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Ephesians
Chapter 5

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Ephesians Chapter Five
Commentary by Ron Beckham

  Audio Bible Study - Ephesians 5:1-5

Verse 1.  “Therefore be imitators of God, as beloved children;”

When a child recognizes they are really LOVED by their parent, he or she will want to be LIKE them.  “God is love” (1 John 4:8) and He is our true Parent.  Everything He does or thinks or intends is always based in love.  As we will see in the next verses, we are to “walk in love” with the same kind of fervent love that Christ showed when He died so that you and I may live.

To be “imitators of God” is to STOP trying to live a godly life in our own strength.  The Word of the Lord to you and me is this: “Not by might nor by power, but by My Spirit, says the Lord of hosts” (Zechariah 4:6).  Jesus Christ, Himself God, lived His life on earth in concert with the Holy Spirit.  We are His “imitators” when we do the same, and the Holy Spirit is urging us all to be one in the love of God which is in Christ Jesus.

Verse 2.  “and walk in love, just as Christ also loved you and gave Himself up for us, an offering and a sacrifice to God as a fragrant aroma.”

When you look into the “Yellow Pages” (business section) of a telephone book in many countries, you are likely to find lots of entries under “C” for “Church.”  The reason there are often so many churches is because of a lack in the important area of “love.”  We talk a lot about love, but then divide over lesser issues.  We are to “WALK in love,” which includes giving up bickering over our viewpoints and instead give ourselves to Christ’s kind of love.

His love includes sacrifice, as seen in the sacrifice of Himself on the Cross.  You don’t need to die on a cross because He has already done that.  But you become a “fragrant aroma” in the sight of God when you become willing to sacrifice your wishes in favor of someone else’s needs.  And, as we shall see in the next verses, you may have to give up some of what the world counts as “pleasure,” in order to love others as much as you love yourself.  But He gives us more than “pleasure” – we have the lasting JOY that only comes from God.

Verse 3.  “But immorality or any impurity or greed must not even be named among you, as is proper among saints;”

This verse does NOT mean that you hide who you are and pretend to be something you’re not.  It is instead a call to be changed by the power and love of God.  There is a process occurring in those who are truly God’s little ones, called “sanctification,” in which He remarkably changes people like you and me.  There actually is a basic immorality within humans, a sort of negative mark on the soul that disfigures us – inside.

But when we are “born again” in Christ Jesus (John 3:3, 7), the Spirit of God comes into us and the “immorality” that marks us is replaced.  In Him, we gradually become moral beings who long for purity.  The “greed,” the wanting of more-and-more in life, is gradually changed to love.  Instead of wanting it all for ourselves, amazingly we now want it for someone else – because we love them.  And it’s obvious that when our heart is changed, our words, our language will be renewed also, as in this verse.

Verse 4.  “and there must be no filthiness and silly talk, or coarse jesting, which are not fitting, but rather giving of thanks.”

This is a continuation of the previous verse.  It is interesting that when a group of “Christian” men are gathered together, especially when they are not well acquainted, they often lapse into superficial conversation, or “silly talk.”  Even worse are the “coarse” or filthy (dirty) words that creep into the discussion.  It’s thought that jokes (”jesting”) will break the ice and cause conversation to flow.  It can do that, but your choice of a “joke” can lead to immoral discussion.

Paul offers an alternative – the “giving of thanks” to God.  If you are in Christ, the Spirit of God will be doing a great work in you.  Your language and your life will be changed from the inside, where it counts.  You should be THANKFUL about what is occurring in your life, and if so, you will want to tell others of the wonders He is doing in you.  Thankfulness is the opposite of “coarse jesting.”

Verse 5.  “For this you know with certainty, that no immoral or impure person or covetous man, who is an idolater, has an inheritance in the kingdom of Christ and God.”

If you secretly or openly choose to continue to be an “immoral or impure person,” you are likely not in Christ.  If you continue to be a “covetous” person who always wants what you do not have, it’s a sign you are not right with Him.  To be “covetous” is to be an “idolater,” for your focus is to worship, to covet the things of this world instead of trusting in the Creator of all things.

To have “an inheritance in the kingdom of Christ and God” is to be utterly changed by Christ (John 3:3, 7).  In Him, your life is being changed from immorality to purity in thought and action.  This is an event, but it is also a process, often a lengthy one.  We need to look at how we have been, and what we are like now.  It is hoped you are “giving thanks” for the changes God has wrought (verse 4 comments) and that you are encouraged as you see the work He is continuing in you.

Audio Bible Study-Ephesians 5:6-10

Verse 6.  “Let no one deceive you with empty words, for because of these things the wrath of God comes upon the sons of disobedience.”

The wrath of God” is upon this world because of “these things” which we have been studying in the preceding verses.  “These things” include: “immoralityimpuritygreed” (verse 3), “filthinesssilly talkcoarse jesting” (verse 4) “immoral” behavior, along with “covetous” thoughts (verse 5).  The “covetous” person is considered an “idolater” in the sight of God.

How could this happen to me?” has been the cry of humanity, and many have shaken their fists at God for some “unthinkable” event in their lives.  “How could this happen?” is a phrase that could also be uttered by God, as He looks at the thoughts and actions of mankind.  Another way of looking at our lives is to recognize that God could have destroyed the human race at any point in history.  The fact that you are able to read these words right now is a testimony to the grace of God.  He has spared many for this time, in the hope that some will look to the Lord and be saved.

Verse 7.  “Therefore do not be partakers with them;”

Immorality, impurity, greed, filthiness, silly talk, coarse jesting, covetousness, and idolatry (as described in the preceding verses), are actually the characteristics of humanity.  To tell us to “not be partakers” with others of our race is like telling a bird to not fly.  Sinners sin, just as fish swim and bacteria multiply.  It follows that if this verse is applicable in our lives, we must be changed inside in order for it to be a reality.

And that is why Paul, the human writer of Ephesians, is able to comfortably tell us: “Do not be partakers with them” (those who sin).  As we will see in the next verse, when we are “born again” (John 3:3, 7) by the power of the Lord, we are taken out of the “darkness” of this world and made “light in the Lord” (Ephesians 5:8).  Paul was dramatically changed from a murderer into a man of God and we can be changed, too.  To “not be partakers” is to look to Him.

Verse 8.  “for you were formerly darkness, but now you are Light in the Lord; walk as children of Light”

Darkness” in Scripture typically refers to a depraved person who acts in a shameful manner and then hides what he or she does.  When Jesus said to His disciples, “You are the light of the world” (Matthew 5:14), He was revealing the good news that God will change us into the kind of people who no longer need to hide our thoughts and actions.  He continued, “Let your light so shine before men, that they may see your good works and glorify your Father in heaven” (Matthew 5:16).

Note the important purpose you have in living a clean, open life: Others will see you.  They will be surprised that you do not behave like they do and some will want what you have.  It takes EFFORT to hide, to live a lie, and people everywhere want to be changed, deep inside.  If you have been made new by the Lord, your life is evidence that such change is possible.  You offer hope to the world, and it’s very important to respond to Paul’s words: “walk as children of light.

Verse 9.  “for the fruit of the Light consists in all goodness and righteousness and truth,”

Just the right amount of sunlight will work wonders for your garden: seeds will germinate, plants will grow and flowers bloom.  And so it is with us.  The Son of God brings just the right amount of “Light” into your heart, your life (He illumines your understanding).  He nurtures us and is the Master Gardener in the King’s garden.  Growth will occur, for He will make it happen.

Samples of the good “fruit” to be expressed through those who trust in Christ are found in a number of places within Scripture, and three of them are here in this verse: “goodness and righteousness and truth.”  All of us know what “good” is, even those who don’t want to be good.  These three characteristics will be brought into our lives as we become open and begin to trust in the Lord: GOOD thoughts, RIGHT actions, and we will become people who love the truth.

Verse 10.  “trying to learn what is pleasing to the Lord.”

You will be changed by the presence of the Lord in your life, and a key part of that amazing change is revealed here: you will want to do what is “pleasing to the Lord.”  That is basically the opposite of what humanity counts as valuable.  And note that we are “trying to learn” what is pleasing to Him, for it’s not that we suddenly know it all.

There is a common misconception that a person who receives the Lord in a personal way, is to be suddenly made perfect.  Not true.  We are IM-perfect, which is why we need Him so much.  Just like a hospital is full of sick people, the church is full of sinners.  A problem arises when we forget that we are learning and think we have learned it all.  We need HIM, who DOES know all things, and we need others in the body of Christ who have learned what we don’t know.

Audio Bible Study - Ephesians 5:11-15

Verse 11.  “Do not participate in the unfruitful deeds of darkness, but instead even expose them;”

There’s always somebody nearby, in your city or in your computer, who wants to lead you along a “road” to a place where you should not go.  The words, “I dare you,” have led many into the “unfruitful deeds of darkness” as in this verse.  “Unfruitful” carries the idea of barrenness, like a grapevine that does not produce grapes as it is supposed to.  “Darkness” relates to thoughts and actions that are shameful.

Life is EASIER and better when we are open, honest, and are not hiding anymore.  And Paul, the author of Ephesians, is encouraging us to go even further than just saying “No” to those who would lead us astray.  He’s saying, “EXPOSE them” to other people.  Paul is writing to the CHURCH, and the one who fails in an attempt to lead YOU into works of darkness will turn to somebody else and try to damage THEM.  “EXPOSE them!” for the safety of others.

Verse 12.  “for it is disgraceful even to speak of the things which are done by them in secret.”

Here in the early part of the 21st Century, the “disgraceful” has become commonplace, incredibly the norm for people just about everywhere, and “secret” things, shameful things are now done openly.  “Disgraceful” things are portrayed openly in the movies and in popular music.  But our culture, our world, is still going down, for even worse actions than we could imagine are being done in “secret.”

Actually, “goodness and righteousness and truth” (verse 9) DO exist in the world and when we find such things, we should speak of them and rejoice in them.  As Paul said in another place, “Whatever things are noblejustpurelovely, whatever things are of good reportmeditate on these things” (Philippians 4:8).  Why? – If you do, “the God of peace will be with you” (Philippians 4:9).

Verse 13.  “But all things become visible when they are exposed by the light, for everything that becomes visible is light.”

Jesus said, “You are the light of the world” (Matthew 5:14).  He continued the idea in a manner that helps us understand what “light” is in this context: “Let your light so shine before men, that they may see your good works and glorify your Father in heaven” (Matthew 5:16).  To be “light” is to become open, to be honest, to not hide who you are anymore.  And the goal in all this is greater than any need you may have for personal privacy.

The goal is that you, by your changed words and behavior, will cause others to “glorify your Father in heaven.”  We were created to glorify God, and the wonder of it all is that He will “transform our lowly body, that it may be conformed to His glorious body” (Philippians 3:21).  We can safely become utterly open, we can give our lives to the “light” of God; and we can do it without fear, for He intends to bring GOOD to you, to me, and through us, to those we meet.

Verse 14.  “For this reason it says, ‘Awake, sleeper, and arise from the dead, and Christ will shine on you.’”

To be a person of “light” as in the preceding verses, is to abandon yourself to Jesus Christ.  To live in “darkness” (verse 11) is actually to be “dead” to God, as we glimpse in this verse.  To come to Christ, to be “born again” (John 3:3, 7), to be literally raised from spiritual death.  The Son of God is like the sun is to this earth, for He gives “light” to you and me.  Without Him, we have no light at all.

This is one of the greatest verses in Scripture, for it utterly and completely shows our need for God, our inability to find Him on our own, and it gives us the method of salvation.  We were dead to God.  We had no relationship with Him at all.  Then Christ came and He IS “the light of the world” (John 8:12).  If you are willing, “Christ will shine on you” (this verse) and give you not only His “light,” but also LIFE from God Himself.

Verse 15.  “Therefore be careful how you walk, not as unwise men but as wise,”

Since those who are in Christ Jesus are children of His “light” (preceding verses), risen from the dead and awake at last to God (verse 14), Paul is now adding this advice: “be careful how you walk.”  The phrase, “how you walk” is a reference to our behavior.  We are to give thought (and prayer) to what we say and what we do.  The world is watching, more than we know, and the stakes are very high.

Paul is telling us to become “wise” men and women, and in the next verses, he will offer concrete suggestions as to how we may “walk” in wisdom.  We’ll look at Paul’s words, always understanding that we are like little children, learning to grow up in the Lord, for this direct purpose: that others will see the change He has wrought in us and they will want Him, too.

  Audio Bible Study - Ephesians 5:16-20

Verse 16.  “making the most of your time, because the days are evil.”

In the original language, the idea of this verse is: “Buying up for yourselves the opportunity,” carrying the idea of a merchant, who, knowing the value of something, finds out it is for sale and promptly buys it.  We have been seeing in Ephesians 5 that Christ gives us “light” (understanding – verses 13 and 14) and we are to allow as much as possible of His “light” to come into the world through us while there is still time.

The “days (were) evil” in the time of the Apostle Paul and they are evil right now.  “Darkness” (verse 11) has filled this planet for thousands of years because of the darkened hearts of men and women everywhere, and it is a high privilege to receive (and transmit) His light.  Jesus said, “You are the light of the world” (Matthew 5:14) and “making the most of your time” is letting HIS light shine from you to others of this world.

Verse 17.  “So then do not be foolish, but understand what the will of the Lord is.”

A great deal of what the world counts as important is really “foolish” if you look at it closely.  Sports, movies, and entertainment give temporary pleasure, but they can waste a lot of time and we should examine ourselves – What is the lasting BENEFIT of what we do?  What is IMPORTANT in life?  So many work all week, practically LIVING for their plans on the weekend, and you have to ask: To what end?

Many work hard for their money, and then throw it away on useless pursuits.  The Lord is NOT against us enjoying life, but you need to ask – what is the “will of the Lord” for YOUR time, your money, your life?  He has a plan for us all, including YOU.  Someday, all will realize that the opposite of the Lord’s will is simply – foolishness.

Verse 18.  “And do not get drunk with wine, for that is dissipation, but be filled with the Spirit,”

The person who tends toward alcoholism should NEVER take an alcoholic drink.  But we know from places like 1 Timothy 5:23, that wine is not in itself sinful, for Paul the Apostle told the younger man, Timothy, to “use a little wine for your stomach’s sake.”  Timothy was trying hard and had become a very tense young man.  “Relax,” Paul was saying.  What this verse in Ephesians points out is that to become “DRUNK” with alcohol or other drugs is dissipation – a waste of our lives.

Not unlike verse 17, where we see the “will of the Lord” contrasted with foolishness, this verse contrasts getting “drunk” to being “filled with the Spirit.”  The false happiness that comes from drinking only has a vague similarity to the JOY in the Spirit that comes from God.  One takes FROM you and the other, the Holy Spirit, satisfies you, deep inside.

Verse 19.  “speaking to one another in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, singing and making melody with your heart to the Lord;”

There is a false notion that Christians don’t have fun.  Actually, we do, though our “fun” comes from and through the changes the Holy Spirit of God is making in our hearts and lives.  Yes, we are to give up gossip, drunkenness, greed, covetousness, silly talk (as Paul puts it), immoral thoughts and behavior, and so on.  But in exchange for giving up the inconsequential in life, we are given – EVERYTHING, especially the joy of the Lord.

Christ really does make a difference.  We are given LIFE to a degree and in a way that no one knows until they have received the Lord.  We are given the Holy Spirit of God, who leads us and directs us, cleanses our thoughts and lives, gives us hope and peace, and lets us know He is always with us.  And so we sing, “making melody with (our hearts) to the Lord.”  We have a lot to sing about, for we are learning to love, and we are – loved!

Verse 20.  “always giving thanks for all things in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ to God, even the Father;”

A lot of times we don’t understand life and what is happening to us, so it’s hard to be thankful.  Life can be not unlike going to the hospital.  It’s uncomfortable being in the place and often painful things happen to us while we are there.  Hospital personnel make holes in our bodies, poke needles in our arms, give us bad tasting medicine and so on, but the purpose of it all is to heal us and make us well.

So it is with our Lord Jesus Christ, who not only died for us, but He also expects that you will die to this world for Him.  He said, “If anyone desires to come after Me, let him deny himself and take up his cross, and follow Me” (Matthew 16:24).  Our circumstances may seem difficult, but Jesus Christ is the one who heals you, rendering you able to have eternal life with God the Father.  We are given certain hope, abiding faith and the love of God.  It is reasonable to thank Him all the time.

 Audio Bible Study - Ephesians 5:21-25

Verse 21.  “and be subject to one another in the fear of Christ.”

It is simple logic, open for all to see, that we should respond to the will of God! And our Lord, when He was here on earth, was absolutely clear that God’s will is that we are to LOVE one another (John 13:34-35).  We are actually to ESTEEM others, placing their needs ahead of our own (Philippians 2:3).  “Fear,” in this context, is actually summed-up by the word “reverence.”  We should revere our Lord so much that we cannot help loving one another.

We should be so grateful for what the Lord Jesus Christ has done for us, that it makes sense for us to thank Him continually (Ephesians 5:20).  And we should be so much in love with Him because of what He has done, that we find His love overflowing through us into the lives of others.  To be “subject” to others is to be like a servant to them – being interested in their needs and trying to help them.

Verse 22.  “Wives, be subject to your own husbands, as to the Lord.”

There is a reason why a Christian wife can safely be “subject to” her husband, and that is because her husband is to love her with the same kind of fervent devotion that Christ had when He died for our sins on the cross (verse 25).  That is the Lord’s will for the husband – he is to LOVE his wife.  There is a problem, however.  The husband is a sinner like everybody else and so many husbands place their own needs ahead of their wives.

Husbands have often become abusers rather than leaders, which has ruined God’s good intention for many marriages.  The wife is supposed to follow her husband BECAUSE OF his devotion to God and his love for her.  When he does truly utterly give himself to the Lord, his wife can safely follow his lead, because he finally becomes open to the leading of the Lord for himself and his marriage.  He will love her with the love of God that is in Christ Jesus.

Verse 23.  “For the husband is the head of the wife, as Christ also is the head of the church, He Himself being the Savior of the body.”

This verse reflects God’s will for marriage.  A look at marriages in the 21st Century clearly shows that most are far from the will of God.  As the “head” of the wife, the husband is commanded to watch out for her, protect her, and deny himself in relation to her needs.  Her duty is “subjection” to him and their marriage is to be like a parable, showing the world how the church is supposed to respond to Christ.

Here is what subjection is meant to be all about: 1) She is NOT to be his servant or be like his child. 2) He is to be wise and loving in leadership. 3) It is a LIMITED subjection – the wife is to “obey God rather than men” (Acts 5:29), if he leads her in a direction contrary to the will of God and His Law. 4) She is to love him (Titus 2:4)& not cower before him. 5) He is to love her (Ephesians 5:25).

Verse 24.  “But as the church is subject to Christ, so also the wives ought to be to their husbands in everything.”

We know from places like Matthew 20:26-27, that God’s expectation for leaders in the kingdom of God is completely unlike leadership is understood in this world.  In those verses, the Lord said, “Whoever desires to become great among you, let him be your servant, and whoever desires to be first among you, let him be your slave.”  And then He continued, “just as the Son of Man (Christ) did not come to be served, but to serve, and to give His life a ransom for many” (Matthew 20:28).

If the husband is to be “the head of the wife, as Christ also is head of the church” (Ephesians 5:23), he is to do what Christ did and place her needs ahead of his own.  This does not mean in any way that the wife is to rule over her husband.  These verses were added by the Holy Spirit through Paul so that wives would NOT decide that their “freedom” in Christ gives them license to assert themselves over their husbands, contrary to God’s intention for marriage.

Verse 25.  “Husbands, love your wives, just as Christ also loved the church and gave Himself up for her,”

Husbands are to love their wives even to the point of being willing to die for them.  For many husbands, giving up for their wives some sporting event or surrendering time that might be “good fun,” can seem like “death” to them.  It’s important to recognize that when Christ loved you enough to give up His life for you, He revolutionized your life and you will never be the same.  Husband, you were called to receive and transmit His love to your wife.

For the husband who is in Christ, there is no such thing as adultery, bigamy, polygamy or any kind of selfishness.  Divorce is not in his vocabulary, and the phrase “until death do us part” is law for him, “in sickness and in health.”  If she is paralyzed and in a wheelchair, she is his and he is hers.  If her mind is gone due to Alzheimer’s or her breast was taken due to cancer, they are still married because he loves HER, not just some outward part of her.

Audio Bible Study - Ephesians 5:26-30

Verse 26.  “so that He might sanctify her, having cleansed her by the washing of water with the word,”

These verses discuss marriage, but they also reveal God’s intention for the church.  Jesus Christ “washed” the called-out ones of God, the “her” of this verse.  He “cleansed” us with the words that came from God and with His own blood.  He gave us everything, including His life, because He loves you and me.  If He is real to you, then you will find you are being “sanctified” (cleansed), with an infusion of the Lord’s faith, hope and love.  A husband is so loved by the Lord that love should overflow out of him into the life of his spouse, the woman God gave to him - which is God’s intention for marriage.

The “Word” of God is the key to the husband’s ability to love his wife as Christ loved the church.  The Bible is God’s Word for your life and mine, and when you prayerfully study His Word, the Holy Spirit will remarkably change you.  You may think you don’t need to be changed, but husband, your wife thinks otherwise.  To receive Christ is to set out on a lifetime journey in which we all are being “washed” by the Word of God, as revealed through His Holy Spirit.

Verse 27.  “that He might present to Himself the church in all her glory, having no spot or wrinkle or any such thing; but that she would be holy and blameless.”

Jesus Christ gave Himself so completely that the “church,” the “called-out ones” of God, are made clean in the sight of God.  We are like an article of clothing that has become dirty and wrinkled, so that any wearer would be ashamed to put it on.  The blood of Jesus Christ removes the disfiguring “spot(s)” on our souls, and the “wrinkle(s)” in our thoughts, attitudes, words and actions are made smooth because of what He did.

When husbands are made clean and beautiful inside by the Lord, they show that the work of God in their lives is real by similar actions in the lives of their wives.  Mr. Husband: Is your wife fulfilled and made complete by your love?  Are you concerned enough about her so that you want “spot(s)” of sorrow to be removed from her soul?  Are you looking for ways to smooth and soothe the “wrinkle(d)” places in her mind and heart?

Verse 28.  “So husbands ought also to love their own wives as their own bodies. He who loves his own wife loves himself;”

The problem with people everywhere is that we often put our own needs far above those of anyone else.  Husbands tend to marry, not because they can give themselves TO their wives, but because they want something FROM her.  That attitude is so common that we accept it culturally because we aren’t even fully aware it is wrong.  Frank Sinatra sang, “I’ll do it MY way,” which should be a warning sign to every one of us.

This verse does NOT say that the husband is to constantly deny himself in everything (we’re human after all).  Instead it recognizes that we DO love ourselves – the difference here is that we are to love someone else (the wife) just as much.  And it should be clear to us all, as husbands, that if we continue to fervently love our wives, life will be better, not only for the wife, but for the husband, too.  Husbands should carry this concept to their children: “If Mommy is happy, we all will be happy!” (and it’s true).

Verse 29.  “for no one ever hated his own flesh, but nourishes and cherishes it, just as Christ also does the church,”

The husband who acts in a hateful manner toward his wife is actually hateful, not only toward her, but to himself as well.  God created marriage for many reasons, and one of them is to provide for our happiness.  If you, the husband, are nursing a grudge toward your wife, it will ruin YOUR life in addition to hers.  We are to “be kind to one another, tender hearted, forgiving one another, just as God in Christ also forgave you” (Ephesians 4:32).

That verse is especially applicable in marriage, where the parties live in such close proximity to one another that their “nice” behavior is tested to the limit.  Marriage has the effect of revealing us for what we are and it’s a training ground for men to learn to walk in the Spirit of God.  Every man should look to the Lord. Even though he may love his wife, he needs the Lord, for only HIS love in us will last.

Verse 30.  “because we are members of His body.”

When we are in Christ, we are as close to Him as the fingers, toes, arms, legs and other parts of our bodies are to human beings.  Some manuscripts add to this verse, “of His flesh, and of His bones.”  The reference is to the formation of the first woman in Genesis Chapter Two.  Eve’s name indicated she was “taken from man” and then she was given to him.  The church is taken from the wounded side of Christ and we have similarly been given to our Lord.

Adam and Eve demonstrated a basic flaw in humanity: a fatal tendency toward self-direction, coupled with an unwillingness to respond to the clear leading of the Lord.  That’s why arguments in marriage are so common and it’s why divorce is so prevalent.  We all too often love ourselves more than we love our spouse.  In Christ, we are being taken out of selfishness and are made a part of Him, receiving much needed healing and new life.  We are “His body” because of His love.

 Audio Bible Study - Ephesians 5:31-33

Verse 31.  “For this reason a man shall leave his father and mother and shall be joined to his wife, and the two shall become one flesh.”

The first woman, Eve, was literally removed out of the first man, Adam.  They were “one flesh.”  God caused the man to sleep, which was a picture of death.  At that moment, the first woman was taken out of him, a picture of life.  The church was taken out of Christ – His life was given to you and me.  Adam and Eve were “one flesh” and we are “one” with our Lord by simply accepting what He has done for us all.  The account of Adam and Eve may be seen in Genesis 2:21-24 and this verse in Ephesians is taken from Genesis 2:24.

Marriage was created by God and it is not merely like a human contract that can be broken by the parties to it.  There are many reasons why God instituted marriage and probably the most important is that marriage is a parable given to the world about Christ and His Church.  Jesus Christ gave up everything out of His love, and the husband is to reveal Christ’s love to this world through the unselfish love he has for his wife, even giving up his previous life for her.

Ron Beckham, Pastor
Friday Study Ministries
The First Church On The Net
www.FridayStudy.org
www.FirstChurchOnTheNet.org
"While we were yet sinners, Christ died for us" (Romans 5:8)
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