Chapter 2
Outline of the chapter
Verses 1-10, the grace panorama.
Verses 11-17, grace and the barrier.
Verses 18-22, grace and the Church.
The subject of the first three
verses is how grace found us: verse 1 — grace found us spiritually dead; verse
2 — grace found us under the control of Satan; verse 3 — grace found us under
the control of the old sin nature.
Verse 1 — the first erroneous
problem in this verse is that even in italics someone has put in “hath he
quickened.” They thought it was legitimate to let us know that is was a long
sentence, and this verb does occur in this sentence but it doesn’t occur just
yet. It comes up a little later on in the passage — verse 5 which is still the
same sentence.
“And” is the continuative use of the
conjunction kai, and the continuative
extends from the last two verses of the previous chapter. The concept of the
church is picked up again in Ephesians 2:18 but we are not ready for it yet
because to realise what a great thing it is to be a member of the body of Christ,
to be a member of the universal church, to realise how really important it is,
we need to stop and see what we were like before we joined the church. Joining
the church is believing in Jesus Christ. The body of Christ is a synonym for
the church, a synonym to indicate the church on the earth. There is also a
synonym for the church in heaven — bride. Some day we will be a bride. In the
meantime we are in the formation process and therefore a body. At the
resurrection of the church we will become the bride of Christ. In this passage
we are not dealing with the church local, we are dealing with the church
universal, which began on the day of Pentecost in 30 AD and has continued under
the grace of God to this hour. The church is any believer wherever he is found.
Since the proqesij of God is founded on grace and functions on grace
it is inevitable that we have at this point a grace panorama.
“you” — the accusative plural of the
personal pronoun su refers to every believer of
the Church Age. The plural says here that what the principle is is for all of
us, and when grace found us under these three concepts in these first three
verses it found all of us the same way.
“hath he quickened” is not here in
the original, it comes later.
“who were” — present active
participle of e)imi. This is the ascriptive use
of the participle; it ascribes some fact, some quality, or some characteristic
directly to the pronoun. The quality, the characteristic, or the fact is death.
“dead” — is also in the accusative
plural of nekroj because the pronoun is in
the plural. The ascriptive use of the participle is used to link up the quality
of death to each one of us. So when grace found us we were all dead, says the
ascriptive participle plus the plural of the accusative of nekroj, plus the plural of su.
The doctrine of the classification of death
1. Spiritual death — Ephesians 2:1;
Romans 5:12; 6:23; 1 Corinthians 15:22. Spiritual death is a judgment on the
human race at the point of birth. It is being born into the devil’s kingdom as
citizens. We are born spiritually dead and related to the devil’s kingdom and
we continue that way until we believe in Jesus Christ at which point this thing
is broken. This means that when grace found us we belonged to Satan’s kingdom
because we were born with spiritual death. Therefore the participle in verse is
not only ascriptive but it is linear aktionsart. It is a status that continues
and can only be broken by a new birth, and therefore the necessity for the new
birth. The new birth breaks spiritual death. Spiritual death is not only
separation from God but it is the penalty of sin, and it is totally the penalty
of sin. Physical death is not the penalty of sin and it does not have anything
to do with the penalty of sin. The only way that physical death is related to
the penalty of sin is that since we are born spiritually dead it is inevitable
that eventually we will all die. The first use of spiritual death in the Bible
is in Genesis 2:17.
2. Physical death — Matthew 8:22; 2
Corinthians 5:1-8; Romans 8:38,39; Philippians 1:21. Physical death is the
separation of the soul from the body.
3. The second death is the
perpetuation of spiritual death into eternity — Hebrews 9:27; Revelation
20:12-15. It refers to the final judgment of the unbeliever in which the
unbeliever is cast into the lake of fire forever. So it follows the general
concept of separation but it is the eternal lake of fire.
4. Operational death — James 2:26.
“Faith without production is dead [non-operative].” This is a reference to the
believer’s failure to produce divine good, the failure of the believer to reach
super-grace, the failure of the believer to GAP it consistently; it is the
failure of the believer to get an accumulation of doctrine that leads to the ECS,
occupation with Christ, super-grace capacity, super-grace blessing.
5. Positional death — Romans chapter
6 is the major passage of discussion. It is also found in Colossians 2:12, 20;
3:3. At salvation we are entered into union with Christ through the baptism of
the Spirit. The baptism of the Spirit has two aspects. We are in union with
Christ as Christ is seated at the right hand of the Father. We are also in
union with Christ as Christ died on the cross — current and retroactive
positional truth. Positional death is retroactive positional truth or
identification with Christ in His death. We are identified with Christ in His
death because at the cross Jesus Christ rejected human good. He bore our sins
in His own body on the tree but He rejected human good. Retroactive positional
truth is simply our rejection of human good through identification with Christ
on the cross.
6. Temporal death — Romans 8:6,13;
Ephesians 5:14; 1 Timothy 5:6; James 1:15; Revelation 3:1; Luke 15:24,32. It
refers to the believer out of fellowship through sin. It is simply carnality or
the perpetuation of carnality in reversionism. Temporal death just means that
death is used to show that when you and I sin we are out of fellowship, we are
dead to God in the sense of being out of fellowship. The prodigal son was still
a son but he was dead to his father — “This, my son, was dead but now is
alive.” He was out of fellowship, now he is back in fellowship.
7. Sexual death which is the
inability to copulate — Romans 4:16-21; Hebrews 11:11.12.
There is no greater emphasis on
God’s grace than our spiritual condition prior to salvation — “And you all
constantly being [spiritually] dead.”
Next we have a prepositional phrase,
e)n plus the locative of
sphere, and we have two objects of the preposition — “in the sphere of.”
“your transgressions” — paraptwma plus the definite article and a personal pronoun.
The definite article classifies the sphere in which our spiritual death is
manifest. We are spiritually dead but how do we demonstrate it? By
transgressions. This means to violate divine law. Sin is any want of conformity
unto or transgression of the law of God — from the Westminster Confession. Sin
is violation of something you know to be true as a part of divine law. But that
is only half of it. The other half is found in the other half of the
preposition, the word “sins,” also the locative plural. This time the noun is a(martia, which means failure to hit the mark. It is
correctly translated “sins.”
Translation: “And you being spiritually
dead in the sphere of your transgressions and sins.”
Principle: Grace found every
believer regulating his life and ordering his behaviour pattern in the sphere
of deviations and missing the mark. Grace found each one of us not only a total
zero but also a total sub-zero.
Verse 2 — grace found us under the
control of the ruler of this world. Spiritual death is your citizenship paper
showing that you are member of the devil’s kingdom.
“Wherein” is a prepositional phrase
— e)n plus the locative plural of
the relative pronoun o(j. It should be translated
“in the sphere of which” or “in which sphere.” It is referring to the sphere of
transgressions and sins.
“in time past” — an enclitic
particle of time, pote, and it means “formerly.”
It means before we were saved.
“ye walked” — aorist active
indicative of the verb peripatew, used for lifestyle or life
pattern. The aorist is a constative aorist, which always contemplates the
action of a verb in its entirety. It takes an occurrence and regardless of the
extent or the duration of that occurrence it gathers it into a single whole.
The active voice: the unbeliever, which we all were formerly, produces the
action of the verb. The indicative mood is the reality of the fact that not
only were we spiritually dead but we had a ruler who was totally obnoxious to
the groom. The unbeliever is under the domination and the control of Satan.
A classification of verbs for walking
1. A)nastrefw is used for the pattern of social life — Ephesians 3:3
2. Stoixew refers to action along a particular line — Romans 4:12; Philippians
3:16. It means to follow a definite course of action, a course of action which
is recognisable in the context.
3. Peripatew connotes personal or an individual life-pattern.
“according to the course” — the
preposition kata plus the accusative
singular of a)iwn which means an age or an
era. It refers to a period of time and it should be translated “according to
the era.”
“of this world” — a genitive of
description, kosmoj which represents the
anti-God influence of the unbeliever in the status quo of spiritual death. The
era of the kosmoj refers to the fact that not
only does Satan rule the planet earth but that he has compiled a tremendous
mass of thoughts, opinions, speculations, hopes, impulses, objectives,
aspirations, trends, and panaceas which form the entire scope of Satanic doctrine
for ruling. Communism is an extension of these things, as is the thinking of
the French Revolution, as is liberalism. The evils of the world are brought
about by Satan’s inability to keep consistent. Satan does not have the ability
to rule the world which he has taken from man at the fall.
“according to the prince” — the
Greek word for prince is a)rxon for “highest ruler.” It
really means a ruler, a king, but it is someone who becomes a ruler without
inheriting a throne. Notice that Satan is not called “king,” he is called a)rxon because he didn’t inherit the world, he seized it.
The coup de tat of seizure was the
fall of man. One thing Satan recognises is the importance of authority, so he
is called the highest ruler …
“of the power” — a descriptive
genitive of e)cousia which does not means power,
it means authority.
“of the air” — a)er, the Greek word for the lower or dense atmosphere.
The higher atmosphere is called ether. The atmosphere around the earth consists
of the first heavens. Satan as the highest ruler is found controlling not only
the planet earth but also the atmosphere around it.
Translation so far: “In which sphere
you formerly walked according to the era of this kosmoj,
according to the highest ruler of the authority of the atmosphere.”
The seven points of the devil (The devil’s seven)
1. The devil is an angelic
personality. He is also a genius, smarter than any human being or creature who
ever lived. He is also very attractive and has a beautiful voice. Isaiah
14:12-17; Ezekiel 28:11-19 gives us a total picture of Satan as a personality,
a person of the highest possible mentality. Here and there other passages tell
us other things about Satan. He is the biggest liar that God ever stuck a soul
in. He is the father of lies — John 8:44. He is also a murderer — 1 John 3:8.
He is the highest ruler of the authority of the atmosphere.
2. The devil is the ruler of this
world — Luke 4:5-7; John 12:31; 14:30; 16:11; 2 Corinthians 4:4; Ephesians 2:2.
3. As the ruler of this world Satan
has strategy regarding the nations. Satan is anti-nationalism; he despises
nationalism. Nationalism frustrates the function of his rulership. Nationalism
is a part of the laws of divine establishment to preserve human freedom in the
devil’s kingdom — Revelation 12:9; 20:3,8. In order to rule the world Satan has
to have strategy, he has to function on principles. For example, the two
greatest enemies of Satan in ruling the world are Bible doctrine and the laws
of divine establishment. So Satan counterattacks with religion. Religion is
designed to neutralise doctrine. He counterattacks with revolution. Revolution
is a Satanic device to neutralise the laws of divine establishment. That is why
all revolutionists in their doctrine are internationalists and
anti-nationalism. Nationalism frustrates Satan’s function on the earth.
Nationalism is a part of the laws of divine establishment and basically it
includes: a) the military establishment to protect the freedom of the nation
involved. This immediately knocks out the possibility of any Christian being a
conscientious objector; b) law plus a police system. This is one of the most
important foundations for the preservation of privacy, rights and freedoms; c)
free enterprise, with no government interference.
Religion is man by man’s efforts
seeking to gain the approbation of God. It is working, man’s plans, man’s
devices, superimposed upon God. The devil is the author of religion, the author
of revolution, the author of internationalism; it is all a part of his strategy
as the ruler of the world.
4. Since everyone is born into the
world as an unbeliever and spiritually dead we are born citizens of Satan’s
kingdom. Spiritual death is the citizenship papers in cosmos diabolicus.
Therefore the devil has to have strategy with regard to people. He has to do
everything possible to keep people unbelievers. It is the devil’s objective
that no one believe in Jesus Christ. Luke 8:12; 2 Corinthians 4:3,4; 2
Thessalonians 2:9,10; Colossians 2:8.
5. Therefore when a person believes
in Christ the devil doesn’t give up on them. They are members of the family of
God and in God’s plan and totally separated from Satan’s plan. So the devil has
to have strategy regarding believers — 2 Corinthians 2:1.
There are seven strategies:
a) The devil’s strategy
is to accuse believers. The devil is always embarrassed about sin. What he
tries to do in his kingdom is what God produced in innocence. So one of his
objectives is to ignore sin with all unbelievers and to make a great stir about
the sins of believers. Satan makes an accusation about the sins of believers to
God the Father. God the Son is seated at the right hand of the Father and at that
point Jesus Christ takes on a new role, which is very closely related to His
celebrityship. He acts as the believer’s defense attorney immediately and
presents the case that every sin that the devil mentions has already been
judged. Law of double jeopardy: you can’t be judged twice for the same offense.
So Jesus Christ mentions that. God the Father as the judge throws the case out
of court. Revelation 12:9,10; Job 1:6-11; Zechariah 3:1,2; 1 John 2:1,2.
b) It is Satan’s
objective to sponsor reversionism. The devil has been working for a long time
to get one whole generation of believers in reversionism. 1 Corinthians
10:19-21. The devil has a communion table and it is designed to sponsor
reversionism. This communion table is for reversionists. 2 Corinthians
11:3,13-15. Illustration: 1 Chronicles 21.
c) It is the strategy of
the devil with regard to believers to frustrate the will of God in the
believer’s life. The will of God is categorised and classified in three ways:
mental, operational, and geographical. Mental will of God: What does He want me
to think? Operational will of God: What does he want me to do? Geographical
will of God: Where does He want me to be? It is the Satanic objective to
frustrate all three categories. The mental — Ephesians 4:14, he tries to
frustrate divine viewpoint. Operational — James 4:7,8. Geographical — 1
Thessalonians 2:18.
d) It is the strategy of
the devil to neutralise the believer’s soul through worry and anxiety — 1 Peter
5:7-9.
e) It is Satan’s
objective to obscure the focus of the believer — occupation with Christ or the
super-grace life. He does this in three ways: getting eyes on self — 1 Kings
19:10; getting eyes on people — Jeremiah
17:5; getting eyes on things — Hebrew 13:5,6.
f) It is the Satanic
objective to involve the believer in humanistic, temporal solutions to man’s
problems so that divine solutions are obscured and excluded, e.g. the so-called
social gospel (social action).
g) To instill in
believers a fear of death — Hebrews 2:14,15.
6. Religion as a Satanic system. The
basic principle of religion is to counterfeit what God has done. There are nine
different counterfeits in religion:
a) Counterfeit gospel —
2 Corinthians 11:3,4.
b) Counterfeit ministers
— 2 Corinthians 11:13-15.
c) Counterfeit doctrine
— 2 Timothy 4:1.
d) Counterfeit communion
table — 1 Corinthians 10:19-21.
e) Counterfeit
righteousness — Matthew 19:16-28.
f) Counterfeit modus
vivendi — Matthew 23. (Whitewashed tombstones)
g) Counterfeit power — 2
Thessalonians 2:8-10.
h) Counterfeit gods — 2
Thessalonians 2:3,4.
7. False teachers and false teaching
is a part of the devil’s strategy.
a) False teachers always
have a phony facade — Matthew 7:15; Romans 16:18. This facade is a kind of
Maddison Avenue presentation to impress people.
b) False teachers court
believers — Galatians 4:17,18; 2 Timothy 3:5-7.
c) False teachers always
appeal to human pride — 2 Corinthians 10:12.
d) False teachers like
to promote idolatry because it is a quick way to demon possession — Habakkuk
2:18,19.
e) False teachers often
promote legalism — 1 Timothy 1:7,8.
f) False teachers will
continue throughout the cosmic era of Satan’s rulership — 1 John 4:1.
Next to the lie
itself, the greatest delusion Satan imposes — reaching to all unsaved
and to a large proportion of Christians
— is the supposition that only such things as society considers evil could
originate with the devil — if, indeed, there be any devil to originate
anything. It is not the reason of man, but the revelation of God, which points
out that governments, morals, education, art, commercialism, vast enterprises
and organisations, and much of religious activity are included in the cosmos
diabolicus. That is, the system which Satan has constructed includes all the
good which he can incorporate into it and be consistent in the thing he aims to
accomplish. A serious question arises whether the presence of gross evil in the
world is due to Satan’s intention to have it so, or whether it indicates
Satan’s inability to execute all he has designed. The probability is great that
Satan’s ambition has led him to undertake more than any creature could ever
administer. Revelation declares that the whole cosmos-system must be annihilated — not its evil alone, but all
that is in it, both good and bad. God will incorporate nothing of Satan’s
failure into that kingdom which He will set up in the earth.
Lewis
Sperry Chafer, “Systematic Theology", vol. 2 , PP 100-101
“the spirit” is a subjective
genitive from a neuter noun, pneuma. While pneuma is a neuter noun it is used also for persons. It
means breath or air or spirit. The word is also used for angels, for esprit
decor, thought pattern. Here we have the definite article, which indicates the
classification of the noun rather than calling attention to its quality. The
noun in the genitive produces the action of
the participle.
A genitive noun produces the action of the participle. The noun refers to the
state of mind of reversionistic believers. It refers to doctrine of demons
entering the right lobe of believers who are negative toward doctrine. The word
also refers to unbelievers’ thinking as Satan has influenced them. The noun
also refers to Satan who is the a)rxon and therefore a spirit.
“that now worketh” is the present
active participle of e)nergew and it goes with the
genitive because it, too, has the definite article. The word means to be
operational or effective — “the spirit which is now operational.” The definite
article can be translated as a relative clause when included with the
participle.
“in the children” — e)n plus the locative plural of u(ioj. This refers to negative volition toward the gospel
as far as unbelievers are concerned, for the believer it refers to negative
volition toward doctrine. The devil’s propaganda works in the unbeliever to
keep him from getting to the gospel, or putting him under strong delusion so
that he will not accept the gospel. This is the principle of 2 Corinthians
4:3,4. Satan has blinded the minds of the unbelievers. It also refers to
reversionistic believers. Both could be classified as children of disobedience.
“of wrath” — the descriptive
genitive of the noun a)peiqeia, used both here and in
Hebrews 4:6 for the obstinacy or disobedience or negative volition of the
reversionistic believer. It can be both a reversionist or an unbeliever.
Translation: “In which sphere you
formerly walked according to the error of the cosmos, according to the supreme
ruler of the authority of the atmosphere, the ruler of the spirit which now is
operational in the sons of obstinacy.”
Verse 3 — Grace also found us under
the control of the old sin nature. “Among whom” is a prepositional phrase, e)n plus the locative of the relative pronoun o(j.
a) This refers to the unbeliever
type reversionists specifically.
b) The unbeliever reversionist has
rejected the gospel so that a vacuum is created in his soul.
c) Into this vacuum goes the
doctrine of demons causing him to reject the laws of divine establishment.
d) Every believer was once among unbeliever
type reversionists.
e) This is where grace found each
one of us.
f) Now also grace finds this
believer in this passage in a reversionistic state, controlled by the old sin
nature.
“also” is the adjunctive use of kai; it is followed by the phrase “we all” — h(meij pantej, a pronoun and an adjective in the nominative
plural and it refers to believers with retrospective exposition regarding their
status as unbelievers or how grace found them.
“we all had our conversation” — an
aorist passive indicative from the compound verb a)nastrefw [A)na = above or again; strefw = to turn one’s course]. It connotes a pattern of
social life, it means to live in the sense of practicing certain principles, to
have a pattern of behaviour or conduct. This is a constative aorist, it gathers
up into one entirety the pattern of our life when grace found us. The passive
voice: The subject receives the action of the verb. The unbeliever receives the
action of this verb and this is what we received up to the point of salvation.
The indicative mood is the reality of our life pattern or life style as an
unbeliever under the old sin nature.
“in times past” is an adverb, pote, and it means “formerly.”
“in the lusts of our flesh” — this
Greek phrase refers to the old sin nature’s lust pattern. We have ep)iqumia and sarc as the two basic words. Sarc is sometimes human flesh but sometimes the old sin
nature: generally in the epistles of the New Testament, the old sin nature.
The doctrine of the old sin nature
1. Definition. The old sin nature is
that which was acquired originally by Adam’s fall and subsequently acquired by
us at the point of physical birth. It is the source of the soul’s rebellion
toward God.
2. The essence of the old sin nature
is specified in the Greek of Romans 6:6. Basically it is fourfold. There is an
area of weakness which produces all personal sins — Hebrews 12:1 specifies the
principle. The doctrine of hamartiology classifies three types of personal sins
— mental, verbal, and overt. Secondly, the old sin nature has an area of
strength which produces human good in contrast to divine good. Human good is
described in Isaiah 64:6 and the principle is mentioned in Romans 8:8. Thirdly,
there is a lust pattern in the old sin nature — Romans 7:7; Ephesians 2:3.
Approbation lust is the basic concept, the basic motivator of life and is why
people seek to get attention from others. There is power lust, materialism
lust, sex lust, and so on. Finally, the old sin nature has antithetical trends
— trend toward lasciviousness, trend toward asceticism. One is as bad as the
other, both are evil.
3. The biblical nomenclature for the
old sin nature.
a) The flesh — Galatians
5:16; Ephesians 2:3.
b) Old man — Ephesians
4:22; Colossians 3:9.
c) Carnal — Romans 7:14;
1 Corinthians 3:1-3.
d) Sin (in the singular)
— Romans 5:12; 7:14; 1 Corinthians 15:56; 1 John 1:8.
e) Heart, generally used
for the right lobe, occasionally for the old sin nature’s influence on the
right lobe — Jeremiah 17:9; Matthew 12:34,35; 15:19; Mark 7:21-23.
4. Principles of the old sin nature.
a) The old sin nature is
a source of spiritual death in mankind — Romans 5:12; Ephesians 2:1,5.
b) The old sin nature is
perpetuated in the human race through physical birth — Psalm 51:5; 1 Timothy
2:13,14.
c) The believer
continues to have an old sin nature after salvation. There is no such thing as
sinless perfection — 1 Corinthians 3:1; 1 John 1:8.
d) The believer under
the control of the old sin nature is designated carnal — Romans 7:14; 1
Corinthians 3:1-3.
e) The old sin nature
frustrates bona fide production in phase two — Romans 7:15.
f) The old sin nature is
not found in the resurrection body of the believer — 1 Corinthians 15:56;
Philippians 3:21; Colossians 3:4; 1 Thessalonians 5:23.
g) Divine judgment
solves the problem of the old sin nature. Phase one judgment: Christ is judged
for our sins on the cross — 2 Corinthians 5:21; 1 Peter 2:24. There is a phase
two judgment: the believer’s sins in time are judged by the rebound technique —
1 Corinthians 11:31; 1 John 1:9. There is also a phase three judgment where the
believer’s human good is judged.
Verse 3b — “fulfilling” is a present
active participle of poiew which means “doing the
desires of the flesh.” The verb means to do and has nothing to do with
fulfilling anything.
“the desires of the flesh” — the
word for “desires” is the accusative plural of the noun qelhma. It means that people always do what they want to
do. They are not always ready to take the consequences of that they do.
Basically the lifestyle of all unbelievers is doing what they want to do. This
simply proves once again that you have free will before salvation. Doing what
God wills or doing what you want to do after salvation indicates the same factor.
Angels observe unbelievers with this in mind. In this sense the unbelieving
human race is spoiled and when grace finds us we have been doing what we wanted
to do X number of years without achieving anything by it. We are neither
happier nor better off in any way, we simply have put ourselves under total
obligation to the cosmos, the “devil’s seven.” Being under this obligation
means that anything we have in life that we enjoy we owe to the ruler of this
world, and it’s enjoyment in very short-lived because the ruler of this world
does not have either the ability or the capacity to make either a promotion or
any kind of prosperity system of happiness. Therefore our only hope in this
field lies under the concept of grace. So grace found us totally enmeshed in
using our own free will to make ourselves miserable while trying to make
ourselves happy. “Continually doing” is present linear aktionsart, and this is
how grace found us. Continually doing the desires of the flesh means that if
you were a very good person before you were saved (and not the town sinner) you
were still doing what you wanted to do. You wanted to be good, you wanted to be
prissy, and you wanted to be better than everyone else. We are what we are by
our own volition.
When grace found all of us we were
doing what we wanted to do and it wasn’t getting us anywhere. The issue is on
volition and desires, and desires are what we will, what we want to do. With
Bible doctrine you know what you want to do, you want to do the will of God.
The will of God is for you to get doctrine inside the soul. The only way we can
use our situation to improve the situation is non-meritorious. Non-meritorious
volition GAPs it to super-grace, and then God does all the pouring.
“and of the mind” — the genitive
plural from dianoia. All the do-gooders and all
the bleeding hearts are always looking for something for which they can
crusade. They want to be good in life, they want to do something good, they
want to feel like they have put a little whitewash or a little patch on planet
earth.
“and were” is the imperfect active
indicative of e)imi — “we kept on being.” This
is the imperfect used as the past tense for the purpose of indicating what we
were when grace found us.
“by nature” — the instrumental of fusij, which means by natural or by inherited endowment.
We all inherited something. By inherited endowment we are …
“the children” — the nominative
plural of teknon without the definite
article.
1. The word means a child in
relationship to its parents. That is, a child under authority of other members
of the human race.
2. It also refers to descendants, to
posterity, hence it refers here to the posterity of Adam.
3. The absence of the definite
article emphasises the qualitative aspect of the noun. In this case the quality
was bad. We were under authority but we were under the authority of wrath.
“of wrath” — o)rgh, descriptive genitive singular. It means anger,
wrath, indignation, or punishment. In other words, we were being pulled
irresistibly under Satan’s authority, under the authority of the old sin
nature, toward the lake of fire. Now here is the contrast: We were under this
authority taking us to the lake of fire; now we are under authority taking us
eventually to surpassing grace. In the meantime we have the privilege of
super-grace, and our authority is the Word of God and the communicator of the
Word, the classroom being the local church.
“even as others” — kai o(i loipoi is plural and means “also the rest [of the
human race].”
Translation” “Among whom also
formerly we all had our behaviour pattern in the lusts of our flesh [OSN],
continually doing the desires of the flesh and the thoughts, and were
continually by natural inherited endowment the posterity of wrath punishment, as
also the rest of the human race was.”
Verses 4-7 takes us a step further —
how grace found us, how grace provided for us.
Verse 4 — “But” is an adversative
particle, de, used as a conjunction of
contrast. The contrast is between how Christ found us as the children of wrath
and what God was like when He found us. In other words, this adversative
conjunction is to set up a contrast. We were found as zeros, the one who found
us was perfect.
“God” — o( qeoj refers to God the Father, and it is “the God.” Now the purpose of the definite
article is to define one person of the Godhead, the author of the plan.
“who is” should be “being” — the
present active participle of e)imi: always being, there never
was a time when he wasn’t. “But the God being.”
“rich” — the adjective plousioj. The word means money, but it also means to be rich
in other things too.
The doctrine of divine essence — we must see who found us.
1. God is one in essence. The
oneness of God’s essence is the glory of God. Whenever the glory of God is
found in the scripture it refers to the essence of God. All the characteristics
of divine essence are resident in each member of the Godhead. However, all of
the characteristics of God are not manifest at one time.
2. The relationship of essence to
the Trinity. Each member of the Trinity or the Godhead is a separate person
having the same essence as the other members. Even though a separate person He
is still one in essence with the others. The fact that there is more than one
person in the Godhead is taught in 1 Peter 1:2; 2 Corinthians 13:14; John 10:30
cf. Psalm 110:1; Isaiah 48:16.
3. Examples of how various
characteristics are manifest include: a) Salvation, where you see God’s love
and eternal life; b) Judgment, God’s righteousness and justice is seen; c)
Faithfulness, you see immutability plus veracity; d) In God’s plan is seen omniscience
plus sovereignty. So each aspect of life brings out a different characteristic
in the essence of God.
4. The sovereignty of God.
a) God is the supreme
being of the universe — Deuteronomy 4:39; 1 Samuel 2:6-18; 1 Chronicles 29:11;
2 Chronicles 20:6; Psalm 83:18; Isaiah 45:5,6; Acts 17:24.
b) God is also said to
be king of heaven and earth — Psalm 47:2; 93:1; Matthew 6:13b; Hebrews 8:1;
Revelation 4:2,3,11.
c) God as sovereign is
also eternal — Psalm 93:2; God is infinite — Psalm 8:1; Acts 5:39;
Self-determining — Job 9:12; Psalm 115:3; 135:6; Proverbs 21:1; Daniel 4:35.
d) Expressions of divine
volition — Isaiah 46:10b; Ephesians 1:5 — resulting in a plan for humanity —
Psalm 24; Hebrews 6:17.
e) But as a part of the
sovereignty of God, God is a gentleman. That means He will not coerce or
violate the volition of any member of the human race. He will not use His
absolute will against the volition He gave man — John 7:17; Revelation 22:17.
f) As far as the
believer is concerned God has a will for our life. We can choose to go against
that will of the intake of doctrine, GAPing it to super-grace. We can wind up
in reversionistic revolt. The believer in reversionism repudiates God’s will,
God’s person, and God’s plan.
5. The righteousness of God.
a) God is righteous or
absolute holiness — Leviticus 19:2b; 1 Samuel 2:2; Psalm 22:3; 47:8; 111:9;
Isaiah 6:3; John 17:11; Revelation 3:7; 4:8; 6:10. God’s righteousness is
absolute, it cannot be destroyed, contaminated, compromised.
b) There are passages
which say that God is good, a goodness that stems from His righteousness —
Psalm 25:8; 34:8; 86:5; 119:68; Luke 18:19.
c) God’s righteousness
is free from sin — 2 Corinthians 5:21; 1 John 1:5.
d) The righteousness of
God is perfect, so that His character is perfect, so that His person is
perfect. It is impossible to have perfect righteousness without having perfect
character and a perfect personality. They key to personality is righteousness. Deuteronomy
32:4b; Psalm 7:9; 11:7; 97:6; 111:3; 119:137a; Jeremiah 23:6; John 17:25a;
Romans 1:17; 10:3; 1 John 2:29.
e) He is righteous in
His attitudes and His actions — Deuteronomy 32:4; 2 Samuel 22:31; Psalm 119:37;
145:17; Daniel 9:14; Revelation 19:2.
f) God’s perfect
righteousness rejects human standards of self-righteousness. Self-righteousness
galls, but true righteousness in the believer is pleasing. That is why
salvation cannot be attained by human righteousness — Titus 3:5. God regards
our righteousness as filthy rags — Isaiah 64:6.
g) The righteousness of
God is available to all who believer — Romans 3:22 for imputation of
righteousness.
6. The concept of divine justice as
a part of the essence of God .
a) God is fair, this is
a part of His justice. In fact, it is impossible for God to be unfair. God’s
judgments are perfect and God is always fair, therefore God is eliminated as a
patsy in anyone’s life. It is impossible to make God the object of bitterness
or any mental attitude sin. His fairness is total. His justice also operates in
the field of punitive activity. God must express His love through His justice
to His reversionistic believers. He is always just and as a part of His justice
He is no respecter of persons. Therefore God has only two avenues through which
He can express His love to believers. He expresses His love to super-grace
believers through blessing; He expresses His love to reversionism through the
function of divine justice and/or discipline. Justice administers the penalty
which righteousness demands. Deuteronomy 32:4; 2 Chronicles 19:7; Job 37:23;
Psalm 19:9; 50:6; 58:11; 89:14; Isaiah 45:21; Jeremiah 50:7; Romans 3:26;
Hebrews 10:30,31; Hebrews 12:23.
b) Justice not only is
an expression of the fairness of God, not only an expression of the punitive
operation of God, but justice means that God in vindicating any believer as a
part of the angelic conflict cannot have a compromise to that characteristic.
That is why we have the cross and that is where the doctrine of propitiation
fits in. Were it not for the ministry of Jesus Christ on the cross, were it not
for the doctrine of propitiation we would be in serious trouble because God
would have to compromise His justice in order to save us; and God cannot
compromise any part of His character. Immutability means that God’s character
remains inviolate, it cannot be compromised. The Lord Jesus Christ through His
vicarious efficacious spiritual death on the cross (1 Peter 2:24) transferred
the guilt of the sinner (Romans 5:12) in Himself. This propitiated the justice
of God the Father so that the Father is not only free to pardon and to justify
each person who accepts Christ, but He is free with His justice to condemn
forever those who reject Christ. So the work of Christ on the cross not only
liberated the justice of the Father for total expression in eternity but also
made it possible for the Father’s justice to remain intact in the plan of God.
His justice in the basis for the unbeliever going to the lake of fire.
7. Divine love.
God is eternal and
therefore has unchangeable love in the same quantity as he had billions of
years ago. The quantity of God’s love and the quality of God’s love remains the
same — Jeremiah 31:3. Each member of the Godhead is somewhere related to love.
For example, the Father’s love is described in John 3:16; 1 John 2:15; 3:1. The
Son’s love is described in Romans 8:35. The principle that the love of God will
not permit separation, that no believer can be separated from the love of God,
is found in Romans 8:38,39. No matter how a believer fails, no matter what he
does, no matter who says what about him, no matter what he has actually done,
he can never be separated from the love of God which is in Christ Jesus our
Lord. This means that the Father has a love which is not in any way related to
emotion. Emotion does not exist in any member of the Godhead. Emotion is not a
part of the essence of God, it is strictly a human function in order to become
an appreciator of what we have in the right lobe of the soul. In the function
of the soul emotion is the responder to the various functions of the right lobe
or the heart. God doesn’t need an emotion to appreciate what He has in the
mentality if His essence — omniscience, and God does not function on emotion as
we do. Emotion is a prop so that what you have in your right lobe will be a
source of stimulation to you. But God is not emotional. An occasional emotional
type verb will be used as an anthropopathism merely to express a divine
attitude but not to indicate a true condition of God’s essence. So it is
important to understand that God’s love is infinitely superior to any human
love because it needs no props. For example, one of the props in human love is
to get a response. Very few people have the ability to love someone
consistently when all they ever get from them is to be ignored or antagonism.
God’s love is so great that no
strings are involved. He will love us when we are in reversionism just as much
as when we are heroes in super-grace.
It is possible for a member of the
human race to love God. However, it must be regenerate mankind, a member of the
family of God, first. Then the capacity for it is something totally unrelated
to props. Doctrine is not related to props; doctrine is not emotional. We
appreciate doctrine and emote often when we learn principles of doctrine. But
doctrine in itself has not emotional content. Doctrine is designed to have a
strictly mental content. God’s love is a part of the ECS, in which case it
becomes reality. 1 John 2:5 tells us about God’s love and the ECS. God’s love
is first a reality to us when we are controlled by the Spirit — Romans 5:5.
8. Eternal life. God is absolute
existence — Exodus 3:14; John 8:58; Psalm 90:2. Jesus Christ is eternal life
and has always existed with the Father — John 1:1-3. He is eternal life and
shares His life with us at the point of salvation — 1 John 5:11,12; John 10:28;
20:31. Always existent as eternal life is a characteristic of essence.
9. Omniscience. God is
all-knowledge. It is related to eternal life in this way. God’s knowledge is
total and God’s knowledge is not related to time. God’s knowledge is outside of
time because He is eternal life. 1 Samuel 2:3; Job 26:6; Jeremiah 16:17; Psalm
139:1-6; Ezekiel 11:5; Matthew 10:29,30; Hebrews 4:13. God, therefore has
infinite wisdom and understanding — 1 Samuel 16:7; Psalm 44:21; 147:5; Proverbs
3:19; 5:21; 17:3; Isaiah 40:13,14; Jeremiah 17:10; 51:15; Nahum 1:7; Romans
11:33; 1 John 3:20.
It is God’s intention for each one
of us as a believer to understand everything in the Bible — in time!
10. Omnipresence. God is ever
present, He is not limited by space or time. This means He is both imminent and
transcendent. Jeremiah 23:24; Acts 17:27. Heaven is His throne, the earth is
His footstool — Deuteronomy 4:39; Isaiah 66:1. Furthermore, where His
omnipresence is concerned the heavens cannot contain Him — 1 Kings 8:27; Acts
17:24b.
11. Omnipotence. God has a power
totally devoid of human props. Omnipotence means not only strength as we
understand it but ability as well. God has unlimited ability, unlimited
strength — Genesis 17:1; 18:14; Job 26:7; 42:2; Psalm 24:8; 93:1; 147:5a; Isaiah
40:26; 50:2; Jeremiah 27:5; 32:27; Matthew 19:26; Mark 14:36; Luke 1:37. The
only limitation God ever has on His strength is human negative volition —
Revelation 4:8. God also has unlimited authority — Psalm 33:9; Romans 13:1;
Hebrews 1:3; Revelation 19:6.
12. Immutability. God is also
perfectly stable. Immutability is total stability. Immutability means
unchangeability. God cannot change — Psalm 102:26,27; Malachi 3:6; Hebrews
1:12. God is absolute stability — Isaiah 40:28; James 1:17. God’s Word and God’s
works are unchanging. That is why through GAP God gives us one immutable thing
— doctrine is immutable. God gives us something of Himself when he gives us
Bible doctrine. When we have doctrine in the soul we have the only stabiliser
in life. His words and His works are unchanging — Psalm 119:89; Ecclesiastes 3:14;
Isaiah 40:8. From His stability comes His faithfulness. He is faithful in
keeping His promises — Numbers 23”19; 1 Kings 8:56; 2 Corinthians 1:20; Titus
1:2; Hebrews 10:23; 11:11. He is faithful to forgive — 1 John 1:9. He doesn’t
forgive because we feel sorry for our sins, He forgives because Christ died for
our sins. He is faithful in keeping us saved — 2 Timothy 2:12,13. He is
faithful to deliver us from and in pressure — 1 Corinthians 10:13; 1 Peter
4:19. He is faithful in stabilising the believer — 2 Thessalonians 3:3. He is
faithful in the administration of His plan — 1 Corinthians 1:9. He is faithful
in His provision — 1 Thessalonians 5:24.
13. Veracity: truthfulness. He is
absolute truth — Deuteronomy 32:4b. His veracity manifests itself in His ways;
He has ways of communication — Psalm 25:10; 86:15; Revelation 15:3. His truth
is manifest in His Word — 2 Samuel 7:28; 1 Kings 17:24; Psalm 19:9; 119:142;
138:2, 150:1; John 8:45; 17:17; 2 Corinthians 6:7.
Verse 4b — The word plousioj is an expression of the doctrine of divine essence.
“in mercy” — the manifestation of
God’s essence to the human race. It is e)n
plus the locative of e)leoj which means grace in action.
In other words, grace found us, that’s verses 1-3. So if God is going to take
us from mere zeros and He is going to take us to a hundred point zero He is
going to have to have a way to do it. The way is GAP. Grace found us as zeros
and God has the capability to do something about that. So “in the sphere of his
mercy” means God did something about it. This glorifies God only. No member of
the human race is glorified by entering the plan of God. The stability of God’s
grace emphasises His righteousness but the mercy of God’s grace emphasises His
love. Love goes into action on our behalf.
“for his great love” — dia plus the accusative singular of polluj plus the accusative of a)gaph.
Polluj connotes greatness in
magnitude and quantity. In quantity God has enough love for all of us. God’s
love is great in magnitude. It is perfect because God’s character is perfect.
So we translate not “for his great love” but — dia
plus the accusative — “because of his great love.”
Verse 4, translation: “But the God,
being rich in mercy, because of his great love with which he loves us.”
The doctrine of love
1. At the point of salvation every
believer passes the point of propitiation, placing himself under maximum divine
love. The principle is found in relationship to that love in 1 John 2:2.
Positional truth further guarantees that God the Father will love every
believer with the same amount of love which He possesses for Jesus Christ — 1
John 3:2.
2. Therefore God can love every
believer with maximum love in spite of the believer’s spiritual status in phase
two.
3. There are three basic categories
of love. As far as man is concerned category #1 is love toward God. Category #2
is love for a member of the opposite sex who is categorised as either right man
or right woman. Category #3 is friendship. All of these categories are limited.
Category #1 is limited to the three members of the Godhead. Category #2 is
limited to one person of the opposite sex. Category #3 is also limited and will
never include too many real friends. When it comes to the command to love the
brethren (members of the family of God) that is strictly a mental attitude love
produced first by the filling of the Spirit and also produced by growth and
spiritual maturity. It is strictly a mental attitude, nothing more.
4. There is also a relationship-type
love in the Bible. It comes from the Attic Greek noun storgh and it means love of parents for children, love of
children for parents when they mature a little bit. There is another Attic
Greek word which connotes an aspect of category #2 love, e)roj, which is called sex love. Relationship love does
exist, except of course where Bible doctrine divides a family, as in Matthew
10:34-37; Luke 12:51-53.
5. In the New Testament vocabulary
for love we have two verbs and two nouns. They are cognates within the
framework of the two. We have a)gapaw which is the verb, and the
cognate is a)gaph. We have filew, which is the verb, and the noun is filoj. A)gapaw and a)gaph is a special love, a limited type love because it
refers only to the mentality of the soul. it is strictly a mental attitude and,
by the way, excludes emotion. It means freedom from mental attitude sins, it
means a relaxed mental attitude towards its object. The second category is a
general type love and covers every facet of the soul. This type of love
includes emotion and it is actually more mature. To be called the filoj of God like Abraham was is a very, very high
honour. This type of love is more mature and expresses greater capacity for
love, as illustrated by the indignation of Peter when Jesus said he didn’t have
filew or filoj — John 21:17.
6. Principle of documentation. It
was Archbishop Trench who first observed the correct distinction between a)gapaw and filew. He observed this by going
to a parallel and almost an exactly parallel language at the time of the Roman
empire. At that time Latin was spoken in the western part of the empire and was
the most dominant language. In the eastern part of the empire Koine Greek was
the dominant language. At the time of the Roman empire Latin and the Koine
Greek became exact equivalents. It was the study of these two languages at the
time of the writing of the New Testament which brought Trench around to the
conclusion that the verb in the Latin, diligo,
is equivalent to a)gapaw; and that the Latin word amo is equivalent to filew. He cites the writings of Cicero and he finally
concluded from these and other writings from which he took a lot of authors:
“We conclude that amo which answers
to filew is stronger than diligo which corresponds to a)gapaw” — page 41, The Synonyms of the New Testament, by
Archbishop Richard C, Trench.
7. Summary of the distinctions. The
noun a)gaph is strictly a mental
attitude love which emphasises the actions of mental attitude sins. The noun filoj is stronger and connotes a more general soul love
and a great capacity. It is mistakenly translated “friendship.” The noun a)gaph is found in two areas: the filling of the Spirit
produces it — Romans 5:5; Galatians 5:22. The third floor of the ECS produces
it — 1 John 2:5; Colossians 3:14. The noun filoj
is the fourth floor of the ECS and it by far the highest concept in that
area.
8. All believers are commanded a)gaph type love. Since a)gaph
is produced by the filling of the Spirit it is only accomplished in this way —
Romans 5:5 — and it produces the concept we have in 1 Corinthians 13 where the
word “charity” is a)gaph love. However, filoj type love demands maturity, it demands capacity, so
there is a lot of GAPing before one gets this far.
9. In mankind a)gaph is limited only to the mentality of the soul while filoj extends to every facet of the soul and to the
entire life as well as having something to do with the personality of the
individual. This has to be remembered because people have very erroneously
taught that a)gaph is divine love and filoj is human love.
10. The erroneous conclusion that a)gaph refers only to divine love because, for example, it
is found in John 3:16. With the verb a)gapaw and the noun a)gaph it all depends on who is producing the action. For
example, in John 3:19 men loved darkness rather than light because their deeds
were evil. So you have evil men with a)gaph and the word is used in an
entirely different way.
11. God must be the subject of the
verb before any verb can be divine love. God is the subject of filew in John 16:27, just as God is the subject of a)gapaw in John 3:16.
12. God is the motivating factor of
category #1 love — 1 John 3:11; 4:19.
Verse 4b — “wherewith” is accusative feminine singular of the
relative pronoun o(j should be translated “with
which.”
“he loved us” — the aorist active
indicative of a)gapaw. The aorist tense is a
dramatic aorist, it states a present reality with the certitude of a past event
and it is always translated like a present tense. Notice that “he loved us” is
a past tense in our English translation, but it should be translated “with
which he loves us.” God still loves us, will always loves us, nothing can
change to love of God for us. This is an idiomatic device in the Greek for
emphasis. While God has always loved us we have just come to realise it through
doctrine in the soul. The active voice: God produces the action of the verb.
The indicative mood is the reality of God’s past and present and future love
for the believer. The dramatic aorist indicates something that always existed
but is just now realised. The accusative plural of the personal pronoun e)gw [us] indicates all believers regardless of status.
Translation: “But the God who is
rich in mercy because of his great love with which he loves us.”
God loves us whether we love Him or
not — 1 John 4:19, “We” refers to the super-grace believer only. Only the
super-grace believer has what it takes to respond to the love of God.
Verse 19 — “Even” is the ascensive
use of kai, translated “even ” or
“although.”
“when we were” is the present active
participle from e)imi, indicating a status quo.
This is what we were before we were found by grace. This is a temporal
participle and it is always translated by the past tense in the English. The
temporal participle is technically an adverbial participle acting as an adverb
to the noun and main verb of the sentence. The noun is “the God.” The main verb
is the dramatic aorist of a)gapaw. The temporal adverbial
participle indicates the condition of each member of the human race when God
loves us. The point is that we weren’t worth loving. We were spiritually dead,
under the influence of Satan, under the old sin nature.
“dead” is the masculine accusative
plural from nekroj. The plural refers to
spiritual death in every case, there are no exceptions.
“in sins” — We have the locative of
sphere, also in the plural of paraptwma, meaning “in the sphere of
our transgressions.” So far this should be translated, “Although we were dead
in the sphere of our transgressions.” So we were totally unlovely to God.
“hath he quickened” — aorist active
indicative of the triple-compound verb suzwpoiew [sun = with or along with; zw = life; poiew = to do or to make] which
means to make alive together with or along with — “he has made us alive
together with.” The aorist tense is a culminative aorist. It is employed to
view the action of the verb in its entirety but to emphasise the existing
results. Along with a lot of other people since Adam was saved He has made us
alive together with them. The culminative aorist emphasises the results. The
active voice: God produces the action of the verb. The indicative mood is the
reality of the fact that this is accomplished in the Church Age by positional
sanctification whereby every believer is entered into union with Christ through
the baptism of the Spirit.
“with Christ” is the instrumental of
association plus the definite article — “in association with Christ.” So this
is positional truth, this is the same as 1 John 5:11,12.
The doctrine of propitiation
1. Propitiation is taken from the
Greek word i(lasthrion which actually means the
mercy seat, the mercy seat over the ark of the covenant. Technically it should
probably be translated “the place of the propitiation.”
2. To understand the mercy seat one
must first of all comprehend the ark of the covenant — Exodus 25:10-22; 37:1-9
declare the concept of the ark of the covenant.
3. In summary, the ark was a wooden
box two and a half cubits long [45 inches] by one and one half cubits high [27
inches] by one and one half cubit wide [27 inches]. The wood was acacia wood
and it was overlaid with gold. The gold represents the deity of Christ, the
wood represents the humanity of Christ.
The gold in the box: Jesus Christ is
God. He is sovereignty, absolute righteousness, justice, love, eternal life,
omnipotence, omniscience, omnipresence, immutability, and veracity. But as God
He cannot go to the cross. Sovereignty cannot become obedient to death, eternal
life cannot die, omnipresence cannot reduce itself to one point — the cross,
immutability cannot change these characteristics, righteousness will have
nothing to do with sin [except through justice to condemn it]. There is no way
that Christ as God can go to the cross. The wood in the ark speaks of the fact
that Christ would become in the fullness of time true humanity, as He did. The
wood represents the fact that Christ had a human body, that He had a human soul
which possessed self-consciousness, mentality, emotion, volition, and
conscience. He did not have an old sin nature — virgin birth. He also was born
with and retained a human spirit. The ark of the covenant portrays the
hypostatic union and the impeccability of Jesus Christ.
4. There are three verses of
scripture in the Bible that tell us the content of the ark — Numbers 17:8, 10;
Hebrews 9:4. There were three things in this box. There was the table of the
law, which spoke of sin as transgression of God’s perfect standard. There was
Aaron’s rod that budded which speaks of sin in terms of reversionism,
revolution against God. There was the pot of manna, which speaks of sin, in
rejection of the provision of God. So all three articles inside of the box
picture sin. They picture Christ bearing our sins in His own body on the tree.
5. The content of the box therefore
indicates the work of Christ on the cross. On the cross Jesus Christ was
bearing our sins — 1 Peter 2:24.
6. Over the top of the ark was a
mercy seat, the i(lasthrion, the throne with a golden
cherub on each side of the throne. This throne or seat was made of solid gold.
There was a cherub on each end to represent the pertinent characteristics of
the essence of God. One cherub represented +R, the other cherub represented the
justice of God.
7. On the day of atonement the high
priest took the blood of an animal sacrifice, entered the holy of holies and
sprinkled the blood over the top of this golden throne. When righteousness
looks at that blood righteousness is satisfied because that blood is a
representative analogy of the work of Christ in bearing our sins. Righteousness
is satisfied and justice is satisfied. Righteousness is satisfied because the
animal sacrifice was without spot and blemish representing the impeccability,
the perfection of Jesus Christ. Justice is satisfied because Jesus Christ bore
our sins in his own body on the tree. This is what is meant in the English by
propitiation. Propitiation means satisfaction.
8. The mercy seat represents the
doctrine of propitiation or satisfaction.
In verse 5 we now have a
parenthesis: “by grace” is the instrumental singular of xarij. It is the instrumental of means, it indicates the
principle of God’s grace, that God found a way to love us, even though He is
perfect and the total sum of perfection, and we are the total of everything
that is imperfect.
“ye are saved” is a periphrastic, a
perfect periphrastic. A periphrastic is composed of two verb forms. The first
is a present active indicative of the verb e)imi,
the verb to be. With this is a perfect passive participle of the verb swzw which means to save or deliver. We have in this
case the intensive perfect which emphasises the fact that the work of salvation
is completed and the results are perpetuated forever. The passive voice of the
participle: mankind at the point of faith in Christ receives the action of the
verb, which is a permanent salvation. The participle indicates the permanence
of the periphrastic. “By means of grace you have been permanently saved.”
The doctrine of grace
1. Grace is all that God is free to
do for man on the basis of the cross, on the basis of propitiation. God is
actually freed from the confinements of His own perfect character to do
something for us. So grace is God’s freedom to express His love to mankind
without jeopardising any part of His essence. The cross freed God to save us
and to save us permanently. Therefore grace is the plan of God, grace is the
work of God, the expression of God’s perfection. Grace means very simply that
God does all the work and man does all of the benefiting without work. Grace is
a plan, a policy, a function, a mechanic of divine modus operandi.
2. Grace depends upon the essence or
the character of God. Therefore grace depends on who and what God is. Grace is
what God can do for man and be consistent with His own character or essence.
This is why propitiation is so important.
3. The issue. The believer must sort
out the different between grace and legalism. Legalism is man’s ability, man’s
works, man’s actions intruding into the plan of God. Anything that man throws
into the plan is no good. If is was accepted it would neutralise or destroy
grace. The plan of God, however, is not destroyed or neutralised because grace
rejects our talent, our ability, our plans, our concepts, anything that we have
and regard as beneficial. Man’s plans and God’s plans cannot coexist. This
immediately sets up in the soul a great conflict.
4. Grace, sanctification, and the
angelic conflict all meet. The principle is that under grace the greatest
things that God can do for any believer is to make that believer like His Son
who is the only celebrity of the Church Age, as well as the head of the Church.
Man was created to resolve the angelic conflict, therefore when the first Adam
blew it through his free will and sin [the Fall] Jesus Christ as the last Adam
became human — not an angel, as per Hebrews 2:14-16. The first Adam lost the
victory through the Fall and the last Adam wins the victory through the cross
and then operation footstool — Colossians 2:14; Hebrews 2:14. So grace found a
way to take man, created inferior to angels and in fallen condition, and make
him superior to all angelic creatures. This is accomplished in three stages of
sanctification.
Stage one: By means of the baptism
of the Holy Spirit whereby every believer is entered into union with Christ
every believer became positionally higher than angels — Hebrews chapters 1
& 2.
Stage two: Because of this it is
possible under the construction of the ECS and the entrance into the
super-grace life to become experientially higher than angels. There is nothing
that tears the devil up more than for some believer to reach super-grace because
positionally the devil can’t do anything about what happened in a second. But
he can try to head off building a cup in the soul because one the believer has
a cup God starts pouring, and He pours, and He pours. Once the ECS has been
constructed and once the believer enters into super-grace and maintains it then
he is under what is known as experiential sanctification. At this point God is
able to so benefit in the devils world human beings to a greater extent than
the devil’s own original crowd, angels, are benefited. Demons are miserable,
that’s why they are always trying to possess a body. When God through grace can
start pouring in your cup and benefit you way above the demons it just tears
them all apart. While God is blessing you God is glorified. The other side of
the picture is that the demons are weeping and wailing. It tortures them to
have you blessed under super-grace. The biggest issue in your life is
super-grace blessing.
Stage three: That is when the Church
receives their resurrection body and becomes the bride of Christ. When Church
Age believers receive the resurrection body at the Rapture this is ultimate
sanctification, and at that point the believer in Jesus Christ is physically
superior to the angels.
5. The entrance factor into grace.
Every believer has entered the grace of God. That means he has tasted grace at
least once, the moment he believed in Jesus Christ — Hebrews 6:4; 1 peter 2:3.
At the moment of salvation every believer receives 36 things and hey are
irrevocable, they are just as immutable as God Himself. This grace package at
salvation cannot be cancelled or destroyed either by God or by angels or by
human beings. At the same time God is freed to love you regardless of your
experiential status of this life. Maximum love frees God to pour out maximum
grace, but grace can only find a place to lodge where there is capacity for
grace, and that is the super-grace life. Therefore God in grace has provided
super-grace in order that this might be demonstrated to us, to angels, to the
entire heavenly convocation. By the way, grace never goes where grace is not
wanted. The issue here is Bible doctrine. God found a way through doctrine, through
GAP, to put this into operation.
6. The occupational hazard of
believers in the field of grace: ignorance, lack of cognisance with regard to
the concept of grace, therefore leading to disorientation of grace, leading to
the field of reversionism — Galatians 5:4; Hebrews 12:15. Reversionism is the
greatest enemy, the greatest antagonist to the whole plan of God in operation
phase two.
7. The divine attitude: God is
constantly waiting to pour grace into the cup of the soul — Isaiah 30:18,19.
When a believer reaches super-grace he has super-grace capacity and God pours.
8. Grace in phase one is documented
from the following passages: Psalm 103:8-12; Romans 3:23,24; 4:4; 5:20;
Ephesians 2:8,9; Hebrews 2:9.
9. Grace in phase two sees the
believer in time and every aspect of our life is related somehow to grace, like
prayer in the super-grace life — Hebrews 4:16; in the field of suffering — 2
Corinthians 12:9,10; growth through the function of GAP — 2 Peter 3:18;
stability — 1 Peter 5:12; Hebrews 13:9; modus vivendi — 2 Corinthians 1:2;
Hebrews 12:28; the production of divine good — 1 Corinthians 15:10; 2
Corinthians 6:1.
10. Grace and giving. The best part
of giving comes when maximum materialistic blessing meets maximum doctrine in
the normal function of the super-grace life. Giving becomes meaningful as an
act of priestly worship — 2 Corinthians chapters 8 & 9; Philippians
4:14-18.
11. The axioms of grace:
a) God is perfect,
therefore His plan is perfect.
b) A perfect plan can
only originate and function from a perfect God.
c) If man can do
anything meritorious in the plan of God it is no longer perfect, and obviously
not longer grace.
d) A plan is no stronger
than its weakest link. For this reason grace excludes human merit and human
ability. Grace also excludes human good. Do-gooders never make it under the
plan of God.
e) Legalism and human
good are the enemies of grace.
f) Therefore works of
human righteousness have no place in the plan of God.
g) All human good is
associated with the great mental attitude sin of pride. Pride seems to be the
expansion of the self-consciousness of the soul in reversionism to the point of
total disorientation to the grace of God.
12. Four areas in which pride
rejects God’s grace.
a) The pride of the
believer who rejects the doctrine of eternal security. To reject eternal
security you have to be very proud because inevitable the person who does
thinks that his sins are greater than the plan of God. He is more impressed
with his sins than he is with what God has done for him.
b) The pride of the
believer who succumbs to pressure and adversity and who thinks that his
sufferings are greater than the grace provision of God — 2 Corinthians 12:7-10.
c) The pride of pseudo
spirituality: the believer who thinks that his human systems are greater than
the ministry of God the Holy Spirit in his life. The systems may be anything
from personality imitation, observation of taboos, confusion of means and results,
the concept of relativity (my sins are more refined than your sins, therefore I
am spiritual), the speaking in tongues, the ecstatics, the asceticism, the
programs, the ritualism, all are involved in that type of pride.
d) The pride of the
believer in emotional revolt of the soul. he assumes that his feelings, his
emotions, his experiences, and his areas of reaction — disillusion, boredom,
discouragement, self-pity, loneliness, frustration, jealousy, bitterness, being
jilted or phased out. These are reactors that lead to the frantic search for
happiness which triggers emotional revolt and which comes back and intensifies
the ones involved. So there is an intensification of reactors through emotional
revolt.
13. Grace is always related to
divine assets — John 1:14,16,17; 1 Corinthians 1:4,5; Ephesians 1:6,7.
14. The principle of super-grace —
James 4:6, “greater grace/super-grace.” Super-grace in the life of Jesus Christ
is described in John 1:14-17; in the life of the believer in phase two is
described in chapters like Philippians 4; James 4; Ephesians 3:19-21; 2
Corinthians 12:8,10.
15. The concept of the pursuit of
grace — Ephesians 1:6. The pursuit of grace is the perpetuation of super-grace
in the believer’s life. God is glorified when we are blessed under super-grace.
16. Under grace [super-grace] the
believer reaps what God sows — Psalm 13:5; under reversionism the believer
reaps what the believer sows — Psalm 13:5.
Verse 5 — “Although we were dead in
our transgressions, he made us alive in association with the Christ, (by means
of grace you have been permanently saved).”
Verse 6 — we see now what happened
at the beginning of the Church Age and why the Church Age had to be. Jesus
Christ was raised from the dead, and because in His humanity He ascended as a
member of the human race into the presence of God the Father, as a man He is
now superior to all angels. And now that the Age of Israel is interrupted the
Church Age begins, and the Church Age is the age of the intensification of the
angelic conflict , not the Tribulation. The Tribulation is one of the most
awful periods in human history and it is a continuation of the Age of Israel,
but the Church Age is the age of the intensification of the angelic conflict
because Jesus Christ is seated at the right hand of the Father. Throughout the
Old Testament dispensations Christ was the target of Satan but once Christ was
glorified at the right hand of the Father He can no longer be the target, and
therefore the Church, the body of Christ — some day to be the bride of Christ —
becomes the target. Because the Church is the target the angelic conflict
shifts gears and it now in its intensified stage.
In order that we might be properly
entered into the intensified stage of the angelic conflict verse 6 tells us
that we have been raised up together with Jesus Christ and made to sit with
Him.
“And” is the continuative use of the
conjunction kai for the resumption of a
sentence on the other side of a parenthesis.
“hath raised us up together” —
aorist active indicative from the compound verb sunegeirw [sun = along with; e)geirw = to raise up]. The word has several connotations.
It has to do with the fact that somehow we are identified with Jesus Christ in
His resurrection. The aorist tense is a culminative aorist, it regards this
phase of current positional truth from the standpoint of its existing results.
Christ died on the cross, He was buried and raised and then ascended into
heaven. This is the culminative aorist which sees the results of the entire
glorification of Jesus Christ. The active voice: God the Holy Spirit actually
produces the action of raising us up together with Christ through the ministry
of the baptism of the Holy Spirit.
The doctrine of the baptism of the Holy Spirit
1. It did not occur in the Old
Testament or in any previous dispensation.
2. The baptism of the Holy Spirit is
first mentioned as a prophecy from the lips of the Lord Jesus Christ — John
14:20; Acts 1:5.
3. The mechanics of the baptism of
the Spirit are also an explanation of it, or description — 1 Corinthians 12:13.
God the Holy Spirit at the beginning of the Church Age took those who were
already saved in one locale only, Jerusalem, and entered them into union with
Christ. Now, wherever we are in the Church Age, the moment a person believes he
enters into union with Christ, he is identified with Him forever and it is the
ministry of God the Holy Spirit to enter him into union with Christ. Baptism
means identification. All believers are entered into union with Christ and this
is the basis of unity in the entire Church Age. This unity is expressed by a
command to love the brethren, other member of the family of God, but the love
which is used is a)gaph or a)gapaw and this means simply a relaxed mental attitude
toward other members of the body of Christ.
4. The unification of believers is
achieved by the baptism of the Spirit — Ephesians 4:5 which has nothing to do
with water baptism.
5. The implications of the baptism
of the Spirit provide equality not existent in physical birth. We are not born
equal, the only equality we will ever know is when we are born again and that
equality comes through the baptism of the Spirit — Galatians 3:26-28.
6. The basis for retroactive
positional truth is the baptism of the Spirit — Romans 6:3,4; Colossians 2:12.
We are not only identified with Christ but we are also identified with Him in
His death, the principle being that Jesus Christ rejected human good when He
was bearing our sins and therefore we are identified with Christ because that
is our position. Our position in Christ is that of rejection of human good.
7. The baptism of the Holy Spirit is
also the basis for current positional truth — Ephesians 1:3-6; Colossians 2:10.
8. The baptism of the Spirit begins
the dispensation of the Church — Matthew 16:18; Acts 1:5. It was fulfilled in
Acts 2:3, however there is no reference in Acts 2:3 to the baptism of the
Spirit but Acts 11:15-17 explains the fact that Acts 1:5 was fulfilled in Acts
2:3.
9. The baptism of the Spirit is not
an experience of any kind. It is not ecstatics, it is not speaking in tongues.
The aorist tense of 1 Corinthians 12:13 plus “we all” includes all believers
and does not include experience.
10. The baptism of the Spirit occurs
at the moment that we believe in Jesus Christ — Colossians 2:12.
“And has raised us up together” is
the ministry of God the Holy Spirit. The indicative mood of this verb is the
reality of current positional truth identifying us with Christ seated at the
right hand of the Father. The implications of this indicative mood are found in
Hebrews 1:13,14.
“and has made us sit together” — the
aorist active indicative of sunkaqizw [sun = along with; kaqizw
= to sit]. This is also a culminative aorist, it regards this phrase of current
positional truth from the standpoint of its existing results. The active voice:
God the Holy Spirit produces the action on the baptising ministry. The
indicative mood is the reality that God the Holy Spirit enters each one of us
into union with Christ as at the point of salvation.
“in heavenly places” — the
preposition e)n plus the locative plural of
e)pouranioj, and it should be
translated “in the heavenlies.” The prepositional phrase refers to the sphere
of the believer’s position in Christ. The sphere is the place of victory in the
angelic conflict and in effect it is our identification with the strategical victory
of the cross. At the cross Christ bore our sins. Three days later He was
resurrected. Then He ascended and was seated at the right hand of the Father
and this is the strategical victory of the angelic conflict. The strategical
victory has its continuation at the second advent. In the meantime during the
Church Age we have tactical victories when a believer reaches super-grace. We
have part in glorifying God in the Church Age in tactical victory. There can be
no tactical victory without some strategical victory first. The strategic
victory is the fact that God the Holy Spirit unites each one of us into union
with Christ at the point of salvation. Strategic victory leads to tactical
victory.
The doctrine of the heavenlies
1. The heavenlies is the sphere of
divine blessing, including super-grace blessings, because it is the place of
strategical victory in the angelic conflict. Christ seated at the right hand of
the Father is the strategical victory — Ephesians 1:3.
2. The heavenlies is the sphere of
Christ’s victory in the angelic conflict and therefore the key to the Church’s
position — Ephesians 1:20.
3. “In the heavenlies” is the sphere
of the believer’s current position in Christ, making it possible for
super-grace blessing to be a part of the tactical victory in our lives —
Ephesians 2:6.
4. “In the heavenlies” is also the
sphere of angelic activity — Ephesians 3:10. This is why elect angels are
rejoicing and are observing very closely our activities.
5. It is also the sphere of the
angelic conflict in the Church Age — Ephesians 6:12.
“in Christ Jesus” — the
prepositional phrase e)n plus the locative of Jesus
Christ. The absence of the definite article in this phrase calls attention to
the quality of the proper noun. Jesus Christ is unique, He is the only
celebrity for the Church Age.
Translation: “And has both raised us
up together, and has seated us together with Him in the heavenlies in Christ
Jesus.”
Verse 7 — there is a reason for all
of this. In verse 6 the implication is that positional truth is designed to
make it possible for tactical victory. The Church Age is the time of tactical
victories. The tactical victory is always the same, the believer GAPs it to
super-grace. Under super-grace he has the cup in his soul and God pours. It is
the pouring of God that is the tactical victory. God is glorified by giving the
believer super-grace blessings. Notice: the strategical victory is positional
truth; the tactical victory is the super-grace experience. One is related to
the other.
“That” is the conjunction i(na plus the subjunctive and it introduces a purpose
clause.
“in the ages to come” — the
preposition e)n plus the locative of a)iwn plus the definite article should be translated
“that in the approaching ages.” The approaching ages refer to phase three. The
word “to come” is the locative plural present active participle of e)perxomai and should be translated here “approaching.” Here
is a participle used as a noun.
“he might shew” — the aorist middle
subjunctive of e)ndeiknumi which means to demonstrate.
In the middle voice it means to manifest. Here we have the culminative aorist,
which views everything from the standpoint of its results. God’s plan
inevitably results in eternity. We have gone through a time when there have
been tactical victories but there is coming a time when there is going to be
strategic victory and it is called “surpassing grace.” The middle voice
describes the subject as participating in the results of the action. We are
going to have everything associated with happiness forever. This is also the
indirect middle, which emphasises the agent producing the action, and the agent
producing the action is God. This is sometimes known as the intensive middle.
The subjunctive mood goes with the purpose clause. There is no question about
what God is going to do, so the subjunctive is not potential here but a purpose
clause.
“the exceeding riches of his grace”
— the word “exceeding is a present active participle of u(perballw which means to throw beyond or throw over. It comes
to mean surpassing; “riches” is ploutoj, which includes
materialistic things, things that have always been associated with happiness;
“of his grace” — the descriptive genitive and also the genitive of possession
of xarij, and because it is in the
genitive case it can be translated “grace riches.” The genitive of possession,
indicates that he has all the wealth and whether we like it or not He is going
to give it to us forever and ever and ever.
“in his kindness” — e)n plus xrhstothj should never be translated
“kindness,” it means generosity.
“toward us” is literally, “upon us
in Christ Jesus,” not “through Christ Jesus.”
Translation: “That in the
approaching ages he might demonstrate his surpassing grace riches in generosity
toward us in Christ Jesus.”
Summary
1. Note that verse 7 deals with phase three grace
and that phase three grace is literally “surpassing grace.”
2. In phase two the believer has
grace and super-grace.
3. In phase three the believer has
surpassing grace.
Verse 8 — “For” is the explanatory
use of the conjunctive particle gar. This now gives us a
concept of the strategical victory that we might have a better understanding of
our relationship to our life on this earth. The strategic victory occurred at
the cross, resurrection, ascension and session. And because Jesus Christ is
seated at the right hand of the Father and we are entered into union with
Christ we share in the strategic victory, and being sharers in the strategic
victory the objective in phase two is to enter into the tactical victory of the
super-grace life. This is only possible as we utilise the grace of God
available to us. There are four different kinds of grace available. First of
all, phase one grace which is the pattern for all grace, and at the same time
it is related to volition. Positive volition to phase one grace enters the
believer into the strategical victory of the angelic conflict. Then there is a
phase two grace which has nothing to do with volition except that phase two
grace is designed to keep us alive a certain amount of time in the devil’s
world. But there is a super-grace in phase two which again is related to
positive volition. The issue in phase one is Christ, the issue in phase two is
doctrine, which results in tactical victory in the angelic conflict. Finally
there is surpassing grace or phase three grace which is the inheritance and the
portion of every believer forever and ever, and is not related to volition.
“by grace” — the instrumental
singular of xarij plus the definite article
should be translated “by the grace.” The grace refers to the plan of God as
emanating from the character of God. The definite article denotes a previous
reference to grace which was mentioned in verse 5. The definite article may be
used to point out an object the identity of which is defined by some previous
reference made to it in context. Grace is the operating principle of God’s
plan; grace is the way in which God can provide all things for us which He
designed to provide for us in eternity past without ever compromising His
character and at the same time glorifying Himself. So grace is the only
principle to the plan of God because grace means that God is responsible, God
does the work, God does the providing. But to keep His plan perfect God must do
all of the work and all of the thinking, and take all the credit. Therefore the
exclusion of man’s works in the plan.
“are ye saved” — this is a perfect
periphrastic and is erroneously translated. A periphrastic is always made up of
a participle plus the indicative mood. In this case we have the present active
indicative of the verb e)imi. Then with that is the
perfect passive participle of swzw. The two of them together
form a perfect periphrastic. The perfect tense is the intensive perfect which
emphasises the results of a finished product. The passive voice: mankind is the
beneficiary, mankind receives the action of the verb. The participle indicates
the permanence of the periphrastic.
The first word, gar, should be translated not “for” but “now you see.”
“Now you see by the grace you have been permanently saved.”
Next, the means of appropriation is
emphasised as a non-meritorious function: “through faith” — dia plus the genitive singular of pistij. There is no definite article here. The absence of
the definite article gives great emphasis to the noun “faith.” It emphasises
the qualitative aspect of the noun rather than its identity. The quality of
faith is non-meritorious and yet totally efficacious because of the object of
faith. The definite article with the noun emphasises the identity but there is
no definite article here so faith is then emphasised as a non-meritorious
system of perception, a system whereby we can never receive any credit at any
time.
“and that” is not correct. We have
the ascensive use of kai, which should be translated
“even.” Then we have the demonstrative pronoun, the nominative neuter of o(utoj. The neuter gender is the problem here because
“faith” is in the masculine gender, and “grace.” But here we have a neuter
gender and it should be translated “even this,” not “and that.” The
demonstrative pronoun calls attention with special emphasis to the designated
object, and the demonstrative pronoun is used for something relatively near in
the context. But in this neuter gender this demonstrative pronoun excludes the
possibility of anything in the context because they are feminine gender, not
neuter. So here is a hanging demonstrative pronoun to indicate the entire plan
of God. The demonstrative pronoun emphasises the importance of the planner
rather than the mechanics of the plan. The mechanics of the plan are outlined
but they are not nearly as important as the planner.
“not” — the negative particle o)uk. This word is spelled three different ways [o)uk, o)u, and o)ux]. Each spelling of this negative depends upon how
it is used in the sentence. O)uk is used before words
beginning with vowels. O)u is used before words
beginning with consonants. Then the o)ux is used before words
beginning with vowels which have a rough breathing. But it is always the same
negative. So it is “ … even this definitely not.”
“of yourselves” — the preposition e)k plus the ablative plural of su. This means “not out from the source of you all.”
Then the true source is given: “it
is the gift of God.” This is the ablative of source from qeoj which should be translated “from God,” plus the
word for “gift” here which denotes a gift which could never be earned or
deserved, dwron. In the Koine Greek when it
is desired to apply the sense of an abstract noun in some special and distinct
way it is again preceded by the definite article, as here. It is an abstract
noun which has a distinct meaning — “the gift,” a gift that God can never
retract.
Translation: “Now you see by the
grace you have been permanently saved through faith; even this [salvation] not
out from the source of you: the free gift is from the source of God.”
Verse 9 — “Not” is the negative o)uk again to deny the reality of an alleged statement;
“of works” — e)k plus the ablative plural of
e)rgon, and it means “not out from
the source of works.”
That brings up the categories of
works that are generally associated with salvation. First of all there are
verbal works — things like coming forward and acknowledging Christ publicly,
“repenting,” confessing, or begging God to save you, inviting Christ into your
heart. These are verbal works. The second category would be ritual works, like
circumcision or baptism. The third are psychological works, like raising the
hand, walking the aisles, doing something to make an ass out of yourself. In
other words, jumping through a psychological hoop. The fourth are corporate
works, works related to the church — join the church, tithe, give money, work around
the church for salvation. The fifth: religious works — keeping the law, doing
penance, or “recognising the Lordship of Christ.” The sixth type is behaviour
improvement works, changing of behaviour patterns from immoral to moral, or
giving up something in the taboo class. Then, seventh, the emotional works such
as ecstatics or the tongues crowd, or anything where you get the rosy glow
simultaneously with some type of a confession of Christ. These are all the
negative side and they are all included in this phrase, “not out from the
source of works.”
“lest” is i(na mh which introduces a negative final clause. Mh is the subjective type negative, it is not quite as
strong.
“any man” — the indefinite pronoun tij which represents a category of humanity that is
those who seek to be saved by their own works with the result that they can
boast. “Lest anyone” is a better translation.
“should boast” — aorist middle
subjunctive of kauxaomai. The aorist tense is a
culminative aorist in which the event is viewed from the standpoint of its
entirety but emphasised from the viewpoint of its existing results. The result
is that when everyone and anyone gets to heaven there will be no boasting. This
is the whole concept of salvation as well as everything else thereafter. In the
plan of God there is no place for human boasting. The middle voice: the subject
acts with a view toward participating in the outcome. This is called a direct
middle or a reflexive middle — not from the source of works that no one
himself” really. The subjunctive mood is a potential subjunctive which is used
to indicate a final clause in the Greek.
Translation: “Not from the source of
works, that no one should boast.”
The doctrine of human good
1. Human good is dead to God’s plan,
therefore it is called “dead works” in Hebrews 6:1.
2. Human good is not acceptable to
God at any time — Isaiah 64:6.
3. Therefore human good has no place
in the plan of God — 2 Timothy 1:9.
4. However, a distinction should be
made between human good and morality — Romans 13:4,5.
5. Human good will not save mankind
— Titus 3:5.
6. The believer’s human good is
revealed and destroyed at the judgment seat of Christ — 1 Corinthians 3:11-16.
7. Human good is the basis for the
unbeliever’s indictment at the last judgment — Revelation 20:12-15.
8. Human good has as its logical
outlet boasting — Ephesians 2:9.
Verse 10 — “For” is again the
explanatory use of gar, which means “for you see”
or “now you see.”
“we are” — present active indicative
of e)imi, “we keep on being.” This
is linear aktionsart, also a dramatic present.
“his workmanship” — genitive
masculine singular from the intensive pronoun a)utoj
for “his.” It is used here as a possessive pronoun. The demonstrative force of
the pronoun is intensified to emphasise the believer’s identity. The point of
this intensive pronoun is to tell you that you have a very definite place in
the plan of God. This is so strong in the Greek that it should be brought in
first — “His, you see, we are his.” This is a proleptic use of the intensive
pronoun. Then comes the word “workmanship,” the noun poihma, taken from poiew.
Poihma is a perfect illustration
of the suffixes of the noun in the Greek. It is taken from the verb poiew, which means to do. The noun is manufactured by
dropping the suffix of the verb and adding a noun suffix. Ma is the passive suffix in the Greek, so poihma means what is made. Therefore handiwork,
workmanship are good translations, as long as it is understood to mean what is
manufactured. In other words, we are His product. We are something God makes.
“For you see we are his production.” God does the producing and He does it by
creating something that is brand new.
“created” — aorist passive
participle of ktizw.
Ktizw
actually has three pertinent meanings. It means to create in the sense of
reducing from a state of disorder, and this is pertinent. The disorder was
stated in the first part of this chapter — grace found us spiritually dead and
under the control of Satan. And the old sin nature. That is disorder. All we
inherited from Adam causes us disorder, our unregenerate state is a state of
chaos and we have gone from being a chaotic unregenerate to a production by
God, regenerate. Ktizw also has a second meaning
which is pertinent. It means to call into being. This definition emphasises the
new birth aspect of salvation plus the potential of phase two. There is a being
in this earth, in the devil’s world, which is a person who belongs to God,
called into being as God’s citizenship rather than Satan’s. The third meaning
of ktizw is to invest with a
spiritual frame, and this emphasises positional truth, the same concept that we
have in 2 Corinthians 5:17. All of these meanings are pertinent. There is a
principle that goes with this: God’s plan and God’s grace begins at the cross,
and what God does for us at the cross is perfect. It does not reflect itself in
our lives unless there is doctrine in the soul subsequently but what God does
is perfect at salvation. We are new creatures at the moment of salvation because
of what God does — positional truth. The objective of super-grace is to
dramatise our position and to have a tactical victory from our strategic
victory. God has placed us in this world under the principle of strategic
victory, and when you exist under the principle of strategic victory it should
follow that there is tactical victory. Strategic victory merely places you in
the right position; tactical victory causes you to annihilate the enemy. That
is the concept here, that God at the point of salvation placed us under the
concept of strategic victory so that tactical victory can be ours, and that is
why we are left alive. He keeps us alive to pour out super-grace blessings upon
us as a part of the tactical victory of the intensified stage of the angelic
conflict. Therefore in salvation we have to be His workmanship and only His
workmanship. If we are our own workmanship to any degree then we are still
under chaos. God can only build on His own foundation. Positional truth,
therefore, wipes out every foundation and every achievement of human life in
the devil’s world. The aorist tense is a culminative aorist which is employed
to emphasise the results. The results toward which this passage is looking are
super-grace. The passive voice: the believer receives the action of the verb at
salvation. In other words, the fact that you’re saved is a guarantee that God
has super-grace blessings for you. Whether you get them or not depends on your
attitude toward doctrine, but they are available. The aorist participle: the
action of the aorist participle precedes the action of the main verb, the main
verb is “we are.”
“in Christ Jesus” emphasises
positional truth. We were created in Christ Jesus and then became His
production. Positional truth is the basis for our strategic victory being
related to the tactical victory of super-grace blessing.
“unto good works” is not quite
correct — the preposition e)pi plus the instrumental of a)gaqoj and e)rgon. This should be translated
“for the purpose of good works,” e)pi plus the instrumental means
purpose.
The doctrine of divine good
1. There are three sources of divine
good: from the Holy Spirit, the filling of the Spirit; from the human spirit,
doctrine applied to the right lobe; from the soul, the ECS resulting in
super-grace.
2. Divine good resolves the angelic
conflict, it is the tactical victory — Romans 12:21.
3. GAP is the means for the
production of divine good in the grace perspective — Colossians 1:9,10; 2
Timothy 2:21; 3:17; Titus 2:7.
4. The believer in phase two is the
recipient of grace in time for the production of divine good as a manifestation
of the tactical victory — 2 Thessalonians 2:17.
5. The grace principle of divine
good is found in 2 Corinthians 9:8; 1 Corinthians 15:10. Divine good is really
a normal part of the function of the priesthood at the point of super-grace.
6. Divine good will be rewarded
under 2 Corinthians 5:10 as a part of the reward for super-grace — living
super-grace and receiving the blessings of super-grace.
“which” — the relative pronoun o(j in the instrumental plural. The antecedent of this
relative pronoun is “good works.”
“God” is literally “the God” — o( qeoj, referring to God the Father as the author of the
plan.
“hath before ordained” — aorist
active indicative of proetoimazw [pro = before; etoimazw = to make ready], which means that God has prefabricated every
blessing that we will ever have, and a lot we may not reach because of failure
to GAP. This means that God has pre-decreed or prefabricated. The aorist tense
is a dramatic aorist, which states a present reality with the certitude of a
past event. The active voice: God produces the action in eternity past when He
prepared super-grace blessings and divine good production for you and for me.
The indicative mood is the reality of the preparation of super-grace blessings
in eternity past.
“that” introduces a purpose clause: i(na plus the subjunctive; “we should walk” is an aorist
active subjunctive of peripatew which means here to have a
pattern of life — “that we may pattern our life,” literally. This is a
constative aorist, it contemplates the action of the verb in its entirety. It
takes the occurrence regardless of its extent or duration and gathers it into a
single whole. This single whole is patterning our life in super-grace. The
active voice: the believer orders his pattern of life in the sphere of
super-grace. The subjunctive mood indicates the potentiality of super-grace and
resultant production of divine good.
“in them” is e)n plus the locative and should be translated “in the
sphere of them.”
Translation: “For you see we are his
production, having been created in Christ Jesus for the purpose of good
production, which the God has prefabricated that in the sphere of them we may
pattern our life.”
The doctrine of walking
1. The verb peripatew always describes pattern of life. It is used
usually for modus vivendi and in Ephesians 2:10 it refers to the modus vivendi
of the super-grace life.
2. This word is so used because the
believer lives one day at a time just as walking involves putting one foot down
at a time. The concept is related in Romans 14:5,6; Ephesians 5:16-18; James
4:13-15.
3. The second concept of walking
involves recovery of balance. There is a moment in walking when we are off
balance. The believer is off balance living in the devil’s world but is
stabilised by the grace provision of God. Therefore walking is identified with
grace orientation and grace provision.
4. Walking is used to depict the
modus operandi of the reversionistic believer — Philippians 3:18.
5. Walking is also used to describe
the function of the ECS of the believer — Philippians 3:7; Colossians 2:6.
6. There are three spheres of the
believer’s walk; a) In the Holy Spirit — Galatians 5:16; b) In faith — 2
Corinthians 5:7; c) In doctrine — 3 John 3.
7. Walking therefore depicts the
Spirit-filled life in certain passages, such as Galatians 5:16; Romans 8:2-4;
Ephesians 5:2,18.
8. Walking also describes the
function of GAP to the point of super-grace — Ephesians 5:15.
9. Walking therefore results in the
ECS and the super-grace life. The super-grace life is then described as
“walking in the light” — 1 John 1:7; “in newness of life” — Romans 6:4; “worthy
of the vocation” — Ephesians 4:11; “worthy of the Lord” — Colossians 1:10;
“honestly as in the day” — Romans 13:13; “in good works” — Colossians 1:10;
Ephesians 2:10.
Summary translation of verses 8-10:
Verse 8 — “For you see by the grace
you have been completely and permanently saved through faith; even this
salvation not out from the source of you: the free gift is from the source of
God:
Verse 9 — “Not from the source of
works, that no one should boast.
Verse 10 — “Of him, for you see we
are his production, having been created in Christ Jesus for the purpose of good
production, which the God has prefabricated that in the sphere of them we may
pattern our life.”
Verse 11 — “Wherefore,” or “for this
reason,” in view of the first ten verses. “Wherefore” is a compound inferential
conjunction composed of the preposition dia
plus the relative pronoun o( — dio. “For this reason,” that is because of the panorama of grace in the
previous paragraph now comes the application. The application takes us back to
a facet of salvation. In verses 11-17 we have the concept of grace and the
barrier. Once you understand grace and the barrier there is no excuse for not
making the application to every facet of your life on this earth. The real
blackout with most people is the fact that they are not aware that God intends
for you to be blessed to the ultimate in time, in the devil’s world, while the
angelic conflict is going on. In eternity there will be no angelic conflict,
neither will there be any sorrow, pain, tears, death, or anything that is
uncomfortable or miserable or construed as adversity. This next paragraph
orients us to what God intends without it being stated at this point. We are
given here a grace basis for orientation. In verses 11 and 12 we have the true
and the false barrier. In verse 11 is the false barrier, and “for this reason”
it is time for us to apply grace.
“remember” — capacity for life is
related to memory. We have the present active imperative of mnhmoneuw. What you have in your soul by way of memories can
never be taken from you. The present tense of this verb is a tendencial
present, it is used of an action which is purposed though has not actually
taken place. It represents the idea of what is intended. Whatever you have in
your right lobe becomes the basis for orienting to difficulties that are beyond
your control or understanding. Whatever you have in your frame of reference
memory centre picks that up and makes the application. If you are at the point
of occupation with Christ, if Christ is the only celebrity in your life, the
celebrityship of Jesus Christ will take up the slack for any adversity in life
and any blessing. That is why Jesus said, “Keep on doing this in remembrance of
me.” But the normal function of the communion table comes with super-grace. It
is your memory centre that pulls out the things that are important to meet any
given situation. It should be your objective if you are taking in doctrine to
pull doctrine, or to pull pleasant experiences, to pull something wonderful out
of your life to utilise. The tendencial present plus the imperative mood
demands that we apply grace principles, that we apply occupation with Christ,
that we apply category #1 love, that we apply wonderful things in our lives
when the chips are down, when things are difficult. The active voice: this is a
command to all believers. We are to recall what grace did, for example, to
eliminate the true and false barriers for that is the recall in this passage.
Summary
1. “For this reason remember.” This
command to remember the false and superficial distinctions on the wrong side of
the barrier acts as a reminder to avoid making such distinctions of a
superficial nature on the right side of the barrier.
2. Believers have a tendency to
establish a false criterion for the evaluation of other believers.
3. This results in judging,
maligning, gossiping and criticising other believers. This is false
application.
4. The sins of the tongue in turn
produce self-induced misery.
“that” — the conjunction o(ti is used after verbs of thinking or recalling for
content. it is set up to who the content of what should be remembered; “ye” is
a nominative plural pronoun, su, therefore it applies to
each one of us.
“in time past” — this is not a
preposition, it is an enclitic particle used for an adverb meaning “formerly.”
It is an adverb of the past, pote — “at one time.” It means
all of us before we were saved, all of us had a superficial system of
evaluation of life and the people in it. This must be shed.
“Gentiles” — the nominative plural
of e)qnoj plus the definite article —
“the Gentiles.” This is addressed to former Gentiles.
Summary
1. “Gentiles” [e)qnoj] is not usually used as a term of reproach except
by the Jews.
2. These former Gentiles were the
objects of Jewish scorn and snobbishness. The Jews, because of their fantastic
background from God in grace, regarded all heathen with some form of scorn.
3. Such a critical attitude either
came from the religious and legalistic Jewish unbeliever or the reversionistic
believers also. (Reversionism causes you to keep the same standards that you
had on the wrong side of the barrier — Galatians 2:11)
4. Religious snobbery caused the
legalistic Jew to hold dogmatically to the opinion that he was closer to God
because of the ritual of circumcision.
5. In reality the ritual of
circumcision did not more to save the Jew than lack of ritual did to condemn
the Gentile — Romans 9:30-33.
6. Circumcision had become a status
symbol, which gave the Jews a false confidence based on ritual.
7. Relativity on the wrong side of
the barrier does not save, does not give anyone a relationship with God.
“the Gentiles in the flesh” — the
preposition e)n plus the locative of sarc refers to the matter of physical birth.
“who are called” is a present
passive participle of legw plus the definite article
and should be translated “the ones being called.”
“Uncircumcision” — a)krobustia. And the Jews said it with their nose in the air.
This is still the wrong side of the barrier. This was the name of derision for
the Gentiles by which the Jews sought to establish their superiority in the
field of religion and culture. The Jews had a snobbishness in this field.
“by that which is called” — the
preposition u(po plus the ablative of a
participle, the present passive participle of legw
again. It should be translated “by the ones being designated.”
“Circumcision” — h( peritomh, “the circumcision.” The ablative case denotes
separation. This is called the ablative of comparison which implies separation
in a degree. The degree of separation is the difference between circumcision
and uncircumcision. The absence of the definite article calls attention to the
quality of the noun, rather than defining it. Therefore the circumcised Jews
regarded themselves infinitely superior to the uncircumcised Gentile. This was
their sign.
“in the flesh” — e)n plus the locative of sarc;
“made by hands” is a compound adjective in the ablative singular — xeiropoihtoj.
Translation: “For this reason
remember that at one time you all, the Gentiles in the flesh, the ones being
called uncircumcision by the ones being designated circumcision in the flesh
accomplished by human hands.”
Remember that circumcision is being
distorted here. There is a true and real use of circumcision but this is the
distortion here.
Summary
1. If man using his hands to perform
the rite of circumcision can actually save another then salvation is by works.
2. However, man is incapable of
saving man — Ephesians 2:9; Titus 3:5.
3. Man is imperfect. Man’s plan,
man’s actions, man’s thoughts, man’s devices are imperfect.
4. But God is perfect; His plan is
perfect. His plan includes salvation by grace. This is because God does all the
planning, God does all the work, and God does all of the revealing. Therefore
it is all grace.
5. However man by man’s efforts
cannot save man. Man’s thoughts, man’s functions on the wrong side of the
barrier cannot save him, they are on the wrong side of the barrier.
6. Now that these Gentiles are saved
the purpose of this verse is to remind them of false barriers which existed
when they were unbelievers. There were barriers between them and the Jews.
7. These false barriers on the wrong
side of the barrier made Gentiles the victims of Jewish religiosity, Jewish
snobbishness. Gentiles were subjected to name-calling devices based on false
standards.
8. Circumcision and uncircumcision
are superficial and outward distinctions which in no way reveal the inner soul
relationship to God. Cf Isaiah 55:7-9; 1 Samuel 16:6,7.
9. Therefore believers are warned
not to bring into the Christian life the false and superficial standards of
pre-salvation days. These false standards victimise other believers as well as
being contrary to divine standards of evaluation. Bible doctrine brings us
divine standards of evaluation.
The doctrine of circumcision
1. Circumcision was designed by God
as the sign of the Abrahamic covenant — Genesis 17:10-14. It was both an
operation and at the same time a ritual. The ritual emphasised both the
principle of establishment in the law plus the spiritual value of doctrine —
Romans 2:25. Abraham was circumcised long after his salvation and after he was
given the covenant — Romans 4:11. Moses almost died the sin unto death because
he had failed to circumcise his younger son — Exodus 4:24-26. No Jew could
partake of the Passover without first being circumcised — Exodus 12:48. The
Jews were placed under the 5th cycle of discipline for lack of circumcision of
the soul to accompany this ritual — Jeremiah 6:10; 9:25,26.
2. Circumcision consists of the
operation of cutting away the foreskin of the male phallus. The ritual
indicated dedication of the male sexual organ to the right woman and no one
else. It was definitely set up in contrast to the phallic cult of the Gentiles
— Leviticus 12:2,3.
3. The ritual of circumcision has no
significance in the Church. It only intrudes as a false standard on the wrong
side of the barrier — 1 Corinthians 7:18,19; Galatians 5:2,3; Ephesians 2:11.
4. Circumcision became a rallying
point for legalism, therefore — Acts 15:1, 24; Galatians 6:12,13.
5. Circumcision was used to
designate the Jews by race and by nation — Galatians 2:8; Colossians 4:11;
Titus 1:10; Ephesians 2:11. The ritual portrayed the laws of divine
establishment found in the Mosaic code.
6. The ritual of circumcision is
used as an illustration of retroactive positional truth in Colossians 2:11.
7. Circumcision is also used to
illustrate or portray scar tissue of the soul, emotional revolt, and other
aspects of reversionism — Jeremiah 6:10; 9:25,26; Ezekiel 44:7; Acts 7:51.
8. Circumcision is used to portray
the function of GAP — Deuteronomy 10:16; Jeremiah 4:4.
9. Circumcision is used to portray
the ECS — Romans 2:28,29; Philippians 3:3. This is a spiritual connotation.
Verse 12 — “That” is the conjunction
o(ti, used after thinking or
remembering. It’s purpose is to show the content of memory. Again we have to
use the word “remember,” mnhmneuw, present active imperative,
with o(ti because o(ti is like a quotation mark. This is what we are to
remember — what we were. Now we have what God has done for us.
“at that time,” before we accepted
Christ, when we were on the wrong side of the barrier — to kariw e)keinw. We have the locative of kairoj, and kairoj refers to a period of time,
the time before we were saved. Plus the locative of time from the demonstrative
pronoun e)keinoj, used to refer back to the
previously mentioned context. The believer previously being on the right side
of the barrier had false standards. As unbelievers there are true standards as
well. But Paul is saying once again that they were separated even from good
standards.
“ye were” — we now have all the
advantages that Israel had plus a lot more. This is the imperfect active
subjunctive of e)imi, absolute status quo verb.
The imperfect tense is a progressive imperfect, it denotes linear aktionsart in
past time. This was what you always were and you never did improve until the
day you accepted Christ as saviour and then grace provided things for you which
you never had before. The active voice: the Ephesians believers formerly
produced the action of the verb as unbelievers in the past. The subjunctive
mood is called a deliberative subjunctive, it is used as a rhetorical device to
which there is no answer. It is used here to say that this statement has no
answer. There is no way a Gentile can contradict this principle. The Jews are a
unique race, always have been.
Next follow five relatives on the
wrong side of the barrier. These are true standards. The first standard has to
do with salvation:
“without Christ” — xwrij Xristou. The adverb xwrij
and Xristoj, the ablative for “Christ.”
It should be translated “separated from Christ” in the sense of no
relationship. Here is the first true standard and the most universal standard
for all people on the wrong side of the barrier. All unbelievers are separated
from Christ. Circumcision, therefore, is a false issue; Christ is the real
issue.
“being alienated from the
commonwealth of Israel” — here is the superiority of Israel historically.
“Being alienated” is a perfect passive participle from a)pallotriow [a)po = ultimate source; allotriow = alienate] which means to be alienated from the
ultimate source. It should be translated “having been alienated from.” This is
the intensive perfect, something that has happened in the past and the results
continue into the present time and onward. The passive voice means we receive
this by being born Gentiles in the world. We also have here a circumstantial
participle; “the commonwealth” is an old English word, the Greek is politeia. This is a word that was left over from the Attic
Greek. It does not mean commonwealth, it means citizenship — “the citizenship
of Israel.”
“Israel” — It does have a definite
article and it is in the genitive case, the genitive of description. The word
“Israel” is an indeclinable noun. This is actually, with the definite article,
a reference to the previous dispensation of Israel in which the citizenship
with Israel was based on regeneration rather than physical birth. The pattern
for the citizenship with Israel is found in Romans 4:2-25; 9:6-8. Only born
again Jews were the true citizens of Israel. So this phrase once again
emphasises lack of regeneration on the wrong side of the barrier. This phrase
emphasises the fact that no matter what we had formerly when we walked over the
barrier it was gone. God has stripped us of these things, He has stripped us of
every superficiality.
“and strangers” — this is an
adjective, the nominative plural of cenoj which means a foreigner. It
also means to be estranged, unacquainted with, not operating under. In other
words, here again we are an alien in the sense of no citizenship. All of this
means that we were foreigners to what grace is all about.
“from the covenants” — the ablative
plural of source of diaqhkh and it refers to the
unconditional covenants of Israel. We were foreigners, we were outside of them.
The unconditional covenants all involve eternal life. So once again it is
always the same thing: we didn’t have salvation so we didn’t have anything. Until
we believe in Jesus Christ we are nothing. This is the Abrahamic, Palestinian,
and Davidic covenants. They are unconditional covenants, they are grace
covenants, they have grace provision, they all have eternal life provision,
they are all for the Jews.
“of promise” — a descriptive
genitive e)paggelia. It is used for the divine
promises, for a gracious gift. It is used for unconditional promises of grace
and blessing.
“having no hope” — present active
participle of e)xw plus the subjective
negative mh, plus the accusative
singular e)lpij and it means expectation
here.
“without God in the world” — the
nominative plural of a)qeoj which means “Godless,” plus
a prepositional phrase e)n plus the locative of kosmoj which is the devil’s system of controlling the
world.
Translation: “At that period of time
you were separated from Christ, having been alienated from the citizenship of
Israel, and aliens from the covenants of the promise, not having future
expectation, Godless in the cosmos.”
Beginning with verse 13 we have the
means of reconciliation.
Verse 13 — “But” is the conjunctive
particle de and it is used as an
adversative particle, it sets up a contrast. The contrast is between the saved
and unsaved state or the former state of those to whom this epistle is
addressed. We have a contrast, then, between the wrong and the right side of
the barrier.
This is followed by a temporal
adverb, nun or nuni. The temporal adverb designates the immediate
present as well as the extent of the immediate present. It is translated here
“now,” and it can be also translated “at the present time.” This is now our
status as believers.
“in Christ Jesus” — the preposition e)n plus the locative gives us positional truth and
relates us to the strategic victory of the angelic conflict. We start at
salvation with relationship to the strategic victory. This is “in Christ
Jesus.”
“ye” is a nominative plural pronoun
which refers to believers who were formerly Gentile unbelievers: “ye were” is a
present active participle of e)imi plus the definite article.
This is a customary present tense and indicates a continuous situation.
“were” — the enclitic particle pote is used for the past; “far off” — the adverb of the
extent of space, “far away,” makran. This indicates that as an
unbeliever on the wrong side of the barrier, no matter how you succeeded and no
matter what you did, you were not brought any closer to God. So the adverb of
the extent of time indicates no matter whom you are or what you are you can’t
be saved by what you do. No matter what you achieve it is not good enough.
“are made” — aorist passive
indicative of ginomai which means to become. The
aorist tense is the culminative aorist in which the event is viewed in its
entirety but regarded from the standpoint of its existing results. This is a
verb of process, that is, the removal of the barrier and/or reconciliation, and
it denotes the attainment of the process. The passive voice: the believer
receives the action of the verb at the point that he believes in Jesus Christ.
The indicative mood is the reality of reconciliation.
Then we have an adverb as the object
of the state of being verb — e)gguj, “near.” This is an adverb
of space, which goes with the accusative of the extent of space. “Near”
actually refers to the commonwealth or the citizenship of Israel, which we have
previously studied. Note that the Gentile believers are not in the commonwealth
of Israel but are near it in the sense of being born again. They cannot be in
it because this is the Church Age, not the dispensation of Israel. This
emphasises the fact that pseudo standards on the wrong side of the barrier do
not exist, nor is there any cognisance taken of them, in God’s
plan.
“by the blood” — the preposition e)n plus the instrumental case of a(ima — “blood.” The blood relates back to the Old
Testament to the sacrifices that were made to portray the Lord Jesus Christ.
The doctrine of the blood
1. Blood is the basis for animal
life. Animals do not have souls. A human being is not dead until the soul
leaves the body but an animal dies because his blood leaves his body. Leviticus
17:10-14 is about animals only. A human being’s life is in his soul. God
selected animals to teach the Old Testament people about salvation. The cross
had not occurred historically; the cross was going to occur historically, the
cross was a part of the divine decrees. The cross is the key to the Father’s
plan of grace and the cross is the mechanics of salvation. God selected these
animals to portray the ministry of Christ in salvation, the work of Christ on
the cross. This is how the altar came into being. It was a raised platform so
that everyone could see. The meaning of a word in the Bible is determined by
its first usage, and the meaning of the word “blood” is determined by Genesis
3:20,21 and Leviticus chapters 1-6.
2. Therefore animal blood was used
in Old Testament sacrifices to represent the spiritual death of Christ in the
cross. Leviticus chapters 1-3. Therefore the blood of the animal becomes a
representative analogy. This is not a direct or true analogy. A direct or true
analogy would mean that Christ had to bleed to death on the cross. But Christ
didn’t bleed to death on the cross. A representative analogy takes something
that happens literally to portray something that is spiritual. The something
that is spiritual is the first of the two deaths of Christ on the cross.
When Christ died spiritually on the
cross He did so in a way which is very clearly described in scripture. He bore
our sins in His own body on the tree. That means that all of the sins in the
history of the human race were poured out upon Him. As our sins were poured out
upon Christ God who had withheld judgment on these sins now judges them. This
is what the animal was portraying on the altar. The animal died a physical
death; the Lord Jesus died physically too, after salvation was finished. Tetelestai is the perfect tense of telew
and it means it has already been finished in the past and the results go on
forever. The animal blood was real and literal but it represents the spiritual
death of Christ on the cross, which was real and literal. The term “blood of
Christ” is talking about Christ being judged for our sins — Colossians 1:20;
Hebrews 10:19; 13:20; 1 Peter 1:2.
3. The doctrine of redemption was
communicated to the Old Testament by means of animal sacrifices. Redemption is
the classifying phrase for the blood of Christ, starting in Old Testament times
— Hebrews 9:22.
4. Christ did not die on the cross
by bleeding to death — John 19:30,33,34. The physical death of Christ on the
cross occurred not by bleeding but by an act of His own volition: “Father, into
thy hands I dismiss my spirit.” He dismissed His spirit and departed from this
life as an act of His own volition. John 10:18 also indicates that He did not
die by bleeding to death. Cf. Luke 23:46; Matthew 27:50. When Christ died
physically His blood was still inside His body — John 19:34.
5. Therefore the blood of Christ is
part of the representative analogy between the physical death of animals in the
Old Testament and the spiritual death of Christ on the cross bearing our sins.
2 Corinthians 5:21; 1 Peter 2:24.
6. The blood of Christ depicts four
doctrines of soteriology: expiation (the paying of the penalty) — Revelation
1:5; redemption — Ephesians 1:7; Colossians 1:14; 1 Peter 1:18,19;
justification — Romans 5:9; sanctification — Hebrews 13:12.
7.
The blood of Christ is expiation is also the basis for the rebound technique —
Leviticus 4 & 5; 1 John 1:7 cf. 1 John 1:9.
The judgment of Christ on the cross
means reconciliation. His judgment is related to the Levitical sacrifices by
the use of the word a(ima or “blood.”
This is the true condition of every
unbeliever on the wrong side of the barrier and this removes all false
standards set up by religion, legalism, and the reversionistic revolution.
Verse 14 — the removal of the false
standards of religion by reconciliation. Christianity is not a religion; it is
a relationship with God. Religion is man by man’s efforts seeking to gain the
approbation of God. Remember that in the angelic conflict Satan has two great
counterattacks going. One counterattack is against Bible doctrine; the other is
against the laws of divine establishment. The counterattack against doctrine is
religion, the counterattack against the laws of divine establishment is
revolution, and these two are constantly in operation during the course of
human history since the fall of man.
“For” is the inferential conjunction
gar which draws the inevitable
conclusion. There are two types of inferential particle. The first is gar, the other real inferential conjunction is o)un. O)un is an inference which always occurs somewhere in
the sentence, usually in between clauses. Gar
begins a sentence, but both of them demand a conclusion. The conclusion
demanded by gar is a very strong or a
primary conclusion whereas the conclusion demanded by o)un is always a secondary conclusion somewhere in the
context. From time to time this becomes very important. When it says “for” we
are to understand a major conclusion is on its way.
“he” — incorrectly translated. This
looks as though we have a simple personal pronoun, but we do not. We have an
intensive demonstrative pronoun a)utoj, and with gar demanding a primary conclusion it should be
translated “For he himself and only he himself.” This immediately sets off the
Lord Jesus Christ as being unique. It emphasises His celebrityship and it
reminds us once again so that we never lose the perspective, the celebrityship
of Christ is the first characteristic of entering into the super-grace life.
There is nothing more important than reaching the super-grace life; it is place
of the normal function of the priesthood. When a believer GAPs it all of the
way to super-grace the first thing that
characterises
that condition is occupation with the person of Christ or maximum category # 1
love. The second characteristic has to do with super-grace capacity based on
doctrine or the cup in the soul. The next factor is the fulfillment of Romans
8:28.
“is” — present active indicative of e)imi, absolute status quo. This is a customary
progressive present, it continues — “keeps on being.” It is an absolute.
“our peace” — h) e)irhnh h(mwn. E)irhnh means harmony, welfare,
tranquillity, unity, blessing. It can also mean peace. Here the noun denotes
harmony and distinction between Jew and Gentile. The word h(mwn is a descriptive genitive, it is “our” harmony, our
tranquillity, our peace. This means that Jesus Christ as the strategic victor
plays a major role in our lives at the point of super-grace, and we know it.
“who hath made” — there is no
relative pronoun, this is simply the aorist active participle of poiew plus the definite article. The definite article is
in the singular — “the one having made.” The aorist tense is a culminative
aorist, it takes an entirety and emphasises the results which have come from a
consistent action within the entirety. This is the result of that so great
salvation and the result of the strategic victory. The culminative aorist,
then, takes note of the strategic victory of the Lord Jesus Christ when he
broke the back of Satan on the cross, as per Colossians 2:14,15; Hebrews
2:14,15. The active voice: Christ produces the action of the verb through the
function of reconciliation. The participle has antecedent action.
“both” — the accusative plural of a)mfoteroj. Both Jew and Gentile entering the body of Christ,
crossing the barrier, as per John 10:16; “one” — the accusative from e(ij, the numeral. All distinctions are removed at the
point of salvation.
“and hath broken down” — aorist
active participle from luw which means to abolish, to
annihilate, to destroy. This is a culminative aorist. The active voice: Christ
did the work. Basically the word means to destroy.
“the middle wall of partition” —
this is one of the best-attested records from the ancient world of class
distinction, of racial distinction. It is actually a wall that the Jews built
around the temple. Gentiles could be around the outer court but never past the
middle wall. Why the middle wall? Because the temple had walls, an outer wall
and then a wall in between called the middle wall because the middle wall was
that through which the Jews could go but the Gentiles could not. The penalty
for any Gentile going past the middle wall was death. But Jesus Christ broke it
down. When you accept Christ as saviour and you are related by the baptism of
the Spirit and are entered positionally into union with Christ, at that moment
in principle the middle wall of partition is broken down. And if you do to the
tactical victory you will literally be without a middle wall in your soul. So
the strategic victory always comes before the tactical victory.
Translation: “For he himself being
our harmony [blessing], the one having made both [Jew and Gentile] one, and
having abolished the dividing wall of the barrier.”
Summary
1. The distinction between Jew and
gentile emphasised by religious Jews and Judaisers is obliterated in the Church
Age.
2. Circumcision has no spiritual
advantage over uncircumcision.
3. Because of reconciliation and
positional truth all pseudo standards are removed and replaced by position in
Christ.
4. Both Jew and Gentile have the
same position in Christ.
5. Jesus Christ makes two kinds of
peace or harmony: a) Harmony that removes the wall between Jew and Gentile,
harmony that destroys all of those distinctions of the soul that are false and
based upon the prejudice and the pattern of life and thinking when we were on
the wrong side of the barrier; b) The harmony or peace that joins Jew and
Gentile to God, removing the enmity between God and the believer and
establishing a relationship between the believer and the strategic victory of
Jesus Christ.
6. Reconciliation removes bona fide
barriers between God and man, as well as false barriers between man and man.
Verse 15 — “Having abolished” is the
aorist active participle of the compound verb katargew. The aorist tense here is a gnomic aorist which means an absolute.
Whatever is stated by the participle is to be regarded as an absolute point of
doctrine. The active voice: the Lord Jesus Christ produces the action. It is
produced on the cross and produced under the category of the doctrine of
reconciliation. The participle is one of those antecedent type actions. The
action of the aorist participle ordinarily would precede the action of the main
verb. In this case this is a matter almost of logic because they are
coterminous and yet one must occur before the other logically. This should be
translated “Having cancelled” or “Having wiped out.”
“in his flesh” — the Lord Jesus
Christ provided for us the strategic victory of the angelic conflict by
becoming a member of the human race. It became obvious at the time of creation
that the human race was created and brought on to planet earth to resolve the
angelic conflict. It also was obvious that the failure of the first Adam
necessitated the second Adam coming into the world without a sin nature,
without an act of personal sin, without the imputation of Adam’s sin, so that
He might actually resolve the angelic conflict. Passages like Colossians 2:14
make it very clear that Satan’s back was broken at the cross. This is the
strategic victory which is so important to us and to which we are related by
positional truth. Every believer is in union with Christ as Christ is seated at
the right hand of the Father. This is the place of operation footstool.
Retroactive and current positional truth put us in strategic victory.
We have the preposition e)n plus the locative of sarc. Sarc means old sin nature most of the time in scripture. Here it means the
human body only. It can be used either way, depending upon the context. Here it
refers to the humanity of the Lord Jesus Christ hanging on the cross. The
primary objective in the humanity of Christ is to win the strategic victory of
the angelic conflict and to provide at the same time for us eternal salvation.
“the enmity” — the accusative
singular of e)xqra which means total
alienation, state of enmity. This state of enmity or alienation is the barrier
between God and man. The barrier is made up of a) sin — “All have sinned and
come short of the glory of God.” But that is only personal sin. By birth we are
born with an old sin nature and with the imputation of Adam’s sin; b) The
penalty of sin which is death — Romans 6:23; c) The problem of physical birth —
physically alive and spiritually dead; d) The problem of relative
righteousness, -R cannot have fellowship with +R; e) The problem of the
character of God. His character is perfect and therefore there is no way He can
have fellowship with us; f) All members of the human race have a position in
Adam — “In Adam all die,” spiritual death. This is our e)xqra in the passage, it refers to the fat that there is
a barrier between man and God, a barrier which man cannot move around or over,
a barrier which is non-removable and therefore a barrier which God Himself must
handle. In the handling of this barrier notice that Christ came in the flesh.
“Having wiped out in his flesh the state of enmity [the barrier].”
The doctrine of the hypostatic union
1. By way of definition, in the
person of Jesus Christ are two natures inseparably united, without mixture or
loss of separate identity, without loss or transfer of properties or
attributes, the union being personal and eternal.
2. The two natures involve the deity
of Christ. He is coequal with the Father and with the Holy Spirit, both of whom
have identical characteristics. When the Bible says God is one it is always
referring to essence. Jesus Christ is also different from the other members of
the Trinity in that he is a man having a body, a soul, and a human spirit. So
He has two natures, God and Man in one person forever. John 1:1-14; Romans 1:2-5;
(Philippians 2:5-11; 1 Timothy 3:16; Hebrews 2:14.
3. The incarnate person of Christ
includes His deity. Jesus Christ is God, coequal and co-eternal with the Father
and with the Holy Spirit. His incarnation does not diminish His deity and
therefore He is undiminished deity even though He is in hypostatic union. There
is no change in the deity of Christ.
4. The incarnate person of Christ is
true humanity. He is a bona fide member of the human race with a body, a soul,
and a human spirit, minus the old sin nature. Because of the virgin birth Jesus
Christ came into the world without a sin nature and without the imputation of
Adam’s sin. He was without both of those and so He was born in the same status
as Adam came into the world — without sin.
5. The two natures are united
without transfer of attributes. The attributes adhere to their corresponding
natures. That means that the divine attributes are always the divine attributes
and the human attributes are always the human attributes and there is no “leak”
back and forth. The essence of deity cannot be changed — doctrine of
immutability; the infinite cannot be transferred to the finite. If you rob God
of one attribute of His essence then you destroy His deity. To rob Jesus Christ
of His humanity or one single attribute of His humanity would destroy humanity.
But it must be remembered that from the virgin birth Jesus Christ has been and
always will be truly God and truly man in one person forever.
6. No attribute of essence or deity
was changed by the incarnation. In fulfilling the purpose of the first advent
certain attributes of deity were not used. But this does not imply that they
were either surrendered or destroyed. They were merely held in check in keeping
with the plan of the Father for the first advent. The plan of the Father for
the first advent was to provide a strategic victory, which would once and for
all break the back of Satan. This strategic victory calls for the humiliation
of Christ, bearing our sins on the cross. The problem of the old sin nature has
to be solved in the cosmos. All of the sins of the old sin nature are poured
out and judged and all human good is rejected at the cross. Then, because Jesus
Christ is a priest and because the offering of Himself was only the first
function of His priesthood He must remain alive. In death He is eliminated as a
priest, but three days later His resurrection, ascension and session puts Him
in the driver’s seat to make intercession for us, as per Hebrews 7:25.
Therefore the priesthood of Christ is perpetuated by resurrection; therefore He
had to be resurrected. Then, furthermore, the priesthood of Christ was
perpetuated by His ascension. Whereas the high priest in Israel could only
enter the holy of holies once a year our high priest has entered the reality.
The holy of holies is merely a type of heaven. Our high priest has actually
entered heaven and now represents us at the right hand of the Father making
intercession for us.
The true doctrine of Kenosis: Jesus
Christ, during His time on this earth, voluntarily restricted the independent
use of certain divine attributes in keeping with the plan of the Father during
the first advent. This did not in any way eliminate them from His essence.
7. Therefore the union of divine
essence and human nature in the incarnation of Christ is hypostatic and
personal. “Hypostatic” refers to the whole person of Christ as distinguished
from His two natures, divine and human. “Personal” refers to the emergence of a
unique person. The hypostatic union is personal in the sense that Jesus Christ
is truly God and truly man, of course superior to all mankind.
8. There is a false interpretation,
which occasionally breaks out during the course of church history. Many of the
great controversies in church history have occurred over this very fact. The
false interpretation is that deity possessed humanity, or that the deity of
Christ indwelt His humanity, or that the union was simply harmony or sympathy.
These are the major heresies in the field. But, once again, the hypostatic
union is personal, the divine and human natures have been combined into one
person, once essence, forever.
9. Therefore Jesus Christ, the
God-Man has one hypostasis or one essence forever. The attributes of the divine
and human nature belong to the person of Christ. The characteristics of one
nature are never attributed to the other and this means that during the first
advent Jesus Christ would be simultaneously omnipotent and weak, omniscient and
ignorant. However, the ignorance of His humanity was quickly overcome by the
daily function of GAP — Luke 2:40,52; John 1:14.
10. The necessity for the humanity
of Christ. There are four reasons why Christ had to become a member of the
human race.
a) The first reason is
because as God he can’t save us. Deity can plan it but deity can’t execute the
plan. It takes humanity to execute the plan. Every characteristic of deity is
immutable and unchangeable. What happened to the deity of Christ on the cross?
It remained in the hypostasis but it remained without change. Philippians
2:7,8; Hebrews 2:14,15.
b) To be a mediator. A
mediator must be equal with both parties in the mediation. A mediator is
defined for us in Job. He pulls two parties together by being equal with both
parties — Job 9:2, 32-33; 1 Timothy 2:5,6.
c) Priesthood —
emphasises in Hebrews 7:4,5,14,28; 10:5,10-14. A priest is a man; he must be a
member of the human race.
d) God cannot lie.
Veracity is one of the characteristics of His essence. When God makes a promise
He must keep the promise. In this case God promised David that no matter
whether he failed or succeeded he would have a son in his line who would rule
forever, and that David’s dynasty would be the one dynasty in all of history
that would be perpetuated into eternity. 2 Samuel 7:8-16; Psalm 89:20-37. There
is no way that this could be fulfilled except one, and that is for Jesus Christ
to come in the line of David.
11. Everything verbally communicated
by Christ during the incarnation came from one of three sources: His deity — John
8:58; His humanity — John 19:28; His hypostatic union — His calls for
salvation, like Matthew 11:28.
12. Categories of attributes as
related to the person of Jesus Christ.
a) Attributes true of
His whole person, the God-Man, include redeemer or saviour. Both divine and
human natures are essential to the function of Christ as saviour.
b) Attributes true only
of His deity but the whole person [God-Man] is the subject. John 8:58.
c) Attributes true only
of His humanity but the whole person is the subject — John 19:28.
d) The person of Christ
is described according to the divine nature but predicate of the human nature —
Revelation 1:12-18. In other words, Christ is described as the one who was dead
but now is alive. The deity of Christ is in evidence but death is only possible
to the humanity of Christ.
e) The person is
described according to the human nature but the predicate of the divine nature
— John 6:62. The Son of man belongs to the human nature. The Son of man
ascending up where He was before applies only to the divine nature.
f) The person of Christ
described according to His divine nature but predicate of both natures — John
5:25-27. Here we have Christ as the Son of God who spoke to those who were
spiritually dead and those who heard, having positive volition, lived. But in
the future Christ will execute judgment as the Son of man — His human nature.
So the person of Christ is described according to His divine nature but the
predicate of both natures.
g) The person of Christ
is described according to His human nature but the predicate of both natures —
Matthew 27:46. Here Christ was speaking from the viewpoint of His human nature
but the pronoun “me” has reference to both natures.
The state of enmity is now described
in two phrases, which gives us an outline for reconciliation.
“the law of commandments” — ton nomon twn e)ntolwn, all in the accusative. Ton nomon refers to the Mosaic Law, but only one part of it.
The law refers to the whole law, Codex #1, #2, and #3. But here we have a
qualifying phrase in the genitive, “of the commandments.” The commandments is
an Old Testament technical term for Codex #1 only. It refers to what is
sometimes called the decalogue but includes a great deal more, the moral
commandments. The decalogue really is the basis for human freedom and every
prohibition in the ten commandments is directly related to some phase of human
freedom, as divine institution #1 and as the springboard for the laws of divine
establishment. However, there is another purpose in the many, many commandments
in addition to the decalogue that are found. All of these commandments under
Codex #1 actually prove that man is a sinner and needs a saviour — 1 Timothy
1:9,10; Galatians 3:15-29; Romans 3:20 or establishing the fact that the status
of man is hopeless and he needs to go outside of himself for eternal salvation.
“in ordinances” — e)n plus the instrumental of dogma which means decrees or ordinances. Technically here
it refers to ordinances and it refers to Codex #2 of the Mosaic Law, which is a
complete Christology and soteriology. It includes everything from the Levitical
offerings, the holy days, the tabernacle, the modus operandi of the priesthood,
and it all adds up to the ministry of Jesus Christ dying for our sins. So Codex
#2 in the Mosaic Law was a complete Christology by which any person who heard
it read, even once, or saw it in operation under the Levitical priesthood could
understand salvation, understand the gospel, and respond by believing in the
Lord Jesus Christ.
“for to make” — “For” is a
conjunction i(na and should be translated
“that,” plus the aorist active subjunctive of ktizw
and it means to create. It should be translated, “that he might create.” The
aorist tense is a gnomic aorist, an absolute. It is an absolute fact that as of
the moment of salvation one of the 36 things the believers receives is being
made a new creature by being entered into the strategic victory in Christ.
“in himself” — e)n plus the locative of the intensive pronoun a)utoj. This refers to positional truth by which every
believer is made a new creature at the moment of salvation.
“of twain” — the accusative definite
article plus the indeclinable numeral duo.
This all should be translated “that in himself he might create the two.”
“one” — the preposition e)ij plus numeral in the accusative singular for e(ij which is into one or resulting in one.
“new” is the accusative singular of kainoj which means new in species; “man” — a)nqrwpoj, the generic term for the category of mankind. It
is a brand new category once you accept Christ as saviour.
“making” — present active participle
of poiew. This is in the static
present which represents a condition perpetually existing. This means eternal
security, blessing by getting into doctrine. The active voice: Christ produces
the action on the cross through the doctrine of reconciliation. The participle
is a causal participle, He causes this.
“peace” — e)irhnh which means harmony, blessing. It causes harmony
and the removal of the barrier between the Jew and the Gentile, which occurs
when Jew and Gentile accept Christ, now they are both the same.
Translation: “Having wiped out in
his flesh the state of enmity, the law of the commandments by means of the
ordinances; that he might create in himself the two resulting in one [Jew and
Gentile] new species man, causing peace.”
Reconciliation removes all false
standards and pseudo barriers between the members of the human race and all
believers are new creatures in Christ.
Verse 16 — reconciliation removes
all false standards and pseudo barriers between the members of the human race.
All believers are a brand new species on this earth. As a brand new species you
are in union with the Lord Jesus Christ. That means you are related to the strategic
victory.
“And that” — the continuative use of
the conjunction kai. Like most conjunctions it
unites clauses; “that” is inserted by the translator for the word does not
occur at the beginning of the verse. It does occur in the middle. The word is i(na and when it occurs it will be related to a purpose
concept.
“he might reconcile” — aorist active
subjunctive of the compound verb a)pokatallassw [a)po = preposition of ultimate source, always used with
the ablative; kata = norm or standard; allassw = to change or to alter something] which means to
transform someone or something according to a norm or a standard from the
ultimate source of someone else. To put all of this together in one English
word is difficult. However, it might be translated “to restore to favour.” The
aorist tense is a constative aorist; it contemplates the action of the verb in
its entirety. It takes an occurrence, like reconciliation, and regardless of
its extent or duration gathers it into a single whole. The active voice: Christ
does the work of reconciliation on the cross. The subjunctive mood is used to
indicate a continuation of the purpose clause from the middle of the previous
verse. If we are a new species at the point of regeneration God had to do
something to make it possible. God had to wipe out all of the contamination
from the fall of Adam and being of the old species of a)nqrwpoj. Reconciliation is also potential, according to
this subjunctive, depending upon whether the individual believes in the Lord
Jesus Christ or not.
“both” is the accusative plural from
a)mfoteroj plus the definite article
and should be translated “the both.” The definite article refers to the Jew and
the Gentile on the wrong side of the barrier and it is used to show that the
nouns have been previously defined. Therefore the qualitative aspect is not the
issue, merely definition.
A)pokatallassw means in this context to transfer from a certain state [a bad one] to
another state which is not only quite different but beneficial. Both Jew and
Gentile are transferred from total condemnation to the grace plan of God.
“unto God” — dative of possession of
qeoj plus the definite article
indicates that anyone who crosses the line at the point of salvation he does
possess God. He is in union with God the Son; he is related to the strategic
victory of the angelic conflict.
“in one body” — the preposition e)n plus the locative of sarc
which is “in one flesh.” This emphasises the principle of no old species but a
new one, which has meaning and purpose. Even though you look the same you are
not the same because of the new spiritual definition in your life beginning at
the point of salvation with the 36 things that you receive.
“by the cross” — dia plus the genitive of stauroj means “through the cross.” The cross is the means of reconciliation,
on the cross the barrier was removed between man and God; and by the work of
Christ on the cross man is reconciled, God is propitiated, and there is no
barrier. It was all accomplished through grace; it was planned in eternity past
and executed in time.
“having slain” — the aorist active
participle of a)pokteinw. It means having put to
death. This is an antecedent aorist participle. That means that the action of
the aorist participle precedes the action of the main verb, and first of all
“he put to death’ — He destroyed the barrier, tore down the middle wall of
partition — that he might reconcile. God tore down the wall between Himself and
us, therefore God is the reconciler but we are reconciled. “Man is reconciled”
is the correct statement of the doctrine. God is not reconciled to man; God is
propitiated.
“the enmity” — the accusative
singular of e)xqra which refers to the barrier
between man and God, a barrier man cannot remove or get around in any possible
way. “thereby” is a prepositional phrase, e)n
plus the instrumental of the intensive demonstrative pronoun a)utoj. It should be translated “by it.”
Translation: “And that he might
reconcile the both to the God in one body through the cross, by it [the cross]
having put to death the enmity.”
Principle of grace
1. God the Father planned the
removal of the barrier — doctrine of divine decrees.
2. God the Son executed the removal
of the barrier; He tore down the wall.
3. God the Holy Spirit reveals to
the human race to step over the line.
So everything in reconciliation is
accomplished by God and man is the beneficiary — “man is reconciled.”
The doctrine of reconciliation
1. Reconciliation is the first work
of God from which man benefits eternally.
2. The removal of this barrier
between man and God is called reconciliation in Ephesians 2:16; Colossians
1:20,21; 2 Corinthians 5:18.
3. The cross is the basis for such
reconciliation — Colossians 1:20; Ephesians 2:16.
4. In reconciliation the unbeliever
is regarded as the enemy of God, the barrier is called “enmity” — Romans 5:10;
Colossians 1:21.
5. Believers of the Church Age,
therefore, have a ministry of reconciliation — 2 Corinthians 5:18-20.
6. Reconciliation connotes peace
between man and God — Ephesians 2:14 cf. 2:16; Colossians 1:20.
7. The peace offering of the
Levitical sacrifices portrays reconciliation — Leviticus chapters 3, 6:37,38;
8:15.
8. The mechanics of reconciliation.
a) Sin is removed from
the barrier [unlimited atonement — 2 Corinthians 5:14,15,19; 1 Timothy 2:6;
4:10; Titus 2:11; Hebrews 2:9; 2 Peter 2:1; 1 John 2:2; redemption — John
8:31,36; Galatians 3:13; 1 Peter 1:18,19; Ephesians 1:7; Colossians 1:14.
b) The penalty of sin is
removed by expiation — Colossians 2:14. Expiation is Christ paying the penalty
of sin — Psalm 22:1-6 where Christ is the worm being crushed on our behalf.
c) The problem of
physical birth is removed from the barrier by the doctrine of regeneration —
John 3:1-18; 1 Peter 1:23; Titus 3:5. When anyone believes in Christ because of
the work of the cross he is said to be born again.
d) Human good or
relative righteousness is removed from the barrier by two doctrines: the
doctrine of imputation and the doctrine of justification. They are entirely
different doctrines though closely related because one depends upon the other.
At the point of salvation, because of propitiation and the work of the Lord
Jesus Christ on the cross, God imputes to each person who believes His own
righteousness [+R]. Once we have +R God then looks at us
and says, “Vindicated” or “Justified.” So the possession of +R means
vindication at the point of salvation. Imputation — Romans 3:22; 9:30-10:10;
Philippians 3:9; 2 Corinthians 5:21; Hebrews 10:14. Justification — Romans
4:1-5, 25; 5:1; 8:29,30; Titus 3:7; Galatians 2:16.
e) The problem of God’s
perfect character. This is removed from the barrier through propitiation —
Romans 3:22-26; 1 John 2:1,2.
f) Instead of position
in Adam God the Holy Spirit through the baptism of the Spirit takes us at the
moment of salvation and enters us into union with Christ so that this item of
the barrier is removed. The problem s position in Adam is removed by positional
sanctification — 1 Corinthians 15:22; 2 Corinthians 5:17; Ephesians 1:3-6.
9. Reconciliation at the cross was
prophesied in Isaiah 57:19.
Verse 17 — the paraphrasing of
Isaiah 57:19 which is Old Testament documentation to reconciliation. “And” is
the adjunctive use of kai which introduces the
paraphrase. The adjunctive use of kai is always translated
“also.” It is translated this way in order to indicate documentation.
“came” — (He came) This is the
aorist active participle of e)rxomai used here for the coming of
Christ at the first advent: His arrival at the cross and His fulfillment of
reconciliation by the removal of the barrier between man and God. The aorist
participle is not a part of the paraphrase; it introduces the subject of the
paraphrase. The fulfillment of this participle comes in Isaiah 57:19 which
refers to the first advent and the cross. The action of this aorist participle
precedes the action of the main verb, which is coming up — “preached.” The
aorist tense itself is a dramatic aorist; it states a present reality with the
certitude of a past event. This Greek idiom is used for a situation which has
already been realised, already been fulfilled. At the time that it was written
it was a prophecy; now it has been fulfilled. This is true of many of the Old
Testament prophecies; they were fulfilled by the first advent of Christ.
Therefore the dramatic aorist is used to indicate that principle. The active
voice indicates the one who has come, the Lord Jesus Christ. It should be
translated “also having come.” After this comes the paraphrase (put in a
colon).
“and” is not found here; “he
preached” — aorist middle indicative from e)uaggelizw which means to communicate information of good news or to communicate
vitally important information. In this case what is communicated in the
doctrine of reconciliation or the removal of the barrier between God and man by
the work of Christ on the cross. The aorist tense of the verb is a culminative
aorist. The communicating of the good news is the result of Christ coming into
the world. The middle voice is an indirect middle emphasising the agent
producing the action who is, of course, the Lord Jesus Christ. The indicative
mood is declarative, it indicates that we have an absolute assertion, total and
complete reality. This is a picture of communication of reconciliation on the fulfillment
side as stated in Isaiah 57:19.
“peace” is the good news that He
preached — the absence of the definite article with the accusative of e)irhnh. This is peace between God and man, a peace which
describes reconciliation in this passage.
“to you which were afar off” — “to
you” is a dative plural from the personal pronoun su;
“which were” is not found in the original; we have simply an adverb, makran, in the dative plural plus the dative plural
definite article. Adverbs do not take cases but there is one with this one to
show advantage to the Gentiles. The far away ones have the advantage of being
reconciled. The definite article in the plural with the adverb indicates it is
to their advantage to have Christ come into the world and go to the cross.
“to them” — dative plural of
advantage plus the definite article; “that were near” — this time the adverb is
e)gguj and refers to the Jews.
Translation: “Also [Jesus] having
come, he announced the good news [fulfillment of Isaiah 57:19] which is reconciliation
to you [Gentiles], the far off ones, and reconciliation to you [the Jews] who
were near.”
Summary
1. The documentation of
reconciliation is taken from the paraphrase of Isaiah 57:19.
2. When Jesus came to the earth in
the incarnation He communicated the good news of reconciliation to both Jews
and Gentiles, just as Isaiah 57:19 prophesied He would.
3. Therefore in the next and final
section of this chapter, verses 18-22, Paul picks up the thread now of
Ephesians 1:22,23 where the Church, the body of Christ, was last mentioned.
Verses 18-22, the principle of grace
and the Church.
Verse 18 — the baptism of the Holy
Spirit. “For” is a causal conjunction, o(ti,
and it means “Because.” It connects this with the previous paragraph — Because
of reconciliation.
“through him” — the preposition dia plus the genitive of the intensive pronoun a)utoj.
“we both” — the nominative plural
adjective a)mfoteroj, used for both Jew and
Gentile; plus the definite article. It should be translated “we the both,”
referring to Jew and Gentile in this dispensation. The royal priesthood is
recruited from both Jews and Gentiles, and always has been. Melchizedek was a
Gentile: Jesus Christ was a Jew. This is the dispensation in which both Jew and
Gentile become one in Christ and become members of that same royal priesthood.
“have” — present active indicative
of e)xw. The present tense is a
static present; it represents a condition as perpetually existing. The active
voice: the believer, Jew or Gentile, produces the action of the verb as of the
moment of salvation. The indicative mood is the reality of access or entry as
of the moment of salvation.
“access” — the accusative singular
from the noun prosagwgh. It means access or entry,
it means admission into the presence of, entrance or freedom to enter, the
ability to enter, the right to enter. The Greek word was used originally for
obtaining an interview with a king or entering into the presence of a king to
serve him. This is emphasised here. Our access is based upon our union with
Christ; it therefore gives us the right to enter into His presence because we
are under His priesthood.
“one Spirit” — e)n plus the instrumental of e)ij plus the instrumental of pneuma,
referring to God the Holy Spirit, and it should be translated “by means of one
Spirit.” This refers to the baptism of the Spirit by which we are entered into
the presence of the Father.
“unto the Father” — proj plus the accusative of pathr,
and it means “face to face with the Father.”
Translation: “Because through him
[Jesus Christ] we the both [Jew and Gentile] keep having access by means of one
Spirit face to face with the Father.”
The doctrine of the baptism of the Holy Spirit
1. The baptism of the Holy Spirit
did not occur in Old Testament times or in any previous dispensation. It is
peculiar to one dispensation only, the Church Age, the age in which we live. It
qualifies each one of us as royal priests. The baptism of the Holy Spirit is
that salvation ministry of the Spirit whereby he enters every believer into
union with Jesus Christ our high priest and therefore appoints each one of us a
royal priest forever.
2. The baptism of the Holy Spirit
was prophesied by the Lord Jesus Christ while He was on earth. It was a part of
teaching the whole principle of reconciliation. Reconciliation and the baptism
of the Spirit occur simultaneously. John 14:20; Acts 1:5. It was essential the
Lord the Lord Jesus Christ ascend and be seated at the right hand of the
Father. That is analogous to the high priest entering the holy of holies. The
holy of holies represents heaven. Jesus Christ enters into heaven as the royal
high priest and our personal representative. We, in turn, represent Him as a
kingdom of priests on this earth.
3.
The mechanics of the baptism of the Spirit are described in 1 Corinthians
12:13. God the Holy Spirit enters each one of us into union with Christ.
4. In this way at the point of
salvation and totally apart from any experience God the Holy Spirit brings
perfect unity to the body of Christ. Regardless of its experiential status
there is perfect unity kin the body of Christ for all believers are entered
into union with Christ. Ephesians 4:5.
5. The implications of the baptism
of the Spirit provide equality nonexistent in physical birth — Galatians
3:26-28.
6. The basis for retroactive
positional truth is the baptism of the Spirit since we are not only entered
into union with Christ at the right hand of the Father but we are also
identified with Him in His death, as per Romans 6:3,4; Colossians 2:12.
7. It is also the basis for current
positional truth — Ephesians 1:3-6; Colossians 2:10. In current positional
truth we share everything that Christ has.
8. The baptism of the Holy Spirit
begins the dispensation of the Church — Matthew 16:18; Acts 1:5, plus Acts 2:3
which doesn’t mention the baptism of the Spirit, but it explains that what
happened there is the baptism of the Spirit by the explanation in Acts
11:15-17.
9. The baptism of the Spirit is not
an experience of any kind; it is something that happens to every believer at
the point of salvation.
10. The baptism of the Spirit occurs
at the moment that we believe in Jesus Christ —Colossians 1:12.
Verse 19 — an application to former
Gentiles. “Now” is an inferential illative particle a)ra
which means “consequently.”
“Therefore” is another inferential
particle, o)un, which denotes that which
is introduced as an inference from something else — from the baptism of the
Spirit. Translation: “Consequently therefore [as a result of the baptism of the
Spirit].”
“Ye are” — present active indicative
of e)imi. This is a static present,
an absolute thing that will always be true.
“No more” — a negative compound
adverb, o)uketi, which means “no longer.”
It is a reference to Gentiles who in the previous dispensation of Israel were
excluded from the commonwealth of Israel.
“Strangers” — the predicate
nominative plural of cenoj, mean, “aliens.”
“And foreigners” — paroikoj, meaning those who live beside us but were not of
us.
“But” — the adversative conjunction a)lla sets up a contrast between the saved and the
unsaved Gentiles of the Church Age.
“Fellow citizens” — predicate
nominative plural sumpolithj; “with the saints” — the
genitive plural of description from a(gioj which is “of the saints.”
This is also a genitive of possession to indicate that all believers, Jew or
Gentile, at the point of salvation actually possess sainthood.
“And of the household of God” — the
word “household” here simply means a dispensation, administration, brought
about by God; and we have the ablative of source, He is the source of that
dispensation — members of the family of God or an administration from the
source of God. The household is often used for a dispensation. It is used to
designate the dispensation of the Church in Hebrews 3:6; 1 Peter 2:5.
Translation: “Consequently therefore
you are no longer strangers and aliens, but you are fellow citizens of the
saints and members of the family of God [or, members of the dispensation from
God].”
Verse 20 — “And are built” — there
is no word “and.” We have the aorist passive participle of e)poikodomew, which means to build upon. — “Having been built.” This is a culminative aorist. The Church
is still being built by the baptism of the Spirit. The passive voice: the
believer receives the action of the verb at salvation. Again we have antecedent
action to the main verb, the main verb is “you have become and keep on being
fellow citizens.”
“Upon the foundation of the
apostles” — this is the historical foundation of the Church. E)pi plus the locative of qemelioj which means “upon the foundation.” It refers to the local church in
contrast to the entire body of Christ. The historical foundation was the local
church and its leadership of the apostolic age.
“Apostles and prophets” are
descriptive genitives and they apply to the leadership that existed before the
canon. There are neither prophets nor apostles today because the canon is
closed. The real foundation is given next for the universal church in contrast
to the local church…
“Jesus Christ himself” … this is
another genitive absolute. When a noun and a participle in the genitive case
are not grammatically connected with the rest of the sentence they are called a
genitive absolute, and “Jesus Christ himself” is put in the genitive absolute
to show the uniqueness of what we now have and what we are a part of.
“Being” is the present active
participle [e)imi] in the genitive case and
it completes the absolute and indicates the uniqueness of what we have.
“The chief corner stone” is one word
in the Greek, a)
krogwniaioj.
It means the corner foundation stone. The concept is found in many scriptures —
Matthew 21:42; Psalm 118:22; Mark 12:10; Luke 20:17; Acts 4:11; 1 Peter 2:5-7;
Isaiah 28:16. The corner foundation stone is the stone by which the architect
fixes the standard for the bearing of the walls. This is the way he trues
everything. This stones actually forms the corner or the angle of the wall and
that is the concept here. Jesus Christ is the chief corner stone. One wall is
Israel and the other wall is the Church. Israel trues up on Jesus Christ and
the Church trues up on Jesus Christ. This stone is often laid by a formal
inauguration after the erection of a building and becomes the stone on which
the information and dedication, name of the building, and other such
information is found.
Translation: “Having been built on
the foundation of the apostles and prophets, Jesus Christ himself the corner
foundation stone.”
In this passage the corner
foundation stone is the stone, which is built into the corner of the foundation
of the building and actually trues up the wall. The two walls are the Jewish
Age and the Church Age. Today Jew and Gentile are united by the baptism of the
Spirit.
Verse 21 — the construction of the
Church. “In whom” is e)n plus the locative of the
relative pronoun o(j, referring to the Lord
Jesus Christ — “In the sphere of whom.”
“All the building” — refers to the
Church; “fitly framed together” — present passive participle sunarmologew which means to be in the process of being framed
together in a perfectly compact manner. The Lord doesn’t build anything in a
sloppy manner; this is no hit-or-miss operation. The present tense is a
pictorial present; it depicts an event in the process of occurrence. The
building isn’t finished yet. One of the words in this participle is a)rmoj which means a joint; sun
means all together; logew means it has been thought
out perfectly and it has been put together perfectly. The passive voice
indicates that the building of the Church is in the process of being
constructed by the baptism of the Spirit. When it is finished the Rapture of
the Church will occur. The participle is circumstantial.
“groweth” — present active
indicative of a)ucanw, a retroactive progressive
present denoting what has begun in the past and continues into the present
time, and hasn’t stopped yet. The active voice: the Church or the body of
Christ continues to grow during the course of this dispensation. The indicative
mood is the reality of continual growth of the body of Christ during this age
in spite of everything; “resulting in a holy temple in the Lord.”
Translation: “In whom an entire
building in the process of being perfectly constructed continues to grow,
resulting in a holy temple is the Lord.”
Summary
1. The Church continues to grow
during the present dispensation in spire of all Satanic efforts to hinder it.
Satan has never been able to stunt the growth of the Church.
2. On earth the Church is called the
body of Christ in anticipation of phase three. When the body is completed the
holy temple will be called the bride of Christ — phase three.
3. The building of the temple is
also used as an analogy in this paragraph. Each person saved during the Church
Age is one more brick, one more board in the building, and each brick or board
is perfect in itself because it is said to be holy. Our holiness is based upon
not only the baptism of the Spirit but the fact that the Holy Spirit enters us
into union with Christ and He stays.
4. When the number of believers in
the body of Christ is equal to the number of fallen angels or demons operating
under Satan the last board will be in.
5. This is the completion of the
building and/or the removal of the Church in preparation for operation
footstool: the fact that we will be a part of operation footstool, the second
strategic phase and the second strategic victory of Jesus Christ. Colossians
2:15; Revelation 19:6,8; Zechariah 13:2; 1 Thessalonians 3:13
6. A new concept emerges. In the Old
Testament Christ was the target of Satan, but with the glorification of Christ
and the change of dispensation the Church is the target of Satan.
7. This leads to the intensification
of the angelic conflict in the Church Age.
Verse 22 — the positional
sanctification of the Church.
“In whom” — e)n plus the locative of the relative pronoun o(j, again referring to Jesus Christ: “In the sphere of
whom.”
“ye also” — all believers’ “are
builded together” — present passive indicative of sunoikodomew — “In whom you are being constructed together.” The construction of
the Church goes on. The present tense is the retroactive progressive present,
it indicates that which was begun in the past and continues right up to the
present time, and will continue until the Rapture of the Church. The passive
voice: the Church is in the process of being constructed. The indicative mood
is declarative which says in effect that this is an absolute assertion.
“for an habitation of God” is not
quite correct. It should be translated “resulting in a permanent dwelling for
God.” We have the preposition e)ij plus the accusative. The
word for “dwelling” is katoikhsij which means permanent type
dwelling; “of God” is genitive of possession: “of the God.” God owns the
building.
“through the Spirit” is e)n plus the instrumental of pneuma which is “by means of the Spirit.” This is a second
reference to the baptism of the Holy Spirit.
Translation: “In whom you also are
being constructed together, resulting in a permanent dwelling place of the God
by means of the Spirit.”
The intensification of the angelic conflict
1. In the Old Testament dispensation
Christ was always the target of Satan. But once Christ came in the flesh, went
to the cross, was glorified through resurrection, ascension and session he is
no longer a target and can no longer be a target. He is now at the right hand
of the Father.
2. The Church therefore, the
representation of Christ on the earth, has become that target. Every believer
is a royal priest, every believer is an ambassador, and therefore we are His
representatives, we are the targets.
3. Since the Church is composed of
numerous believers on earth at any given time in history the conflict has
shifted gears and intensified, making each believer on this earth a target.
4. Therefore each believer in this
dispensation, being the devil’s target, also is fortified and strengthened. For
each board in the building will remain in the building, it cannot be removed.
For this reason special and unique divine provision is ours in this age of the
Church.
a) Union with Christ or
positional truth, relationship to God in the strategic victory of the cross.
b) The indwelling of
Christ as long as we are growing.
c) The indwelling of the
Holy Spirit.
None of these things ever occurred
before the Church Age historically.
d) The completion of the
canon of scripture.
e) The universal royal
priesthood of the believer.
f) The universal
ambassadorship of the believer.
g) A supernatural way of
life with a supernatural tactical objective — the super-grace life.
5. Grace provision did not exist did
not exist in the Old Testament dispensations. These things have been added to
meet the needs and the pressures of the intensified angelic conflict.
6. Different epistles emphasise
different aspects of this intensified conflict. Hebrews emphasises the
priesthood; Ephesians emphasises the grace plan; James emphasises the
experiential activity.
7. Twice in this chapter — verses
18-22— God the Holy Spirit is mentioned in relationship to the unique ministry
of the Church.
8. The baptism of the Holy Spirit
multiplies the targets of Satan and causes him to go on an all-out offensive to
destroy the Church. This he has been trying for nearly 2000 years and has not
succeeded.