EPHESIANS
CHAPTER 4.
Apostolic
Admonitions to Unity, to Perfection in Knowledge, to Holiness,
and to Peace. Eph. 4, 1-32.
Paul exhorts to unity:
V.1. I,
therefore, the prisoner of the Lord, beseech you that ye walk worthy of
the
vocation wherewith ye are called, v.2. with
all lowliness and meekness, with long-suffering, for bearing one an
other in
love; v.3. endeavoring to keep the
unity of the spirit in the bond of peace. V.4. There
is one body and one Spirit, even as ye are called in one hope of
your calling; v.5. one Lord, one
faith, one Baptism, v.6. one God and
father of all, who is above all and through all and in you all. Having
brought the doctrinal section of his letter to a close, the apostle
bases his
admonitions to holiness of life upon the foundation of Christian
knowledge thus
laid. He opens the second part of his letter just as he did Rom. 12, 1:
I
beseech you, therefore, I, the prisoner in the Lord, to live your life
worthy of
the calling wherewith you were called. As the apostle of the Gentiles
he was
very much concerned about his charges’ remaining in faith and leading a
holy
life. Emphatically he speaks of himself as the prisoner in the Lord,
thus
reminding them of the reason for his present state. He was a prisoner
because of
his connection with Christ, the Lord, in behalf of the Gentiles. As
such he
exhorts or entreats his readers to conduct themselves at all times so,
to lead
their entire life in such a manner, as to be worthy of their calling as
Christians, to prove themselves true members of the Christian
congregation. It
was God that had called them to the fellowship of His Son, Jesus
Christ; as
children of God they could not afford to bring disgrace upon the name
of their
heavenly Father.
They
should walk and conduct themselves, therefore: With all lowliness and
meekness,
with long-suffering, bearing one another in love. These Christian
virtues,
according to God’s will, are to attend the Christians, to be their
constant
companions and associates. All possible lowliness they should use in
their
fellowship toward one another, as fellow-members of the same body of
the Church.
That very disposition of mind which was despised by the heathen as
unworthy of a
man, the deep sense of one’s own smallness in insignificance, the
Christians
are to cultivate. And this is to be accompanied by gentleness, loving
submissiveness, patient yielding to others even under provocation,
willingness
to serve and share rather than to demand. The apostle, moreover,
expects from
the Christians long-suffering, in this connection not so much the
endurance of
tribulations from without as patience under provocations on the part of
friends
and brethren, as Paul himself adds, in explanation, that we should
forbear one
another in love, that we should endure even the unpleasant
peculiarities of our
Christian brethren without a hint of impatience. The apostle here
paints an
ideal of the relation that should obtain among the members of the
Christian
Church, which may well provoke all Christians to eager emulation.
With
these virtues as a basis, the next admonition expands the idea of the
relation
among Christians: Giving diligence to maintain the unity of the Spirit
in the
bond of peace. While the believers strive after the virtues indicated
above,
they should incidentally make use of all energy, work with all zeal, to
hold
fast with watchful care the glorious possession of the oneness of the
Spirit,
the unity in feeling, interest, and purpose which accompanies the unity
in
doctrine. It is the unity of the Spirit, wrought by the Spirit of God,
the unity
in the truth. This splendid gift and possession is to be kept in the
bond of
peace, this being the tie that binds the hearts together. By striving
after the
virtues named by the apostle: love, peace, meekness, humility,
long-suffering,
patience, the Christians maintain the unity of the Spirit given to them
in the
Word. As soon as these virtues are disregarded, the result is
dissension and
disagreement, division and sectarianism.
That
the apostle, however, by no means advocates or sanctions the modern
perversion
of his words which the spirit of unionism, now rampant, shows, he
indicates in
the next words: One body and one Spirit, just as you also are called in
one hope
of your calling. This is not an admonition referring to the future, but
one
which calls upon the Christians to hold fast that which they have. They
are one
body, as closely connected and joined together as the members of one
body. They
are united and kept in the union of Christ’s body by the one Spirit who
lives
in them, the Holy Ghost being, as it were, the soul of this body, of
the
Christian Church, who directs and governs the entire body. They are all
looking
forward to the same goal, for they are all called in or with the one
hope of
their calling. When the call of the Lord was realized in them, the hope
of
eternal salvation was held before them all, and this hope holds them
together,
emphasizes their unity.
The
Christians, moreover, have in common: One Lord, one faith, one Baptism,
one God
and Father of all, who is over all, and through all, and in all. The
Lord of the
Christians to whom they belong, who has redeemed them with His holy,
precious
blood, is Christ. In Him they believe, Him they recognize and
acknowledge as
their Lord; for Him they have put on in Baptism. So they all have the
same
faith, which united them with their one Lord by means of the same
Sacrament. But
the climax is reached in the words: One God and Father of us all.
Through
Christ’s vicarious work God is our Father, the Father of all Christians
without exception. He is over them all, He rules over them, He
exercises His
gracious parental authority over them as His dear children, He is their
Guardian
and Guide. He is through them all, through them, as through the
instruments of
His mercy, He carries out many of His intentions; all the good works
which the
Christians perform, especially such as serve the Church, they do by the
power of
God which works in them. He is in them all, He has deigned to dwell in
them;
they are His temple, His constant abode. Thus the Christians, in and
through the
Triune God, in whom they live, and move, and have their being, are most
intimately connected with one another; they are bound together by the
strongest
ties that can be conceived of.
Note:
This passage describes, in a wonderfully clear and brief way, the holy
Christian
Church, the communion of saints. “Here St. Paul says and teaches what
the true
Christian Church is and by what signs one can recognize it, namely,
that there
is no more than one single Church or people of God on earth, that has
one faith,
Baptism, one confession of God the Father and of Christ, etc., and
therein holds
and remains together in complete harmony. In this Church every one that
wants to
be saved and come to God, must be found and be embodied, and outside of
her no
one is saved. Therefore this unity of the Church does not consist in
various
forms of outside government, law, and precept, nor in having and
observing
church customs,... but is found where this harmony of the one faith,
Baptism,
etc., is. Therefore it is called one holy Catholic or Christian
Church.” 12)
Christ’s
gifts to the individual Christians: V.7. But
unto every one of us is given grace according to the measure of the
gift of
Christ. V.8. Wherefore
He saith, when He ascended up on high, He led captivity captive, and
gave gifts
unto men. V.9. (Now that He
ascended, what is it but that he also descended first into
the lower parts of the earth? V.10. He
that descended is the same also that ascended up far above all heavens
that He
might fill all things.) This bit of
information very properly follows the instruction concerning the union
of all
believers in the holy Christian Church, for it throws the
responsibility upon
the individual as a member of the whole: But to every single one of us
is given
the grace according to the measure of the gift of Christ. The union of
all
believers in Christ does not exclude the fact of their having received
various
and distinctive gifts of grace. With emphasis the apostle states that
every
single Christian has received special gifts or some special gift from
God, which
he should apply in the interest of the Church, for the benefit of the
brethren.
He is speaking of gifts of grace, evidence of which is to be seen in
the various
talents of preaching, teaching, organizing, governing, mission-work,
tact in
charity, etc. Every Christian, by reason of the grace which he has
received,
through the special spiritual talent which Christ distributes from His
boundless
hoard, is pledged to do his part toward the maintenance of unity and
peace, as
well as toward the further growth of the Church.
For
the fact that Christ bestows such gifts of grace in the measure which
He
considers best, the apostle quotes a passage of the Old Testament, Ps.
68, 18,
calling upon the witness of God for the truth of his statement:
Ascending up on
high, He led captivity captive, He gave gifts to men. Ps. 68, in spite
of all
its references to the history of the Jews, is a Messianic psalm and
speaks of
the triumph of the Lord Jehovah, the promised Messiah, which was fully
realized
by His ascension to heaven, by His entering into the unlimited use of
the
authority and power which was transmitted to his human nature at the
time of His
incarnation. Of this exalted Christ Paul now says, no longer in the
form of a
direct quotation, but in a free use of the passage in the quoted psalm,
that He
bestows gifts upon men, various gifts of His grace, of which the
apostle speaks
also in other places, Rom. 12, 6.
Paul
now adds an explanation of the passage quoted by him: But this, “He
ascended,” what is it but that He also descended first into the lower
parts of
the earth? The apostle does not mean to say that these two events are
always
correlated, but refers to the case of Jesus in particular. To His
ascension to
the right hand of Power in the heavenly places corresponds His descent
and
victorious entrance into the kingdom of Satan. Christ, having been made
alive in
the grave, as transfigured God-man, according to body and soul,
descended into
hell; and the same God-man then, before the eyes of His astounded
disciples,
ascended up into heaven bodily. Cp. 1 Pet. 3, 19. 20. Thus Christ, by
returning
to life in the grave, had actually destroyed the power of death and of
the
prince of death, and His ascension was the triumphant entry of the
Victor into
the palace of heaven. In order to bring home this thought, Paul repeats
it: He
that descended, He it is that also ascended above all heavens, that Re
might
fill all things. The greatest height is here contrasted with the
greatest depth.
Above all created heavens Christ ascended, the height which He reached
is the
sitting at the right hand of His heavenly Father. And the object of the
ascension was that He might fill all things. The exalted Christ now
fills the
universe with His almighty omnipresence, which fact assures us also of
His
gracious presence in His Church, to whose members He gives the gifts of
His
grace and mercy. Although the enemies of the Church, the devil and his
angels,
are not definitely and everlastingly bound and confined in their
kingdom of
darkness as yet, they are conquered, they are in Christ’s power, they
cannot
hinder the growth of the Church, And the final triumph of the Church
with
Christ, made possible by the victory of Christ, is merely a matter of
time. With
the conversion of the last of God’s elect the day of salvation in the
endless
joy of heaven will dawn.
The
organization and work of the ministry of the Church: V.11. And he gave some, apostles; and some, prophets; and some,
evangelists;
and some, pastors and teachers, v.12.
for the perfecting of the saints,
for the work of the ministry, for the edifying of the body of Christ; v.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
fullness
of Christ; v.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; v.15. but, speaking the truth in love, may grow up into Him in all
things,
which is the Head, even Christ, v.16.
from whom the whole body, fitly
joined 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. The thought here
expressed is connected with that of v.7. but Paul now
speaks in detail of the gifts of God to the Church: He gave some as
apostles,
some as prophets, some as evangelists, and some as pastors and
teachers. The
ministers of the Church at all times are gifts of the exalted Christ.
“The
apostles were and are the infallible teachers of all Christendom, their
doctrine
is authoritative for the doctrine of the Christian teachers of all
times.
Prophets and evangelists were special gifts of the primitive Church.
The
prophets, in this connection the New Testament prophets, received
special
revelations for special purposes, which they then in inspired speech
declaimed
to the Christian assembly. Cp. Rom. 12, 6. The evangelists, to whom,
for
example, Philip, Acts 21, 8, belonged, proclaimed the Gospel in
missionary
activity, ...spread the apostolic word in places where the apostles
themselves
had not come; to their calling corresponds probably the service of our
present
missionaries. With ‘pastors and teachers’ the apostle describes the
regular
ministry of the Word, which in all periods of the Church has been and
remained
the same, the public office of preaching. The expression ‘teachers’
probably
refers chiefly to the public activity as preachers, the other,
‘pastors,’ to
the pastoral activity which applies the Word to the individual members
of the
congregation.” 13) In speaking of all these ministers as gifts of
Christ, the
apostle does not exclude specific preparation for the ministerial
office. But it
is the exalted Christ that makes these persons willing, that works in
their
hearts the resolution to serve the Church, that blesses their study,
that adds
spiritual enlightenment to intellectual gifts, that distributes gifts
for
individual stations and special circumstances.
Of
the immediate aim of the ministerial activity St. Paul writes: With a
view to
the perfecting of the saints for the work of ministration, for the
edification
of the body of Christ. All the servants of the Church in their various
offices
have been given by Christ to be active in ministering to the spiritual
needs of
the congregation; through their work the Church is to be built up,
edified. The
apostle uses the figure of the growth of a healthy body, which must be
supplied
with proper food in sufficient quantity. In this way the ultimate
object of
Christ is gained, the full equipment, the final perfection of the
saints.
Whatever is still incomplete in their spiritual condition and makeup,
due to the
attacks of the enemy and their own natural weakness, is to be supplied
by the
ministers of the Gospel through the preaching of sin and grace.
This
goal of all ministerial work must be held before our eyes as the ideal:
Until we
all attain to the unity of the faith and the understanding of the Son
of God, to
a perfect man, to the measure of the stature of the fullness of Christ.
The
apostle here has in mind the congregation of the elect in heaven, and
he refers
to the time at which the great end in view is to be realized. At the
present
time many of these chosen children of Christ are still without the
knowledge of
their Savior. But when these all, through the preaching of the Gospel,
have
become one with the present believers, one in faith and in the
knowledge of
their Savior, the Son of God, then the object of the ministry of the
Word will
have been realized, then the assembly of the believers will stand there
as a
mature, full-grown man. Then the Church will have entered upon its
majority,
will have reached the age and the maturity of Christ, the First-born of
the
Father; the perfection of His graces and virtues will rest upon the
believers.
This aim will indeed never be realized fully in the present temporal
life, but
only in that to come. For all that, however, the teachers of the Church
will
ever be mindful of the external and internal growth of the Church and,
in
particular, of their own congregations; they will not cease to add new
members
to the flock entrusted to them, and to strengthen their people in faith
and in
all Christian virtues.
The
results of such faithful labor cannot fail to materialize, first of all
in
overcoming defects: To the end that we may no longer be children,
tossed to and
fro and carried about by every wind of teaching, in the sleight of men,
in
craftiness tending toward the system of error. The work of perfecting
the
saints, carried on through the Word of the Gospel, should effect so
much that
the believers are no longer infants, minors, immature, and untaught in
the
knowledge of sin and grace, of the holy will of God. As children in
spiritual
knowledge they enter the Church; but the Lord wants spiritual growth
and
progress, He wants them to reach the maturity and stature of Christ. So
long as
a person is weak in Christian knowledge, having no thorough
understanding of
Christian doctrine, so long he is apt to be tossed to and fro, driven
back and
forth, like a rudderless ship in a storm. Every new temptation from
within,
every new attack from without, makes some new inroad upon such a
person’s
firmness. Every new wind of false doctrine takes such a person along,
because
the ship of his faith is not anchored firmly enough in the knowledge of
Christ.
The false teachers that attack the weak Christians deal with the
Scriptures and
with the truth and with the men whom they try to beguile with their
oily voice,
just as gamblers play with dice. One never knows what new trick is
coming next,
what new doctrine will be invented to deceive the souls of men. Their
entire
behavior tends to treacherous tricks, they practice carefully planned
deceitful
devices. The Christian, therefore, that is not yet firmly grounded in
all the
doctrines of the Bible as they pertain to man’s salvation, is apt to
stray
from the way, to wander hither and yonder, and thus to be lost forever.
Thus the
deceitful schemes of the false teachers and seducers lead to the false
way of
life that strays fatally from the truth. Note: It belongs to the
business of the
pastors and teachers whom Christ has given to His Church that they
point out the
dangers threatening on the part of false teachers, that they refute
their
arguments, that they expose the tricks and the jugglery which false
prophets
practice upon the Word of Grace, that they continue the instruction of
all the
church-members by means of doctrinal sermons and discussions, so that
all the
Christians in their care are furthered in the knowledge of truth and
learn to
distinguish between falsehood and truth and to try the spirits.
This
point is brought out by the apostle in the next verse: But (that we)
holding
fast the truth in love, may grow up into Him in all things, who is the
Head,
Christ. For that purpose Christ has given teachers to His Church, that
they
might enable the believers themselves to confess and defend the truth
of the
Scriptures, and not only for the purpose of upholding the truth, but in
love,
that their testimony of the truth may be of service to others; for that
is
always the sphere of the true Christian’s activity. The result will be
that we
Christians will grow up into Christ, the Head of the Church, in all
things. It
is not intellectual growth, but spiritual growth that is of the
greatest value
in the Church. By growing in the knowledge of Christ, by understanding
the truth
more perfectly day by day, by gaining in Christian faith and life, we
enter into
ever more intimate fellowship with Christ. Our spiritual growth is
always
directed to Him, to the perfection of His stature. In all things that
belong to
our growth this will be true, all the circumstances of our growth will
be
controlled by it.
The
apostle now concludes his sentence: From whom the whole body, being
firmly
connected and compactly joined together by means or' every joint of the
supply,
in keeping with the efficiency in the measure of each individual part,
effects
the growth of the body to it s building up in love. The entire body, of
which
St. Paul here speaks, brings about, causes, the growth of the body
itself. The
directing and effecting power for this growth goes forth from Christ,
the Head.
The growth is expressed by the fact that the joints and ligaments are
connected
ever more firmly, framed together more fitly, put together more
compactly. This
is clone by means of the cords of the ligaments and the sinews of the
muscles.
The whole body, when it acts and moves, is served by the muscles and
sinews, as
they are contracted; every individual cord thus performing its duty,
the members
of the body are enabled to act and operate conjointly. Each individual
member
and part supplies its measure of energy and working force, and the
better they
all act together, the better will be the opportunity for even
development and
steady growth. The application of the figure does not offer unusual
difficulties. If every Christian uses the special gift of grace which
he has
received of the Lord in the right way, the entire congregation and
Church will
thereby be benefited, since there will be a closer connection between
the
various organs. Just as soon as every Christian performs the service
for which
the grace of Christ has fitted him, the consciousness of union in the
Christians
will be strengthened, all the members will be joined in a closer union
and will
further the work of the Lord with their combined strength. The growth
of the
entire body of the Church takes place in proportion to the energy and
willingness with which each member exercises Christ's gift of grace.
Thus the
Church, internally and externally, grows toward perfection. Note that
the
apostle makes the growth of the Church dependent upon the willing
cooperation of
each individual member of the Church, that He ascribes to every one
some gift of
grace. But mark also that the determining and directing power is that
of Christ
alone.
An
admonition to spiritual renewal: V.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, v.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 he art; v.19.
who, being past feeling, have given themselves over
unto lasciviousness,
to work all uncleanness with greediness. V.20.
But ye have not so learned Christ, v.21. if so be that ye have
heard Him and have been taught by Him, as the truth is in Jesus; v.22.
that ye put off, concerning the former conversation,
the old man, which
is corrupt according to the deceitful lusts, v.23. and be renewed in the
spirit of your mind, v.24. and
that ye put on the new man, which after God is created in righteousness
and true
holiness. The apostle here takes up the thought of
v.1 again, which contains the
fundamental admonition for the entire second part of the letter,
namely, that
the Christians should lead a life worthy of the calling wherewith they
were
called. He here brings out the contrast between the moral purity of the
Christians and the social impurity of the Gentiles: This, then, I say
and
testify in the Lord, that you no longer lead your lives just as the
Gentiles
live theirs, in the vanity of their minds. It is a solemn protest and
warning
that Paul here issues in the Lord, for his exhortation was made in the
interest
of Christ and the Church, an earnest declaration and injunction in the
nature of
an appeal to God. As members of Christ's body the Ephesian Christians
should no
longer have anything in common with their former companions, the
members of
their own race and nationality. For that is the characteristic of the
unbelievers, the heathen of all times, that they walk in, that their
entire
conduct reveals, the vanity of their minds. The inner life of natural
man, his
thinking, willing, desiring, is vain, useless, purposeless, altogether
without
reality and worth before God. No unbeliever can have a conception of
real moral
values, for his mind is centered in nothingness.
This
idea is now unfolded more completely: Being darkened in their
understanding,
estranged from the life of God by reason of the ignorance that is in
them, by
reason of the hardening of their hearts. The terms used by Paul
presuppose a
former, more enlightened condition of man. As God created man, his
reason and
mind were highly enlightened, especially also in their understanding of
God and
of things divine. Moreover, man, as created by God, had a blessed
knowledge of
God as of the heavenly Father. All this has been changed by sin. It is
true of
the Gentiles, as of natural man in general, that their minds, their
thinking,
their judgments, are darkened. Their understanding, their feeling,
their
desiring, is in such a condition as to make the distinction between
good and
evil impossible to them. And as far as their will is concerned, they
have become
alienated, estranged, from the life in God. They have no idea of the
life which
is from God, in and with God. Not a spark of fear, love, and trust in
God is
found in natural man. This condition is due to the inherited depravity
of
mankind; it is found in men because of the ignorance which is in them
by birth
and nature, because of the hardening of their hearts. They have been
mentally
and morally hardened against every influence for good, they have become
blind,
callous, insensible to everything that is truly noble and divine. This
depraved
condition of mind becomes evident in the lives of the Gentiles: Who, as
men past
feeling, have given themselves to lasciviousness, to the working of all
uncleanness with greediness. They are no longer sensible to any higher
moral
influence, they have become abandoned to a state of heart without
conscience.
They have willingly yielded themselves, by their own guilty choice, to
wantonness, to shameless, outrageous sensuality, to a reckless,
unbridled
behavior. So completely have they surrendered themselves in this
respect that
they make it their business to indulge in every form of uncleanness,
together
with greed or covetousness; for both vices are self-seeking. Paul
purposely
paints a picture from which the converted Gentile will turn with horror.
With
this fact in mind the apostle now turns again to his readers: You,
however, have
not so learned Christ, if indeed you heard Him and in Him were
instructed, as
the truth is in Jesus, that you should put off, as regards your former
way of
life, the old man. There is a clear-cut, irreconcilable difference
between the
unregenerate and the regenerate person. The Ephesian Christians did not
study
the glorious news of their salvation through Christ in such a way as to
suppose
that they could continue in the sins which characterized the Gentiles.
With
delicate tact the apostle adds: If, as I assume it to be the case, as I
take it
to be a fact, Christ was indeed the subject, the sum and substance, of
the
preaching which you beard. As a matter of fact, they not only had heard
Christ
in the preaching of the Gospel, but had also been instructed in Him; as
they
received the instruction and progressed in the knowledge of their
Savior, their
union with Christ became ever more intimate, in their fellowship with
Christ
their knowledge of Him increased, as the truth, sound morality, and
righteousness is in Christ. Jesus, holy and righteous in His person,
gives to
His disciples both the example and the proper instruction in holy life.
He that
has entered into the sphere of Jesus as His disciple is thereby under
obligation
to conduct himself in his entire life as Jesus walked.
The
apostle now specifies a few points in the instruction which the
Ephesians
received: That you put off, as regards your former way of life, the old
man,
which becomes corrupt according to the lusts of deceit. The Ephesian
Christians,
at the time of their conversion, had renounced the devil and all his
works and
all his pomp. Still, the admonition is necessary that they, so far as
their
former manner of living is concerned, in order that their old
heathenish conduct
might definitely be put behind them, should put off the old man, the
natural
sinful corruption, the inherited evil inclination. As man is born into
this
world, not only are there a few objectionable traits in him, but his
whole
nature is absolutely and entirely perverted and corrupt, all his
thoughts,
imaginations, desires being directed against God and upon the vain
things of
this world. This old evil nature is found even in the regenerated
Christians,
for which reason it is necessary to exert eternal vigilance and to put
off the
old man, like a filthy garment, whenever he attempts to perform evil.
The sinful
words which rise to the tongue, the evil thoughts and intentions that
desire to
break forth out of the corrupt heart, must be brought into subjection
and
crucified before they find gratification. This is all the more a matter
of
necessity, since, if the old evil nature continues to rule in the heart
of a
person, the entire man, with body and soul, will share the fate of the
old Adam,
that of eternal damnation. For the lusts and desires of the old man are
deceitful; they seem to promise happiness, joy, life, while in reality
they ruin
a person that follows their guidance, both in body and spirit, until he
is lost
forever.
The
other side of the picture drawn by the apostle is more cheerful: That,
on the
other hand, you be renewed in the spirit of your mind, and that you put
on the
new man, who after God has been created in righteousness and holiness
of the
truth. The putting off of the old man and the putting on of the new is
done at
the same time; the two events are simultaneous. In and by his
conversion a
person begins an entirely new life; he enters into a new existence so
far as his
spirit and mind are concerned. This regeneration must be continuous and
steady,
lest the old sinful nature once more gain the ascendency. It is a
necessary part
of Christian sanctification for a Christian always to begin anew,
always to
renew his spiritual youth, with every new day to withdraw with his
heart and
mind from the vain matters of this world. At the same time, therefore,
he is
also daily clothed anew with the new man, that state of mind, that
moral habit
which accords with the will of God. The new man is the sum total of all
Christian virtues, the entire number of God’s moral demands in
realization. To
put on this summary of virtues, like a new, splendid garment, to be
clothed and
decorated with it at all times, to follow at all times the best
thoughts and
impulses of the new man, that must be the aim of every Christian. And
this is
possible for him, because the new man, in conversion, is created after
God, in
the image of God, Col. 3, 10, in the righteousness and holiness which
are
characteristic of true morality. In the same proportion as the
Christian puts on
the new man, gives evidence of his power in his entire life, in that
measure the
image of Christ, the image of God, makes its appearance in him. 14)
An
instruction regarding individual sins: V.25. Wherefore,
putting away lying, speak every man truth with his neighbor; for we are
members
one of another. V.26. Be
ye angry, and sin not; let not the sun go down upon your wrath. V.27.
Neither give place to the devil. V.28.
Let him that stole steal no more, but rather let him
labor, working with
his hands the thing which is good, that he may have to give to him that
needeth.
It is true indeed that a Christian,
by virtue of his conversion, has his thoughts and interests directed to
the
virtues which are well-pleasing to God. But it is equally true that the
old evil
nature is still present with him, causing him to wage incessant warfare
against
'its attempts to lead him into sin, as the apostle pictures it Rom. 7.
It is for
that reason that Paul here mentions individual sins by name, as among
those that
are most dangerous for a Christian: Wherefore, having put away
falsehood, speak
truth every one with his neighbor, because we are members one of
another. A
Christian's life of sanctification, which appears in righteousness and
holiness,
places this obligation upon him. With the old man the Christians have
put away
lying; they no longer have pleasure in lying, they are no longer under
the rule
of falsehood, But the spirit of falsehood is continually endeavoring to
regain
lost ground, and, unfortunately, it will happen even in the case of
Christians
that they are overcome by the weakness of their flesh and become guilty
of lying
and deceit. Hence the admonition: Speak truth every one with his
neighbor. Every
Christian should diligently strive to make use of veracity over against
all men
at all times, over against friend and foe, unbeliever and believer. But
this
condition should obtain especially among Christians in their outward
conduct
toward one another, seeing we are members one of another. As members
together of
the body of Christ, under the headship of the Lord, this fellowship is
more
intimate than that of any physical organism. Nothing can be more
disgraceful,
therefore, than that Christians deliberately, maliciously, lie to one
another.
If they want to be true to their calling, they will walk in the truth,
above all
over against those that are of the household of faith.
A
second admonition concerns an evil which is just as widely distributed:
Be
angry, and sin not; let not the sun go down upon your provocation. The
apostle
makes use of Ps. 4, 4, according to the Greek translation. It is a
warning
against the sin of anger. The emphasis being on the second part of the
command,
the meaning can best be given by the rendering: When you become angry,
do not
sin. The apostle is considering the fact that even Christians, being
obliged
still to contend with their old Adam, are harassed with angry thoughts.
There
are two things which the Christian will keep in mind: First, that he
does not
permit angry desires to break forth in words and deeds; and secondly,
that he
does not cherish anger in his heart. Should your heart be agitated by
anger,
Paul means to say, do not permit the desire to be realized, flee from
the sin of
anger in terror; and at any rate do not permit anger to take root in
your heart
overnight, let the provocation be what it may, lest the irritation
become a
steady feeling of resentment and hatred. To this the warning is
attached:
Neither give place to the devil. The Christians should always remember
that, in
letting anger control them, take possession of their heart and mind,
they are
giving opportunity to the devil to sow dissension and many other forms
of
mischief in the Church.
In
explanation of the Seventh Commandment, the apostle writes: Let the
stealer
steal no longer, but rather let him labor, working with his own hands
that which
is good, that he may have to give to him that has need. It is not only
thieving
that is here condemned, but every form of appropriating one’s
neighbor’s
money or goods by methods that do not conform to the law of love, all
cheating
and profiteering, all the methods which are considered smart by the
God-forsaken
business men of the world. There is always danger that these methods
make an
impression upon Christian business men, causing them to ignore the
warnings of
conscience. But Paul’s call is to quit all shady methods entirely and
to go to
work in earnest. In this way every person will be able to obtain an
honest
return for his work. And he should always remember that the profit of
such work
is not to be kept in selfish greed, but should be shared freely with
such as are
really in need. The poor we always have with us, and charity need never
be idle
for want of suitable subjects. Cp. Acts 20, 34. 35; 2 Thess. 3, 11-13.
15)
Of
sins against Christian fellowship: v.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. V.30.
And grieve not the Holy Spirit of God, whereby ye
are sealed unto the
day of redemption. V.31. Let
all bitterness, and wrath, and anger, and clamor, and evil speaking be
put away
from you, with all malice; v.32. and
be ye kind one to another, tender-hearted, for giving one an other,
even as God for Christ’s sake hath forgiven you. The
apostle here again, as in v.25, mentions sins of the tongue: Every
corrupt speech, out of your mouth let it not proceed; but such as is
good for
the building up of the need, that it may give grace to the hearers.
Christians
should not be guilty of such speech, such utterance, such talk as is
worthless,
bad, rotten, putrid, foul. The inclination to this sin is present also
in the
Christian, as the Lord says Matt. 15, 19. But the believers must not
permit this
inclination to express itself in language of this nature. All their
speech
should rather have the object of serving their neighbor for good, for
the
edification applied to his need. As our neighbor stands in need, we
should come
to his aid with instruction, admonition, consolation, in order that he
may be
confirmed and furthered in faith and in every good thing. In this may
we bring
him a benefit, show him a kindness, impart a blessing to him. On the
other hand,
the apostle warns: And do not grieve the Holy Spirit of God, in whom
you were
sealed unto the day of redemption. With great solemnity he gives the
full name
of the third person of the Godhead, for the sin which he is discussing
is a very
serious matter. The Holy Spirit lives in the hearts of the believers as
in His
temple, and therefore the Christians should fear to offer Him an insult
and thus
to drive Him away. Foul talk of every kind is not to be thought of
lightly, as a
breath that the wind takes away, but it is heard by the Holy Spirit of
God, who
feels deeply grieved and insulted over such behavior. For in and by the
Spirit
we are sealed, made certain, of our salvation, and it is His intention
that we
reach our destination, the redemption of our souls. How can it be
possible,
then, for us to be so ungrateful as to inflict any insult or sorrow
upon this
Spirit of our salvation!
St.
Paul now goes to the root of the matter when he writes: All bitterness,
and
wrath, and anger, and clamor, and blasphemy, let it he put away from
you, with
all malice. It is this condition of the heart that brings out the foul
and
foolish talk: bitterness, resentfullness, harshness, when a person
always walks
around with a chip on his shoulder, ready to break forth at the
slightest
provocation; wrath, the sudden burst of fury, as well as anger, the
steady,
continued feeling of displeasure toward one’s neighbor which plans
vengeance;
blasphemy, scolding, maledictions. All these things should be removed
from the
Christian’s heart, together with all malice, all wickedness, all ill
will in
general. Paul does not name the climax of the sin whose first steps he
describes, he does not speak of actual blows; for he is writing to
Christians,
who surely will not forget their position as children of God to such an
extent
as deliberately to indulge in fisticuffs. They will rather, as Paul
writes, make
it a practice to be kind to one another, show themselves benignant at
all times;
also tender-hearted, full of fellow-feeling and hearty compassion;
forgiving one
another, not unwillingly or grudgingly, but graciously and willingly,
each one
dealing with his neighbor as with himself. And all this with the great
love of
God and the inexpressible sacrifice of Christ before his eyes: Even as
also God
in Christ has graciously forgiven you. God’s grace and mercy was
manifested in
Christ, proved itself in Christ, who by His death accomplished the
reconciliation of the world. Just as God in Christ showed us such
immeasurable
love, so we should show love toward our neighbor; the incomparable love
of
Christ toward us should be the motive and the strength of our love.
Summary.
The apostle admonishes the Christians to keep the unity of the Spirit
in peace,
to serve one another with the gifts received from God, and thus to
assist the
growth of the Church, with special reference to the gifts of the
ministry; he
warns them to abstain from the vices of the Gentiles; he exhorts them
to put
down the old Adam, and to put on the new man with all Christian
virtues, all for
the promotion of Christian fellowship.