they did not prepare their message.  This gift is not available today, which is why there are teachers given by Christ to His people, so that they may expound the scriptures after careful and diligent preparation.  May the Ascended Christ be pleased to continue to give His people such gifts, and may the Lord’s people value them and benefit from their God-given ability.

2 (a)    Verse 12    GOALS ATTAINED THROUGH GIFTS-SHORT TERM

4:12  For the perfecting of the saints, for the work of the ministry, for the edifying of the body of Christ:

The overriding reason for the giving of the gifts is to perfect the saints.  In other words, that they might be fully equipped to respond to the ministry of those who teach the word of God, who, in their turn, base their teaching on what the apostles and prophets wrote.  This end is reached by the secondary actions of fostering the work of ministry, and edifying the body until maturity is reached.  The work of ministry is defined in verse 15 as “speaking the truth in love”, the responsibility of all believers, in their appointed spheres. The edifying of the body is described in verse 16.  In verse 14 there are warnings about things that hinder this whole process.

2 (b)    13    GOALS ATTAINED THROUGH GIFTS- FINAL

4:13  Till we all come in the unity of the faith, and of the knowledge of the Son of God, unto a perfect man, unto the measure of the stature of the fulness of Christ:

Just as the unity of the Spirit is the unity that the Spirit of God produces and promotes, so the unity of the faith is that unity which the faith, (the body of Christian doctrine), is sure to achieve.  In a day to come all the differences of interpretation, and the difficulties and disarray those differences bring with them, will be forever gone.  All God’s people will then be in full agreement with one another as to the truths of the faith.  There is no suggestion that these differences will increasingly disappear as the age draws to a close, culminating with a state of things on earth where all believers are in agreement.  That is not a possibility all the time we have the flesh within.  It does encourage a state of mind, however, which would love to see that happen if it were a possibility. 

Another feature of this future state of completeness is described here as the (full) knowledge of the Son of God.  We shall never know the Son as the Father knows Him, Matthew 11:27, but we shall have the most extensive knowledge of Him that believers can have.  Delivered from this body of clay with all its hindrances and frailties, and bearing the image of the heavenly, 1 Corinthians 15:49, we shall be enabled as never before to enjoy and appreciate Him. 

The apostle now describes the condition believers will arrive at as “the perfect man”, a fully mature and developed state.  In verse 12 he had spoken of the perfecting of the saints, and the word he used has to do with being fully equipped for a particular purpose.  Here the idea behind the word “perfect” is of maturity, and is in direct contrast to the infancy of the next verse.  We should notice that the next phrase does not begin with “and”, as if the measure of the stature is a further thing to which we shall arrive.  We are justified in thinking that the perfect man is a man who is marked by the measure of the stature of the fulness of the Christ.  This is a long phrase, and it is often helpful when handling such expressions to begin at the end and work backwards.

We begin then with Christ, the Anointed One.  When a man was anointed in Old Testament times it meant that God approved of him, whether he was anointed to be a prophet, a priest or a king.  Whether that man lived up to the position was a different matter, Saul being a case in point.

Jesus of Nazareth was anointed on the banks of the river Jordan, Acts 10:38.  Whereas, however, men of old were anointed with physical oil by fellow-men, in this case, things were different.  The anointing was by means of the Holy Spirit Himself, the one symbolized by the oil, and it was the Father who did the anointing.  There was another major difference, even the fact that this anointed one would not fail and disappoint.

So when the apostle speaks here of Christ, he speaks of one who had the Father’s full approval.  That full approval was not only because He is God’s beloved Son, but also because all the features that the Father was looking for in a man upon the earth were found in Christ. These features could be summed up in the expression the apostle John uses of Him in John 1:14, “full of grace and truth”.  All that was pleasurable to the God who is love and light, were found in Him as He manifested grace and truth in His life down here.  He is no longer down here, however, but has ascended up on high, for the heavens must receive such a man as this.  Peter’s words on the day of Pentecost were, “God hath made that same Jesus, whom ye crucified, both Lord and Christ”, Acts 2:36.  He was Christ when He was born, as the angel declared in Luke 2:11, He was Christ because of His anointing at Jordan, and now God has re-affirmed His approval of Him as one who had lived blamelessly upon the earth, and by so doing became the supreme example for His people to follow.

Working backwards through our verse, we come to the word stature.  This can mean physical height, as in 1 Samuel 16:7.  It can also be used in another sense, as when in John 9:21,23 the parents of the blind man said, “He is of age, ask him”.  “Of age” translates our word stature.  It denotes that stage at which a person can be thought of as fully-developed.  This fulness and completeness was seen in Christ down here, and should be seen increasingly in His people as they “grow up into Him”, verse 15, and will be fully attained when we arrive in heaven.  Then we shall have reached the measure of His fulness.

The unity of the faith is the unity which having a common set of beliefs ensures.  At the Lord’s coming we shall not only be changed as to the body, with a body like Christ’s, Philippians 3:20,21; 1 Corinthians 15:45-54, but we shall be changed morally, too, so as to be like Christ who is righteous and pure, 1 John 3:1-3. With all hindrances removed we shall have the most extensive knowledge of Him that believers can have.  This will enable us to fully represent Him, as we shall be conformed (a word which speaks of inward conformity) to His image.  We shall not be conformed to His Sonship, for that is not transferable, but rather to the image of Himself as a Son, representing sonship in our measure.  A full measure, indeed, as far as is possible, but not the personal measure of Christ, which is unique. This will result in the perfect man.  In other words, the new order of manhood which Christ displayed when down here in Adam’s world, will also be perfectly displayed in His people in that day.  The measure of the moral height of Christ’s glorious person is the measure to which we shall be conformed.

HEBREWS 1

 

HEBREWS 1

Purpose of the epistle
The epistle to the Hebrews was written for a threefold purpose.  First, to encourage those from the nation of Israel who had truly believed to not lose heart because of the sufferings they were enduring, but rather to go on with Christ.

Second, to convince those still unbelieving in Israel that the One they crucified was in fact their true Messiah, and to continue to ignore Him was to invite Divine judgement.  He Himself had warned of the consequences of not believing Him with the words, “If ye believe not that I am he, ye shall die in your sins”, John 8:24.

Third, to warn those in danger of turning back from the profession they had made in Christ, and to assure them that He was their only hope, and their best policy was to place genuine faith in Him to the salvation of their souls.

The writer describes his epistle as a “word of exhortation”, 13:22, the only other use of this expression being in Acts 13:15, where it refers to an address given in a synagogue. This may account for the difference in style from the rest of the epistles.  It also accounts for the fact that the word God opens the letter, and not the name of the writer.  See Acts 7:7; 13:17.

It may be that this closing chapter of the epistle up to verse 22 is the end of the word of exhortation, with verses 23 to 25 being the “letter…in few words” referred to in verse 22.

This phrase “word of exhortation” is only used elsewhere in the New Testament when Paul was invited to address the synagogue in Antioch of Pisidia, Acts 13:15. But the style of this epistle is said to be not that of Paul. For instance, in the first few verses of the epistle there are nine forms of expression that are said to not fit with Paul’s way of writing, even allowing for the special character of the epistle.
We know from 2 Thessalonians 2:2 that there were those who were sending out letters as if they were from the apostle paul. Because of this he wrote the salutation at the end of his epistles with his own hand, which was his token in every epistle, 2 Thessalonians 3:17. If Paul was indeed the writer of the epistle there would therefore be no doubt about it, since it would be finished off with his own handwriting. There are those who counter this by saying that by “my token in every epistle” he means the expression “the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with you all”, for similar words to this are found at the end of all his epistles, and also at the end of the epistle to the Hebrews. But making this statement at the end of an epistle would be easy for a forger, whereas to write in the handwriting of the apostle would be much more difficult.

It is possible that the epistle is the record of addresses Apollos gave in some synagogue as he “mightily convinced the Jews, and that publicly, shewing by the scriptures that Jesus was Christ”, Acts 18:28. If this is the case, then there is a sense in which we owe the Epistle to the Hebrews to Aquila and Priscilla, who had expounded unto Apollos the way of God more perfectly, verse 26. These two, in their turn, would have learned much from the apostle Paul as he lodged with them, and also as he preached in the synagogue in Corinth every sabbath day, Acts 18:1-5. Interestingly, the same phrase is used of Paul’s preaching as is used of Apollos’, with Paul “testifying to the Jews that Jesus was Christ”, verse 5, and Apollos “shewing by the scriptures that Jesus was Christ”, verse 28. Perhaps there is a sense in which the apostle Paul is the author of Hebrews after all!

We may even go further, and say that since Paul heard the seed-thoughts of the Epistle to the Hebrews from Stephen in his last address, the epistle is Stephen’s, and he, being dead, yet speaketh. The Lord Jesus told in parable form of those who would reject Him even after He had “gone into a far country to receive a kingdom and return”, Luke 19:12. After His departure His people would send a message after Him, saying, “we will not have this man to reign over us”. This message Israel sent when they stoned Stephen, who testified of Jesus that He was at the right hand of God, His journey from earth to heaven complete. But He was standing there, as if ready to return, if the nation would repent. Every stone hurled at Stephen was a sentence in the message. Yet it is very possible that, by God’s grace, through Stephen’s address there was planted in the mind of Paul, and through him into the mind of Aquila and Priscilla, and through them into the mind of Apollos, the truth of the Epistle to the Hebrews, which became, so to speak, God’s response to the stoning of Stephen.

There is a sense in which the epistle to the Hebrews is the New Testament equivalent to the Old Testament book of Leviticus. That book began with the words, “And the Lord spake”, and now this epistle begins with God speaking. Leviticus was the priest’s handbook, detailing how he was to conduct the affairs of the tabernacle, whereas Hebrews is the Christian priest’s handbook, showing how Christ conducts affairs in the heavenly tabernacle, 8:1,2. In chapters 1 to 7 He helps His people as they move across the desert sands, whereas in chapters 8 to 10 He helps them move into the Divine sanctuary.

Survey of the first section
The first section runs from 1:1 to 2:5, and here the writer declares four things:
That the Lord Jesus is superior to the prophets, whom the Hebrews revered.
That He is superior to angels whom the Hebrews respected.
That He is seated in heaven having purged sins, a thing which Old Testament sacrifices the Hebrews relied on could not effect.
That His place in heaven is the guarantee that He will reign on the earth, which no-one else is qualified to do.

This first section has two themes, and then a warning.  The themes are designed to convince the Hebrews that Christ is supreme:
In verses 1-3, Christ ascends the throne of God in heaven, (where He is still present,) proof positive that His work on earth meets God’s approval.
He is seated on the throne of God by inherent right, hence He sits Himself down there. In verses 4-2:4, Christ is seen in the future on the throne of David, which becomes at last in the truest sense, the throne of Jehovah, 1 Chronicles 29:23.
In 2:1-4 the warning is against neglecting the salvation that Christ came to bring to the nation.

The references to the reign of Christ on earth, (the world or habitable earth to come, 2:5), are made to assure the Hebrews of the following things:
1. God has not cast them off as a people.
2. He has confidence in “the carpenter of Nazareth”, for He is His Son.
3. His character as King-Priest is displayed already in the heavenly sanctuary.  This is the sign that He will indeed be a priest upon His throne in a coming day, see Zechariah 6:13.
There is a vital connection between His purging of sins, and the reconciling of all things, Colossians 1:20.
4. It is worthwhile being in relationship with Christ, for He is the coming King, and His enemies will be made His footstool.  To know Him is to be His associate, not His enemy.
5. That those who were prepared to accept a dual-Messiah idea, with Jesus of Nazareth as the suffering Messiah, but another, yet to come, as the sovereign Messiah, are shown to be wrong.  Jesus Christ combines both in His person.

The present exalted position of the Lord Jesus at the right hand of the throne of God would be a great encouragement to the believers amongst the Hebrews.  Isaiah was no doubt disappointed by the death of King Uzziah, but he was shown Christ in glory, Isaiah 6, John 12:37-41.  Ezekiel must have been depressed as he sat with the captives by the river, but he was shown the throne of God, and the likeness of the appearance of a man above upon it, Ezekiel 1:26.  Daniel must have been dismayed by the thought of great Gentile powers dominating the earth, when he knew that was rightly Messiah’s role, but he saw in vision the Son of Man approach the throne of God to be given a kingdom that will never be destroyed, Daniel 7:13,14.  Stephen was disowned by his own nation, as his Saviour had been, but what caused his face to glow was the sight of Jesus in heaven, Acts 7:55,56.  John, on the isle of Patmos  was deprived of fellowship and comfort, but he was given a vision of coming things, when the kingdoms of this world shall become the kingdom of our God, and of His Christ, Revelation 5:5-7.  So when the word came to the Hebrew believers, “when He had by Himself purged our sins, sat down on the right hand of the Majesty on high”, they must have been greatly heartened.

The words “Son”, (who He is in eternity), “purged”, (what He did at Calvary), and “sat down”, (where He is in glory), sum up the epistle.  His person, His purging and His place are the key elements that show Him to be better than anything the Hebrews had known in Old Testament times.

THE WORDS OF THE BIBLE, THE CHRISTIAN SCRIPTURES, AS FOUND IN THE EPISTLE TO THE HEBREWS CHAPTER 1, VERSES 1-3:

1:1 God, who at sundry times and in divers manners spake in time past unto the fathers by the prophets,

1:2 Hath in these last days spoken unto us by his Son, whom he hath appointed heir of all things, by whom also he made the worlds;

1:3 Who being the brightness of his glory, and the express image of his person, and upholding all things by the word of his power, when he had by himself purged our sins, sat down on the right hand of the Majesty on high:

1:1
God, who at sundry times and in divers manners spake in time past unto the fathers by the prophets,

God, who…spake- this epistle begins with an emphasis on the way God had spoken to the nation of Israel. This theme continues throughout, for in chapter 2 the word spoken through angels, (the Law at Sinai), is contrasted with the word spoken by the Lord, 2:3, a reference to His speaking when upon the earth.  In 3:7 they are exhorted to hear the voice of Christ as Son.  In 4:12 the (spoken) word of God is in view, referring to the word of Christ to them, (and hence an incidental proof of the Deity of Christ); whilst in 12:25-29 the warning is against rejecting the word of the one who spoke at Sinai, who speaks now in grace and salvation, and who will speak again in judgement to those who reject Him.  Once again the Deity of Christ is affirmed, for the one who shall speak when He comes in glory is the same one who spoke at Sinai.  So the latter passage gathers up the three aspects of the speaking, in law, in grace, in judgement. Men either prefer law to grace, clinging to their works, or ignore grace and receive judgement.

Given the emphasis on speaking, it is fitting that the epistle should be described as a word of exhortation, 13:22. There are also expressions throughout the epistle which refer to the author speaking. Chapter 2:5, “whereof we speak”, 5:11; “of whom we have many things to say”; 6:9, “though we thus speak”; 7:9, “and as I may so say”; 8:1, “now of the things which we have spoken”‘ 9:5, “of which we cannot now speak particularly”; 11:32, “and what shall I more say?” After having spoken of his word of exhortation, there seems to be a contrast made with the “letter in few words, 13:22.

It is important for the writer to prove the superiority of Christ not only to the angels through whom the Law was given, 2:2; Acts 7:53; Galatians 3:19, but also to the prophets, who brought the word of God to the people subsequently. On the Mount of Transfiguration Moses represented the Law, and Elijah the prophets, yet the word from heaven was “hear Him”, for He who had spoken indirectly by the prophets, was now speaking directly, in the Person of Christ.  Moses himself had received the assurance from God that a prophet like unto him would be raised up, Deuteronomy 18; Acts 3.  The writer is insisting that Jesus Christ was that prophet.  See also John 1:21; Acts 3:22.  It is important for him to show Christ as superior to prophets, before he turns to the subject of His King-Priesthood, since the prophets as a class were faithful to God, whereas many kings and priests in Israel were not.

Later on the writer will emphasise the fact that Christ is King-priest, so He supersedes the three offices that were prominent in Israel. The Lord Jesus was rejected by elders who governed, (instead of a king), chief priests who officiated as priests, and scribes who taught, (instead of prophets).  These were all appointed by men, and as such were false shepherds, who had “climbed up some other way”, John 10:1.  These princes of this world were ignorant as to who the Lord of Glory was, 1 Corinthians 2:8, and hence they crucified Him. 

At sundry times- literally “in many portions”, meaning that no individual prophet could embrace all the truth of God. Nor could a prophet be present at all times during Israel’s history. He who is the “I am”, unaffected by time and change, is relevant at all times.  He could say, “Before Abraham was, I am”, John 8:8.

And in diverse manners- divers is the old word for diverse.  The prophets spoke in different ways as fitted the circumstance.  Sometimes judging, at other times consoling and exhorting.  They spoke of coming judgement and coming glory.  Some, like Ezekiel, acted out their prophecies.  Now, however, everything is concentrated in the Son, who has the capacity to speak in whatever way is relevant.  He who is “the truth”, can embrace it all.
When Christ asked His disciples who the people said He was, they answered with various suggestions, Matthew 16:13,14.  Some of the people saw in Christ likeness to Isaiah, (delighting in salvation), others, to Jeremiah, (weeping, and rejected of his own people), still others, to Elijah, (courageous, reforming, and a miracle worker). Others said He was John the Baptist risen from the dead, showing they thought that He deserved to rise from the dead.  We should not be surprised at the names the people mentioned, for since He is the Son of the Living God, and the features seen in the prophets were the expression of the life of God, then they are to be expected in the Son.  It is interesting to notice that they did not say He was like Moses, the law-giver, for they appreciated that grace marked Him.  By the variety of persons they mentioned, the disciples were demonstrating that all the good points seen in the individual prophets were found in Christ.

Spake in time past unto the fathers by the prophets- note the contrast between time past and last days.  The word for past here means old, in the sense of worn-out.  See verses 11 and 12, where Divinely established things are said to be wearing out and needing to be replaced, and link with 8:13, where the law-system was waxing old and was ready to vanish away.  The Hebrews are being prepared for the truth that even Divinely-established things can become old and in need of replacing.  There needed to be a fresh beginning, and this comes in with Christ.
Fathers is a term of respect for ancestors, but also a reminder that it was the fathers who ill-treated the prophets, Matthew 23:29-33, and the children of the prophets who were guilty of rejecting “the prophet”, Acts 3:22-26; John 1:21; Deuteronomy 18:15,18,19.

1:2
Hath in these last days spoken unto us by his Son, whom he hath appointed heir of all things, by whom also he made the worlds;

Hath in these last days- this is a Hebrew expression for the end of the age of the Law, prior to the age of the Messiah, the two divisions of time as far as Israel knew. The church age was unknown in the Old Testament. Note that the speaking is still in the last days of the law, for the latter did not come to an end until Christ died, 7:18,28.    This is a reminder that a critical point had been reached, and if they miss out on Christ, they will miss out entirely. 

Spoken unto us by his Son- The contrast is with the character of the speakers, not between “by” and “in”.  The prophets were agents outside of the Godhead, whereas now the speaking is directly by God, in the person of His Son, and this gives the speaking a different character, for it is no longer at different times and in different ways, but all centred in the Son.  The difference is between the prophets as a class, taken from among men, and Christ in His character as Son, taken from among the persons of the Godhead.
So the speaking is now concentrated, in relation to time and content, as with prophets it could not be, and also consummated, for it is now last days, and the Son has come.  The parable of the vineyard spoke of servants, more servants, (corresponding to the early and the latter prophets), then last of all, his son, corresponding to Christ as Son of God, Matthew 21:33-46.

The prophets said “Thus saith the Lord”, but Christ said “Verily, verily, I say unto you”. How foolish to ignore such a Speaker!  “To whom shall we go, for thou hast the words of eternal life,” was the confession of Peter, and also of all who truly believe, John 6:68. 

The Sonship of Christ indicates Deity, for to be the son of a father means to share his nature.  There are expressions in Scripture like “sons of Belial”, (worthlessness), “sons of thunder”, “son of consolation”, “sons of disobedience”.  The idea is not that a person is descended from the thunder, for example, but rather that he has a stormy nature. 

Christ is presented in Hebrews as God’s Firstborn Son, the administrator of the Father’s affairs.  As such, He, like firstborn sons generally, fulfils a prophet/priest/king rôle, speaking to the family for the father, (prophet-like), introducing the family into the father’s presence, (priest-like), and administering the father’s affairs, (king-like).  This is all worked out in the epistle as a whole.  Hence He fulfils His prophetic role by speaking to Israel, just as He had spoken the worlds into being as firstborn, Colossians 1:15,16, and upholds them by the word of His power.  He speaks as priest too, for He ever lives to make intercession, 7:25.  He will speak as king, for His voice will soon shake earth and heaven, 12:25-27.

The titles Only begotten and Firstborn may be compared and contrasted as follows:
Only begotten eternally- “The only begotten Son, which is (permanently) in the bosom of the Father”, John 1:18.  “That eternal life, which was with the Father”, 1 John 1:2.
First born eternally.  For He was appointed heir before He made the worlds.  Creation is by Him and for Him as firstborn, Colossians 1:16.  There is no point of time in eternity, so He was ever the appointed one in the eternal counsels. 

Only- begotten is in relation to the Father, John 1:18.
Firstborn is in relation to creation and believers, Colossians 1:15,18.
As Only begotten He is alone.
As firstborn He has many brethren, Romans 8:29.

His only begotten relationship is not shared.
His firstborn rights are shared- for Hebrews 12:23 speaks of “the church of firstborn ones written in heaven”.

As only begotten, He is in the Father’s bosom, John 1:18.
As firstborn, He is about His Father’s business, Luke 2:49; John 3:35.

Whom he hath appointed heir of all things- the idea of firstborn rights must come from “the Father, from whom every family in heaven and earth is named”, Ephesians 3:15.  This is seen in the fact that there is no regulation about firstborn rights in the early chapters of Genesis, yet the idea was practised, and given Divine approval.  It is therefore a reflection of eternal counsels.  No doubt God spoke to Adam about many things as He walked and talked with him in the garden of Eden.
“Appointed heir” does not imply a specific moment, since we are thinking of Divine and eternal things, and moments of time have no relevance there.
Joseph was Jacob’s firstborn son, replacing Reuben, but he was not in control of everything, for the right to rule was given to Judah, 1 Chronicles 5:1,2.  so the firstborn’s double portion was divided between two sons. Christ, however, has all things under His control, both heavenly and earthly, (compare the stars and sheaves of Joseph’s dream, Genesis 37:6-11).  If He has control of all things, (just as Joseph had everything under his hand, Genesis 39:4-6) then we must be linked to Him if we are to have blessing from God.  “The Father loveth the Son, and hath given all things into his hand.  He that believeth on the Son hath everlasting life: and he that believeth not the Son shall not see life, but the wrath of God abideth on him”, John 3:35,36.

The fact that He is heir highlights the sin of crucifying Him.  The language of the parable was, “Come, this is the heir, let us kill Him”; Matthew 22:38.  And chapter 6:6 speaks of crucifying to themselves the Son of God afresh.  To crucify the Son again is crime indeed! 

By whom also he made the worlds- note the “whom” and “to whom”, with Christ the passive one, whereas in verse 3 it is “who”, Christ’s active work as one charged with representing the Father’s interests, and those of the family of God too.  As the Creator, Christ has authority over creation, yet He was in the world, the world was made by Him, and the world knew Him not, John 1:10.  Angels, demons, animals, birds, fishes, all responded to Him in His lifetime, and recognised Him in some way, but the majority of men did not, and crucified Him.

The making of the worlds is one way in which Christ displays what God is, as Romans 1:18-20 indicates.  As the Creator, He could bypass what rain did to the vine when it fell, and the best wine was ready in an instant, John 2:1-11.  He could also do to a fig tree what happens when rain does not fall, even dry it up by the roots, Matthew 21:19. 

“By whom” does not imply He was merely a creature-agent, given power from God to do things.  Romans 11:36 says all things are “through Him”, meaning God, but none can give God the power to act.  John 1:3 is clear that not one thing that has come into being has done so without Christ, so He did not come into being, or else He made Himself!  This subject is returned to in verses 10-12, contrasting the angels with the Creator.

There are three words for world in the New Testament.  There is “kosmos”, (which gives us “cosmetic”, and “cosmos”), which, in an ideal sense, is the world of symmetry, beauty, and harmony, (the opposite being chaos), but which has now been corrupted by Satan into the world of hostility to God; “aionas”, (which gives us “aeon”), the world of history; and “oikeumene”, (which gives us “ecumenical”), the world of humanity. 
The word used here is “aionas”, the world as an age, the world of history, although it is used in 11:3 in connection with things.  “The aggregate of things contained in time”, Grimm.  The world of matter and time, (which came into being at the same moment, the “beginning” of Genesis 1:1), is the stage for the unfolding of the truth of God.  This is now finalised in Christ, for “once in the end of the world (or the consummation of the ages) hath he appeared to put away sin by the sacrifice of himself”, 9:26.

1:3 
Who being the brightness of his glory, and the express image of his person, and upholding all things by the word of his power, when he had by himself purged our sins, sat down on the right hand of the Majesty on high:

Who being the brightness of his glory- He does not merely reflect, but rather radiates the glory of God, as the sunlight has the same character as the sun.  He is the Shekinah of Psalm 80, shining forth from between the cherubims above the ark, so that Israel may be saved.  Aaron had to make a cloud of incense to shield him from that glory, that he die not, for to see God was to die.  But that glory was Christ!  Aaron entered the presence of God without his garments of glory and beauty, lest anything detract from the glory of God. 

And the express image of his person- Christ is the exact expression of the essence of God.  Christ expresses in Himself all that the Godhead is in Itself.  To see Him is to see the Father, to know His comfort is to know the comfort of the Holy Spirit, for He is another comforter of the same sort, John 14:16; Luke 2:25, where “consolation” is the same word as “comforter”.
The word person translates hupostasis, which was used in ordinary speech of a foundation.  The idea is of an underlying and steadfast thing.  Christ is the unique, full, and exact expression of all that God is in the essence of His Being.  The Son is personally distinct from, and yet literally equal to, the One of whom He is the full expression.  Note later quotations that call the Son “God”, and “Jehovah”, in verses 8 and 10.  Note that He is the express image of the person of God in His totality, not just the Father. “In Him dwelleth all the fulness of the Godhead bodily”, Colossians 2:9.

And upholding all things by the word of his power- the Targums, (Jewish commentaries), and Rabbis often spoke of God in this way.  This is part of His first-born work, of maintaining and bearing responsibility for everything for the Godhead. He has power sufficient for any task, and can maintain everything intact for God, and also cause it to pass and replace it, as verse 12 says.  The idea behind upholding is not simply supporting, or even maintaining, but “carrying toward a final goal”.  He so manages the universe that it moves inevitably to the goal set for it in the Divine Purpose. 

When he had by himself purged our sins- so whatever is involved in purging sins, it is given character by who He is that does it, for He did it “by Himself”, in all the glory of His person.  It is not just that he did the work alone, but left the stamp of His own person upon the work. The expression also indicates that the credit for doing the work is given to Him.

Notice how the glories of Christ relate to the work of purging sins:
As Son He purged sins, so He did the work with Divine insight.
As firstborn and heir He purged sins, for He cannot inherit a defiled inheritance, whether it be His people, or His land, or His world.
As the maker of all things, He knows perfectly the difference between what things are now, and what they were when He made them very good, including man.
As the brightness of the glory, He brings things back by his purging, so that they glorify God.
As the exact expression of the essence of God, He purges in conformity with the Divine character.
As the upholder of all things, He maintains what He establishes in the material world, and in the spiritual.  Note the contrasts, however, for sins are not things, but are moral offences, yet He can deal with these too.  He upholds by His word, but can only purge sins through His death.

Note the following facts about the words “by Himself”:
The purging of sins cannot be done by merely speaking, even though He upholds all things by the word of His power.
It cannot be done with the help of another, for all others, (Aaron included, see 7:27), need a sin-offering themselves, so He did it by the sacrifice of Himself, not needing a personal sin-offering.
He needs no special vestments to make Him suitable for God’s presence, as Aaron did; what He is in Himself is enough.
He needs no sacrifice or officiating priest, but did the work alone.

Three things were purged in Leviticus 16:16-19 as a result of propitiation- the sanctuary, reminding us that Christ has purified the heavenly sanctuary, of which the tabernacle was a representation, Hebrews 9:23; the altar of incense, reminding us that the Lord Jesus ever liveth to make intercession for us, Hebrews 7:25; the people, Leviticus 16:30, reminding us that believers have been purged in conscience from dead works, to serve the living God, Hebrews 9:14.  The phrase is literally “made purgation for sins”, so it is the work itself that is in view here, not the result of the work in persons being individually purged from sins; that comes later, in 9:14.

There are three main results from propitiation. In relation to God, the demands of God regarding sins are met fully.  In relation to man, there can be reconciliation to God, 2 Corinthians 5:14-21; Romans 5:11.  In relation to heaven and earth, the defilement of sin can be removed, so that God can righteously bring in a new heavens and a new earth which shall never be spoiled by sin, John 1:29, Daniel 9:24. 

Sat down on the right hand of the majesty on high- literally, “He set Himself down”, confident of His place with the Father, and of the sufficiency of His work.  In verse 13 we learn that He was invited to sit down. As His work of purging sins is complete, He can sit down, as no Aaronic priest was able to do, see Hebrews 10:11-14.  As Son, He ever had the right to be on the throne, but now as firstborn Son, and moreover as a man, He is given the place at the right hand of the Father.  See the incident in Genesis 48:12-14 which shows the importance of the right hand of a father.
As one who is the brightness of the glory, He had dealt with sins in conformity with the majesty of God, and God can now be appropriately designated “The Majesty”, with every question as to whether He was able to deal with sins finally removed. “Majesty” means greatness, and Christ ensures that nothing can reduce God’s standing and dignity.  In chapter 1, Christ is seated as firstborn.  In 8:1 He is seated as one firmly established; in chapter 10:12 as finaliser, and in chapter 12:2 as the faithful one.

As the heir He is responsible for Administering.
As the one who made the worlds, for Creating.
As the one who is the brightness, for Radiating.
As the one who is the image, for Expressing.
As the one upholding all things, for Preserving.
As the one who purged sins, for Propitiating.
As the one who is sat down on the throne, for Completing.

THE WORDS OF THE BIBLE, THE CHRISTIAN SCRIPTURES, AS FOUND IN THE EPISTLE TO THE HEBREWS CHAPTER 1, VERSES 4 TO 14:

1:4  Being made so much better than the angels, as he hath by inheritance obtained a more excellent name than they.

 1:5  For unto which of the angels said he at any time, Thou art my Son, this day have I begotten thee? And again, I will be to him a Father, and he shall be to me a Son?

 1:6  And again, when he bringeth in the firstbegotten into the world, he saith, And let all the angels of God worship him.

 1:7  And of the angels he saith, Who maketh his angels spirits, and his ministers a flame of fire.

 1:8  But unto the Son he saith, Thy throne, O God, is for ever and ever: a sceptre of righteousness is the sceptre of thy kingdom.

 1:9  Thou hast loved righteousness, and hated iniquity; therefore God, even thy God, hath anointed thee with the oil of gladness above thy fellows.

 1:10  And, Thou, Lord, in the beginning hast laid the foundation of the earth; and the heavens are the works of thine hands:

 1:11  They shall perish; but thou remainest; and they all shall wax old as doth a garment;

 1:12  And as a vesture shalt thou fold them up, and they shall be changed: but thou art the same, and thy years shall not fail.

 1:13  But to which of the angels said he at any time, Sit on my right hand, until I make thine enemies thy footstool?

 1:14  Are they not all ministering spirits, sent forth to minister for them who shall be heirs of salvation? 

There is a correspondence between the seven-fold glories of Christ in verses 1-3, and the seven quotations from the Old Testament in verses 4-14, as follows:

DESCRIPTIONS

QUOTATIONS

 

His Son. 

Thou art my Son.

 

Appointed heir 

By inheritance…he shall be to me a Son.

 

Made the worlds

Of old thou hast laid the foundation of earth.

 

Brightness of glory  

Psalm 104- “Clothed with honour and majesty”.

 

Express image 

Thou Lord (Jehovah)…

 

Upholding all things 

As a vesture thou shalt fold them up.

 

Sat…on the right hand  

Sit on my right hand.

 

 A summary of the seven quotations is as follows:

First   

God to the Son. 

The decree establishing His rule.

Second 

God speaking about the Son. 

The devotedness which marks His rule.

Third  

God speaking to the angels.

The deference to be given when He rules.

Fourth 

God speaking about the angels. 

The demands He makes when He rules.

Fifth 

God to the Son, and about Him as God. 

The Deity of the one who rules.

Sixth

God to the Son, and about Him as Jehovah. 

The duration of the One who rules.

Seventh

God to the Son, but never to the angels in the same terms. 

The dominion of the One who rules.

1:4
Being made so much better than the angels, as he hath by inheritance obtained a more excellent name than they.
 
Being made so much better than the angels- the idea behind “being made…better” is “having become better”, or “proving Himself to be better”.  He becomes, by purging, superior to the angels who administered the first covenant, with its purging only of the flesh, Hebrews 9:13.  The word for made here is “ginomai” which is used “in passages where it is specified who or what a person of thing is or has been rendered, as respects quality, condition, place, rank or character”- Grimme.  So the Son has proved Himself to be superior to angels by all the things He is said to do in verses 1-3.
As he hath by inheritance obtained a more excellent name than they- the more excellent name is Firstborn Son, ( a name which the rest of the chapter shows cannot be applied to angels), and because the idea of inheritance is bound up with the word firstborn, (for the size of a son’s share of the inheritance depended on whether he was firstborn or not), as soon as this Firstborn Son begins to enter into His inheritance, then He can begin to be called by His proper title of firstborn.  It is part of the inheritance, and so He can be said to inherit it.  He is “Firstborn from among the dead”, Colossians 1:18; Revelation 1:5.
The words “so much”, and “as”, taken together, give to us the idea of the measurement of the glory of His name, bearing in mind that the name is more than a title, and involves reputation.  The measure of how much better He has become, is the greatness of the name He is given, and the greatness of this name is understood from the next verses, hence the “for” at the beginning of verse 5.  God Himself leads the way in these quotations by introducing His Son into the world under the title Firstbegotten.

1:5
For unto which of the angels said he at any time, Thou art my Son, this day have I begotten thee? And again, I will be to him a Father, and he shall be to me a Son?
 

For unto which of the angels said he at any time- the angels rejoiced when the earth was established, and they will no doubt rejoice again when it is delivered from the bondage of corruption, but they have not been given the task of doing that.  See 2:5.  The angels could never be only begotten sons, but Lucifer was called the son of the morning, Isaiah 14:12.  He may have been the first one created, and might aspire to the title firstborn.  This may explain his hatred of, and opposition to, the Son of God.

Thou art my Son, this day have I begotten thee?- angels are called sons of God in the Old Testament, Job 1:6, but to none of them were these words spoken, for the word son is being used in a distinctive sense here in relation to Christ.  In Luke 3:38 Adam is called son of God, but when in Luke 4:3 the Devil tempted Christ he said, “If Thou be the Son of God command this stone that it be made bread”.  Clearly, the Devil distinguishes the sonship of Adam from that of Christ, for there would have been no point in tempting Adam to turn a stone into bread. 

These words were originally spoken to David when he ascended the throne of Israel, Psalm 2:7, which is dated BC 1047, the year after David began to reign.  As king in Israel, David was to administer for God, the primary task of the firstborn.  David had been harassed and hunted for many years by Saul and his supporters, but at last he was brought into prominence in Israel, and the anointing which had taken place when he was but a lad, now authorised him to reign.  So it is that David writes of God saying, “Yet have I set, (or anointed) my king upon my holy hill of Zion”, Psalm 2:6.  So despite the raging of his enemies, verses 1,2, David was at last established on the throne of Israel. But now these words find their fulfilment in Christ, and all that was foreshadowed by the reign of David shall come to pass through David’s son, who is also David’s Lord, Matthew 22:41-46. 

The fact that these words can be spoken in a limited sense to David, yet not in any sense to the angels, shows that it is to a man that these words come.  The believers in Acts 4:25,26 applied the words of Psalm 2 to the Lord Jesus as He was raged at by the kings of the earth.  Now the writer to the Hebrews is quoting later verses from the psalm, to show that the one Israel rejected and crucified is indeed to be established by God as His firstborn, “higher than the kings of the earth”, Psalm 89:27.
Psalm 2:7 is quoted again in 5:5 to show that Christ in resurrection and ascension has the title of firstborn, now that He has displaced Aaron as high priest.
In Acts 13:33 the words are used in connection with Him being raised up in Israel at His baptism. The baptism of Christ marked the beginning of His prophetic ministry.

The Hebrew word “yalad” meaning begotten, used in Psalm 2:7, is also translated “declare their pedigree” in Numbers 1:18.  It was unheard of for one who was Son of God to be crucified on a cross, and be cursed of God, but God has declared His pedigree by raising Him from the dead, as Romans 1:4 also indicates with the words , “declared to be the Son of God by the resurrection of the dead”.

It is important that the Hebrews be reassured that Jesus of Nazareth is indeed the Messiah, and that His present place in heaven is not a signal that the kingdom they expected will not be established.  If He disappoints them in that, then He might disappoint them in other ways.  So the seven quotations which are made here serve to show His competence to reign.  Chapter 2:5 assures us that what is being spoken of in these verses is the time when the habitable earth in the future, (“the world to come”), will be under the sway of God’s king.  The seven quotations (which have to with His manifestation on earth the second time), enforce the truth set out in the opening verses, with their seven-fold description of Christ’s glories, (which glories were manifest when He came the first time).

Peter made it clear on the Day of Pentecost that David was still in the grave, and had not ascended into heaven.  But Christ is risen, and ascended, thus showing that the way is open for the throne of David to be occupied by a man who is clear of death, and can reign for ever.  So not only by His birth is He uniquely qualified to sit on David’s throne, (for all others of David’s line through Solomon are unable to overcome the obstacle represented by God’s curse on Jechoniah’s descendants, Jeremiah 22:29,30), but by His resurrection also.  He is able to reign without interruption for ever, with none raising an objection.

And again, I will be to him a Father, and he shall be to me a Son? This is a statement that was made in the first instance to David about Solomon, his immediate successor.  God said, “I will set up thy seed after thee, which shall proceed out of thy bowels, and I will establish his kingdom.  He shall build an house for my name, and I will stablish the throne of his kingdom for ever.  I will be his father, and he shall be my son.  If he commit iniquity, I will chasten him with the rod of men, and with the stripes of the children of men: but my mercy shall not depart away from him, as I took it from Saul, whom I put away before thee.  And thine house and thy kingdom shall be established for ever before thee: thy throne shall be established for ever”, 2 Samuel 7:12-16.  Solomon did indeed proceed out of David’s bowels, verse 12, and have an established kingdom.  He did indeed build a house for Jehovah, verse 13, even the temple.  But it is also true that he committed iniquity, verse 14, yet the kingdom was not taken away from him, verse 15.  Now clearly the house and royal line of David has been interrupted, so how can the promise that they will be established for ever be fulfilled?  Only by Christ coming of the seed of David, and rising from the dead to be alive for evermore.  The writer to the Hebrews, inspired by the same Spirit that inspired Nathan to prophesy to David, understands this, hence he shows that the vitally important part of the prophecy, upon which all the rest depends, was perfectly fulfilled in Christ.  Because this is so, there is no question of Him being disciplined for iniquity, or having the throne removed from Him.
It is noticeable that the writer of the Book of Chronicles does not mention anything about iniquity, and also tells us additional things that God must have said through Nathan to David, but which are not found in 2 Samuel 7. He was concerned to encourage those who had returned from exile in Babylon, and one way he did it was to record the history of the kings of Judah in such a way that features which will be seen to perfection in the Messiah are highlighted. We see this from the following comparison:

2 Samuel 7:12-15 

1 Chronicles 17:11-14

I will set up thy seed after thee…

I will raise up thy seed after thee…

I will establish his kingdom…    

I will establish his kingdom…

He shall build a house for my name…

He shall build me a house…

 I will establish the throne of his kingdom for ever… 

I will stablish his throne for ever…

I will be his father… 

I will be his father

He shall be my son… 

He shall be my son

If he commit iniquity… 

(omitted)

Thine house and thy kingdom shall be established for ever… 

Settle him in mine house and in my kingdom.

Thy throne shall be established for ever. 

His throne shall be established for evermore.

“I will be to Him a Father” signifies that God will guarantee to Christ all the resources He needs, in terms of affection and direction, to enable Him to reign on the earth.  Just as He was dependant on the Father when here the first time, it will be the same when He reigns, He will not be independent then either.  This is indicated by the fact that on the Mount of Transfiguration, when a preview of the coming kingdom was given to the disciples, He is said to have been praying, the sure sign of a dependant man, Luke 9:29.

“He shall be to me a Son” indicates that all that a father expects from a son will be forthcoming from Christ, in terms of loyalty and diligence.  This too will be manifest when He reigns, for His reign will be mediatorial, on behalf of the Father, to whom He will then give it up at the end of one thousand years, 1 Corinthians 15:24.  Jesus the Messiah can be relied on by God, so He should be relied on by the Hebrews.  Being more honoured than any angel, and more than two of the most illustrious kings Israel have ever had, David and Solomon, He is surely worthy of their trust.

1:6
And again, when he bringeth in the firstbegotten into the world, he saith, And let all the angels of God worship him.
 

And again, when he bringeth in the first begotten into the world he saith- the word for world here is “habitable earth”, just as it is in 2:5. 

The following things are brought out in this chapter with regard to the world to come, the inhabited earth where Christ reigns: 

1.

Verse 5

Christ is heir of it.

2.

Verse 7

Angels serve it.

3.

Verse 8

Messiah’s throne governs it.

4.

Verse 10

Earth was made for it.

5.

Verse 12

Earth is folded up at the end of it.

6.

Verse 12

Christ reigns continuously throughout it.

7.

Verse 13

Enemies are expelled from it

8.

Verse 14

Saints inherit it.

9.

Chapter 2:4

Miracles foreshadow it, for they are the powers of the age to come, 6:5.


God has decreed that in all things Christ should have the pre-eminence, as is seen in the following scriptures:

In Hebrews 2:8

All things are to be put under Christ as man.

In Ephesians 1:10

All things will be gathered together into one in Christ.

In Luke 24:44

All things must be fulfilled.

In Colossians 1:20

All things must be reconciled.

In 2 Peter 3:11

All things shall be dissolved, to make way for a new heaven and earth.

The scene, then, is millenial, and God is going to introduce His Son into this world again.  At His first coming, He was sent by God, but when He comes to earth again, so pleased is His Father because of all He was the first time, He is going to personally introduce Him.  Perhaps this is what the Lord Jesus meant at the time of the Mount of Transfiguration experience, (when the power and coming of Christ were manifested to the apostles, 2 Peter 1:16), when He spoke of coming “in his own glory, and in his Father’s, and of the holy angels”, Luke 9:26.  The Father’s glory will shine when Christ comes to earth.

And let all the angels of God worship him- this is a quotation from Psalm 97:7.  In that psalm the kingdom of Christ is anticipated, and especially the beginning of it when He comes in flaming fire taking vengeance on His enemies.  Compare 2 Thessalonians 1:7,8, with Psalm 97:3.  It is Jehovah who is said to come in Psalm 97, but Jesus is Jehovah, equally with the Father and the Spirit.  At that time all the angels (the meaning of “gods”) will worship Him, in effect acknowledging that to none of them has the honour of reigning been given.

1:7
And of the angels he saith, Who maketh his angels spirits, and his ministers a flame of fire.

And of the angels he saith, Who maketh his angels spirits, and his ministers a flame of fire- having told us things about Christ to show why He is superior to angels, we now learn what makes the angels inferior to Him. This is a quotation from Psalm 104:4, which speaks of God as the creator and sustainer of all things.  Indeed, the psalm is a commentary on the six days of creation, and then finishes with what may be thought of as a Sabbath hymn of praise to God.  Since the Son is the exact expression of the essence of God, the writer is free to attribute what is said of Jehovah in Psalm 104 to Christ.  And the matter he emphasises is that He made the angels!  Here is further proof of the inferiority of angels to Christ, for they, for all their glory and might, are simply the product of His hand. 

Consider the following facts about angels in comparison with Christ:
 “For by him (Christ) were all things created…whether they be thrones or dominions or principalities or powers”, Colossians 1:16.
 The angels are said to be made as spirits, so they have not the ability to die, as Christ had because He took flesh and blood.  They will never attain to the glories He has won by His death.
 Notice, too, that they are His angels, they belong to Him by creatorial right, and therefore in gratitude to Him for ever making them, they ought to worship Him.
 They are said to be His ministers, for while Christ has taken the form of a servant, and serves man, He is not said to serve angels; rather, they serve Him.
 They are a flame of fire, sent out on missions of burning judgement, whereas Christ came in grace, and rebuked disciples who wanted to call fire down on men, Luke 9:54-56.
 Given the supreme worthiness of Christ, it is only right for them to worship Him.

 1:8
But unto the Son he saith, Thy throne, O God, is for ever and ever: a sceptre of righteousness is the sceptre of thy kingdom.

But unto the Son he saith, Thy throne, O God, is for ever and ever- this is the second thing that God says directly to His Son.  The words are a quotation from Psalm 45, which is a marriage song for a king, a song of loves.  The psalm speaks of God anointing this one, yet He is called God! The throne of Solomon is called “the throne of the Lord” in 1 Chronicles 29:23.  Here is the full expression of that.  When Solomon sat there it was only the throne of God in a faint sense, but when God manifest in flesh sits on it, then it will indeed be the throne of Jehovah.
The promise to David was that his seed would reign for ever, and here is the fulfilment of the promise, for Christ is risen from the dead to die no more, and He is coming to establish a kingdom which shall last for ever, Daniel 7:14.  “Of His kingdom there shall be no end”, Luke 1:33.
How Satan must shudder at these words, for they indicate that what he sought from the beginning shall never be his.  They explain his hostility to Christ when the wise men sought one who was born king, and when he motivated Herod to slay the infants, Matthew 2:2,16. 

A sceptre of righteousness is the sceptre of thy kingdom- verse 4 of Psalm 45 exhorts Christ to ride prosperously because of truth and meekness and righteousness, and this He will do.  He shall come from heaven riding on a white horse, Revelation 19:11-16, and shall judge all the injustice of the earth.  At last He will be vindicated for His stand for the truth when He came the first time, and shall “bring forth judgement unto truth”, Isaiah 42:3.  All the meekness He displayed before the kings of earth at His first coming will be recompensed, too, for “the servant of rulers”, shall be worshipped by kings and princes, Isaiah 49:7.
The emphasis, however, is on His righteousness, for “He that ruleth over men must be just”, 2 Samuel 23:3, and David had to admit that his “house was not so with God”, verse 5, yet he remembered that God had made with him an “everlasting covenant, ordered in all things and sure”.  When David’s son and David’s Lord reigns, righteousness will be established for ever.  The word for righteousness in this verse means straightness, and is connected with the word used in Matthew 3:3, “make his paths straight”.  Men gave Him a reed, the symbol of weakness, as if He had no power to rule, and as if He could be shaken in the wind, but He was, and will be, steadfast, upright and true in His judgement in the future, as He was in His dealings in the past.

There is a connection between the word for sceptre and the word for tribe.  Jacob had used this word for sceptre when he prophesied that the sceptre would not depart from Judah, nor the law-giver from between his feet, until the coming of Shiloh, Genesis 49:10, Shiloh being one of the names of the Messiah.  Judah, however, had given up his staff to Tamar, Genesis 38:18,26, and subsequently had to admit that she was more righteous than he was, for she knew that it was her duty to have children, in case she was destined to be the mother of the Messiah.  While this was happening, Joseph was being tempted by Potiphar’s wife, and overcoming.  Hence while the right to rule was taken from Reuben and given to Judah, the moral character demanded of a ruler was only found in Joseph, hence the rôles are divided in Israel’s family, but are united in Christ.  He has the right to rule as the Lion of the tribe of Judah, but has the moral character to do so, for He is the Lamb slain, Revelation 5:5,6.

1:9
Thou hast loved righteousness, and hated iniquity; therefore God, even thy God, hath anointed thee with the oil of gladness above thy fellows.
 

Thou hast loved righteousness, and hated iniquity- looking back on the life of Christ at His first coming, it is clear He was righteous, so He is called Jesus Christ the righteous, 1 John 2:1. His love of the one, and hatred of the other, was complete.  He did not even stand in the way of sinners, much less walk in it, Psalm 1:1.  The word to David’s house was “if he commit iniquity”  As we saw in verse 5, Solomon did commit iniquity, but “a greater than Solomon is here”, Matthew 12:42, and He is totally free from all wrong.
Here is one of David’s line, yet who is not descended through Joseph the son of David, Matthew 1:20.  The marriage of Joseph to Mary before Christ was born ensures, however, that He has the legal right to the throne.  According to Jewish law, any child born to a man’s fiancé was legally his child, even if he was not the physical father.  Therefore the legal claim was stronger than the physical claim, so Christ’s claim to the throne through Joseph is sound.  His birth of the tribe of Judah is evident, Hebrews 7:14.  It is said that the temple genealogical records were destroyed in AD 70.  Whether that is true or not in unclear, but God saw to it that the genealogy of Christ was preserved in another place before that happened. 

Therefore, God, even thy God, hath anointed thee with the oil of gladness above thy fellows- the true God is Messiah’s God, for He is a dependant man upon the earth. A specially scented oil was reserved for the favoured guest at a feast, so that he was honoured above his fellow-guests.  Since Psalm 45, from which this is quoted, is a song of loves, probably composed to be sung at the marriage of a king, the feast is a marriage feast, that of the King’s Son, Matthew 22:1-7.
Christ was anointed with the Holy Spirit and with power; in other words, by the one the oil symbolised, not the symbol.  David was anointed twice, first in obscurity, as “the least”, 1 Samuel 16:11 margin, keeping the flocks, whom they did not bother to call, who was, so to speak, “despised and rejected of men”.  Then he was anointed again, once he had gained the throne.  This anointing was “according to the word of the Lord by Samuel”, 1 Chronicles 11:3.  In other words, it was a reaffirmation of his original anointing, but this time surrounded by the nation, who described themselves as bone of his bone, and flesh of his flesh.  He was anointed above his fellows, the nation, just as he had been anointed above his fellows, the other sons of Jesse.
Note the first and last words of the quotation, “Thy throne, O God…thy fellows”.  In Zechariah 13:7 the word used for fellow means an equal, a direct testimony to the equality of the Shepherd with God. This is plain testimony to the truth of the Deity of Christ in the Old Testament, justifying His claim that the Old Testament testified of Him, John 5:39.  Here, however, the word means one who has been joined in fellowship with another, and this time we have an direct testimony to the true manhood of Christ, for He has men as fellows, yet He is addressed as God.  The word “fellows” in Hebrews 1:9 is the same as partakers, or companions, the words used in 2:14 and 3:1.

1:10
And, thou, Lord, in the beginning hast laid the foundation of the earth; and the heavens are the works of thine hands:
 

And, thou, Lord- a further quotation, this time from Psalm 102:25-27.  The psalmist had lamented his position, and this is often taken as previewing Christ’s sufferings during His life, especially as depicting His experience in Gethsemane.  In which case the psalmist contrasts the brevity of his life, with the fact that Jehovah’s years would not fail.
It is possible, however, to read it as if there is a change of speaker, so that the words, “Thou Lord” are spoken by Jehovah to the Messiah.  Certainly all that is said in this quotation is true of Christ.  Each of the persons of the Godhead may rightly be called “Jehovah”, just as they all may rightly be called God.  Each one may fully represent the whole Godhead in its power and authority.  In Romans 10 the apostle Paul does not hesitate to quote “Whosoever shall call upon the name of the Lord shall be saved”, (bearing in mind that the words as originally penned by the prophet Joel referred to Jehovah), for he insists that to be saved we must confess Jesus to be Lord, i.e. to ascribe Deity to Him. So it is here.  The psalmist ranges over the whole of time, from the beginning to the end of things.  And before, and during, and after these things Christ remains in His timeless, unchangeable grandeur. 

In the beginning hast laid the foundation of the earth; and the heavens are the works of thine hands- God asked Job the question, “Where wast thou when I laid the foundations of the earth?”, Job 38:4.  Then it is said in verse 7, “When the morning stars sang together, and all the sons of God shouted for joy”.  It seems that the heavens (with all their hosts, stellar and angelic) were made before the earth; hence the angels could rejoice at the founding of the earth.  This effectively disposes of both the Old Earth theory and the Gap-Theory.  Both these  ideas suppose that what God pronounced as very good was built on the ruins of former rebellion.  Those angels who fell must have done so after the creation week, for all was very good on the seventh day.  The millenial reign of Christ was prepared for from the foundation of the earth, Matthew 25:34; Hebrews 4:4,5. 

1:11
They shall perish; but thou remainest; and they all shall wax old as doth a garment;
 

They shall perish, but thou remainest- even Divinely established things perish, and are replaced, and this is relevant in another direction, for the law system was decaying, waxing old, and was ready to vanish away, 8:13.  The Hebrews are being prepared for the idea that Divinely established things are to be done away- they do not have to continue for ever just because God sets them up.  So with the system of sacrifices.  Remain means “to continue without interruption” for there is no principle of change with God, whereas creation will perish or be destroyed through the active intervention of God.
Peter speaks of the Day of God, the eternal day when He is supreme, “by reason of which” (margin) the heavens shall pass away with a great noise, and the elements shall melt with fervent heat, the earth also and the works that are therein shall be burned up”, 2 Peter 3:10.  The earth is not only made to continue for ever, Psalm 104:5, (it has no built-in obsolescence), but also to be dissolved at the moment of God’s choosing.  The entrance of sin and corruption into the world has not disrupted the Divine Programme.  After all, Christ is the Architect of the Ages, for He made the worlds of time and space. 

And they all shall wax old as doth a garment- Isaiah 40:22 speaks of God stretching out the heavens as a curtain, and here they and the earth are likened to an old, worn-out garment.  In this verse the universe is destroyed by Divine design, whereas in the next verse it is folded up because of decay.  They wax old, like Aaron who died outside of Canaan, but His years do not fail, and He has entered in. 

1:12
And as a vesture shalt thou fold them up, and they shall be changed: but thou art the same, and thy years shall not fail.
 

And as a vesture thou shalt fold them up, and they shall be changed: but thou art the same, and thy years shall not fail- so the heavens and the earth perish, but He remains; they are to be folded up, and changed, but He is the same, never putting off His garments of glory and beauty. “Thou art the Same” indicates the unchangebleness of His Deity, whereas “Thy years shall not fail” speaks of His resurrection manhood. The psalmist wrote, “He asked life of thee, and thou gavest Him it, even length of days for ever and ever”, Psalm 21:4.  He is Jesus Christ the Same yesterday, (on earth), today, (in heaven), and for ever.  The Same is a Divine title, used in the Old Testament to emphasise the unchangebleness of God.  This is revealed in Christ, who was always consistent and unvarying in His character.  When asked “Who art Thou? He could reply, “Even the same that I said unto you from the beginning”, John 8:25. 

Notice the ways in which these verses prepare us for the later teaching of the epistle:
“Thou art my Son” not only guarantees His reign in a day to come, but since the same scripture is quoted in Hebrews 5:5, His priesthood is guaranteed and given Divine sanction also.
He is priest upon His throne, whether in the future on earth, Zechariah 6:12,13, or at present in heaven, Hebrews 8:1.
He is high priest in virtue of His Deity and manhood, (Jesus the Son of God, Hebrews 4:14), so we may count on His ministry at all times.  He combines Divine authority with sympathy as a man.
He loved righteousness, and hated iniquity, reminding us that His priesthood is not to sympathise with our sins, (for He is unable to do that), but rather to succour us so that we do not sin, Hebrews 2:18; 4:14-16.
He remains, and ever liveth to intercede for us, 7:25.  Zacharias remained (same word) speechless, Luke 1:22.
He is the same, and has an unchangeable priesthood; 7:24.
He does not fail, for He saves to the uttermost, right on to the end, 7:25.  The Greek word gives us “eclipse”, telling of one who is never overshadowed or overcome by another.
He will never change His “priestly garments”, nor will they ever wax old and wear out.

1:13
But to which of the angels said he at any time, Sit on my right hand, until I make thine enemies thy footstool?

But to which of the angels said he at any time, Sit on my right hand, until I make thine enemies thy footstool? This is a rhetorical question, demanding a negative answer.  The psalm said, “The Lord said unto my Lord”  so clearly angels are not being addressed.  Only one who is Lord can respond to this invitation.  Yet He does so as man!  It is one of the most amazing things possible, that there is a man on the throne of God.  This fact alone should have settled the matter of Christ’s superiority over everyone else.  Note that whereas in verse 3 Christ sat Himself down, confident that He had the right to do so, here, He sits down by invitation.  This assures us that He was justified in His confidence in verse 3.
Lucifer sought to exalt his throne above the stars of God, and be like the Most High in His exaltation and majesty, Isaiah 14:12-15.  Here is one who humbled Himself, and has been exalted, whereas Lucifer sought to exalt himself and has been abased, Luke 14:11. 

The right hand was the place for the firstborn.  Joseph had been displeased with his father because he had crossed his hands when blessing Ephraim and Manasseh.  He had presented Manasseh, who was born first, to Jacob’s right hand, but Jacob, by crossing his hands, gave Ephraim the firstborn’s place, Genesis 48:11-19.  So Christ is not only firstborn Son and heir by appointment in eternity, verse 2, but also by position at God’s right hand.  God does not have to reverse the normal order for Christ, as Jacob did with Ephraim, for there was never any question of anyone else being given the position.
This position is reserved for Him until a certain time.  The particular word for “until” used here means “up to the time when”.  His position is a moral one, just as Queen Elizabeth is said to be on the throne of England, although she in fact rarely sits upon it physically.  This verse does not imply that He cannot come for the church before the defeat of His enemies at His coming to earth, because even one thousand years after that event He will still have enemies that need to be subdued, for the last enemy is not destroyed until the very end of time, see Revelation 20:7-9. 

Note the recurring theme of enemies throughout the epistle, 10:13; 10:27; 12:25-29; 13:13, (camp is a military word, suggesting Israel were encamped against Christ, and were in military array against Him, see Psalm 2:2; Acts 4:25-28).  Joshua had made his captains put their feet on the necks of the defeated kings of Canaan, to show their utter subjection, Joshua 10:24. 

Benjamin, Jacob’s twelth son, and Joseph’s true brother, was “son of my right hand”, according to his father, but Benoni, “son of my sorrow”, according to his mother, Genesis 35:16-20.  He was born near Bethlehem, and amid sufferings and death, for his mother died giving birth to him.  Jeremiah recalls this in connection with the sufferings of the people of Israel, Jeremiah 31:15, and Matthew quotes his words in connection with the slaughter of the infants at the birth of Christ, Matthew 2:18.  This shows that He is able to relate to the sufferings the people of Israel go through, even the sufferings of the Great Tribulation, the “time of Jacob’s trouble”, Jeremiah 30:7.
So the first quotation in this chapter reminds us of what Leah said when she bare Jacob his first son, Reuben, “Behold, a son”.  And now the seventh quotation has reminded us of Jacob’s youngest son, Benjamin, the son of his father’s right hand.

1:14 
Are they not all ministering spirits, sent forth to minister for them who shall be heirs of salvation? 

Are they not all ministering spirits- far from having a right to the throne, every one of the angels is a minister, serving the interests of the throne of God.  And they are spirits, whereas Christ has acquired for Himself the right to sit on the throne of God by what He did in manhood. 

Sent forth to minister for them who shall be heirs of salvation? Far from being seated, the angels speed forth to minister for the heirs of salvation.  Note it is “for” and not “to”.  Their service is indirect, and has to do with the physical preservation of those who will enter the kingdom.  All spiritual preservation is in the hands of Christ, for He is the author of eternal salvation, but He delegates lesser and temporal things to the angels.  See, for instance, Genesis 19:15; Acts 12:7-11,15. 

Heirs of salvation are those who, literally rendered, “are about to inherit salvation”.  This is the Greek way of saying it will be sure to happen.  As the Captain of salvation, 2:10, Christ leads His people into ultimate and eternal salvation, whether saints of this age brought to glory in heaven, or tribulation saints who enter the kingdom on earth.  A description of the latter aspect of salvation is found in the words of Zacharias in Luke 1:69-79: “That he would grant unto us, that we being delivered out of the hand of our enemies, might serve him without fear, in holiness and righteousness before him all the days of our life”.  Luke 1:74,75.

 

ROMANS 1:1-17

THE GOSPEL DEFINED

Concise Notes on the Epistle to the Romans 

 

The Epistle to the Romans is a masterly exposition of the doctrines relative to the gospel of God. Under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit the apostle Paul was guided to unfold those truths which it is necessary to know and believe in order to be reckoned right in the sight of God, and also to live a life which is righteous before God and before men. 

Central to this gospel is the Lord Jesus Christ, the Son of God, by whom the work of redemption which is the foundation of the gospel was effected at Calvary. It was there that He died for the ungodly, and subsequently rose from the dead and ascended to heaven to intercede for those who believe on Him. 

No preacher should venture to present the gospel to sinners without first gaining a working knowledge of at least the first eight chapters of this epistle. No believer should seek to testify in a personal way without such a knowledge, either. And certainly no unsaved person should dare to enter eternity without first becoming acquainted with the saving truths this epistle contains. Since the moment of departure from this world is unknown to us, it is important to gain this acquaintance as a matter of great urgency.

“Because there is wrath, beware lest He take thee away with His stroke, then a great ransom cannot deliver thee,”  Job 36:18. 

 

Like the rest of the Holy Scriptures, the epistle to the Romans is structured and orderly. We would do well to consider the general scheme of the epistle by way of introduction, for it will help in understanding the truth contained therein.

The epistle as a whole may be divided into three parts, each beginning on a personal note from the apostle, and each ending with a note of praise:-

Chapters 1-8.

 

GOD’S RIGHTEOUSNESS IMPUTED. 

Personal note: “I am ready to preach the gospel”, 1:15

Key phrase: “Him that justifieth the ungodly”, 4:5.

Concluding praise: “For I am persuaded”, 8:38.

 

[Chapters 1-8 may be further divided into two major sections as follows:-

1:1 to 5:11 THE SINS OF THE PERSON

The remedy- the blood of Christ;

The result- redemption and righteousness. 

5:12 to 8:39 THE PERSON WHO SINS

The remedy- death, burial and resurrection of Christ;

The result- identification and assurance.]

 

 Chapters 9-11. GOD’S WAYS DEFENDED. 

Personal note: “I have great heaviness”, 9:2.

Key phrase: “His ways past finding out”, 11:33.

Concluding praise: “For of Him, and through Him, and to Him, are all things: to whom be glory for ever. Amen”, 11:36.

 

Chapters 12-16. GOD’S SERVANTS INSTRUCTED. 

Personal note: “I beseech you, therefore, brethren”, 12:1.

Key phrase: “Him that is of power to stablish”, 16:25.

Concluding praise: “To God only wise, be glory through Jesus Christ for ever. Amen.” 16:27. 

 

ROMANS CHAPTERS ONE TO EIGHT MAY BE DIVIDED INTO FOURTEEN SECTIONS AS FOLLOWS:

SECTION 1 ROMANS 1:1-17

The Person of Christ is central to the gospel

SECTION 2 ROMANS 1:18-32

God’s wrath against men as their Creator 

SECTION 3 ROMANS 2:1-16

God’s wrath against men as their Moral Governor

SECTION 4 ROMANS 2:17-3:20

God’s wrath against men as their legislator

SECTION 5 ROMANS 3:21-26

The work of Christ is central to the gospel

SECTION 6 ROMANS 3:27-4:25

God’s grace towards men as their justifier

SECTION 7 ROMANS 5:1-11

The glory of God is central to the gospel

SECTION 8 ROMANS 5:12-21

Christ and Adam compared and contrasted

SECTION 9 ROMANS 6:1-23

The believer’s past and present position

SECTION 10 ROMANS 7:1-6

Deliverance from the law

SECTION 11 ROMANS 7:7-25

Defence of the law and despair under the law

SECTION 12 ROMANS 8:1-17

Life in the flesh and life in the Spirit

SECTION 13 ROMANS 8:18-27

Present suffering and future glory

SECTION 14 ROMANS 8:28-39

Overwhelmed or overcoming

 

There is a great need in these days to recognise that the gospel is God-centred, and Christ-centred, and not sinner-centred. The apostles “ceased not to teach and preach Jesus Christ”, Acts 5:42. Having taught who He was, they were then in a position to preach that He should be believed in and relied upon. It would be a useful exercise to note the number of verses about sinners and the number of verses about Christ in the gospel addresses recorded in the book of Acts.

THE WORDS OF THE BIBLE, THE CHRISTIAN SCRIPTURES, AS FOUND IN THE EPISTLE TO THE ROMANS CHAPTER 1, VERSES 1 TO 17

1:1 Paul, a servant of Jesus Christ, called to be an apostle, separated unto the gospel of God,

1:2  (which He had promised afore by His prophets in the holy scriptures,)

 1:3 Concerning his Son Jesus Christ our Lord, which was made of the seed of David according to the flesh;

1:4 And declared to be the Son of God with power, according to the spirit of holiness, by the resurrection from the dead:

1:5 By whom we have received grace and apostleship, for obedience to the faith among all nations, for his name:

1:6 Among whom are ye also the called of Jesus Christ:

1:7 To all that be in Rome, beloved of God, called to be saints: Grace to you and peace from God our Father, and the Lord Jesus Christ.

1:8 First, I thank my God through Jesus Christ for you all, that your faith is spoken of throughout the whole world.

1:9 For God is my witness, whom I serve with my spirit in the gospel of his Son, that without ceasing I make mention of you always in my prayers;

1:10 Making request, if by any means now at length I might have a prosperous journey by the will of God to come unto you.

1:11 For I long to see you, that I may impart unto you some spiritual gift, to the end ye may be established;

1:12 That is, that I may be comforted together with you by the mutual faith both of you and me.

1:13 Now I would not have you ignorant, brethren, that oftentimes I purposed to come unto you, (but was let hitherto,) that I might have some fruit among you also, even as among other Gentiles.

1:14 I am debtor both to the Greeks, and to the Barbarians; both to the wise, and to the unwise.

1:15 So, as much as in me is, I am ready to preach the gospel to you that are at Rome also.

1:16 For I am not ashamed of the gospel of Christ: for it is the power of God unto salvation to every one that believeth; to the Jew first, and also to the Greek.

1:17 For therein is the righteousness of God revealed from faith to faith: as it is written, The just shall live by faith.

 

SECTION 1: ROMANS 1:1-17

THE PERSON OF CHRIST IS CENTRAL TO THE GOSPEL

STRUCTURE OF SECTION 1

The person of Christ in relation to:

1 (a) 1:1                   Paul.

1 (b) 1:2                  The prophets.

1 (c) 1:3                  The people of Israel.

1 (d) 1:4                  God.

1 (e) 1:5                  People of all nations.

1 (f) 1:6,7               The people of God.

1 (g) 1:8-12            Paul’s ministry.

1 (h) 1:13-15         Paul’s motives.

1 (i) 1:16-17           Paul’s message.

 
SUBJECT OF SECTION 1

Having introduced himself as the writer of the epistle, Paul goes straight into his theme, which is the gospel of God. He shows that this gospel was promised in Old Testament times as the prophets foretold the coming of Christ. He has now come, and is preached as being relevant to all men. Having assured the believers at Rome to whom he writes that he has a great desire for their blessing, Paul then asserts his strong belief in the ability of the gospel of Christ to save those who believe it.

1:1 Paul, a servant of Jesus Christ- as a servant-slave, Paul was captive to Christ’s will, ready to be told “what thou must do,” Acts 9:6. Called to be an apostle- appointed by Christ’s call, Galatians 1:1; an apostle is a “sent one,” sent out from the presence of his superior to do what he commands. Separated unto the gospel of God- commissioned for Christ’s service, and committed to it, Acts 22:21. Singled out, and single-minded.

1 (b) THE PERSON OF CHRIST IN RELATION TO THE PROPHETS

 1:2 Which He had promised afore- since Christ is the subject of gospel, to promise Him, (as God did through the Old Testament prophets), is to promise the gospel. By His prophets- because they were His, they spoke for God with authority. “But those things, which God before had shewed by the mouth of all His prophets, that Christ should suffer, He hath so fulfilled,” Acts 3:18. “And beginning at Moses and all the prophets, He expounded unto them in all the scriptures the things concerning Himself,” Luke 24:27. See also Luke 1:69,70. In the holy scriptures- the writings of Old Testament are holy, for they express God’s holy will, and are completely separate in character from all other writings, being utterly reliable and trustworthy; “the holy scriptures, which are able to make thee wise unto salvation through faith which is in Christ Jesus. All scripture is given by inspiration of God…” 2 Timothy 3:15,16.

1 (c) THE PERSON OF CHRIST IN RELATION TO THE PEOPLE OF ISRAEL

1:3 Concerning His Son, Jesus Christ our Lord- as God’s Son, the Lord Jesus shares the nature of God the Father, see on verse 4. Jesus is the name He was given when He came into manhood to save His people from their sins, Matthew 1:21. As Christ, He is the Anointed One, the Messiah of Old Testament predictions, see 1 Samuel 2:10; Psalm 2:2; Daniel 9:25. As our Lord, He is the One whose will is sovereign, and to whom believers readily submit themselves, Romans 14:7-9. Which was made of the seed of David according to the flesh- was made means “having come”, the same word as Galatians 4:4, “made of a woman.” As One who is of the seed of David, the Lord Jesus is qualified to bring in a future righteous kingdom on earth, see Luke 1:30-33. But the three main principles of that kingdom will be “righteousness, peace, and joy in the Holy Spirit”, Romans 14:17, and these also sum up the blessings that come to those who believe the gospel. The apostle is careful not to alienate the Jewish element amongst his readers, so reminds them that the line of David clearly reaches to Christ, as Matthew chapter one shows. In fact, “according to the flesh” may include the idea that even a unbelieving man might consult the temple records and see this to be true. But he is also careful to point out that since Christ has become flesh, He is relevant to all men, not just Israel. He became real man, and as such is God’s Ideal Man.

1 (d) THE PERSON OF CHRIST IN RELATION TO GOD

1:4 And declared to be the Son of God- note the change of verb; not made, but declared, for He is ever the Son of God, sharing the Father’s eternal, unchanging nature. The Lord Jesus indicated in John 10:30,36 that to be Son of God was to be one in essence and nature with the Father. If He had meant anything less than this, the Jews would not have tried to stone Him for blasphemy. With power, according to the Spirit of holiness- the declaration of Christ’s Deity is a powerful one, and is made in relation to the Spirit of holiness. Views differ as to whether this is a reference to the Holy Spirit, or to the spirit of the Lord Jesus. If the former, then the Holy Spirit empowers the declaration, but if the latter, then Christ’s own spirit, marked as it is by holiness, and by which He communed with His Father, is set in contrast to His being of the seed of David according to the flesh, by which means He associated with men on earth. Note the contrast with the unholiness of the men described in the second half of the chapter. By the resurrection of the dead- not resurrection from among the dead, but the resurrection of dead persons, Himself included. See for instance, John 11:4. Every time a dead person was raised by Christ, when He Himself was raised, and when the dead are raised at the resurrection, there is a powerful testimony to His Deity. See John 5:17-31.

1 (e) THE PERSON OF CHRIST IN RELATION TO THE PEOPLE OF ALL NATIONS

 1:5 By whom we have received grace- grace is unmerited favour, and believing sinners are shown this when they are saved from their sins; but there is a constant need for the believer to receive Divine favour, in order that the Christian life may be lived effectively. “without Me ye can do nothing,” John 15:5. And apostleship- grace is the common portion of all the people of God, whereas apostleship was granted to only a few, who must have seen the Lord Jesus personally, 1 Corinthians 9:1. Divine favour was needed by apostles also for the discharge of their responsibilities. Note the incidental testimony to the Deity of Christ in that the grace which elsewhere is said to be the grace of God, 1 Corinthians 15:10, is here said to be from Christ Himself. For obedience to the faith- one object of the preaching of the gospel is to bring men to an obedient faith in Christ. The person of the Lord Jesus is presented to men that they may believe on Him and submit obediently to His Lordship. Among all nations- the epistle emphasises the universal need of man to hear and believe the gospel. See also verse 13. For His name means for the good of His name. The object of the apostle’s preaching was not just that sinners might be saved, but that the name of God’s Son, Jesus Christ our Lord might be honoured.

1 (f) THE PERSON OF CHRIST IN RELATION TO THE PEOPLE OF GOD

 1:6 Among whom are ye also the called of Jesus Christ- the preaching of the gospel is the means by which Jesus Christ calls men and women to Himself, that they might enter into the blessings which He obtained at infinite cost when He died upon the cross at Calvary. The call is not only to Himself, but also away from self and the world.

1:7 To all that be in Rome- as is clear from the next statement, this means all the believers in Rome. Beloved of God- they were the object of Divine affections. Beloved is a title of the Lord Jesus, telling of the active love of the Father for Him; here it is used of believers. “Thou…hast loved them, as Thou hast loved Me,” John 17:23. Called to be saints- this means that they were constituted saints or separated ones by the call of Christ, not that they were called to develop into saints, although it is true that believers are to perfect holiness in the fear of God, 2 Corinthians 7:1. All true believers are saints, or holy ones, as far as their standing before God is concerned, but their current state of holiness varies with the individual. Grace to you and peace- grace has been described as “the fount of all mercies,” and peace “the crown of all blessings.” Grace (“Charis”) was a Gentile greeting, whereas peace (“Shalom”) was a Jewish salutation. Here they are combined in the apostle’s greeting to all believers in Rome, whether Jew or Gentile. In Christ there is neither Jew nor Greek, Galatians 3:28. From God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ- a further testimony to the Deity of Christ in that Divine blessings come equally from the Father and the Lord Jesus.

 1 (g) THE PERSON OF CHRIST IN RELATION TO PAUL’S MINISTRY

 1:8 Verses 8-10 emphasise Paul’s attitude Godward, verses 11-15 his attitude towards believers. First I thank my God through Jesus Christ for you all- giving thanks through Jesus Christ for their energetic faith and testimony. Note that even a leading apostle needed the Lord Jesus as mediator between himself and His God. That your faith is spoken of throughout the whole world- living as they did in the capital city of the Roman Empire, they were in a good position to spread the gospel, and this they had done diligently.

1:9 For God is my witness, whom I serve with my spirit in the gospel of His Son- the preaching of the gospel is a spiritual activity, and nothing of man or self must be allowed to intrude into it. It is also a priestly activity, as the word for serve indicates, so the preaching must be with dignity and holiness, with God’s glory as the end in view. That without ceasing I make mention of you always in my prayers- it is just as important to pray for converts after they are saved as it is to preach to sinners so that they may be saved. Note the apostle prayed for these believers even though he did not know many of them personally. See 1 Samuel 12:23.

1:10 Making request, if by any means now at length I might have a prosperous journey by the will of God to come unto you- in the ordering of God he was prevented for many years from visiting them, see 15:23, with the result that we have the benefit of his epistle to them, in which he sets out what he would have said if he had come. Note he subjected his movements to the over-riding will of God.

1:11 For I long to see you, that I may impart unto you some spiritual gift- the gifts he had were for the edifying of the believers, not the advancing of self, Ephesians 4:11,12. To the end ye may be established- sound doctrine is vitally necessary if believers are to be firmly grounded in the faith, Ephesians 4:13-16.

1:12 That is, that I may be comforted together with you by the mutual faith both of you and me- the apostle is at pains not to elevate himself above them. He would be comforted by evidences of their genuine faith, and so would they be comforted by evidences of his faith.

1 (h) THE PERSON OF CHRIST IN RELATION TO PAUL’S MOTIVES

 1:13 Now I would not have you ignorant, brethren, that oftentimes I purposed to come unto you, (but was let hitherto)- he had been let, or hindered, from coming to them by his desire to fully preach Christ elsewhere. He was concerned to preach Christ where others had not, Romans 15:20-24. Those at Rome had heard from others, see Acts 2:10. That I might have some fruit among you also- fruit means results for God’s glory from the making known of His truth. A tree does not produce fruit for itself, but for its owner, so Paul sought glory only for God in his service. He could only be fruitful through Christ- “He that abideth in Me, and I in him, the same bringeth forth much fruit: for without Me ye can do nothing.” John 15:5. Even as among other Gentiles- Paul was commissioned to concentrate on preaching to Gentiles, Galatians 2:9, Acts 22:21.

1:14 I am debtor both to the Greeks, and to the barbarians- it did not matter whether men were cultured or otherwise, Paul was concerned to discharge his debt of obligation to preach the gospel to them, for Christ had died for them all. Both to the wise, and to the unwise- those who sought God through philosophy, or those who were unthinking, all had a claim on his time and attention. “for necessity is laid upon me; yea, woe is unto me if I preach not the gospel!” 1 Corinthians 9:16. Note that the gospel is for all sorts of men, of whatever nationality, culture, or natural ability. 

1:15   So, as much as in me is, I am ready to preach the gospel to you that are at Rome also- as far as it depended on Paul, he stood ready to preach in Rome, for the message of the gospel is urgent, and is also of universal relevance.

1 (i) THE PERSON OF CHRIST IN RELATION TO PAUL’S MESSAGE

1:16 For I am not ashamed of the gospel of Christ- the preaching of the gospel is foolishness to men, 1 Corinthians 1:18, but those who have been saved know it is nothing to be embarrassed about. “and whosoever believeth on Him shall not be ashamed,” Romans 9:33. For it is the power of God unto salvation- the men of the world are perishing all the time they refuse the gospel, whereas believers not only know initial salvation from sin and judgement when they receive the gospel by faith, but are constantly saved from the pitfalls along the way by that same gospel. To everyone that believeth- this is the principle on which God acts in His dealings with men. To believe and to have faith mean the same, namely a firm persuasion based on hearing the word of God. See later passages in this epistle, such as 4:1-8; 10:8-13. To the Jew first- in the rich grace of God, the very nation which cast out the Son of God and crucified Him, is given the first opportunity to believe in Him. “And that repentance and remission of sins should be preached in His name among all nations, beginning at Jerusalem,” Luke 24:47. And also to the Greek- by Greek the apostle here means non-Jew. Since the common language throughout the Roman Empire was Greek, the Gentiles were known as Greeks.

1:17 For therein is the righteousness of God revealed- the expression “the righteousness of God” is used in two senses in this epistle. Here, the phrase means that Divine righteousness which is reckoned, or imputed, to those who believe, see 3:21,22; 4:3-5. Elsewhere, it means God’s attribute, that which He possesses intrinsically and eternally, see 3:25,26. Instead of God demanding that man become righteous by his own efforts, (a thing the apostle will show later in the epistle he cannot do), God is prepared, in grace, to reckon to be righteous those who receive the gospel. From faith to faith- literally “out from faith (on the principle of faith), to faith (with faith as the expected response).” God is prepared to reckon righteousness to a person, provided they come to Him on His terms. The sinner must abandon any idea that he can earn God’s favour, and rely totally on the person and work of the Lord Jesus, who died at Calvary so that his sins might be forgiven, and he might be made right in the sight of God. As it is written, “The just shall live by faith”- the truly just or righteous man is he who has spiritual life within on the principle of his faith in God, as is shown by the fact that he lives out that life by the same principle. The apostle had claimed at the beginning of this section that the gospel was promised through the prophets, and now he proves his point as he brings the section to a close by quoting Habakkuk 2:4. He thus disposes of any idea that he is teaching a new doctrine of his own devising.