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Text -- Ephesians 2:5 (NET)

Strongs On/Off
Context
2:5 even though we were dead in transgressions, made us alive together with Christ– by grace you are saved!–
Parallel   Cross Reference (TSK)   ITL  

Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Dictionary Themes and Topics: Salvation | Righteous | Resurrection | Regeneration | QUICK; QUICKEN | MAN; NEW | HOPE | God | GRACE | Eternal life | Ephesians, Epistle to | Election of Grace | Death | BAPTISMAL REGENERATION | Atonement | more
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
Robertson , Wesley , JFB , Clarke , Calvin , TSK

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , Haydock , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes

Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis , Maclaren , MHCC , Matthew Henry , Barclay , Constable , College

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Robertson: Eph 2:5 - -- Even when we were dead ( kai ontas hēmās nekrous ). Repeats the beginning of Eph 2:1, but he changes humās (you Gentiles) to hēmās (us ...

Even when we were dead ( kai ontas hēmās nekrous ).

Repeats the beginning of Eph 2:1, but he changes humās (you Gentiles) to hēmās (us Jews).

Robertson: Eph 2:5 - -- Quickened us together with Christ ( sunezōopoiēsen tōi Christōi ). First aorist active indicative of the double compound verb sunzōopoieō...

Quickened us together with Christ ( sunezōopoiēsen tōi Christōi ).

First aorist active indicative of the double compound verb sunzōopoieō as in Col 2:13 which see. Associative instrumental case in Christōi . Literal resurrection in the case of Jesus, spiritual in our case as pictured in baptism.

Robertson: Eph 2:5 - -- By grace have ye been saved ( chariti este sesōsmenoi ). Instrumental case of chariti and perfect passive periphrastic indicative of sōzō . P...

By grace have ye been saved ( chariti este sesōsmenoi ).

Instrumental case of chariti and perfect passive periphrastic indicative of sōzō . Parenthetical clause interjected in the sentence. All of grace because we were dead.

Wesley: Eph 2:5 - -- In conformity to him, and by virtue of our union with him.

In conformity to him, and by virtue of our union with him.

Wesley: Eph 2:5 - -- Grace is both the beginning and end. The apostle speaks indifferently either in the first or second person; the Jews and gentiles being in the same ci...

Grace is both the beginning and end. The apostle speaks indifferently either in the first or second person; the Jews and gentiles being in the same circumstance, both by nature and by grace. This text lays the axe to the very root of spiritual pride, and all glorying in ourselves. Therefore St. Paul, foreseeing the backwardness of mankind to receive it, yet knowing the absolute necessity of its being received, again asserts the very same truth, Eph 2:8, in the very same words.

JFB: Eph 2:5 - -- The best reading is in the Greek, "dead in our (literally, 'the') trespasses."

The best reading is in the Greek, "dead in our (literally, 'the') trespasses."

JFB: Eph 2:5 - -- "vivified" spiritually, and consequences hereafter, corporally. There must be a spiritual resurrection of the soul before there can be a comfortable r...

"vivified" spiritually, and consequences hereafter, corporally. There must be a spiritual resurrection of the soul before there can be a comfortable resurrection of the body [PEARSON] (Joh 11:25-26; Rom 8:11).

JFB: Eph 2:5 - -- The Head being seated at God's right hand, the body also sits there with Him [CHRYSOSTOM]. We are already seated there IN Him ("in Christ Jesus," Eph ...

The Head being seated at God's right hand, the body also sits there with Him [CHRYSOSTOM]. We are already seated there IN Him ("in Christ Jesus," Eph 2:6), and hereafter shall be seated by Him; IN Him already as in our Head, which is the ground of our hope; by Him hereafter, as by the conferring cause, when hope shall be swallowed up in fruition [PEARSON]. What God wrought in Christ, He wrought (by the very fact) in all united to Christ, and one with Him.

JFB: Eph 2:5 - -- Greek, "Ye are in a saved state." Not merely "ye are being saved," but ye "are passed from death unto life" (Joh 5:24). Salvation is to the Christian ...

Greek, "Ye are in a saved state." Not merely "ye are being saved," but ye "are passed from death unto life" (Joh 5:24). Salvation is to the Christian not a thing to be waited for hereafter, but already realized (1Jo 3:14). The parenthetic introduction of this clause here (compare Eph 2:8) is a burst of Paul's feeling, and in order to make the Ephesians feel that grace from first to last is the sole source of salvation; hence, too, he says "ye," not "we."

Clarke: Eph 2:5 - -- Even when we were dead in sins - Dead in our souls; dead towards God; dead in law; and exposed to death eternal

Even when we were dead in sins - Dead in our souls; dead towards God; dead in law; and exposed to death eternal

Clarke: Eph 2:5 - -- Hath quickened us together with Christ - God has given us as complete a resurrection from the death of sin to a life of righteousness, as the body o...

Hath quickened us together with Christ - God has given us as complete a resurrection from the death of sin to a life of righteousness, as the body of Christ has had from the grave. And as this quickening, or making alive, was most gratuitous on God’ s part, the apostle, with great propriety, says; By grace ye are saved.

Calvin: Eph 2:5 - -- 5.Even when we were dead in sin These words have the same emphasis as similar expressions in another Epistle. “For when we were yet without stren...

5.Even when we were dead in sin These words have the same emphasis as similar expressions in another Epistle.

“For when we were yet without strength, in due time Christ died, for the ungodly. — But God commendeth his love toward us, in that, while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us.”
(Rom 5:6.)

Whether the words, by grace ye are saved, have been inserted by another hand, I know not; but, as they are perfectly agreeable to the context, I am quite willing to receive them as written by Paul. They show us that he always feels as if he had not sufficiently proclaimed the riches of Divine grace, and accordingly expresses, by a variety of terms, the same truth, that everything connected with our salvation ought to be ascribed to God as its author. And certainly he who duly weighs the ingratitude of men will not complain that this parenthesis is superfluous.

TSK: Eph 2:5 - -- dead : Eph 2:1; Rom 5:6, Rom 5:8, Rom 5:10 quickened : Eph 2:1, Eph 5:14; Joh 5:21, Joh 6:63; Rom 8:2 grace ye : Gr. whose grace ye, Eph 2:8; Act 15:1...

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Eph 2:5 - -- Even when we were dead in sins - notes, Eph 2:1; compare Rom 5:8. The construction here is, "God, who is rich in mercy, on account of the great...

Even when we were dead in sins - notes, Eph 2:1; compare Rom 5:8. The construction here is, "God, who is rich in mercy, on account of the great love which he bare unto us, even being dead in sin, hath quickened us,"etc. It does not mean that he quickened us when we were dead in sin, but that he loved us then, and made provision for our salvation. It was love to the children of wrath; love to those who had no love to return to him; love to the alienated and the lost. That is true love - the sincerest and the purest benevolence - love, not like that of people, but such only as God bestows. Man loves his friend, his benefactor, his kindred - God loves his foes, and seeks to do them good.

Hath quickened us - Hath made us alive see Eph 2:1.

Together with Christ - In connection with him; or in virtue of his being raised up from the grave. The meaning is, that there was such a connection between Christ and those whom the Father hath given to him, that his resurrection from the grave involved their resurrection to spiritual life. It was like raising up the head and the members - the whole body together; compare the notes at Rom 6:5. Everywhere in the New Testament, the close connection of the believer with Christ is affirmed. We are crucified with him. We die with him. We rise with him. We live with him. We reign with him. We are joint heirs with him. We share his sufferings on earth 1Pe 4:13, and we share his glory with him on his throne; Rev 3:21.

By grace ye are saved - Margin, "by whose;"see the notes at Rom 3:24. Paul’ s mind was full of the subject of salvation by grace, and he throws it in here, even in an argument, as a point which he would never have them lose sight of. The subject before him was one eminently adapted to bring this truth to mind, and though, in the train of his arguments, he had no time now to dwell on it, yet he would not suffer any opportunity to pass without referring to it.

Poole: Eph 2:5 - -- Hath quickened us hath raised us up from the death of sin to the life of righteousness, not only in our justification, in which God frees us from our...

Hath quickened us hath raised us up from the death of sin to the life of righteousness, not only in our justification, in which God frees us from our obnoxiousness to eternal death, and gives us a right to eternal life, who before were dead in law, (though this may be included), but especially in our regeneration, by the infusion of a vital principle.

Together with Christ either:

1. God, in quickening Christ, hath also quickened us; Christ’ s quickening, or receiving his life after death, being not only the type and exemplar of our spiritual enlivening or regeneration, but the cause of it, inasmuch as we are quickened, as meritoriously by his death, so effectively by his life: Christ, as having died and risen again, exerciseth that power the Father gave him of quickening whom he will, Joh 5:21 . Or:

2. In Christ as our Head virtually, and by the power of his resurrection actually. Or:

3. By the same power whereby he raised up Christ from the dead, Eph 1:20 . See the like expression, Col 2:13 .

(By grace are ye saved) some read the words without a parenthesis, supplying by whose, and so refer them to Christ, quickened us together with Christ, by whose grace ye are saved but if the parenthesis stand, yet here seems to be a connection with the foregoing words, at least a reason of the apostle’ s bringing in these; for having mentioned God’ s great love, Eph 2:4 , as the cause of their spiritual enlivening here, which is the beginning of their salvation, he infers from thence that the whole of their salvation is of grace, i.e. alike free, and as much out of God’ s great love, as the beginning of it, viz. their quickening, is.

Haydock: Eph 2:5 - -- Quickened us together in Christ. Faith, baptism, and grace, are pledges of our future resurrection and glorification in heaven. Our present convers...

Quickened us together in Christ. Faith, baptism, and grace, are pledges of our future resurrection and glorification in heaven. Our present conversion is also a kind of resurrection. The time is come, when the dead shall hear the voice of the Son of God, and those who hear shall live. (St. Augustine upon St. John, No. 7.)

Gill: Eph 2:5 - -- Even when we were dead in sins,.... See Gill on Eph 2:1. Hath quickened us together with Christ: which may be understood either of regeneration, wh...

Even when we were dead in sins,.... See Gill on Eph 2:1.

Hath quickened us together with Christ: which may be understood either of regeneration, when a soul that is dead in a moral or spiritual sense, is quickened and made alive; a principle of life is infused, and acts of life are put forth; such have their spiritual senses, and these in exercise; they can feel the load and weight of sin; see their lost state and condition, the odiousness of sin, and the beauty of a Saviour, the insufficiency of their own righteousness, and the fulness and suitableness of Christ's; breathe after divine and spiritual things; speak in prayer to God, and the language of Canaan to fellow Christians; move towards Christ, exercise grace on him, act for him, and walk on in him: and this life they have not from themselves, for previous to it they are dead, and in this quickening work are entirely passive; nor can regenerate persons quicken themselves, when in dead and lifeless frames, and much less unregenerate sinners; but this is God's act, the act of God the Father; though not exclusive of the Son, who quickens whom he will; nor of the Spirit, who is the Spirit of life from Christ; and it is an instance of the exceeding greatness, both of his power and love; and this may be said to be done with Christ, because he is the procuring and meritorious cause of it, by his death and resurrection from the dead; and is the author and efficient cause of it; and he is the matter of it, it is not so much the quickened persons that live, as Christ that lives in them, and it is the same life he himself lives; and because he lives, they shall live also; it is in him as in the fountain, and in them as in the stream: or else this may be understood of justification; men are dead in a legal sense, and on account of sin, are under the sentence of death; though they naturally think themselves alive, and in a good state; but when the Spirit of God comes, he strikes dead all their hopes of life by a covenant of works; not merely by letting in the terrors of the law upon the conscience, but by showing the spirituality of it, and the exceeding sinfulness of sin; and how incapable they are of satisfying the law, for the transgressions of it; and then he works faith in them, whereby they revive and live; they see pardon and righteousness in Christ, and pray for the one, and plead the other; and also lay hold and live upon the righteousness of Christ, when the Spirit seals up the pardon of their sins to them, and passes the sentence of justification on them, and so they reckon themselves alive unto God; and this is the justification of life, the Scripture speaks of; and this is in consequence of their being quickened with Christ, at the time of his resurrection; for when he rose from the dead, they rose with him; when he was justified, they were justified in him; and in this sense when he was quickened, they were quickened with him:

by grace ye are saved: the Claromontane copy and the Vulgate Latin version read, "by whose grace"; and the Arabic and Ethiopic versions, "by his grace"; either by the grace of him that quickens, or by the grace of Christ with whom they were quickened; the Syriac version renders it, "by his grace he hath redeemed us"; which seems to refer to the redeeming grace of Christ; and so the Ethiopic version, "and hath delivered us by his grace"; and there is a change of the person into "us", which seems more agreeable to what goes before, and follows after; See Gill on Eph 2:8.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Eph 2:5 Or “by grace you have been saved.” The perfect tense in Greek connotes both completed action (“you have been saved”) and conti...

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: Eph 2:1-22 - --1 By comparing what we were by nature, with what we are by grace,10 he declares that we are made for good works: and being brought near by Christ, sh...

Maclaren: Eph 2:4-5 - --The Resurrection Of Dead Souls God, who is rich in mercy, for His great love wherewith He loved us, even when we were dead in sins, hath quickened us...

MHCC: Eph 2:1-10 - --Sin is the death of the soul. A man dead in trespasses and sins has no desire for spiritual pleasures. When we look upon a corpse, it gives an awful f...

Matthew Henry: Eph 2:4-10 - -- Here the apostle begins his account of the glorious change that was wrought in them by converting grace, where observe, I. By whom, and in what mann...

Barclay: Eph 2:4-10 - --Paul had begun by saying that, as we are, we are dead in sins and trespasses; now he says that God in his love and mercy has made us alive in Jesus...

Constable: Eph 1:3--4:1 - --II. THE CHRISTIAN'S CALLING 1:3--3:21 ". . . the first three chapters are one long prayer, culminating in the gr...

Constable: Eph 1:3--2:11 - --A. Individual calling 1:3-2:10 Paul began the body of his letter by revealing the spiritual blessings th...

Constable: Eph 2:1-10 - --3. The motive: grace 2:1-10 Paul concluded his revelation of the Christian's individual calling ...

Constable: Eph 2:4-10 - --Now alive in God 2:4-10 The wrath of God on the unbeliever (v. 3) contrasts with the grace of God on the believer (vv. 5, 7, 8). God's grace toward so...

College: Eph 2:1-22 - --EPHESIANS 2 B. GOD'S SALVATION (2:1-22) 1. Saved from Sin (2:1-10) 1 As for you, you were dead in your transgressions and sins, 2 in which you used...

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Introduction / Outline

Robertson: Ephesians (Book Introduction) The Epistle to the Ephesians From Rome a.d. 63 By Way of Introduction There are some problems of a special nature that confront us about the so-...

JFB: Ephesians (Book Introduction) THE headings (Eph 1:1, and Eph 3:1, show that this Epistle claims to be that of Paul. This claim is confirmed by the testimonies of IRENÆUS, [Against...

JFB: Ephesians (Outline) INSCRIPTION: ORIGIN OF THE CHURCH IN THE FATHER'S ETERNAL COUNSEL, AND THE SON'S BLOODSHEDDING: THE SEALING OF IT BY THE SPIRIT. THANKSGIVING AND PRA...

TSK: Ephesians 2 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Eph 2:1, By comparing what we were by nature, with what we are by grace, Eph 2:10. he declares that we are made for good works, and being...

Poole: Ephesians 2 (Chapter Introduction) CHAPTER 2

MHCC: Ephesians (Book Introduction) This epistle was written when St. Paul was a prisoner at Rome. The design appears to be to strengthen the Ephesians in the faith of Christ, and to giv...

MHCC: Ephesians 2 (Chapter Introduction) (Eph 2:1-10) The riches of God's grace towards men, shown from their deplorable state by nature, and the happy change Divine grace makes in them. (Ep...

Matthew Henry: Ephesians (Book Introduction) An Exposition, with Practical Observations, of The Epistle of St. Paul to the Ephesians Some think that this epistle to the Ephesians was a circular l...

Matthew Henry: Ephesians 2 (Chapter Introduction) This chapter contains an account, I. Of the miserable condition of these Ephesians by nature (Eph 2:1-3) and again (Eph 2:11, Eph 2:12). II. Of t...

Barclay: Ephesians (Book Introduction) A GENERAL INTRODUCTION TO THE LETTERS OF PAUL The Letters Of Paul There is no more interesting body of documents in the New Testament than the letter...

Barclay: Ephesians 2 (Chapter Introduction) The Christless Life And The Grace Of God (Eph_2:1-10) 2:1-10 When you were dead in your sins and trespasses, those sins and trespasses in which onc...

Constable: Ephesians (Book Introduction) Introduction Historical background Almost all Christians believed in the Pauline autho...

Constable: Ephesians (Outline) Outline I. Salutation 1:1-2 II. The Christian's calling 1:3-3:21 A. Indi...

Constable: Ephesians Ephesians Bibliography Abbot, T. K. A Critical and Exegetical Commentary on the Epistles to the Ephesians and t...

Haydock: Ephesians (Book Introduction) THE EPISTLE OF ST. PAUL, THE APOSTLE, TO THE EPHESIANS. INTRODUCTION. Ephesus was a famous city, the metropolis of Asia Minor, upon the Ægean...

Gill: Ephesians (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO EPHESIANS The city of Ephesus is, by Pliny a, called the other light of Asia; Miletus was one, and Ephesus the other: it was the me...

Gill: Ephesians 2 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO EPHESIANS 2 The design of the apostle in this chapter, is to magnify the riches of divine grace, in the effectual calling and salva...

College: Ephesians (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION We are saved by grace through faith! We do not earn our salvation - it is the gift of God. This is the shocking good news of Ephesians. ...

College: Ephesians (Outline) OUTLINE I. DOCTRINE: God's Plan for Salvation - Eph 1:1-3:21 A. God's Blessings - 1:1-23 1. Salutation - 1:1-2 2. Present Blessings in Ch...

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