The Gentile is now One with the Jew in God's New Man, and an Integral Part of God's Temple. Those who, like the readers, were once Gentiles, are especially bound to remember the condition from which they were rescued (Ephesians 2:11): at that time without Messiah, they were aliens in relation to the commonwealth of God's people, foreigners in relation to the covenants of promise, lacking in that hope of the future which the Jew had always possessed, and living in ignorance of God; such had been their condition in the world (Ephesians 2:12); but now that they are in Christ Jesus, the far-off peoples are become nigh in Messiah's blood (Ephesians 2:13); it is Messiah who is the peace both of Jew and of Gentile, He who made the two things one and broke down the enmity the dividing barrier that separated them in His own flesh by annulling the Law with its injunctions and decrees (Ephesians 2:14 f.): so that He made peace (a) by a creative blending of the two (Jew and Gentile) in Himself into a single New Man; (b) by a reconciliation of both, in the one body thus formed, to God through the Cross whereby He slew the enmity (Ephesians 2:16). His coming was thus a preaching of peace both to Gentiles who were far off and to Jews who were nigh (Ephesians 2:17): for the access of both in one Spirit to the Father is through Him (Ephesians 2:18). Christian Gentiles have therefore ceased to be foreigners, alien residents in the Divine city; they are sharers in the citizenship of God's chosen people, members of the Divine household, stones built in on the apostolic and prophetic foundation in that building whose corner-stone is Christ Jesus (Ephesians 2:19 f.); it is in Him that all building work upon that edifice, as it is progressively accomplished, is so morticed together as to grow into a holy shrine in the Lord (Ephesians 2:21); it is in Him that the readers also are built to form (part of) God's dwelling-place in the Spirit (Ephesians 2:22).

Ephesians 2:11. Gentiles in the flesh: physically Gentiles. called: i.e. in current Jewish terminology; for those who hold (with the writer) that circumcision and uncircumcision are matters of the heart (Romans 2:28 f.), having nothing to do with the physical rite, uncircumcision is no more necessarily the badge of the Gentile than circumcision of the Jew.

Ephesians 2:12. A comma should be inserted before in the world, which stands in emphatic contrast to what follows.

Ephesians 2:13. Cf. Isaiah 57:19.

Ephesians 2:14. Christ is the author of peace between Jew and Gentile, for in reconciling them both to God He has reconciled them to one another and thus made the two things one thing. the middle Wall of partition: in Herod's Temple at Jerusalem, a barrier marked the point beyond which a Gentile might not penetrate under penalty of death (Revelation 11:2 *).

Ephesians 2:15. in his flesh: i.e. by His physical death. the enmity: this expression is in apposition with middle wall of partition, and should be connected with the words and brake down, the phrase law of commandments in ordinances (i.e. the Law, which consisted of injunctions in the form of decrees) alone being governed by the participle having abolished. that he might create: the literal translation is create in Himself the two unto one New Man.

Ephesians 2:16. in one body: i.e. the Church; the mystical, not the physical, body of Christ is meant.

Ephesians 2:17. Isaiah 57:19 combined with Isaiah 52:7 (LXX). The reference is either to Christ's preaching in His earthly ministry or to the gospel as proclaimed by the risen and exalted Lord. But the two need not here be distinguished; the mission of the Saviour as a whole constituted a proclamation of peace.

Ephesians 2:20. Probably the foundation consisting of the apostles and prophets rather than the foundation laid by them. The prophets are those of the Christian Church, not those of OT. The metaphor of the corner-stone is from Isaiah 28:16; cf. Psalms 118:22.

Ephesians 2:21. each several building: read, all building-work that is done. The idea of a plurality of buildings does not suit the context either in thought or in language. The Temple at Jerusalem included a variety of buildings, but the word here translated temple properly means shrine and refers to the Holy of Holies.

Ephesians 2:22. The ancient shrine was not a place of worship but a dwelling-place of the Deity. Christians are to be built into a spiritual whole, in which the Divine Presence is to be enshrined here upon earth.

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