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The meaning of Ephesians, Epistle to in the Bible
(From Easton's Bible Dictionary)

was written by Paul at Rome about the same time as that to the Colossians, which in many points it resembles.

  • Acts 20:19 = Ephesians 4:2. The phrase "lowliness of mind" occurs nowhere else.

  • Acts 20:27 = Ephesians 1:11. The word "counsel," as denoting the divine plan, occurs only here and Hebrews 6:17.

  • Acts 20:32 = Ephesians 3:20. The divine ability.

  • Acts 20:32 = Ephesians 2:20. The building upon the foundation.

  • Acts 20:32 = Ephesians 1:14,18. "The inheritance of the saints."

    Place and date of the writing of the letter. It was evidently written from Rome during Paul's first imprisonment (3:1; 4:1; 6:20), and probably soon after his arrival there, about the year 62, four years after he had parted with the Ephesian elders at Miletus. The subscription of this epistle is correct.

    There seems to have been no special occasion for the writing of this letter, as already noted. Paul's object was plainly not polemical. No errors had sprung up in the church which he sought to point out and refute. The object of the apostle is "to set forth the ground, the cause, and the aim and end of the church of the faithful in Christ. He speaks to the Ephesians as a type or sample of the church universal." The church's foundations, its course, and its end, are his theme. "Everywhere the foundation of the church is the will of the Father; the course of the church is by the satisfaction of the Son; the end of the church is the life in the Holy Spirit." In the Epistle to the Romans, Paul writes from the point of view of justification by the imputed righteousness of Christ; here he writes from the point of view specially of union to the Redeemer, and hence of the oneness of the true church of Christ. "This is perhaps the profoundest book in existence." It is a book "which sounds the lowest depths of Christian doctrine, and scales the loftiest heights of Christian experience;" and the fact that the apostle evidently expected the Ephesians to understand it is an evidence of the "proficiency which Paul's converts had attained under his preaching at Ephesus."

    Relation between this epistle and that to the Colossians (q.v.). "The letters of the apostle are the fervent outburst of pastoral zeal and attachment, written without reserve and in unaffected simplicity; sentiments come warm from the heart, without the shaping out, pruning, and punctilious arrangement of a formal discourse. There is such a fresh and familiar transcription of feeling, so frequent an introduction of coloquial idiom, and so much of conversational frankness and vivacity, that the reader associates the image of the writer with every paragraph, and the ear seems to catch and recognize the very tones of living address." "Is it then any matter of amazement that one letter should resemble another, or that two written about the same time should have so much in common and so much that is peculiar? The close relation as to style and subject between the epistles to Colosse and Ephesus must strike every reader. Their precise relation to each other has given rise to much discussion. The great probability is that the epistle to Colosse was first written; the parallel passages in Ephesians, which amount to about forty-two in number, having the appearance of being expansions from the epistle to Colosse. Compare:

    Ephesians 1:7; Colossians 1:14 Ephesians 1:10; Colossians 1:20 Ephesians 3:2; Colossians 1:25 Ephesians 5:19; Colossians 3:16 Ephesians 6:22; Colossians 4:8 Ephesians 1:19-2:5;; Colossians 2:12,13 Ephesians 4:2-4; Colossians 3:12-15 Ephesians 4:16; Colossians 2:19 Ephesians 4:32; Colossians 3:13 Ephesians 4:22-24; Colossians 3:9,10 Ephesians 5:6-8; Colossians 3:6-8 Ephesians 5:15,16; Colossians 4:5 Ephesians 6:19,20; Colossians 4:3,4 Ephesians 5:22-6:9;; Colossians 3:18-4:1

    "The style of this epistle is exceedingly animated, and corresponds with the state of the apostle's mind at the time of writing. Overjoyed with the account which their messenger had brought him of their faith and holiness (Ephesians 1:15), and transported with the consideration of the unsearchable wisdom of God displayed in the work of man's redemption, and of his astonishing love towards the Gentiles in making them partakers through faith of all the benefits of Christ's death, he soars high in his sentiments on those grand subjects, and gives his thoughts utterance in sublime and copious expression."


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