
Text -- Ephesians 2:8 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Robertson: Eph 2:8 - -- For by grace ( tēi gar chariti ).
Explanatory reason. "By the grace"already mentioned in Eph 2:5 and so with the article.
For by grace (
Explanatory reason. "By the grace"already mentioned in Eph 2:5 and so with the article.

Robertson: Eph 2:8 - -- Through faith ( dia pisteōs ).
This phrase he adds in repeating what he said in Eph 2:5 to make it plainer. "Grace"is God’ s part, "faith"ours...
Through faith (
This phrase he adds in repeating what he said in Eph 2:5 to make it plainer. "Grace"is God’ s part, "faith"ours.

Robertson: Eph 2:8 - -- And that ( kai touto ).
Neuter, not feminine tautē , and so refers not to pistis (feminine) or to charis (feminine also), but to the act of bei...
And that (
Neuter, not feminine
Vincent: Eph 2:8 - -- For by grace, etc.
This may truly be called exceeding riches of grace, for ye are saved by grace. Grace has the article, the grace of G...

And that
Not faith , but the salvation .

Of God
Emphatic. Of God is it the gift.
Wesley: Eph 2:8 - -- Grace, without any respect to human worthiness, confers the glorious gift. Faith, with an empty hand, and without any pretence to personal desert, rec...
Grace, without any respect to human worthiness, confers the glorious gift. Faith, with an empty hand, and without any pretence to personal desert, receives the heavenly blessing.

Wesley: Eph 2:8 - -- This refers to the whole preceding clause, That ye are saved through faith, is the gift of God.
This refers to the whole preceding clause, That ye are saved through faith, is the gift of God.
JFB: Eph 2:8 - -- Illustrating "the exceeding riches of His grace in kindness." Translate as in Eph 2:5, "Ye are in a saved state."
Illustrating "the exceeding riches of His grace in kindness." Translate as in Eph 2:5, "Ye are in a saved state."

JFB: Eph 2:8 - -- The effect of the power of Christ's resurrection (Eph 1:19-20; Phi 3:10) whereby we are "raised together" with Him (Eph 2:6; Col 2:12). Some of the ol...
The effect of the power of Christ's resurrection (Eph 1:19-20; Phi 3:10) whereby we are "raised together" with Him (Eph 2:6; Col 2:12). Some of the oldest manuscripts read, "through your (literally, 'the') faith." The instrument or mean of salvation on the part of the person saved; Christ alone is the meritorious agent.

JFB: Eph 2:8 - -- Namely, the act of believing, or "faith." "Of yourselves" stands in opposition to, "it is the gift of God" (Phi 1:29). "That which I have said, 'throu...
Namely, the act of believing, or "faith." "Of yourselves" stands in opposition to, "it is the gift of God" (Phi 1:29). "That which I have said, 'through faith,' I do not wish to be understood so as if I excepted faith itself from grace" [ESTIUS]. "God justifies the believing man, not for the worthiness of his belief, but for the worthiness of Him in whom he believes" [HOOKER]. The initiation, as well as the increase, of faith, is from the Spirit of God, not only by an external proposal of the word, but by internal illumination in the soul [PEARSON]. Yet "faith" cometh by the means which man must avail himself of, namely, "hearing the word of God" (Rom 10:17), and prayer (Luk 11:13), though the blessing is wholly of God (1Co 3:6-7).
Clarke -> Eph 2:8
Clarke: Eph 2:8 - -- For by grace are ye saved, through faith - As ye are now brought into a state of salvation, your sins being all blotted out, and you made partakers ...
For by grace are ye saved, through faith - As ye are now brought into a state of salvation, your sins being all blotted out, and you made partakers of the Holy Spirit; and, having a hope full of immortality, you must not attribute this to any works or merit of yours; for when this Gospel reached you, you were all found dead in trespasses and dead in sins; therefore it was God’ s free mercy to you, manifested through Christ, in whom ye were commanded to believe; and, having believed by the power of the Holy Spirit, ye received, and were sealed by, the Holy Spirit of promise; so that this salvation is in no sense of yourselves, but is the free gift of God; and not of any kind of works; so that no man can boast as having wrought out his own salvation, or even contributed any thing towards it. By grace arc ye saved, through faith in Christ. This is a true doctrine, and continues to be essential to the salvation of man to the end of the world
But whether are we to understand, faith or salvation as being the gift of God? This question is answered by the Greek text:
Calvin -> Eph 2:8
Calvin: Eph 2:8 - -- 8.For by grace are ye saved This is an inference from the former statements. Having treated of election and of effectual calling, he arrives at this ...
8.For by grace are ye saved This is an inference from the former statements. Having treated of election and of effectual calling, he arrives at this general conclusion, that they had obtained salvation by faith alone. First, he asserts, that the salvation of the Ephesians was entirely the work, the gracious work of God. But then they had obtained this grace by faith. On one side, we must look at God; and, on the other, at man. God declares, that he owes us nothing; so that salvation is not a reward or recompense, but unmixed grace. The next question is, in what way do men receive that salvation which is offered to them by the hand of God? The answer is, by faith; and hence he concludes that nothing connected with it is our own. If, on the part of God, it is grace alone, and if we bring nothing but faith, which strips us of all commendation, it follows that salvation does not come from us.
Ought we not then to be silent about free-will, and good intentions, and fancied preparations, and merits, and satisfactions? There is none of these which does not claim a share of praise in the salvation of men; so that the praise of grace would not, as Paul shews, remain undiminished. When, on the part of man, the act of receiving salvation is made to consist in faith alone, all other means, on which men are accustomed to rely, are discarded. Faith, then, brings a man empty to God, that he may be filled with the blessings of Christ. And so he adds, not of yourselves; that claiming nothing for themselves, they may acknowledge God alone as the author of their salvation.
Defender -> Eph 2:8
Defender: Eph 2:8 - -- This classic gospel verse stresses that even the faith through which we receive God's salvation is the free gift of God. We have nothing of which to b...
This classic gospel verse stresses that even the faith through which we receive God's salvation is the free gift of God. We have nothing of which to boast (Eph 2:9)."
TSK -> Eph 2:8
TSK: Eph 2:8 - -- by : Eph 2:5; Rom 3:24; 2Th 1:9
through : Mar 16:16; Luk 7:50; Joh 3:14-18, Joh 3:36, Joh 5:24, Joh 6:27-29, Joh 6:35, Joh 6:40; Act 13:39; Act 15:7-9...
by : Eph 2:5; Rom 3:24; 2Th 1:9
through : Mar 16:16; Luk 7:50; Joh 3:14-18, Joh 3:36, Joh 5:24, Joh 6:27-29, Joh 6:35, Joh 6:40; Act 13:39; Act 15:7-9, Act 16:31; Rom 3:22-26, Rom 4:5, Rom 4:16, Rom 10:9, Rom 10:10; Gal 3:14, Gal 3:22; 1Jo 5:10-12
that : Eph 2:10, Eph 1:19; Mat 16:17; Joh 1:12, Joh 1:13, Joh 6:37, Joh 6:44, Joh 6:65; Act 14:27, Act 16:14; Rom 10:14, Rom 10:17; Phi 1:29; Col 2:12; Jam 1:16-18

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Eph 2:8
Barnes: Eph 2:8 - -- For by grace are ye saved - By mere favor. It is not by your Own merit; it is not because you have any claim. This is a favorite doctrine with ...
For by grace are ye saved - By mere favor. It is not by your Own merit; it is not because you have any claim. This is a favorite doctrine with Paul, as it is with all who love the Lord Jesus in sincerity; compare the notes at Rom 1:7; Rom 3:24, note.
Through faith - Grace bestowed through faith, or in connection with believing; see the notes at Rom 1:17; Rom 4:16, note.
And that not of yourselves - That is, salvation does not proceed from yourselves. The word rendered "that"-
Whether this passage proves it or not, it is certainly true that faith is the gift of God. It exists in the mind only when the Holy Spirit produces it there, and is, in common with every other Christian excellence, to be traced to his agency on the heart. This opinion, however, does not militate at all with the doctrine that man himself "believes."It is not God that "believes"for him, for that is impossible. It is his own mind that actually believes, or that exercises faith; see the notes at Rom 4:3. In the same manner "repentance"is to be traced to God. It is one of the fruits of the operation of the Holy Spirit on the soul. But the Holy Spirit does not "repent"for us. It is our "own mind"that repents; our own heart that feels; our own eyes that weep - and without this there can he no true repentance. No one can repent for another; and God neither can nor ought to repent; for us. He has done no wrong, and if repentance is ever exercised, therefore, it must be exercised by our own minds. So of faith. God cannot believe for us. "We"must believe, or "we"shall be damned. Still this does not conflict at all with the opinion, that if we exercise faith, the inclination to do it is to be traced to the agency of God on the heart. I would not contend, therefore, about the grammatical construction of this passage, with respect to the point of the theology contained in it; still it accords better with the obvious grammatical construction, and with the design of the passage to understand the word "that"as referring not to "faith"only, but to "salvation by grace."So Calvin understands it, and so it is understood by Storr, Locke, Clarke, Koppe, Grotius, and others.
It is the gift of God - Salvation by grace is his gift. It is not of merit; it is wholly by favor.
Poole -> Eph 2:8
Poole: Eph 2:8 - -- For by grace the free favour of God, as Eph 2:5 , are ye, even ye Ephesians, Gentiles, who had not such promises made to you as the Jews had, Eph ...
For by grace the free favour of God, as Eph 2:5 , are ye, even ye Ephesians, Gentiles, who had not such promises made to you as the Jews had, Eph 2:12 ,
saved from first to last, from your calling, Eph 2:5 , to your glorification, Eph 2:6 .
Objection. How are believers said to be saved, when they are not yet glorified?
Answer.
1. Because Christ their Head is glorified.
2. Because their salvation, begun in their effectual calling, shall be as certainly accomplished in them as it is begun in them, and perfected in their Head, Christ.
Through faith by which ye lay hold on the grace offered you in the gospel. Faith is not considered here as a work done by us, but as an instrument or means applying the grace and salvation tendered to us.
And that not of yourselves not for your own worth, nor by your own strength.
It is the gift of God that ye are saved is the gift of God, and therefore free and purely by grace.
God is opposed to self: gift relates not merely to faith immediately preceding, but to the whole sentence.
PBC -> Eph 2:8
PBC: Eph 2:8 - -- " For by grace are ye saved"
John Gill says in part concerning Eph 2:8 " For by grace are ye saved..." This is to be understood, not of temporal sal...
" For by grace are ye saved"
John Gill says in part concerning Eph 2:8 " For by grace are ye saved..." This is to be understood, not of temporal salvation, nor of preservation in Christ, nor of providential salvation, in order to vocation, and much less of being put in a way of salvation, or only in a salvable state; but of spiritual salvation, and that actual. 1
To all this I say a BIG AMEN. 2
Born again people will hunger to do all the works that accompany salvation (believe, repent, be baptized, etc.); however, we most emphatically believe that these are the evidences of a gracious state and not the cause of a gracious state. Salvation is by grace and not of works, lest any man should boast! 527
" ye"
" ye" -(whoever that has been shown the exceeding riches of his grace in His kindness toward us through Christ Jesus in regeneration and being raised up to set together with Christ Jesus) " saved through faith; and that not of yourselves: it is the gift of God:" -the faith that is under consideration is the religious principles[i] that we hold to. If someone asked you what is your faith you could answer " Christian" or you could be more specific and say " Baptist" or even more specific, " Primitive Baptist." 6
" saved"
IMO, the context is strongest evidence that the salvation includes the eternal dimension. Eph 2:8 is not in a vacuum; it starts with the word " for" which connects it with the concept of salvation established in the preceding verses. In the scripture salvation is usually simply called " salvation." Paul (and others) evidently felt no need to use explicit adjectives to describe salvation as we do today. Of course Paul wasn’t confronted with some of the carefully woven errors that have become common among professing christians today. Notwithstanding, I believe the best and strongest arguments are made from explanations grounded directly in the context rather than imposing specially adapted adjectives. 8
" through faith"
Eph 2:8-9 -" For by grace are ye saved through faith; and that not of yourselves: it is the gift of God: Not of works, lest any man should boast." Verse 8 has three entities -Grace, Salvation and Faith, with two neutral pronouns -" That" and " It" and both have as their antecedent all three -Grace, Salvation and Faith. Next, these three are not of works by man. This " THROUGH FAITH" is the same as is found in Ro 3:25 -This is God’s Faith in His Son’s Obedience to the Father’s Will. This is passive on " man’s part." 14
This " faith" is first " born of God" 1Jo 5:4 [a], that is, created by God in the soul at regeneration. But John takes a further step and claims that this " faith" must be informed by the gospel, move toward Christ and embrace Him in confident trust. 69
Let us contrast the terms BY FAITH with THROUGH FAITH? Ro 3:30. -There is a difference. It is very interesting. Ro 10:17 teaches that there is a TIMELY GOSPEL FAITH, but it is only a reflection of the preceding measure of faith God deals- Ro 12:3 which the unregenerated does not have- 2Th 3:2. Finally, faith begins within a person at the point of Regeneration and is called a Fruit of the Spirit- Ga 5:22-23 22
Since God gives faith to us as a gift then it is our faith. In scriptures that have the words " faith of Christ" or " faith of God" the " of" means that Christ or God is the originator of that faith. 7
Why is it " through faith?" -that it might be by grace. Anything else would have been a work: 21
Ro 4:16 Therefore it is of faith, that it might be by grace; to the end the promise might be sure to all the seed; not to that only which is of the law, but to that also which is of the faith of Abraham; who is the father of us all. 19
Faith is of God -no doubt, love is of God -no doubt, and grace is of God, but that is simply saying that whatever grace that I have is of/from God. Whatever love that I have is of/from God and what ever faith I have is of/from God, even the faith once delivered to the saints. That is the religious principle that I believe is contained in God’s written and preached word. 20
The gift of faith enables the newborn soul to function in the spiritual realm, an ability he did not have prior to his quickening. {Joh 3:3} {Joh 3:5} {1Co 2:14} It also gives the individual the ability to believe, or, if you please, " ears to hear." {Re 2:7,11; Pr 20:12; Mt 11:15} The gospel is, subsequently, addressed to the regenerate, {Ac 2:39; 13:16,26} for the unregenerate cannot believe. {Joh 8:43; 10:26; Ro 3:10-18} 15
" through faith, and that not of yourselves, it is the gift of God."
Next, Gill says= Salvation is through faith, not as a cause or condition of salvation, or as what adds anything to the blessing itself; but it is the way, or means, or instrument, which God has appointed, for the receiving and enjoying it, that so it might appear to be all of grace; and this faith is not the produce of man’s free-will and power, but it is the free gift of God; and therefore salvation through it is consistent with salvation by grace. To all this I say a BIG AMEN. 13
" faith" touto
It is God’s faith implanted in the being of every regenerated heir of the Covenant of Grace. As His faith is an inherent part of His attributes, His nature, His being, so also it is a attribute of the nature of every one of His born again children. For the life they receive in the new birth is Divine life bearing the same characteristics and attributes of God their Father. Nor does this view militate against the idea conveyed by the greek wording, for this life—and the faith intrinsic to it is indeed a gift—the gift of eternal life. 12
No attribute of God finds a perfect match in any mortal. His ways are above our ways. His ways are sublime perfection. The difference between His ways and our ways is incalculable. Were the whole extent of the known universe to be calculated, the difference between His ways and our ways would fill it and then go on beyond what we know, for we know not even the full extent of the heavens. 12
Ro 11:33 O the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and knowledge of God! how unsearchable are his judgments, and his ways past finding out! 12
Isa 55:8 For my thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways my ways, saith the LORD. 12
Isa 55:9 For as the heavens are higher than the earth, so are my ways higher than your ways, and my thoughts than your thoughts. 12
By God’s faith, I mean a complete trust and confidence. God had complete trust and confidence in the Son with which He covenanted and knew that the keeping of the covenant was just as sure as done. Christ had complete trust and confidence that His Father would accept His perfect sacrifice and would raise Him again from the dead and He saw of the travail of His soul and was satisfied that His sacrifice would accomplish that which He died for, the redemption of His people. This is prophesied in Isa 53:1-12 and there is a sense in which He shall yet be satisfied in the fullfillment of His works in His people, i.e. regeneration, glorification, etc. To satisfy God’s justice and his requirement for justice because of His holiness, God could not just be gracious and merciful in saving people, He had to also require justice. We are saved by grace through God’s faith in the sacrifice of His Son to satisfy His justice in forgiving our sins that Christ paid for. The term faith of God, faith of the operation of God, and faith of Christ are biblical terms and are not being introduced by me. See Col 2:12 and Ga 2:16 for examples. Eph 2:7 uses the expression, " through Christ Jesus." The previous verses use the expressions, " with Christ" and " in Christ" as well. Therefore, I have usually interpreted the expression, " through faith" to be associated with the previous expressions focusing on Christ, not our work or exercise of faith. The expression, " through faith" in Eph 2:8 could be interpreted similarly as, " through God’s faith or complete trust in the finished work of His Son and our Saviour." This is a definition of what I mean by my expressions of God’s faith. It is also true, that our faith originates from God and is ultimately His to give us as a gift that accompanies salvation. 26
The expression, " God’s faith" means " God’s faithfulness." 3
God could not give that which He does not possess. This very attribute of God’s faith is freely given in His act of regenerating His loved ones. Then, through God’s eyes, the newly born saint of God is inventoried as being in possession of this same attribute of God’s faith—Christ in you, the Hope of glory. {Col 1:27} 4
Please consider the following texts clearly setting forth the premise that God has faith- Ro 3:3 -faith of God; Re 1:5 -Jesus Christ who is the FAITHFUL witness. He is FULL OF FAITH; Re 3:14 -" The Amen, the faithful and true witness." Again, FULL of faith. Re 19:11 -called " Faithful and True." FULL of faith again. Ro 3:25 -Who was it herein that had FAITH in His Blood, but none other that God Himself. It seems that an extension of definition would embrace that of COMPLETE confidence and trust, rather than limiting the definition to only that of " partial" knowledge. 5
I have always thought of faith as that which we are given or posess until we are given perfect knowledge. Since God has complete knowledge, it is hard for me to think of him as having faith. I know that there are diferent usages of the word faith in the Bible, but I just can’t find a definition that would make " faith" and " perfect knowledge" dwell, as it were, in the same house. I have always heard it preached that when we get to heaven we will not need faith any longer, the reason being that faith will be turned into perfect knowledge. Brethren, please show me how that an " all knowing" God could have faith. 9
" and that not of yourselves: it is the gift of God" -Faith is not an attribute of God. He who KNOWS all things has no need of faith. Therefore it is the believer’s faith under consideration. The believer does not have that faith in and of himself. It is given to him/her as a gift of God. 10
I guess I look at the subject matter of that faith in Eph 2:8 a little differently than some do. This is how I attempt to explain the faith as Paul uses it within the context of Eph 2:5-10: The subject of faith has varied uses in different contexts of Scripture. Faith given in regeneration {e.g., Eph 2:8} is an intrinsic faith—a faith that is inborn in one at the time of the new birth. It is by this intrinsic faith that one is made to know God. Before the new birth, one does not have faith in any Scriptural sense. {2Th 3:2} Imparted intrinsic faith is that which is given by God to every one who is regenerated and at the very time of his/her regeneration. {Ro 12:3} This intrinsic faith is a responsive faith, one that reciprocally responds to God at the very point of receiving the effectual call in the new birth. This faith is received by God’s child involuntarily, i.e., without the works and efforts of the creature. Regeneration is the effectual call of God {2Ti 1:9} to the covenant object of God’s love, a calling out of a death state in sin to a life in Christ Jesus. The God-given intrinsic faith in the new-born creature is that innate faith that responds by answering God to His holy call in regeneration. In a life-speaking Voice, God calls, and the faith then given in the soul answers. This is performed by the renewed soul’s responding faith, delivering the message back to God that " Divine life and knowledge of Thee is immediately received." In a word, this faith responds involuntarily on the part of the creature by the Spirit of God’s Son in our hearts crying Abba, Father. {Ga 4:6} This ethereal faith is the instantaneous and perpetual testimony in the soul that the Divine Call of God is in fact effectual. The " renewed" soul, {Tit 3:5} established by grace via regeneration in an object of God’s love, thus responds through innate faith (below the level of intellectual cognizance) because the elect has been made willing in the day of God’s power. {Ps 110:3} It is thus that this ‘responding’ faith functions below the level of a regenerate’s consciousness. This intrinsic faith is given in the instantaneous and immediate act of the Spirit’s imparting eternal life to the object of God’s love. Every elect of God, the infant and the adult alike, when born again, is in possession of this particular faith. Thus, salvation comes vitally to the object of God’s love in regeneration by grace through faith. {Eph 2:8} The soul is immediately taught to know God through this intrinsic faith. This salvation—this grace through faith—is eternally unconditional on the part of the recipient, unlike that of Gospel (evangelical) faith. Gospel faith (which is an aspect of faith outside the context of Eph 2:8} Gospel faith is a " timely," " daily," and " now" manifestation of temporal salvation. Only a remnant out of the entire circle of God’s elect people will receive and manifest the ‘operations’ of this Gospel, evangelical faith during this " time" world. 11
" it is the gift of God"
The phrase " it is the gift of God" applies to the whole package—grace, saved, and faith. 16
" gift"
The word " gift" in Eph 2:8 is translated from the Greek dwron -SGreek: 1435. doron- whose emphasis is " a sacrifice -gift, offering." This is the same word used in Heb 8:3-4; 9:9 to speak of the sacrifices and offerings made by the priests under the Law. It is also applied in this same sense in numerous other scriptures. Perish the thought that our faith is given us as an offer or that it is an offering from almighty God to us! However, praises be to God that an acceptable sacrifice was made through the blood of the Lamb and that was acceptable in every way. As is stated in Ro 3:25, " Whom God hath set forth to be a propitiation (translated mercy seat-J.N.) through faith in his blood..." Now that’s a faith to hook your salvation on. Compare this " gift" to the forms of " gift" used in Ro 5:1-21. These carry as their primary focus of meaning " bestowment," " endowment," " miraculous faculty -free gift." 17
[i] Then, would it not seem that it is my Christian, Baptist, or Primitive Baptist beliefs that is the faith in Eph 2:8 whereby grace saves me? 18
Haydock -> Eph 2:8
Haydock: Eph 2:8 - -- Faith is the beginning, foundation, and the root of justification, and the first of all other virtues, without which it is impossible to please God. (...
Faith is the beginning, foundation, and the root of justification, and the first of all other virtues, without which it is impossible to please God. (Bristow)
Gill -> Eph 2:8
Gill: Eph 2:8 - -- For by grace are ye saved,.... This is to be understood, not of temporal salvation, nor of preservation in Christ, nor of providential salvation in or...
For by grace are ye saved,.... This is to be understood, not of temporal salvation, nor of preservation in Christ, nor of providential salvation in order to calling, and much less of being put in a way of salvation, or only in a salvable state; but of spiritual salvation, and that actual; for salvation was not only resolved upon, contrived and secured in the covenant of grace, for the persons here spoken to, but it was actually obtained and wrought out for them by Christ, and was actually applied unto them by the Spirit; and even as to the full enjoyment of it, they had it in faith and hope; and because of the certainty of it, they are said to be already saved; and besides, were representatively possessed of it in Christ their head: those interested in this salvation, are not all mankind, but particular persons; and such who were by nature children of wrath, and sinners of the Gentiles; and it is a salvation from sin, Satan, the law, its curse and condemnation, and from eternal death, and wrath to come; and includes all the blessings of grace and glory; and is entirely owing to free grace: for by grace is not meant the Gospel, nor gifts of grace, nor grace infused; but the free favour of God, to which salvation in all its branches is ascribed; as election, redemption, justification, pardon, adoption, regeneration, and eternal glory: the Syriac, Arabic, and Ethiopic versions read, "by his grace", and so some copies; and it may refer to the grace of all the three Persons; for men are saved by the grace of the Father, who drew the plan of salvation, appointed men to it, made a covenant with his Son, in which it is provided and secured, and sent him into the world to obtain it; and by the grace of the Son, who engaged as a surety to effect it, assumed human nature, obeyed and suffered in it for that purpose, and has procured it; and by the grace of the Spirit, who makes men sensible of their need of it, brings it near, sets it before them, and applies it to them, and gives them faith and hope in it: hence it follows,
through faith, and that not of yourselves, it is the gift of God; salvation is through faith, not as a cause or condition of salvation, or as what adds anything to the blessing itself; but it is the way, or means, or instrument, which God has appointed, for the receiving and enjoying it, that so it might appear to be all of grace; and this faith is not the produce of man's free will and power, but it is the free gift of God; and therefore salvation through it is consistent with salvation by grace; since that itself is of grace, lies entirely in receiving grace and gives all the glory to the grace of God: the sense of this last clause may be, that salvation is not of ourselves; it is not of our desiring nor of our deserving, nor of our performing, but is of the free grace of God: though faith is elsewhere represented as the gift of God, Joh 6:65 and it is called the special gift of faith, in the Apocrypha:
"And blessed is the eunuch, which with his hands hath wrought no iniquity, nor imagined wicked things against God: for unto him shall be given the "special gift of faith", and an inheritance in the temple of the Lord more acceptable to his mind.'' (Wisdom 3:14)
----- (I asked the following question from a Greek and Hebrew professor:
"In this verse, to what does the word "that" refer to? Adam Clarke, Wesley & company say that it is neuter plural and "Faith" is feminine hence it cannot refer to faith, (Such an admission would destroy their theological system.) However "Grace" is also feminine as is "Salvation".''
His reply was:
"Here you ask a wonderful theological/exegetical question to which I can only give an opinion, and not a definitive answer. The problem is that there is NO precise referent. Grace is feminine. Faith is feminine. And even Salvation (as a noun) is feminine. Yet it must be one of these three at least, and maybe more than one, or all three in conjunction. Since all three come from God and not from man, the latter might seem the more likely. However, it is a tautology to say salvation and grace are "nor of yourselves," and in that case it certainly looks more like the passage is really pointing out that man cannot even take credit for his own act of faith, but that faith was itself created by God and implanted in us that we might believe (i.e. the normal Calvinistic position). In which regard the whole theological issue of "regeneration preceding faith" comes into play. So, that is basically my opinion, though others obviously disagree strenuously, but from an exegetical standpoint, the other positions have to explain away the matter of the tautology.''
Whether you accept the reply or not, it is sufficient to show that the Greek is not as definitive in this verse as some scholars would have you believe. Editor)

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Eph 2:8 The feminine article is found before πίστεως (pistews, “faith”) in the Byzantine text as well as in A &...
Geneva Bible -> Eph 2:8
Geneva Bible: Eph 2:8 For by ( h ) grace are ye saved through faith; and that not of yourselves: [it is] the gift of God:
( h ) So then, grace, that is to say, the gift of...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Eph 2:1-22
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...
Combined Bible -> Eph 2:8
Combined Bible: Eph 2:8 - --Means; First of Salvation
(2:8) Did we come to Him or did He come to claim us? How strong the urge is to say that we turne...
Maclaren -> Eph 2:8
Maclaren: Eph 2:8 - --Salvation: Grace: Faith
By grace have ye been saved through faith; and that not of yourselves: it is the gift of God.'--Eph. 2:8 (R.V.).
HERE are thr...
MHCC -> Eph 2:1-10
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
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
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 ...
