The Expositor's Bible: Ephesians - LightNovelsOnl.com
You're reading novel online at LightNovelsOnl.com. Please use the follow button to get notifications about your favorite novels and its latest chapters so you can come back anytime and won't miss anything.
The peace that the apostle looks for amongst Christian brethren is the fruit of peace with G.o.d through Christ. Such "peace guarding the thoughts and heart" of each Christian man, nothing contrary thereto will arise amongst them. Calm and quiet hearts make a peaceful Church. There are no clas.h.i.+ng interests, no selfish compet.i.tions, no strife as to who shall be greatest. Differences of opinion and taste are kept within the bounds of mutual submission. The awe of G.o.d's presence with His people, the remembrance of the dear price at which His Church was purchased, the sense of Christ's Lords.h.i.+p in the Spirit and of the sacredness of our brotherhood in Him, check all turbulence and rivalry and teach us to seek the things that make for peace.
"Peace _and love_," the apostle desires. Love includes peace, and more; for it labours not to prevent contention only, but to help and enrich in all ways the body of Christ. By such "toil of love" faith is made complete. We are bidden indeed, in certain matters, to "have faith to ourselves before G.o.d" (Rom. xiv. 22). This maxim holds where one has a special faith in regard to such things as eating flesh or drinking wine, in which any one of us may without offence differ from his brethren. But it is a poor faith that dwells upon questions of this nature, and makes its religion of them. The essentials of faith, as we saw them delineated in chapter iv. 1-6, are things that unite and not distinguish us.
As faith grows and deepens, it makes new channels in which love may flow. "We are bound to thank G.o.d always for you," writes St Paul to the Thessalonians (2 Ep. i. 3), "for that your faith groweth exceedingly, and the love of each one of you all toward one another multiplieth."
This is the sound and true growth of faith. Where an intenser faith makes men disputatious and exclusive; where it fails to breed meekness and courtesy, we cannot but suspect its quality. Such faith may be sincere; but it is mixed with a lamentable ignorance, and a resistance to the Holy Spirit that is likely to end in grave offence. "Contending earnestly for the faith" does not mean contending angrily, with the weapons of satire and censoriousness. It is well to remember that we are not the judges of our brethren. There are many questions raised and discussed amongst us, which we may safely leave to the judgement of the last day. It is too easy to fill the air with matters of contention, and to excite a sore and suspicious temper destructive of peace, and in which nothing but fault-finding will flourish. If we must contend, we may surely debate quietly on secondary matters, while we are one in Christ. If we have not _love with faith_, our faith is worthless (1 Cor.
xiii. 2).
Deep beneath the peace that dwells in the Church and the love that fills each believer's heart, is the eternal fountain of _grace_. "Grace be with all those who love our Lord Jesus Christ," says the apostle.
Grace is theirs already; and they desire nothing so much as its increase. Their love to Christ is the fruit of the grace of G.o.d that is with them. This wish includes all good wishes; it surpa.s.ses both our deservings and desires. All that G.o.d prepared for us in His eternal counsels, and that Christ purchased by His redeeming love, all of good that our nature can receive now and for ever, is embraced in this one word: _Grace be with you._
"With all them that love our Lord Jesus Christ," Paul says; for it is to lovers of Christ that G.o.d gives the continuance of His grace. If our love to Christ fails, grace leaves us. G.o.d cannot look with favour upon the man who has no love to His Son Jesus Christ. In giving his blessing to the Corinthians, St Paul was compelled to write with his own hand: "If any man love not the Lord, let him be anathema." The blessing involves the anathema. G.o.d's love is not a love of indifference, an indiscriminate, immoral affection. It is a love of choice and predilection--"If any man love me," said Jesus, "my Father will love him." Is not the condition reasonable,--and the inference inevitable?
The Father cannot grant His grace to those who have seen and hated Him in His Son and image. By that hatred they refuse His grace, and cast it from them.
On the other hand, a sincere love to the Lord Jesus Christ opens the heart to all the rich and purifying influences of Divine grace. The sinful woman, stained with false and foul love, who washed the Saviour's feet with her tears, attained in that act to a height of purity undreamed of by the virtuous Pharisee. This new and holy flame burns out impure pa.s.sion from the soul: it kindles lofty thoughts; it makes crooked natures straight, and timid and weak natures brave and strong.
"To them that love G.o.d, we know, all things work together for good." To them that love Christ, all things contribute blessing; all conditions and events of life become means of grace. If we love Christ, we shall love His people,--the Church, the bride of Christ from whom He will never be parted in our thoughts. If we love Christ, we shall love the work He has laid upon us, and the word He has taught us, and the sacramental pledges He has given us in remembrance of Him and a.s.surance of His coming. If we love Him, we shall "keep His commandments," and He will keep His promise to send us the "other Helper, to be with us for ever, even the Spirit of truth." The gift of the Holy Spirit is the all-sufficiency of grace.[185] Here is the innermost sanctuary of our religion, the fountain and beginning of the soul's eternal life,--in the love which joins it to the Lord in one spirit.
_In incorruption_ is the last and sealing word of this letter, which we have been so long studying together. It "stands as the crown and climax of this glorious epistle" (Alford). Like so many other words of the epistle, at first sight its interpretation is not clear. The apostle has used the term in several other pa.s.sages, as synonymous with _immortality_[186] and denoting the state of the blessed after the resurrection, when they will stand before G.o.d complete in body and in spirit, with all that is mortal in them swallowed up of life--"raised in incorruption." But there is nothing in this context to lead up to the idea of personal, bodily immortality. Those who construe the apostle's words in this sense, place a comma before the final clause and treat it as a qualification of the main predicate of the sentence: "Grace be with all them that love our Lord,--grace [culminating] in incorruption"--or in other words, "grace crowned with glory!" But it must be admitted that this is somewhat strained.
The rendering of our ordinary version, "in sincerity" (in the Revised rendering, "uncorruptness"), gives an ethical sense to the word that is scarcely borne out by usage. It is a different, though kindred expression that St Paul employs to express "uncorruptness" in t.i.tus ii.
7.[187]
It appears to us that the term "incorruption," in its ordinary significance, applies fitly to the believer's love for the Lord, when the word is read in accordance with the symbolism of the epistle. This love is the life of the body of Christ. In it lies the Church's immortality. The gates of death prevail not against her, rooted and grounded as she is in love to the risen and immortal Christ. "May that love be maintained," the apostle says, "in its deathless power. Let it be an unspoilt and unwasting love."
Of earthly love we often say with sadness:--
"s.p.a.ce is against thee: it can part!
Time is against thee: it can chill!"
Not so with the love of Christ. Neither death nor life parts the soul from Him. Our love to the Lord Jesus Christ seats us with Him in the heavenly places,--above the realm of decay, above this wasting flesh and peris.h.i.+ng world.
FOOTNOTES:
[176] Col. i. 24--ii. 1; Phil. i. 16.
[177] Ch. ii. 7, iii. 10; Phil. i. 20; 2 Tim. iv. 17.
[178] I Thess. v. 25; 2 Thess. iii. 1; Rom. xv. 30-32; Col. iv. 3, etc.
[179] Out of the instances in which the English Version renders ????? in St Paul by _utterance_, the Revisers have subst.i.tuted _word_ for _utterance_ only in Col. iv. 3. One wishes they had done so throughout.
For ????? surely implies the _content_, the _import_ of what is said.
This pa.s.sage reminds us of John xvii. 14: "I have given them Thy word"; and xiv. 24: "The word which ye hear is not mine, but His."
[180] ?? pa???s??: comp. iii. 12; Phil. i. 20; Philem. 8; 2 Cor. vii. 4; 1 Thess. ii. 2, etc.
[181] Phil. i. 25, 26, ii. 23, 24; Philem. 22.
[182] 2 Tim. i. 7-12, ii. 3-10.
[183] Comp. Phil. i. 24-26.
[184] See pp. 13-17.
[185] Ch. i. 14, iv. 30. See Chapter IV., above.
[186] Rom. ii. 7; 1 Cor. xv. 42, 50, 53, 54; 2 Tim. i. 10. See Alford's excellent note on this pa.s.sage.
[187] ?f????a: ?f?a?s?a is deleted in the critical texts.