The Opening Greeting
1:1 Except for the omission of Timothy, the opening of this greeting is quite similar to Colossians 1:1. The letter claims to be from Paul, an apostle of Christ Jesus. This term was one that Paul used frequently to indicate that he was “one who was sent” (apostellō, “to send”) as a missionary or special envoy of God. It is used of the twelve disciples as well as for others who fulfill an apostolic function, such as Andronicus and Junias (Rom. 16:7). At times, it is applied to Christians who have a very vivid experience of Christ (Acts 1:21, 22; 1 Cor. 9:1). By the time Ephesians was written, it was used primarily for those who were the founders of the Christian church (2:20).
The statement that Paul’s apostleship is by the will of God repeats a theme that Paul emphasizes throughout his epistles: At his commissioning, he and Barnabas are set apart to do the work to which God has called them (Acts 13:2); to the Romans he writes “called to be an apostle and set apart for the gospel of God” (1:1); to the Galatians he states in no uncertain terms that his call did not come from “men nor by man, but by Jesus Christ and God the Father” (1:1; cf. also 1:13–16); and though Paul may at times feel unworthy of his calling (1 Cor. 15:9), he affirms that God’s grace has made him what he is (1 Cor. 15:10). This awareness of God’s initiative in his call kept Paul from boasting about his position; it also legitimized his office as an apostle on occasions when his authority was questioned (cf. Galatians and Corinthians).
The readers are identified, first of all, as saints. As such, they are people who are consecrated to God by being separated from sin. Second, they are the faithful in Christ Jesus, i.e., those who are being faithful or trustworthy. The footnote in the NIV text indicates that the Greek pistois (faithful) could also be taken to mean “believers.” Thus the greeting would read “to the saints and believers who are …” Both meanings, however, are expressed within the body of the letter: God’s people are those who have put their faith in Christ (the indicative) and who live out that faith in obedience to the Lord (the imperative).
The text indicates that the letter is addressed to God’s people who live in Ephesus, although the NIV footnote indicates that there is a textual question concerning the inclusion of the phrase in Ephesus. Most likely the destination was not present in the original manuscript because the epistle was intended to be a universal letter to be circulated among a number of churches (see Introduction).
1:2 The greeting ends with Paul’s usual mention of grace and peace (cf. Rom. 1:7; 1 Cor. 1:3; 2 Cor. 1:2; Gal. 1:3; Phil. 1:2; Col. 1:2; 1 Thess. 1:1; 2 Thess. 1:2; 1 Tim. 1:2; 2 Tim. 1:2; and Titus 1:4 include grace, mercy, and peace). Chairein (“Greetings”) was a common word for greeting in the Greek world (Acts 15:23; 23:26; James 1:1). Paul uses charis (“grace”), which to believers has come to mean God’s free and unmerited goodness upon humankind.
The Hebrews greeted each other with šalôm, a common term for “peace” as well as fullness or wholeness of life. The apostle, likewise, is doing more than just greeting his readers with these terms, because grace and peace are gifts of God given through Christ. By bringing these two gifts together, he is urging that his readers enjoy life because of the favor that God freely has bestowed upon them. Both concepts form an important part of the letter (peace: 2:14, 15, 17; 4:3; 6:15; grace: 2:5, 7, 8; 3:2, 7; 4:7).
One cannot help but notice the significant role attached to Christ in these opening verses. Paul is designated as an apostle of Christ Jesus; the believers live their life in Christ Jesus; and together with God the Father, the Lord Jesus Christ bestows the divine gifts of grace and peace upon his people.
In the following discussion it will be noted that Ephesians has a number of stylistic features similar to Colossians. First, Ephesians follows the pattern of praise, thanksgiving, and prayer. In Colossians, Paul began by thanking God for his readers (1:3–8) and then praying that God would accomplish certain things in their lives. In Ephesians, there is a similar structure: The epistle begins with a great hymn of praise or thanksgiving to God (1:3–14) and follows up with a long prayer (1:15–2:20) in which the apostle expresses the concern that his readers understand how God has blessed them through Christ.
A second similarity relates to the hymn and its place in the epistle. In Colossians, the ideas of the Christ hymn (1:15–20) were applied again and again throughout the letter. Much the same could be said of Ephesians, for this opening eulogy serves as an excellent preface to the remaining doctrinal section. The idea of redemption is prominent in the phrases dealing with the exaltation of Christ (1:15–22), salvation by faith (2:1–10), the unity between Jew and Gentile (2:11–22), and the revelation of the mystery of Christ (3:1–12).
Third, Ephesians may be divided conveniently into a doctrinal and a practical section, since we find the author providing a theological base (chapters 1–3) and then applying these truths to the Christian life (chapters 4–6). Such divisions, however, should not be taken too rigidly, for one finds ethical exhortations in the midst of doctrinal discussion (e.g., 1:4; 2:10) and doctrinal teaching continues throughout the last chapters (4:4–16; 5:21–6:9).
A Hymn of Praise
Many elevated words and phrases have been used to describe the beauty of this opening hymn that praises God for the spiritual blessings he has bestowed upon the believer in Christ. Stott, in his commentary (p. 32), quotes a number of authors who use such phrases as “a magnificent gateway,” “a golden chain of links,” “a kaleidoscope of dazzling lights and shifting colors,” a “rhapsodic adoration,” a “paean of praise.”
Unfortunately, the English translations do not retain the hymnic nature and rhythmic pattern that is discernible in the original language. In the Greek, for example, the entire section of twelve verses is one long sentence. This helps one to appreciate how the author’s thoughts keep moving to new heights. Having to divide the section into sentences (RSV and NIV, eight; NEB, eight; GNB, fifteen) destroys the continuity of both style and thought.
A number of proposals have been offered with respect to the origin of the hymn. Those who take the Ephesian letter to be genuinely Pauline naturally attribute these verses to the great apostle. Scholars who question Pauline authorship suggest that an author writing in Paul’s name borrowed terms and phrases from Paul’s other epistles and composed a hymn that resembles something that Paul would have written.
The search for origins and models has moved in a number of directions. J. Kirby believes that this passage is modeled after a Jewish berakah (“blessing”) in which God is praised for his goodness. Others have noted the strong liturgical nature of the passage and have suggested that it belongs to the worshiping community. As such, either it could have a prior and independent existence apart from Ephesians or it could have been written by the author to provide a liturgical piece to be used for church worship and instruction (Mitton, pp. 22–24).
A number of scholars who have tried to explain the origin of Ephesians from a baptismal context have focused their attention on this particular hymnic section. In the hymn, the author utilizes baptismal terms and concepts such as sonship (1:5), redemption (1:7), and sealing (1:13). The most likely explanation for this is that the writer is drawing upon baptismal theology to thank God for all the blessings of redemption that he has provided through Christ to those who have believed. Since the passage is a hymn, it is quite possible to regard it as a baptismal hymn that may have been part of the worshiping tradition in the early church and that the author took over and incorporated into his redemptive doxology. The baptismal motifs in this hymn have been so convincing to some scholars that they have concluded that the entire epistle was written as a baptismal tract or at least connected with the celebration of baptism in the church.
From the baptismal nature of this opening hymn, however, it does not necessarily follow that the occasion of this epistle is to instruct the readers on the meaning of their baptism. If this were the purpose, one might expect baptism to be mentioned more explicitly, for as it stands, the word “baptism” occurs only once (4:5). Rather, the author finds the baptismal motifs and language appropriate to describe to his readers all the blessings that God has bestowed in Christ. The early church understood baptism to be the act in which the believer appropriates in faith the blessings of redemption in Christ. Thus it was sufficient for him to allude to baptism but not to define its meaning directly.
Another noticeable feature of the hymn is the place that it gives to all three members of the Trinity. In a broad sense, the work of the Father is described in verses 3–6; the Son, in verses 7–12; and the Holy Spirit, in verses 13–14. But all three persons permeate the entire passage. God is the source of all the spiritual blessings mentioned in the hymn; Christ is the agent in whom these blessings are realized for the believer. The name “Christ”—or some form of that name, or the personal pronoun “in him”—occurs thirteen times in this passage. All that God has purposed for the believer is fulfilled in Christ. The Holy Spirit is mentioned as the one who seals or marks the believer as belonging to Christ. And, since the blessings that are enumerated in this passage are “spiritual,” they are given by the “Spirit.”
1:3 Praise be: The Greek word is eulogētos, which carries the meaning of speaking (legō) well or kindly (eu) of someone. In this context, the phrase could be expressed as “thanks be,” “blessed be,” as well as praise be to God. In the NT, the word is used exclusively for God, since he alone is worthy to be blessed; he is blessed because he is the author of all the blessings that he bestows upon the believer in Christ. Since such forms of blessings were common among the Jews, this passage may have a Jewish antecedent.
Praise is given to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ (cf. 1:3; 2 Cor. 1:3; 1 Pet. 1:3). Grammatically, the phrase could read, “God who is the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ.” As such, it indicates the unique relationship that God and Christ have to each other. In the context of the NT, believers call God “Father” because of the sonship that is received through Christ (cf. 1:5; Rom. 8:14–17; Gal. 4:6, 7).
Who has blessed us: It is important to note that this is in the past (Greek aorist) tense, meaning that the author is envisioning a time when God acted to provide these blessings rather than anticipating that God will do something in the future. These blessings became a reality for the believers in Christ—that is, in baptism.
The nature or essence of the blessing is spiritual. Although the word is singular (every spiritual blessing), it needs to be understood as a comprehensive phrase: God’s blessings are unlimited, and he does not withhold anything from his people. The sphere of these blessings is the heavenly realms. Thus, the reference is not to material, physical, or temporal blessings: They are not part of one’s treasure “where moth and rust destroy, and where thieves break in and steal” (Matt. 6:19). As spiritual gifts in the heavenly world, they are imperishable and belong to the eternal order “where moth and rust do not destroy, and where thieves do not break in and steal” (Matt. 6:20).
The phrase in the heavenly realms is a translation of the Greek “in the heavenlies” (en tois epouraniois). Since it is an adjective without a noun, English translations supply such terms as “world” (GNB), “places” (RSV), or realms (NIV). This clarification, however, should not lead one to conclude that Paul has a geographical place or cosmic location in mind somewhere in the universe above the earth. Heavenlies is a term signifying the spiritual world, that is, the unseen world of spiritual reality and activity. This is the sphere in which the believers are blessed. The other four occurrences of “heavenly realms” in the epistle (1:20; 2:6; 3:10; 6:12) help to express this idea more clearly.
In the ancient world, it was believed that there was a great cosmic struggle between the forces of good and the forces of evil. Generally, the heavens were considered to be the place where this battle between the evil rulers, principalities, powers, and ruling spirits of the universe (stoicheia tou kosmou) was being waged. A significant part of the message in Colossians is that these spiritual forces are inferior to Christ in the order of creation (Col. 1:16) as well as subject to Christ through his victory on the cross, where Christ “having disarmed the powers and authorities, … made a public spectacle of them, triumphing over them by the cross” (Col. 2:15). Ephesians continues these ideas by teaching that, because of Christ’s victory over these evil powers, he is exalted to God’s right hand “far above all rule and authority, powers and dominion” (1:20, 21). Furthermore, these powers are learning of God’s wisdom through the witness of the church (3:10).
Ephesians teaches that believers are involved in a similar battle: “For our struggle is not against flesh and blood, but against the rulers, against the authorities, against the powers of this dark world and against the spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly realms” (6:12). But by virtue of their union with Christ, they share in Christ’s victory and likewise rule with Christ in the heavenly world (2:6). In fact, all the blessings that are enumerated in this passage are either fulfilled in union with Christ or are mediated through the agency of Christ.
1:4 The first specific blessing mentioned is what is known in theological circles as election or predestination. Basically, this doctrine affirms that God has taken the initiative in the “electing” or “choosing” process. In the OT, God chooses Israel from among all the nations of the earth to be his covenant people (Deut. 4:37; 7:6, 7; Isa. 44:1, 2); in the NT, God chooses people to become members of the new covenant, the church (John 15:16; Rom. 8:29; 9:11; Eph. 1:4, 5; 2 Thess. 2:13; 2 Tim. 1:9; 1 Pet. 1:2); and individuals such as Jeremiah (1:5) and Paul (1 Cor. 15:9–11) believed that even their vocation was destined by God.
Unfortunately, the Christian church has become polarized into theological camps over this doctrine. Some (namely, the Calvinists) have placed all the emphasis upon the sovereign grace of God in matters of salvation; others (namely, the Arminians) have emphasized human free will in the salvation process. Since the Bible does not attempt to harmonize this apparent paradox, it continues to remain one of the more divisive and speculative “mysteries” of the Christian faith.
When dealing with this issue, one should avoid the extremes in theory and practice that so often characterize adherents of one view or another. Election to salvation does not imply that God, therefore, predestines the rest of humanity to damnation; nor should election lead to spiritual pride among the elect. Election simply affirms that personal faith rests upon the prior work (grace) of God, so that, with respect to salvation, God has taken the initiative to claim a people for himself. An individual is free to choose God only because God has already decided for such a person from eternity. Likewise, election should not lead to spiritual complacency; it is a privilege and responsibility that is unto holiness of life and for good works (1:4; 2:10).
The author indicates that God’s intention for the salvation of humanity precedes the creation of the world and the historical process (for he chose us in him before the creation of the world). When Paul, a member of the church and a chosen apostle to the Gentiles, reflects upon the doctrine of election, he may be reasoning in the following way: “How did I, a Pharisee and a former persecutor of Christians, get to be what I am? How is it that the Jews—and now the Gentiles—have become part of God’s family? Surely it is not because of some national merit or personal attainment through faith or good works! This had to be God’s doing. He knew from eternity how he would work in me and in the world; it was not a last-minute decision that the Gentiles were to become heirs of salvation” (3:6). When the apostle writes to the Corinthians about their new existence in Christ, for example, he states: “All this is from God, who reconciled us to himself through Christ” (2 Cor. 5:17–19).
Stott makes a helpful comment by drawing attention to the relationship of the three pronouns in the phrase he chose us in him. God chose us, even before we were created, to be redeemed through the work of Christ that had not yet taken place (Stott, p. 36). Such, however, is the marvel of God’s elective grace toward the human race.
The goal of election is that the believer be holy and blameless before God. This phrase is similar to Colossians 1:2 and may be part of the OT sacrificial language that the NT uses on other occasions (cf. 5:27; Heb. 9:14; 1 Pet. 1:19; Jude 24). In some cases, the doctrine of predestination has led to moral license rather than personal holiness. Not a few believers have reasoned that since they are “eternally secure,” their ethical life is no longer of concern to God or to other people. This reasoning, however, is unfortunate, because the believers’ standing before God and election (the indicative) are demonstrated by the kind of life that they live ethically (the imperative).
1:5 It is difficult to know what to do with the phrase in love. The NIV (as RSV, GNB) takes it to go with verse 5, thereby indicating that God’s choosing was motivated by his love. On the basis of this love, God predestined us to be adopted as his sons and daughters through Jesus Christ. But the phrase could be taken with the action described in verse 4, as humanity’s love to God rather than God’s love for humanity. Thus the meaning would be that believers should be holy and without fault before him in love (en agapē). Agapē is used elsewhere in Ephesians for Christian love (3:17; 4:2, 15, 16; 5:2). Still, it is fitting to mention God’s love so early in the epistle, and that this is what motivated him to decide (lit., “foreordain”) to redeem humanity: adopted as his sons and daughters … in accordance with his pleasure and will.
Sonship—referring to being a child of God (i.e., eligible to inherit his promises)—is the second blessing listed in this passage, and this, too, is a gift mediated through Jesus Christ. Paul uses this term in Romans 8:15, 23, 29, and Galatians 4:5 to indicate the special relationship that believers have to God. Here sonship is tied in with God’s elective purpose for humanity.
The language of this passage is similar to that in the accounts of Jesus’ baptism (Matt. 3:13–17; Mark 1:9–11; Luke 3:21, 22) and transfiguration (Matt. 17:5; Mark 9:7; Luke 9:35). In these Gospel accounts of Christ’s baptism, as in Ephesians 1:5 and 6, baptism and sonship are closely related and Christ is given the title “beloved” or the One he loves (1:6). This similarity of language and ideas (sonship, huiothesia; good pleasure, eudokia; and beloved, agapētos) leads one to infer that this reference to the election and sonship of the Christian may have some connection with the baptism of Jesus. Thus one could say that as Jesus was proclaimed Son at his baptism, baptism is the event whereby believers obtain their sonship. This thought is quite explicit in the baptismal passage in Galatians 3:26–27 that states that “You are all sons of God through faith in Christ Jesus, for all of you who were baptized into Christ have clothed yourselves with Christ.”
1:6 Theology is doxology! In other words, sonship (the indicative) is a summons to praise God for his glorious grace. Literally, from the Greek, the phrase reads, “to the praise of the glory of the grace of him of which he graced us in the beloved.” This reading helps one to see how much emphasis the writer puts upon grace (cf. 1:2). He seems so enraptured by the thought of God’s grace that he does not want to let it go. Also, it is a fitting way to end a section devoted to the work of the Father (1:3–6). That almost identical phrases are used in 1:12 and 1:14 (“the praise of his glory”) confirms the hymnic nature of this entire section.
1:7 There is a definite parallel here to Colossians 1:14, where redemption and the forgiveness of sins are closely connected. But in Ephesians, the means of redemption is amplified by the phrase through his blood, the forgiveness of sins. The emphasis here is upon forgiveness, which in turn is followed by the resounding response concerning the greatness of God’s grace. Since sonship takes place through baptism, and since sonship and forgiveness are so closely linked in this passage, one wonders if the author still has the baptismal event in mind when he speaks of the forgiveness of sins.
1:8 The magnitude of God’s grace is amplified in this opening phrase, that he lavished on us (eperisseusen). The poetic nature of the Greek makes it difficult to know whether to attach the following words (with all wisdom and understanding) with verse 8 or verse 9. Is it God’s wisdom and insight (GNB, RSV) or is it wisdom and insight that God, through his grace, has lavished upon believers so that they could understand God’s will (NIV, NEB)? Given the parallel with Colossians 1:9 and the meaning of verse 9, it seems better to take wisdom and insight as coming from God’s grace.
The two terms, wisdom (sophia) and understanding (phronēsis), though not consistently distinguished in Scripture, generally refer to the knowledge of something, followed by the ability to apply that knowledge or wisdom to a right course of action. God has provided the knowledge and ability to know and to do his will.
1:9 God’s gift of wisdom and insight enables the believer to understand the mystery of his will (cf. GNB: “secret plan”). In Colossians, that mystery meant that the Gentiles were recipients of the gospel and heirs of salvation (1:26, 27; 2:2; 4:3). Though this thought appears also in Ephesians (cf. 3:3–6), this epistle carries the concept somewhat further with its emphasis upon the church and the unity of mankind. The revelation is part of God’s eternal plan (his good pleasure which he purposed) and is something that will be accomplished in Christ. As in verse 5, God’s purpose includes his good pleasure as well (cf. eudokia in Luke 2:14; Gal. 1:15). It pleased God to make his plan or will known and to complete that plan in his Son.
1:10 God’s “good pleasure” is put into effect or administered by Christ (for the use of oikonomia as “management,” “stewardship,” or “administration,” cf. Luke 16:2–4; 1 Cor. 9:17; 1 Pet. 4:10). He is the steward through whom God is working out his plan for the world—a plan that is in process and that will be culminated when the times will have reached their fulfillment (lit., “in the fullness of time”).
God’s ultimate plan is to unify all of creation under the headship of Christ. Elsewhere in the epistle, the author talks about bringing the Jews and Gentiles together into one body (2:11, 12; 3:6); here, however, he envisions a global unity. In many ways the words are reminiscent of the Christ hymn in Colossians, in which all things on earth and in heaven are reconciled in Christ (1:20).
It is difficult to know how far one should push this language or attempt to comprehend the scope of the author’s ideas. Are all things (ta panta) and heaven and earth just metaphors for universality, or does he mean the unity of heavenly beings (i.e., angels, principalities, powers, spirits, etc.) with human beings? Is he thinking of a cosmic and earthly renewal characteristic of the end times (Matt. 19:28; Rom. 8:18–25; 2 Pet. 3:10–13)? Although one cannot be sure of the details, it is clear that this hymn praises God that ultimately all things will find their place and unity in Christ.
The difficult word anakephalaiōsasthai is translated appropriately in the NIV to bring … together under one head, even Christ. In secular terms, the word is used for the summation of things, such as adding up numbers in mathematics or concluding an argument in a debate. In today’s language, people speak of “the bottom line” in much the same way. Paul uses the term in Romans 13:9 when he indicates that all of the commandments are being “summed up” in the one command of love.
In Ephesians, however, “addition” or “summation” does not quite express the author’s thought adequately. To bring everything together under one head, even Christ suggests that all things (human beings, history, and the entire universe) find their focus in Christ. This, essentially, is the content of God’s secret plan!
1:11–12 Up to this point in the hymn (vv. 3–10), the personal pronouns “we” and “us” refer to all Christians, irrespective of ethnic origin. But an important change takes place in the concluding verses of the hymn, where a distinction is made between Jewish and Gentile Christians: In verses 11–12, the “us” with whom the author identifies himself is the Jewish Christians; in verse 13, the “you” definitely refers to the Gentile believers; then the “we” in verse 14 refers to all of God’s people—both Jewish and Gentile believers. The distinctions mentioned here will receive further attention in chapter 2 of the epistle, where it is shown how Jews and Gentiles were brought together into one body in Christ.
When the author describes God’s action upon the Jewish believers, he repeats many of his earlier words and ideas: having been predestined (1:4) according to the plan (cf. 1:5, 9) of him who works out everything in conformity with the purpose of his will (1:5). With respect to the Jewish Christians, he wants to emphasize that what has happened to them was not by chance or by human merit but is due entirely to the eternal and elective purposes of God in Christ. All is of God!
The NIV In him we were also chosen does not quite capture the essence of the Greek eklērōthēmen. The verb klēroō means “to choose,” “to appoint by lot.” The noun (klēros), therefore, would be “the lot,” “share,” or “portion” that was obtained by lot. The Greek word for “inheritance,” “possession,” or “property” is the cognate word klēronomia (cf 1:14).
Behind this language is the OT concept that Israel was God’s “lot” or “chosen people” (Deut. 4:20; 9:29; 32:9; 1 Kings 8:51; Ps. 106:40; Jer. 10:16; Zech. 2:12). Given the context of verse 11 within a hymn that is celebrating God’s elective purpose, it seems likely that the author is referring to the Jewish Christians as those whom God has chosen as his own people. Now, however, that possession is claimed by virtue of their union with Christ (in him).
While being God’s people may result in praising God through prayer, worship, etc., the phrase in order that we … might be for the praise of his glory suggests that one’s very being or existence is involved. These new people of God are summoned to be a praise to God in the same manner that Israel was called as a nation to declare God’s glory in their life, witness, and worship (Isa. 43:21; Jer. 13:11).
Who are those who were the first to hope in Christ? Some commentators, by virtue of the Greek article with Christ, take the reference to be to the Jewish nation and their expectation of “the Christ,” that is, the coming Messiah; others see the comment applying to those Jews who believed in Christ and became the first Christians. In priority of time, they preceded the Gentiles with their hope (and faith) in Christ. This latter view appears to fit this context where the contrast between Jewish (1:11–12) and Gentile believers (1:13) is being discussed.
1:13 Here the author turns to the Gentiles and affirms that they, too, were included in Christ. He then proceeds to outline the steps that were involved in their coming to Christ:
First, they heard the word of truth, the gospel of your salvation. On some occasion these readers heard the message of the gospel, which resulted in their salvation. In this context, salvation probably signifies inner renewal and all the blessings and privileges available to believers because of their status in Christ (cf. 2:1ff.) rather than preservation from the wrath of God (cf. Rom. 5:9).
The phraseology of this opening statement is similar to Colossians 1:5 and to the ideas in Romans 10:14 and 17, which show that the proclamation of the gospel precedes faith in the gospel. A similar sequence takes place during Peter’s sermon on the day of Pentecost when he summons those who heard the gospel to repent and be baptized (Acts 2:37ff.).
Second, they believed in Christ, literally, “in whom also having believed.” Although the content of belief is not mentioned, it definitely must include the person of Christ (“If you confess with your mouth, ‘Jesus is Lord,’ and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved,” Rom. 10:9) or the gospel that bears witness to him.
Third, you were marked in him with a seal, the promised Holy Spirit. The imagery behind this phrase comes from the ancient custom of sealing (sphragizō), in which personal possessions (e.g., animals, household goods, slaves) received a mark or stamp of ownership in much the same way that things are branded or identified today. This act also confirmed or authenticated something as genuine. A seal on a letter or document, for example, declared that it was legally valid. People belonging to religious cults often were sealed with marks that bore the image of their god(s). The Book of Revelation talks about those who have or do not have “the seal of God on their foreheads” (Rev. 9:4; cf. also 7:2–8; 22:4; 2 Tim. 2:19).
In the NT, there are a number of references that indicate that the Holy Spirit is the Christian’s seal: In Romans, Paul relates the inner witness of the Spirit to the believer’s sonship (8:15, 16; cf. Gal. 4:6), thus affirming that the presence of the Holy Spirit in the believer is a sign that he or she belongs to God. The apostle is even more explicit in 2 Corinthians 1:22, “[God] set his seal of ownership on us, and put his Spirit in our hearts as a deposit, guaranteeing what is to come.” Ephesians 1:13 confirms this by assuring the believer that the seal is the possession of the Holy Spirit. It is a visible attestation that one belongs to Christ.
Although Paul connects the giving of the Holy Spirit to the acts of “hearing” the gospel and “believing” in Christ, there are credible reasons to believe that verse 13 has the baptismal event in mind, even though the term is not mentioned explicitly. First, there is an inseparable connection between faith and baptism in the NT. Baptism is believers’ baptism, and those who believed in Christ expressed their faith almost immediately in baptism (Acts 2:38, 41; 8:12, 35–38; 9:18; 10:47, 48; 19:5). Faith and baptism went so closely together that they were regarded as one act rather than two. Peter, for example, instructs his hearers to repent, that is, to have faith, believe, and to be baptized for the forgiveness of sins (2:38). When Paul becomes a Christian, he is told to “Get up, be baptized and wash your sins away, calling on his name” (Acts 22:16). Within the framework of the NT, one was not baptized unless one believed; nor did one believe without being baptized.
Second, the NT connects baptism with the reception of the Holy Spirit. Peter summons his audience to be baptized and receive “the gift of the Holy Spirit” (Acts 2:38). Paul associates baptism and the Holy Spirit on several occasions in his letters (1 Cor. 6:11; 12:13; Titus 3:5). And when Luke describes some of the major epochs in the life of the early Christian church, he includes faith, baptism, and the reception of the Holy Spirit as essential parts of becoming a Christian, that is, of Christian initiation (Acts 2:38ff.; 8:12–17; 19:1–6; cf. 10:44–48). There is no need for a “Spirit baptism” or a rite of confirmation apart from the reception of the Holy Spirit at the time of water baptism.
On the basis of these observations it appears legitimate to interpret 1:13 within the context of baptism. The aorist participles “having heard” (akousantes) and “having believed” (pisteusantes), followed by the aorist passive (“you were sealed with the Holy Spirit of promise”), are reminiscent of the faith, baptism, Holy Spirit pattern noted above. The author does not envision a sequence of events separated by a long period of time.
Although the Holy Spirit is the seal (1:13; 4:30; 2 Cor. 1:22), and 1:13 is a strong allusion to baptism, it is by no means certain that sealing is used as a technical term for baptism in Ephesians. The first definite reference to the “seal of baptism” occurs in the second century (ca. A.D. 150) in the Second Letter of Clement (7.6; 8.6). From this time onward, sphragis is the seal received by all Christians at baptism and thus becomes a term for baptism itself.
The effect of the Holy Spirit is to mark the believer with a seal. As a seal, the Spirit marks one out as belonging to Christ. It is interesting to note that this is virtually the same effect that baptism “into Christ” has. To be baptized into the name or person of Christ is to become Christ’s possession, to be placed under the Lord’s authority and protection.
1:14 In addition to ownership, the Holy Spirit is a deposit guaranteeing that believers will receive God’s promises. Most commentators suggest that the idea of guarantee (arrabōn) came into the Greek world from the Phoenicians who, in matters of trade, often would make a deposit or an installment as earnest money with the balance to be paid in full at some later date. This act obliged both buyer and seller to complete the transaction. But “the deal” included a sense of “quality” as well, for the person receiving the down payment looked forward to receiving full payment with goods of the same quality (Mitton, pp. 62–63). In the Christian life, the Holy Spirit is a pledge that God will complete his promise to deliver our inheritance. The statement in 2 Corinthians 5:5 is more specific about this idea: “God … has given us the Spirit as a deposit, guaranteeing what is to come.” One’s present life in the Spirit is a foretaste of one’s future and eternal life with the Spirit!
Beyond guaranteeing one’s inheritance, the Holy Spirit assures believers of the redemption of those who are God’s possession. Included in this translation are the two important theological concepts of redemption (apolytrōsis) and possession (peripoiēsis). Some commentators (cf. Abbott, p. 24) believe that the context (our inheritance) requires that possession likewise be “our possession.” Thus, believers are redeemed, but await a future time when they will take full possession of their redemption. This view has led to the ambiguous and inadequate translation in the RSV, “which is the guarantee of our inheritance until we acquire possession of it, to the praise of his glory.”
Most commentators—and as a result most English translations, like the NIV—think the verse is stressing that God is the agent of redemption and that believers are God’s possession (NIV, NASB), “his own” (NEB), or “those who are his” (GNB). Although redemption is a present gift, the Holy Spirit assures the believer that ultimately God will redeem completely those who are his; he is a guarantee until the complete freedom (redemption) of God’s own people (cf. 1 Pet. 2:9).
These thoughts recall the “already” and the “not yet” aspect of the Christian life. Believers have been given the Holy Spirit, enjoy new life in Christ, have been redeemed, but still await the fulfillment of these blessings at the second Advent. The sealing of the Holy Spirit has an eschatological function that points toward the final day, when their bodies will completely be freed (redeemed) from all the effects of sin. Ephesians 4:30 expands this concept more fully when it refers to “the Holy Spirit of God, with whom you were sealed for the day of redemption.” A similar thought concerning redemption is expressed in Romans 8:23, where Paul discusses the future glory of God’s people and God’s creation: “We ourselves, who have the firstfruits of the Spirit, groan inwardly as we wait eagerly for our adoption as sons, the redemption of our bodies.”
This great hymn of praise (vv. 3–14) ends with a note that has been sounded several times before with respect to God’s elective purpose for humanity. Hence, election and sonship are to the praise of his glorious grace (v. 6); redemption, and all of its benefits (vv. 7–11), are to culminate in a life of praise (that we … might be for the praise of his glory—v. 12); finally, the pledge of the Holy Spirit is presented in relation to the unfolding plan of God. This, also, is to the praise of his glory (v. 14).
Additional Notes
On 1:3–14 cf. J. T. Sanders “Hymnic Elements in Ephesians 1–3,” ZNW 56 (1965), pp. 214–32. Other specialized studies include V. A. Bartling, “The Church of God’s Eternal Plan: A Study of Ephesians 1:1–14,” Concordia Theological Monthly 36 (1965), pp. 198–204; J. Coutts, “Ephesians 1:3–14 and 1 Peter 1:3–12,” pp. 115–27; N. H. Keathley, “To the Praise of His Glory: Ephesians I,” RevExp 76 (1979), pp. 485–93; P. T. O’Brien, “Ephesians I: An Unusual Introduction to a New Testament Letter,” NTS 25 (1979), pp. 504–16. O’Brien notes that vv. 3–14 have a “didactic intent,” a “paraenetic aim,” and an “epistolary function.”
The following phrases from vv. 3–14 in the NIV indicate the many variations of the “in Christ” statements:
in Christ (v. 3)
in him (en autō, i.e., Christ, v. 4)
through Jesus Christ (v. 5)
in the One he loves (v. 6)
in Christ (v. 9)
under one head, even Christ (v. 10)
in him (v. 11)
in Christ (v. 12)
in Christ (v. 13)
in him (v. 13)
1:3 Some helpful material on “heavenlies” includes Caragounis, The Ephesian Mysterion, pp. 146–52; Robinson, Ephesians, pp. 20–22; A. T. Lincoln, “Re-Examination of ‘The Heavenlies’ in Ephesians,” NTS 19 (1973), pp. 468–83. Lincoln gives a good history of interpretation as well as an examination of H. Odeburg’s The View of the Universe in the Epistle to the Ephesians (Lund: C. W. K. Gleerup, 1934). He differs with Odeburg by concluding that 3:10 and 6:12 have a “local” rather than a “spiritual” meaning: “In Ephesians then it would not be surprising if en tois epouraniois were to have a reference to heaven as a distinct part of the created universe but one which retains its concealing relation to the spiritual world and to God himself, and thus also its aspect of incomprehensibility” (p. 480). See also Lincoln’s Paradise Now and Not Yet: Studies in the Role of the Heavenly Dimension in Paul’s Thought with Special Reference to His Eschatology, SNTSMS 43 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1981), esp. pp. 135–68.
1:7 For the association between baptism and the forgiveness of sins in the NT, cf. Acts 2:38; 22:16; 1 Cor. 6:11; Titus 3:5; 1 Pet. 3:18–21 and the disc. on Col. 2:11–15.
1:10 The ideas in this verse should not be used to promote a doctrine of “universalism” that teaches that all humanity ultimately will be saved (see Stott, God’s New Society, pp. 42–45; Caragounis, The Ephesian Mysterion, pp. 143ff.; Hanson, on anakephalaiosis, in his The Unity of the Church in the New Testament, pp. 123–25).
1:11–12 On “we” and “you,” see D. Jayne, “ ‘We’ and ‘You’ in Ephesians,” ExpT 85 (1974), pp. 151–52; R. A. Wilson, “ ‘We’ and ‘You’ in the Epistle to the Ephesians,” Studia Evangelica 2 (1964), pp. 676–80.
1:13 G. Fitzer, “sphragis,” TDNT, vol. 8, pp. 939–53; P. W. Evans, “Sealing as a Term for Baptism,” The Baptist Quarterly 16 (1955–56), pp. 171–75; J. Ysebaret, Greek Baptismal Terminology (Nijmegen: Dekker & Van de Vegt, 1962), pp. 182ff.
On water and Spirit baptism, see G. R. Beasley-Murray, Baptism in the New Testament (London: Macmillan, 1962); J. D. G. Dunn, Baptism in the Holy Spirit (London: SCM, 1970).
1:14 On the “already” and the “not yet” in Paul’s theology, cf. J. D. Hester, Paul’s Concept of Inheritance. Scottish Journal of Theology Occasional Papers No. 14 (Edinburgh: Oliver & Boyd, 1968), esp. pp. 90–104; D. R. Denton, “Inheritance in Paul and Ephesians,” EQ 54 (1982), pp. 157–62; P. L. Hammer, “Comparison of klēronomia in Paul and in Ephesians,” JBL 79 (1960), pp. 267–72.