
Text -- Ephesians 3:17 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Robertson: Eph 3:17 - -- That Christ may dwell ( katoikēsai ton Christon ).
Another infinitive (first aorist active) after hina dōi . Katoikeō is an old verb to make ...
That Christ may dwell (
Another infinitive (first aorist active) after

Robertson: Eph 3:17 - -- Being rooted and grounded in love ( en agapēi errizōmenoi kai tethemeliōmenoi ).
But it is not certain whether en agapēi should go with the...
Being rooted and grounded in love (
But it is not certain whether
Vincent: Eph 3:17 - -- May dwell ( κατοικῆσαι )
Settle down and abide. Take up His permanent abode, so that ye may be a habitation (κατοικητήρ...
May dwell (
Settle down and abide. Take up His permanent abode, so that ye may be a habitation (

Vincent: Eph 3:17 - -- By faith ( διὰ τῆς πίστεως )
Through your (the article) faith, as the medium of appropriating Christ. Faith opens the door a...
By faith (
Through your (the article) faith, as the medium of appropriating Christ. Faith opens the door and receives Him who knocks. Rev 3:20.
Wesley -> Eph 3:17
That is, constantly and sensibly abide.
So that.

JFB: Eph 3:17 - -- Abidingly make His abode (Joh 14:23). Where the Spirit is there Christ is (Joh 14:16, Joh 14:18).

JFB: Eph 3:17 - -- Greek, "through faith," which opens the door of the heart to Jesus (Joh 3:20). It is not enough that He be on the tongue, or flit through the brain: t...
Greek, "through faith," which opens the door of the heart to Jesus (Joh 3:20). It is not enough that He be on the tongue, or flit through the brain: the heart is His proper seat [CALVIN]. "You being rooted and grounded in love" (compare Eph 3:19), is in the Greek connected with this clause, not with the clause, "that ye may be able to comprehend." "Rooted" is an image from a tree; "grounded" (Greek, "founder," "having your foundations resting on"), from a building (compare Notes,, see on Eph 2:20-21; Col 1:23; Col 2:7). Contrast Mat 13:6, Mat 13:21. "Love," the first-fruit of the Spirit, flowing from Christ's love realized in the soul, was to be the basis on which should rest their further comprehension of all the vastness of Christ's love.
Clarke: Eph 3:17 - -- That Christ may dwell in your hearts by faith - In this as well as in many other passages, and particularly that in Eph 2:21 (note), the apostle com...
That Christ may dwell in your hearts by faith - In this as well as in many other passages, and particularly that in Eph 2:21 (note), the apostle compares the body or Church of true believers to a temple, which, like that of Solomon, is built up to be a habitation of God through the Spirit. Here, as Solomon did at the dedication of the temple at Jerusalem, 2Ch 6:1, etc., Paul, having considered the Church at Ephesus completely formed, as to every external thing, prays that God may come down and dwell in it. And as there could be no indwelling of God but by Christ, and no indwelling of Christ but by faith, he prays that they may have such faith in Christ, as shall keep them in constant possession of his love and presence. God, at the beginning, formed man to be his temple, and while in a state of purity he inhabited this temple; when the temple became defiled, God left it. In the order of his eternal mercy, Christ, the repairer of the breach, comes to purify the temple, that it may again become a fit habitation for the blessed God. This is what the apostle points out to the believing Ephesians, in praying that Christ

Clarke: Eph 3:17 - -- That ye, being rooted and grounded in love - Here is a double metaphor; one taken from agriculture, the other, from architecture. As trees, they are...
That ye, being rooted and grounded in love - Here is a double metaphor; one taken from agriculture, the other, from architecture. As trees, they are to be rooted in love - this is the soil in which their souls are to grow; into the infinite love of God their souls by faith are to strike their roots, and from this love derive all that nourishment which is essential for their full growth, till they have the mind in them that was in Jesus, or, as it is afterwards said, till they are filled with all the fullness of God. As a building, their foundation is to be laid in this love. God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, etc. Here is the ground on which alone the soul, and all its hopes and expectations, can be safely founded. This is a foundation that cannot be shaken; and it is from this alone that the doctrine of redemption flows to man, and from this alone has the soul its form and comeliness. In this, as its proper soil, it grows. On this, as its only foundation, it rests.
Calvin -> Eph 3:17
Calvin: Eph 3:17 - -- 17.That Christ may dwell He explains what is meant by “the strength of the inner man.” As “it pleased the Father that in him should all fullne...
17.That Christ may dwell He explains what is meant by “the strength of the inner man.” As
“it pleased the Father that in him should all fullness dwell,” (Col 1:19,)
so he who has Christ dwelling in him can want nothing. It is a mistake to imagine that the Spirit can be obtained without obtaining Christ; and it is equally foolish and absurd to dream that we can receive Christ without the Spirit. Both doctrines must be believed. We are partakers of the Holy Spirit, in proportion to the intercourse which we maintain with Christ; for the Spirit will be found nowhere but in Christ, on whom he is said, on that account, to have rested; for he himself says, by the prophet Isaiah, “The Spirit of the Lord God is upon me.” (Isa 61:1; Luk 4:18.) But neither can Christ be separated from his Spirit; for then he would be said to be dead, and to have lost all his power.
Justly, therefore, does Paul affirm that the persons who are endowed by God with spiritual vigor are those in whom Christ dwells. He points to that part in which Christ peculiarly dwells, in your hearts, — to show that it is not enough if the knowledge of Christ dwell on the tongue or flutter in the brain.
May dwell through faith The method by which so great a benefit is obtained is also expressed. What a remarkable commendation is here bestowed on faith, that, by means of it, the Son of God becomes our own, and “makes his abode with us!” (Joh 14:23.) By faith we not only acknowledge that Christ suffered and rose from the dead on our account, but, accepting the offers which he makes of himself, we possess and enjoy him as our Savior. This deserves our careful attention. Most people consider fellowship with Christ, and believing in Christ, to be the same thing; but the fellowship which we have with Christ is the consequence of faith. In a word, faith is not a distant view, but a warm embrace, of Christ, by which he dwells in us, and we are filled with the Divine Spirit.
That ye may be rooted and grounded in love Among the fruits of Christ’s dwelling in us the apostle enumerates love and gratitude for the Divine grace and kindness exhibited to us in Christ. Hence it follows, that this is true and solid excellence; so that, whenever he treats of the perfection of the saints, he views it as consisting of these two parts. The firmness and constancy which our love ought to possess are pointed out by two metaphors. There are many persons not wholly destitute of love; but it is easily removed or shaken, because its roots are not deep. Paul desires that it should be rooted 136 and grounded, — thoroughly fixed in our minds, so as to resemble a well-founded building or deeply-planted tree. The true meaning is, that our roots ought to be so deeply planted, and our foundation so firmly laid in love, that nothing will be able to shake us. It is idle to infer from these words, that love is the foundation and root of our salvation. Paul does not inquire here, as any one may perceive, on what our salvation is founded, but with what firmness and constancy we ought to continue in the exercise of love.
TSK -> Eph 3:17
TSK: Eph 3:17 - -- Christ : Eph 2:21; Isa 57:15; Joh 6:56, Joh 14:17, Joh 14:23, Joh 17:23; Rom 8:9-11; 2Co 6:16; Gal 2:20; Col 1:27; 1Jo 4:4, 1Jo 4:16; Rev 3:20
being :...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Eph 3:17
Barnes: Eph 3:17 - -- That Christ may dwell in your hearts by faith - see the notes, Eph 2:22. Expressions like this often occur in the Scriptures, where God is said...
That Christ may dwell in your hearts by faith - see the notes, Eph 2:22. Expressions like this often occur in the Scriptures, where God is said to dwell in us, and we are said to be the temples of the Holy Spirit; see the Joh 14:23, note; 1Co 6:19, note.
That ye being rooted - Firmly established - as a tree is whose roots strike deep, and extend afar. The meaning is, that his love should be as firm in our hearts, as a tree is in the soil, whose roots strike deep into the earth.
And grounded -
In love - In love to the Redeemer - perhaps also in love to each other - and to all. Love was the great principle of the true religion, and the apostle wished that they might be fully settled in that.
Poole -> Eph 3:17
Poole: Eph 3:17 - -- That Christ on whom this Spirit (who must strengthen you, as being a Spirit of might, Isa 11:2 ) resteth, Isa 61:1
May dwell in your hearts may i...
That Christ on whom this Spirit (who must strengthen you, as being a Spirit of might, Isa 11:2 ) resteth, Isa 61:1
May dwell in your hearts may intimately and continually possess and fill, not your heads only with his doctrine, but your affections with his Spirit: see Joh 14:23 .
By faith whereby ye not only believe Cllrist’ s truth, but receive and apprehend himself, and which is the means by which ye have union and communion with him.
That ye, being rooted and grounded in love: either he means:
1. Our love to God and our neighbour; and then he prays that their love might not be slight and superficial, but strong and firm. Or:
2. God’ s love to us; and then he prays that the Ephesians, who had already tasted God’ s love to them in Christ, might be more fully strengthened in the persuasion of that love.
Haydock -> Eph 3:17
Haydock: Eph 3:17 - -- Christ dwelleth in us by his gifts, and we are just by those his gifts remaining in us; and not by Christ's proper justice only, as some modern innova...
Christ dwelleth in us by his gifts, and we are just by those his gifts remaining in us; and not by Christ's proper justice only, as some modern innovators will have it. (Bristow) ---
And this not by faith only, but by faith rooted and founded in charity, which accomplishes all virtues. (Bristow)
Gill -> Eph 3:17
Gill: Eph 3:17 - -- That Christ may dwell in your hearts by faith,.... This is another petition put up by the apostle for the Ephesians, which is for the inhabitation of ...
That Christ may dwell in your hearts by faith,.... This is another petition put up by the apostle for the Ephesians, which is for the inhabitation of Christ in them: the inhabitant Christ is he who dwells in the highest heavens, who dwells in the Father, and the Father in him, in whom all fulness dwells, the fulness of the Godhead, and the fulness of grace; so that those in whose hearts he dwells cannot want any good thing, must be in the greatest safety, and enjoy the greatest comfort and pleasure; and this inhabitation of Christ prayed for is not to be understood in such sense, as he dwells everywhere, being the omnipresent God; or as he dwells in the human nature; nor of his dwelling merely by his Spirit, but of a personal indwelling of his; and which is an instance of his special grace: he dwells in his people, as a king in his palace, to rule and protect them, and as a master in his family to provide for them, and as their life to quicken them; it is in consequence of their union to him, and is expressive of their communion with him, and is perpetual; where he once takes up his residence, he never totally and finally departs: the place where he dwells is not their heads, nor their tongues, but their hearts; and this is where no good thing dwells but himself and his grace; and where sin dwells, and where he is often slighted, opposed, and rebelled against: the means by which he dwells is faith; which is not the bond of union to Christ, nor the cause of his being and dwelling in the hearts of his people; but is the instrument or means by which they receive him, and retain him, and by which they have communion with him:
that ye being rooted and grounded in love; either in love to God, and one another; for faith and love go together; and love is sometimes weak, and needs establishing; and what serves to root and ground persons in it, are the discoveries of God's love, views of Christ's loveliness, the consideration of blessings received, and the communion they have with God, and Christ, and one another, and a larger insight into the doctrines of the Gospel: or rather in the love of God to them; which is the root and foundation of salvation; this is in itself immovable and immutable; but saints have not always the manifestations of it, and sometimes call it in question, and have need to be rooted and grounded in it; which is to have a lively sense of it, and to be persuaded of interest in it, and that nothing shall be able to separate from it.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Eph 3:1-21
TSK Synopsis: Eph 3:1-21 - --1 The hidden mystery that the Gentiles should be saved was made known to Paul by revelation;8 and to him was that grace given, that he should preach i...
Combined Bible -> Eph 3:17
Combined Bible: Eph 3:17 - --Our preparation as a temple is for a purpose. "That" introduces a purpose clause, "that Christ may dwell". The place of His dwelling is in our "hear...
Maclaren -> Eph 3:17
Maclaren: Eph 3:17 - --The Indwelling Christ
That Christ may dwell in your hearts by faith; ye being rooted and grounded in love.'--Eph. 3:17.
WE have here the second step ...
MHCC -> Eph 3:13-19
MHCC: Eph 3:13-19 - --The apostle seems to be more anxious lest the believers should be discouraged and faint upon his tribulations, than for what he himself had to bear. H...
Matthew Henry -> Eph 3:14-21
Matthew Henry: Eph 3:14-21 - -- We now come to the second part of this chapter, which contains Paul's devout and affectionate prayer to God for his beloved Ephesians. - For this c...
Barclay -> Eph 3:14-17
Barclay: Eph 3:14-17 - --It is here that Paul begins again the sentence which he began in Eph 3:1and from which he was deflected. It is for this cause begins Paul. What is t...
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 2:11--3:20 - --B. Corporate calling 2:11-3:19
New spiritual life does not just mean that we have experienced regenerati...
