Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Ephesians 4:24
And that ye put on the new man, which after God is created in righteousness and true holiness.
24. that ye put on ] See note on “put off,” Eph 4:22. Here again is an aorist infinitive in the Gr.; and we may correspondingly paraphrase, “(you were taught) with regard to the fact that the new man was put on.”
On the meaning of the phrase here, see notes on Eph 4:22, where it is explained by contrast and implication. The “putting on the new man” is the inseparable converse to the “putting off the old man.” There is no neutral border; to step out of the old position and connexion, out of Adam, is to step into the new, into Christ.
Meantime, what is in covenant and in principle a thing done, is to be in realization and application a thing doing, a thing repeated. So we have Rom 13:14; “ put ye on the Lord Jesus Christ,” an exhortation to a new act of realization. And cp. Col 3:12. The other side, the side (as we believe) of this passage, appears Gal 3:27; “ ye did put on Christ.”
the new man ] Practically, the new position and power (legal and moral, see note on Eph 4:22) of the regenerated self. In a deeper analysis, we trace (as above on Eph 4:22) a reference to the Second Man, the Second Adam, Christ. (See the quotation from St Ignatius, Introd., p. 28. See also, for another aspect of this phrase, Eph 2:15). By incorporation with Him His “members” become (in a sense needing reverent caution in the statement) repetitions of Him the glorious Archetype, as occupants of His position of Acceptance, and as “one spirit” with Him, and as enabled in Him to live a life whose principle is His separation from sin to God. To come to be “in Him” is thus to “put on the New Man” in the sense of part and lot in the standing and in the power of the Lord as Second Covenant Head. But, we repeat it, the practical reference of the verse is to the “newness” of the believer’s standing and power, acquired in regeneration.
which ] Better, in modern English, who.
after God ] “Answering His great Idea,” His plan and will.
is created ] Better, was created. This “creation” was accomplished, ideally, when the new Covenant Head of the regenerate Race was provided, in eternal purpose; historically, when He was “made Man,” in time; actually, for individuals, when each believer “put on Christ,” came to be “in Him.” Cp. on the thought of spiritual “creation” ch. Eph 2:10; Eph 2:15 ; 2Co 5:17; Gal 6:15; and especially Col 3:10, a close and suggestive parallel here.
righteousness ] Of which the essential idea is willing conformity to Law; “the keeping of His commandments.”
true holiness ] Lit., sanctity of the truth. We use “sanctity” rather than “holiness,” to mark the fact that the Gr. word ( hosiots) is not akin to that commonly rendered “holy.” Its meaning is discussed by Abp Trench ( N. T. Synonyms ii. xxxviii). He shews it to be the virtue which “reverences everlasting sanctities, and owns their obligation”; the intuitive conviction, e.g., of the sacredness of an oath, or of marriage, or, in the spiritual sphere, of God’s absolute claims, wholly apart from a calculation of results. “ Piety ” would fairly, though not fully, represent the word. In two places (Rev 15:4; Rev 16:5) the cognate adjective is used of God Himself. It there suggests His own inviolable regard for His own truth, in mercy and judgment.
The word (noun, adjective, or adverb) occurs (as here) with “righteous” or “righteousness” Luk 1:75; 1Th 2:10; Tit 1:8. It is the almost invariable rendering in the LXX. for the Heb. chsd; e.g. Psa 16:10, quoted Act 2:27; Act 13:35 (A.V. “ thy Holy One ”); and Isa 55:3, quoted Act 13:34 (where lit. “ the holy things of David,” the inviolable promises given to him [38] ).
[38] The lit. rendering of the Heb. of Isa 55:3 is “the mercies of David, the assured (mercies).” The LXX. represents, but does not translate, this. In Psa 16:10 render lit., “Thy godly One,” or perhaps, “Thy favoured, beloved, One.” (Note by the Dean of Peterborough).
“ Of the truth ”: so lit., and so, looking at St Paul’s usage, we translate; not “ of truth,” as R.V. and marg. A.V. This “sanctity” or “piety” is “ of ” the truth of the Gospel, because the Gospel explains it, and it characterizes the Gospel; and this is equally so, whether the thought is of its manifestation in Christ or in Christians, in Head or in Members.
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
And that ye put on the new man – The new man refers to the renovated nature. This is called in other places, the new creature, or the new creation (see the notes on 2Co 5:17), and refers to the condition after the heart is changed. The change is so great, that there is no impropriety in speaking of one who has experienced it as a new man. He has new feelings, principles, and desires. He has laid aside his old principles and practices, and, in everything that pertains to moral character, he is new. His body is indeed the same; the intellectual structure of his mind the same; but there has been a change in his principles and feelings which malco him, in all the great purposes of life, a new being. Learn, that regeneration is not a trifling change. It is not a mere change of relations, or of the outward condition. It is not merely being brought from the world into the church, and being baptized, though by the most holy hands; it is much more. None of these things would make proper the declaration, he is a new man. Regeneration by the Spirit of God does.
After God – kata Theon. In respect to God. The idea is, evidently, that man is so renewed as to become like God, or the divine image is restored to the soul. In the parallel passage in Colossians Col 3:9, the idea is expressed more fully, renewed in knowledge after the image of him that created him. Man, by regeneration, is restored to the lost image of God; compare Gen 1:26.
Is created – A word that is often used to denote the new birth, from its strong resemblance to the first act of creation; see it explained in the notes on 2Co 5:17.
In righteousness – That is, the renewed man is made to resemble God in righteousness. This proves that man, when he was made, was righteous; or that righteousness constituted a part of the image of God in which lie was created. The object of the work of redemption is to restore to man the lost image of God, or to bring him back to the condition in which he was before he fell.
And true holiness – Margin, as in Greek, holinese of truth – standing in contrast with lusts of deceit (Greek), in Eph 4:22. Holiness properly refers to purity toward God, and righteousness to integrity toward people; but it is not cerrain that this distinction is observed here. The general idea is, that the renovated man is made an upright and a pious man; and that, therefore, he should avoid the vices which are practiced by the pagan, and which the apostle proceeds to specify. This phrase also proves that, when man was created, he was a holy being.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Eph 4:24
And that ye put on the new man, which after God is created in righteousness and true holiness.
Putting on
Observe–
I. That Christian life begins in renunciation, but does not finish there. It is a great mistake to imagine that Christian life ends with renunciation, or that renunciation constitutes the sum of that life. Great, however, as that mistake may be, it very largely prevails, and works much mischief. It is felt that Christian life is chiefly occupied with sacrifice and resistance; what we forego is the main matter, the great idea being that of renunciation throughout. Out of this negative view, constantly set forth and exaggerated, sprung great evils.
1. One unfortunate result of this view of Christian life is disappointed experiences. It is no uncommon thing to find Christian people with a sense of disappointment in the life they are striving to live; they do not experience all the satisfaction and joy the New Testament obviously promises. A lady told the present writer, that on returning from India with her little daughter, when the cliffs of England first came into view she lifted the child to catch sight of the welcome land. The child had heard much, of course, of England, of its wonderful scenes and stories, and seeing the cold coast in the grey mist, she was much disappointed and murmured, Is that England? It does not look much! No; England does not look much from that particular point of view; you must land; you must penetrate it; you must wander on the banks of the Wye, by the lakes of Cumberland, on the hills of Derbyshire; you must see the ferns and flowers of Devonshire; the gardens of Kent, the orchards of Gloucestershire, rivers, mountains, parks, landscapes, cities, cathedrals; and then England will grow upon you, and you shall acknowledge the half has not been told. Many are similarly disappointed with religion, simply because they have not gone on to realize its treasures and blessings. They have understood that Christianity means renunciation rather than appropriation; and whilst they have given up the false and base, whilst they have left the far country and returned to their fatherland, they have known little more than its grey cliffs, and feel the sense of keen disappointment. For all that we give up for Christs sake, a new world opens to us of fresh interests, activities, and pleasures, and this world we must forthwith claim and realize. We put off not that we may be found naked and comfortless, but that we may put on–put on beauty for ashes, the oil of joy for mourning, the garment of praise for the spirit of heaviness.
2. Another unhappy result of this negative view of Christian life is found in poverty of character. It is not enough that we are free from old vices; we must put new virtues in their place, equally living and bold; and we suffer when this view is not fully entertained. Carlyle has a pregnant passage on this subject: Washington is another of our perfect characters, to me a most limited uninteresting sort. The thing is not only to avoid error, but to attain immense masses of truth. There are many such as Washington–perfect characters so far that they refuse evil and avoid error, and yet limited, uninteresting, because they have not gone on to attain fulness of knowledge, depth of feeling, strength and richness of character. Simply to renounce error and evil will leave us neutral characters, without attractiveness or force; we must attain immense masses of truth, immense masses of purity, immense masses of kindness, immense masses of whatever is lovely and of good report. As in the springtime the old withered leaves are expelled by new buds and replaced by unfolding blossoms, so the old evil characteristics of our life must be rejected and supplanted by the new radiant graces and joys which spring from the Spirit of God renewing the spirit of our mind.
3. Another unhappy result of this negative view of Christian life is found in many painful lapses. The Christian life begins with renunciation, but renunciation leading to possession–possession of higher and nobler qualities and characteristics. The ground is cleared of the thorn, that the green fir tree may disport itself; of the brier, that the fragrant myrtle may fill the air with sweetness; and if the fir and myrtle do not speedily spring forth, the wild growths of the wilderness again shoot and bear their fruits of bitterness.
II. That the good of the Christian life is the assumption of sublimest character. We are to aspire to a Divine moral likeness, to be perfect, even as our Father who is in heaven is perfect. Some say they cannot believe in God, the God of the Bible, because He is only a magnified man. Well, and what special difficulty is there if that were so? What is a true man? The best we know! and that magnified can be no bad thing. What could be more admirable than the genius of Shakespeare indefinitely magnified, the charity of Howard, the righteousness of Paul, the gentleness of John? We might have the conception of a worse God than that; could we easily have a better? What about God being a magnified man, if man is first a minified God? Here is the truth: there is more of the Spirit of the Universe in us than some think. We were made in the image of God, our nature in its depths bears the likeness of God, and it is our calling to strive until we put on that glorious personality which after Gods image is created in righteousness and holiness. But where shall we acquaint ourselves with this new man, so utterly glorious and Divine? The truth for us is the truth as it is in Jesus, and all the glorious features of our great ideal are definite in Jesus Christ. (W. L. Watkinson.)
The new man
I. New thoughts. Formerly chaos; now light.
II. New motives. The glory of God and the welfare of fellow man take the place of selfish and sinful motives. Order and beauty dislodge confusion and fruitlessness.
III. New dispositions. The blood of Jesus has washed away the corrupting inclinations of the heart.
IV. New enjoyments. The surroundings are new, the experiences are also new, and consequently the heart has new joys. The new man is immortal. (The Weekly Pulpit.)
Moral renewal
I. The great purpose of the gospel is our moral renewal.
II. This moral renewal, is a creation in the image of God.
III. This new creation has to be put on and appropriated by us.
IV. The means of appropriating this new nature is contact with the truth. (Homiletic Hints.)
Spring clothing
At this season of the year many living things around us are daily putting on a new appearance. The grass, which, dining the winter, has worn the dullest green, is now putting on the brightest verdure. The shrubs, which have been clothed in raiment of leaden hue, are now putting on their beautiful garments. The trees, which put off their foliage for the dark and cold months of winter, are now again putting on their new and shiny leaves in harmony with the lengthened days and with sunny skies. Seeds and roots, which, during many weeks, have been hid in the soil, are putting off the old man of the unquickened and undeveloped state, and are putting on the new man of germ life, and of plant life, and of bloom life. The effect of all these changes around us is to produce corresponding changes in the spirits, and in the health, and in the habits of the people. This extends to things both small and great. All, who have the means, lay aside the raiment which spring suns show to be threadbare and soiled, and attire themselves in clothing which will bear the manifestation of light; while those whose poverty prevents such changes, try to make all things new, by making all things clean. The changes to which we refer in the vegetable kingdom, are the result of newness of life. Under the influence of vernal light and heat, the seed germinates, the sap rises in the shrub, and in the tree, and circulates through every branch, and bough, and stem; and the improved appearance of all things in the vegetable kingdom, is the result of an increased power of life. The changes, too, which men make at this season are partly the result of an increase in the animal spirits and in physical energy. No such changes as those we have been speaking of, pass however upon that which is artificial. The grass, and the shrubs, and the trees, in the landscape of the painter, change not with the season. The true Christian has a new man to put on. The mere formalist, like a stuffed animal, or like an artificial flower, or like a painting from the life, is now what he was in the beginning. There can be no change, no satisfactory change even in the outer life, just because there is no religious or spiritual vitality in the soul. The new man which, according to this precept, we are to put on, and which is of God, is, as the very words indicate, outside the man. The reference here is not to the inner man which God alone sees, but to the outer man, which is the only part of our being that our fellow men can see. There are precepts which require attention to the inner man, as for example, Keep thy heart with all diligence, and it is useless to attend to the outer man, unless we give first and commanding attention to the inner man; but the outer man–the character which a Christian has among his fellow Christians, and which he has in the world–is of immense moment–of such immense moment that God gives us directions like the text, Put on, He says, the new man. Now, the outside man consists, as you well know, of words, looks, demeanour, behaviour, actions, the company which a man keeps, the occupation he adopts and pursues, the connections he forms, his pleasures and recreations, and especially his habits. Well, this outside man, we say again, is of importance, for this is the only part of the man that is really seen–by his fellow men. Hereby, therefore, is the man judged, judged in the Church, and judged in the world. The influence of a man upon his fellows, and the services he renders them, are dependent entirely upon the outward life. And then, this new man is to be put on in connection with a new heart and with a renewed heart. Sometimes, when men are describing hypocrisy, or describing conduct which they resent, they say of certain behaviour, it is put on. Now there is a putting on which is of course sinful and to be deprecated, but there is a putting on which becomes a duty. The artiste in the theatre puts on a certain attire for the sake of acting, for the sake of mere play. But a man in ordinary circumstances, puts on raiment for the sake of covering, for warmth and health, for convenience and preservation of life. Now, because some clothe themselves in peculiar attire simply for the purpose of play, we do not condemn the putting on of suitable clothing for the purposes of work. Just so with reference to outward character. There is an outward character which it is the duty of every man to study. If a man neglect his outward character, he is decidedly committing sin; he is breaking such distinct and positive commandments as that which we are now considering–put on the new man. But then this new man is to be put on in connection with a new heart and with a renewed heart. Now the characteristic of the new man is, of course, godliness, and its distinctive features are righteousness and true holiness. Hence, following the text, you find the words, which after God is created in righteousness and true holiness. The apostle names some of the things in which this righteousness and true holiness consist. It is very remarkable that he should mention such things as he does here speak of. For example, he goes on to say, Putting away lying, let every man speak truth with his neighbour, for we are members one of another, recognizing truthfulness as a part of righteousness and true holiness, and lying as the opposite of righteousness and true holiness. Again we find him saving, Let him that stole steal no more, but rather let him labour, working with his hands the thing which is good, that he may have to give to him that needeth. Now, you know, brethren, that there are people who think that righteousness and true holiness consist principally in making prayers, and in coming to places of worship, and in taking the Lords Supper, and in tallying godliness and religion from morning to night; and you find that such people will lie, and they will not blush when charged with lying; you find they will Steal and even justify theft; you find they will walk in a path that many an upright worldly man will not dare to put his foot upon. Now, all these cursed opinions, with their hellish fruit, require to be driven away. People sometimes justify the retention of that which Paul calls the old man by saying, Such a thing is my habit, or my temper, or my temperament, or my constitution, or my nature; but you know this is no justification for continuance in evil. It is absurd to talk about evil feelings being your temper or temperament, or constitution, or nature; you, Christian, are a new creature, and there is a new man to put on. Others justify the repression of very much that is within them by saying I feel it, although I do not express myself. I am kind to that man in heart, but I do not show it. Look here, what does our text mean? Put on the new man. If God has changed that heart of yours, turned out the wrath and enmity, and put kindness there, you must put on the new man. It is of no use, though you may have kind feelings within, to show on the outside the angry man; you must show on the outside the kind, considerate, and compassionate man. Then, we say again, what have you in daily wear as spiritual attire? Do you speak of religious subjects in the same tone, and in the same phrases, and with no more intelligence, sagacity, and feelings, than you did, say ten years ago? Does your countenance show only as much interest in spiritual things as when you first gave heed to them? Is your walk through life upon the same incline as when you first moved heavenward? (S. Martin, D. D.)
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 24. Put on the new man] Get a new nature; for in Christ Jesus-under the Christian dispensation, neither circumcision avails any thing, nor uncircumcision, but a new creation. Therefore ye must be renewed in the spirit of your mind.
Which after God is created in righteousness] Here is certainly an allusion to the creation of man. Moses tells us, Ge 1:27, that God created man in his own image; that is, God was the model according to which he was formed in the spirit of his mind. St. Paul says here that they should put on the new man, which after God is created in righteousness and true holiness, or, , in the holiness of truth. Both certainly refer to the same thing, and the one illustrates the other. From the apostle we learn what Moses meant by the image of God; it was righteousness and the truth of holiness. See Clarke on Ge 1:26. It is not this or the other degree of moral good which the soul is to receive by Jesus Christ, it is the whole image of God; it is to be formed , according to God; the likeness of the Divine Being is to be traced upon his soul, and he is to bear that as fully as his first father Adam bore it in the beginning.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
And that ye put on; the same metaphor of a garment as before, to show the intimateness of the new man with us, and its being an ornament to us.
The new man; i.e. a new disposition or constitution of the whole man, called the new creature, 2Co 5:17, and a divine nature, 2Pe 1:4.
Which after God; after Gods image.
Is created in righteousness and true holiness; either righteousness may relate to the second table, and
holiness to the first, and so both contain our duty to man and to God; or righteousness may imply that Divine principle in us, whereby we perform our whole duty to God and the creature, and holiness that which denieth all mixture of corruption in onr duty to God and man.
True; sincere and sound. As
righteousness and holiness are opposed to lusts, Eph 4:22, so true here, to deceitful there.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
24. put on the new manOpposedto “the old man,” which is to be “put off” (Eph4:22). The Greek here (kainon) is different fromthat for “re-new-ed” (Eph4:23). Put on not merely a renovated nature, but a new,that is, altogether different nature, a changed nature(compare Note,, see on Col3:10).
after God, c.Translate,”Which hath been created (once for all: so the Greekaorist means: in Christ, Eph 2:10so that in each believer it has not to be created again, but to beput on) after (the image of) God” (Gen 1:27;Col 3:10; 1Pe 1:15),c. God’s image in which the first Adam was originally created, isrestored, to us far more gloriously in the second Adam, the image ofthe invisible God (2Co 4:4Col 1:15; Heb 1:3).
in righteousness“IN”it as the element of the renewed man.
true holinessrather,as the Greek, “holiness of the truth“;holiness flowing from sincere following of “the truth of God”(Rom 1:25; Rom 3:7;Rom 15:8): opposed to “thelusts of deceit” (Greek, Eph4:22); compare also Eph 4:21,”truth is in Jesus.” “Righteousness” is inrelation to our fellow men, the second table of the law; “Holiness,”in relation to God, the first table; the religious observance ofoffices of piety (compare Lu 1:75).In the parallel (Col 3:10) itis, “renewed in knowledge after the image,” c. As atColosse the danger was from false pretenders to knowledge, thetrue “knowledge” which flows from renewal of the heart isdwelt on so at Ephesus, the danger being from the corrupt moralsprevalent around, the renewal in “holiness,” contrastedwith the Gentile “uncleanness” (Eph4:19), and “righteousness,” in contrast to”greediness,” is made prominent.
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
And that ye put on the new man,…. Which some understand of Jesus Christ, who is truly and really man, and a new or extraordinary one, Jer 31:22 and as such is God’s creature, and is made after his image, and which appears in his perfect holiness and righteousness; and the phrase of putting on well agrees with him,
Ro 13:14 whose righteousness is a garment, pure and spotless, and which is put on by the hand of faith: though rather by the “new man” is meant, the new nature, the new principle, or work of grace in the soul, elsewhere called a new creature; and it bears this name in opposition to, and distinction from the old man, or corruption of nature, before spoken of; and because it is “de noro”, or anew, put into the hearts of men; it is not what was in them naturally; nor is it any old principle renewed, or wrought up in another and better form; but it is something that is infused, that was never there before: and because it is new in all its parts; such who have it, have new hearts and new spirits given unto them; they have new eyes to see with, and new ears to hear with, and new hands to handle and work with, and new feet to walk with; and they live a new life and conversation: so the Jews says of a man that truly repents of sin, and does not return to it, that he is , “a new man” d: now to put on this new man, is not to make ourselves new creatures; for this is not by the power of man, but by the Spirit of God; this is God’s work, and not man’s; it is he who made us at first, remakes us, and not we ourselves; besides, these Ephesians the apostle writes to, were already made new men, or new creatures; but to put on the new man, is to walk in our lives and conversations agreeably to the new man, or work of grace upon the soul; as to put off the old man, respects the former conversation, or a not walking as formerly, and agreeably to the dictates of corrupt nature, so to put on the new man, is to walk according to the principles of grace and holiness formed in the soul: and of this new man it is further said,
which after God is created in righteousness and true holiness; the principle of the soul is “created”, and therefore is not the effect of man’s power, which cannot create; it is peculiar to God only to create; it is a creature, and therefore not to be trusted in, and depended on; for not grace, but the author of grace, is the object of trust: it is created “after God”; by his power, according to his mind and will, and after his image, and in his likeness; which greatly consists “in righteousness and true holiness”; called “true”, in opposition to the typical and ceremonial holiness of the Jews, and to the pretended holiness of hypocrites; and denotes the truth and genuineness of the Spirit’s work of sanctification upon the heart; unless this should rather be considered as the effect of his grace upon the soul; for so the words may be rendered, “unto righteousness and true holiness”; for the new man is of such a nature, and so formed, as to tend to acts of righteousness and holiness, and to engage men to the performance of them: some copies read, “in righteousness, and holiness, and truth”; and so the Ethiopic version seems to have read.
d Tzeror Hammor. fol. 156. 4.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
Put on (). First aorist middle infinitive of (–), for which see Col 3:10.
The new man ( ). “The brand-new (see 2:15) man,” though in Col 3:10.
After God ( ). After the pattern God, the new birth, the new life in Christ, destined to be like God in the end (Ro 8:29).
Fuente: Robertson’s Word Pictures in the New Testament
New man [] . See on Mt 26:29.
Created [] . See on ch. Eph 2:10.
In righteousness and true holiness [ ] . Rev., correctly, in righteousness and holiness of truth. See on Luk 1:75. Truth. Opposed to deceit, ver. 22, and likewise personified. Righteousness and holiness are attributes of truth.
Fuente: Vincent’s Word Studies in the New Testament
1) “And that ye put on the new man” (kai endusasthai ton kainon anthropon) “And to dress up in, put on the new man, the new creature!” Outward reformation is to reflect an implanted new nature. Genuine morality is to be cultivated by inner power and influence of the new nature — not by environmental social reform from without. Putting on and putting off are acts of choice while renewal is a process of inner change effected by the Holy Spirit, Joh 6:63. The Spirit quickens, makes alive, 2Co 3:6.
2) “Which after God” (ton kata theon) “Which according to God,” God’s pattern of creation or God’s nature of holiness.
3) “Is created in righteousness and true holiness” (ktis henta en dikaiosune kai hosioteti) “Was created (the new man) in (a state or condition of) righteousness and or even holiness of being,” 1Jn 3:9. His righteousness is in the new man, the new creature, 2Pe 1:4; Col 3:3-4; 2Co 5:17; Eph 2:10.
Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary
24. And that ye put on the new man. All that is meant is, “Be renewed in the spirit, or, be renewed within or completely, — beginning with the mind, which appears to be the part most free from all taint of sin.” What is added about the creation, may refer either to the first creation of man, or to the second creation, which is effected by the grace of Christ. Both expositions will be true. Adam was at first created after the image of God, and reflected, as in a mirror, the Divine righteousness; but that image, having been defaced by sin, must now be restored in Christ. The regeneration of the godly is indeed — as we have formerly explained (149) — nothing else than the formation anew of the image of God in them. There is, no doubt, a far more rich and powerful manifestation of Divine grace in this second creation than in the first; but our highest perfection is uniformly represented in Scripture as consisting in our conformity and resemblance to God. Adam lost the image which he had originally received, and therefore it becomes necessary that it shall be restored to us by Christ. The design contemplated by regeneration is to recall us from our wanderings to that end for which we were created.
In righteousness. If righteousness be taken as a general term for uprightness, holiness will be something higher, or that purity which lies in being devoted to the service of God. I am rather inclined to consider holiness as referring to the first table, and righteousness to the second table, of the law, as in the song of Zacharias,
“
That we may serve him in holiness and righteousness, all the days of our life.” (Luk 1:74.)
Plato lays down the distinction correctly, that holiness ( ὁσιότης) lies in the worship of God, and that the other part, righteousness, ( δικαιοσύνη,) bears a reference to men. The genitive, of truth, ( τὢς αληθείας,) is put in the place of an adjective, and refers to both terms; so that, while it literally runs, in righteousness and holiness of truth, the meaning is, in true righteousness and holiness. He warns us that both ought to be sincere; because we have to do with God, whom it is impossible to deceive.
(149) See Calvin’s Commentary on Corinthians, vol. 2 p. 187.
Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary
(24) And that ye put on . . .But this effect of the putting off of the old man is at once absorbed in the stronger idea of putting on the new man. In the new man here is implied not merely youthfulness, but the freshness of a higher nature (as in Eph. 2:15). To put on the new man is, therefore, to put on the Lord Jesus Christ, by that divine process of which we have the beginning in Gal. 3:27, the continuation in Rom. 13:14, and the completion in 1Co. 15:53-54; 2Co. 5:3. For He is the new man, the second Adam, formed after God, in righteousness and holiness of the truth.
Holiness (used only here and in Luk. 1:75) is purity consecrated to God in His Holy One (Act. 2:27). It describes the purity of heart of which our Lord Himself speaks as a still higher grace, gifted with a higher reward, than even hunger and thirst after righteousness (Mat. 5:6; Mat. 5:8). Righteousness is goodness shown to others, to man and to God: holiness is goodness in itself, as it is in the High and Holy One who inhabiteth eternity. Stress is laid upon it here in contrast with the lusts and uncleanness described above.
Truth is similarly opposed to the deceit of Eph. 4:22. Christ is Himself the Truth, as being the manifestation of the fulness of the Godhead. As the corrupting and beguiling lusts belong to the spirit of Deceit, so righteousness and holiness to the Truth.
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
24. After God So Col 3:10. “Renewed in knowledge after the image of Him that created him.”
Created As Ellicott well notes, in the past tense, as if the image in which we are to be being renewed was itself created at first, though our renewal be a progressive work, to be completed at “the manifestation of the sons of God,” Rom 8:19, when we are to be completely “conformed to the image of his Son” at the final “regeneration,” Mat 20:28, when we are “children,” or rather, sons, “of the resurrection.” Luk 20:36. And here we learn wherein, in some respects, is the image of God in which Adam was first created, and in which our renewal ultimates.
Righteousness holiness Rectitude in our dealings with men, holiness in our relations with God; yet the latter giving a higher tone to the former than it could of itself possess. Virtue is hardly virtue until verified by piety. See note on Mat 5:7. Ellicott well notes “a faint contrast” between righteousness here and greediness, Eph 4:19, (gain-greed, as we have translated it.) as well as between holiness and uncleanness, or baseness, as we have rendered it. If the entire “contrast” which we exhibit, as intended by Paul in these two paragraphs, is realized, the contrast Dr. Ellicott notices ceases to be faint. Our renderings, which exclude the reference to sexuality alone, are thereby confirmed.
True This adjective is in the Greek a genitive noun of truth, and commentators now agree should so be rendered: righteousness and holiness of truth. Truth, then, is here contrasted with the deceit of Eph 4:22, where see our note. And this contrast again confirms our rendering in that verse.
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
Eph 4:24. True holiness. As this stands in a beautiful contrast to deceitful lusts, Eph 4:22 we may, with great propriety, retain our version; though archbishop Tillotson would translate the clause, the holiness of truth, which is perfectly agreeable to the originalby truth understanding the gospel, and so explaining it of evangelical holiness, in opposition to such mere moral virtues as might be found in a heat
Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke
Eph 4:24 . Observe the change of tenses . The laying aside of the old man is the negative commencement of the change, and hence is represented as a momentary act; the becoming renewed is an enduring process, the finishing act of which is the putting on of the new man , correlative to the ,. Hence , aorist; , present ; , aorist .
] As previously the old immoral state is objectivized, and objectivized indeed as a person, so is it also here with the new Christian moral state. Thus this new habitus appears as the new man , which God has created ( ), but man appropriates for himself ( ), so that thus moral freedom is not annulled by God’s ethical creative action.
] not present , but the new moral habitus of the Christian is set forth as the person created by God, which in the individual cases is not first constituted by growth , but is received , and then exhibits itself experimentally in the case of those who, according to the figurative expression of the passage, have put it on .
] Comp. Col 3:10 ; not merely divinely , and that in contrast to human propagation (Hofmann, Schriftbew . I. p. 289), but: according to God , i.e. ad exemplum Dei (Gal 4:28 ). Thereby the creation of the new man is placed upon a parallel with that of our first parents (Gen 1:27 ), who were created after God’s image ( , Col 3:10 ); they, too, until through Adam sin came into existence, were as sinless . [243]
. . . ] belongs to , expressing the constitution of the new man created after God; furnished, provided with rectitude and holiness of the truth (on , see Matthiae, p. 1340). The truth is the opposite of the , Eph 4:22 and like this personified. As in the old man the pursues its work, so in the new man the , i.e. the Truth , the divine evangelical truth, bears sway, and the moral effects of the truth, righteousness and holiness, appear here, where the truth is personified, as its attributes , which now show themselves in the new man who has been created. The resolving it into an adjective: true , not merely apparent, righteousness and holiness (Chrysostom, Luther, Castalio, Beza, Calvin, Grotius, and most expositors), is arbitrary and tame. And to take instrumentally (Morus, Flatt) is erroneous, for the reason that righteousness and holiness form the ethical result of the creation of the new man; hence Beza, Koppe, and others thought that must be taken for . and (comp. Luk 1:75 ; 1Th 2:10 ; Tit 1:8 ) are distinguished so, that the latter places rectitude in itself ( ), in relation to God ( sanctitas ); , Plat. Euth. p. 6 E. See Tittmann, Synon . p. 25, and the passages in Wetstein. With special frequency the two notions are associated in Plato.
[243] Comp. Ernesti, Ursprung der Snde , II. p. 135 ff., in opposition to Julius Mller, II. p. 487, who calls in question the identity of contents between the and the original divine image.
Fuente: Heinrich August Wilhelm Meyer’s New Testament Commentary
24 And that ye put on the new man, which after God is created in righteousness and true holiness.
Ver. 24. Which after God is created ] The new man is nothing else but the happy cluster of heavenly graces.
And true holiness ] Or, holiness of truth. Opposite to that deceitfulness of lusts, Eph 4:22 .
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
24 .] and put on (see on above) the new man (as opposed to ; not meaning Christ , any further than as He is its great Head and prototype, see on . ), which was created (mark the aorist, as historical fact, once for all, in Christ. In each individual case, it is not created again, but put on: cf. Rom 13:14 ) after God (= , Col 3:10 : also , Gen 1:27 : so 1Pe 1:15 , . . . The doctrine of the restoration to us of the divine image in Christ, as here implied, is not to be overlooked. Mller, ‘Lehre von der Snde,’ ii. p. 485 ff., denies any allusion to it here, but on insufficient grounds, as indeed he himself virtually allows. Not the bare fact of Gen 1:27 , but the great truth which that fact represents, is alluded to. The image of God in Christ is a far more glorious thing than Adam ever had, or could have had: but still the , = , is true of both: and, as Mller himself says, ‘ jenes ist erst die wahrhafte Erfllung von diesem ’) in (element, or sphere, of the character of the new man) righteousness and holiness of truth (again, beware of ‘ true holiness ,’ E. V. as destroying the whole antithesis and force of the words. The genitive, too, belongs to both substantives.
, God’s essence, Joh 3:33 ; Rom 1:25 ; Rom 3:7 ; Rom 15:8 , opposed to above. “ and occur together, but in contrary order, in ref. Luke, and Wis 9:3 . The adjectives and adverbs are connected, 1Th 2:10 : Tit 1:8 . betokens a just relation among the powers of the soul within, and towards men and duties without. But , as the Heb. (Pro 2:21 . Amo 5:10 ), betokens the integrity of the spiritual life, and the piety towards God of which that is the condition. Hence both expressions together complete the idea of moral perfection ( Mat 5:48 ). As here the ethical side of the divine image is brought out, Col 3:10 brings out the intellectual . The new birth alone leads to : all knowledge which proceeds not from renewal of heart, is but outward appearance: and of this kind was that among the false Colossian teachers. On the other hand, in Wis 2:23 ( , ( . F. (not A.)) ) the physical side of the divine image is brought out.” Olsh. Stier suggests that there is perhaps a slight contrast in to Eph 4:19 , and in ( , Chr.) to ).
Fuente: Henry Alford’s Greek Testament
Eph 4:24 . : and put on the new man . For the imper. is read by some authorities of consequence ( [448] [449] [450] 1 [451] 2 , etc.). The aor. is appropriately used again, as before in Eph 4:22 ; “putting off” and “putting on” being acts, while renewal ( ) is a process. For see on Eph 2:15 above. : which after God was created . The aor. suggests that the “new man” is regarded here not as a nature created anew for the individual, but as “the holy form of human life which results from redemption,” created once for all in and by Christ, and participated in by the individual convert. (See Ell., in loc. , and Mller, Christ. Doctr. of Sin , ii., p. 392). The phrase has sometimes the simple sense of “godly,” “in a godly manner” (2Co 7:9-11 ). Hence it is held by some to mean nothing more here than created “divinely” (Hofm.) or “according to the will of God” (Abb.). But is also used to express likeness (1Ki 11:10 ; Heb 8:8 ; Gal 4:28 ; 1Pe 1:15 ; 1Pe 4:6 ). Here, therefore, it may mean “like God” or “after the image of God”. That this is the sense is confirmed by the use of (which recalls Gen 1:27 ), and by the fuller parallel statement in Col 3:10 : , . The clause, therefore, affirms a new creation of man, and describes that creation as being according to the image or likeness of God. It neither states nor suggests, however, that the image of God in which man was first created was lost and has been restored in Christ. What it does state is simply that this second creation, like the first, was in conformity with the Divine likeness or after the example of what God is. : in righteousness and holiness of the truth . For some few authorities give ( [452] 1 [453] , Cypr., Hil., etc.). This clause specifies the things in which the new man was created and in which the likeness between him and God consisted. , therefore denotes the quality or ethical condition in which the creation realised itself. and are coupled again in Luk 1:75 ( cf. also Wis 9:3 ; Clem. Rom., First Corinthians , xlviii., 4). Plato distinguishes in two ways between the idea of and that of . He defines as the generic term and as the specific ( Euthyp. , p. 12 E); and he describes the former as having regard to our relations to men , the latter to our relations to God ( Gorg. , p. 507 B). The latter distinction is also given by other Greek writers (Polyb., xxiii., 10, 8, etc.). It is not easy, indeed, to say how far this distinction holds good in the NT. But both in profane and in biblical Greek the two words, adjective, adverb or noun, are often combined in one statement ( e.g. , Plato, Protag. , 329 C; Theaet. , 176 B; Rep. , x., 615 B; Laws , ii., 663 B; Joseph., Antiq. , viii., 9, 1; Luk 1:75 ; 1Th 2:10 ; Tit 1:8 ). In many of these cases the distinction between integrity and piety is certain, and it is suitable to all. The NT also clearly distinguishes between and (Luk 2:25 ). It may be said, therefore, that and are not used vaguely or interchangeably, but that, while both are of grace and both consequently have a new meaning Godward, the former expresses the right conduct of the Christian man more distinctively in its bearings on his fellow-men, and the latter the same conduct distinctively in its relation to God. is not to be reduced to “true holiness” as in AV, but is to be taken as the gen. of origin and as qualifying both nouns. Further, with the article, contrasting with of Eph 4:22 , seems to be more than Truth in the abstract or a quasi-personification of Truth. It may mean “ the truth” par excellence , the evangelical message, the objective truth given in the Gospel ( , Gal 2:5 ; Gal 2:14 ; or simply, as here, , Joh 8:32 ; Joh 8:40 ; Joh 17:19 ; Gal 5:7 ; 2Co 4:2 ; 2Co 13:8 , etc.). The creation of the new man in the Divine likeness realises itself, therefore, in something better than the ceremonial rectitude of the Jew or the self-contained virtue of the heathen in a righteousnes and a holiness born of the new truth contained in the Evangel.
[448] Codex Sinaiticus (sc. iv.), now at St. Petersburg, published in facsimile type by its discoverer, Tischendorf, in 1862.
[449] Codex Mosquensis (sc. ix.), edited by Matthi in 1782.
[450] Codex Vaticanus (sc. iv.), published in photographic facsimile in 1889 under the care of the Abbate Cozza-Luzi.
[451] Codex Claromontanus (sc. vi.), a Grco-Latin MS. at Paris, edited by Tischendorf in 1852.
[452] Codex Claromontanus (sc. vi.), a Grco-Latin MS. at Paris, edited by Tischendorf in 1852.
[453] Codex Boernerianus (sc. ix.), a Grco-Latin MS., at Dresden, edited by Matthi in 1791. Written by an Irish scribe, it once formed part of the same volume as Codex Sangallensis ( ) of the Gospels. The Latin text, g, is based on the O.L. translation.
Fuente: The Expositors Greek Testament by Robertson
EPHESIANS
THE NEW MAN
Eph 4:24
We had occasion to remark in a former sermon that Paul regards this and the preceding clauses as the summing up of ‘the truth in Jesus’; or, in other words, he considers the radical transformation and renovation of the whole moral nature as being the purpose of the revelation of God in Christ. To this end they have ‘heard Him.’ To this end they have ‘learned Him.’ To this end they have been ‘taught in Him,’ receiving, by union with Him, all the various processes of His patient discipline. This is the inmost meaning of all the lessons in that great school in which all Christians are scholars, and Christ is the teacher and the theme, and union to Him the condition of entrance, and the manifold workings of His providence and His grace the instruments of training, and heaven the home when school time is over-that we should become new men in Christ Jesus.
This great practical issue is set forth here under three aspects-one negative, two positive. The negative process is single and simple-’put off the old man.’ The positive is double-a spiritual ‘renewal’ effected in our spirits, in the deep centre of our personal being, by that Divine Spirit who, dwelling in us, is ‘the spirit of our minds’; and then, consequent upon that inward renewal, a renovation of life and character, which is described as being the ‘putting on,’ as if it were a garment, of ‘the new man,’ created by a divine act, and consisting in moral and spiritual likeness to God. It is not necessary to deal, except incidentally, with the two former, but I desire to consider the last of these-the putting on of the new man-a little more closely, and to try to bring out the wealth and depth of the Apostle’s words in this wonderful text.
The ideas contained seem to me in brief to be these-the great purpose of the Gospel is our moral renewal; that moral renewal is a creation after God’s image; that new creation has to be put on or appropriated by us; the great means of appropriating it is contact with God’s truth. Let us consider these points in order.
I. The great purpose of the Gospel is our moral renewal; ‘the new man … created in righteousness and … holiness.’
Now, of course, there are other ways of stating the end of the Gospel. This is by no means an exhaustive setting forth of its purpose. We may say that Christ has come in order that men may know God. We may say that He comes in order that the Divine Love, which ever delights to communicate, may bestow itself, and may conceive of the whole majestic series of acts of self-revelation from the beginning as being-if I may so say-for the gratification of that impulse to impart itself, which is the characteristic of love in God and man. We may say that the purpose of the whole is the deliverance of men from the burden and guilt of sin. But whether we speak of the end of the Gospel as the glory of God, or the blessedness of man, or as here, as being the moral perfection of the individual or of the race, they are all but various phrases of the one complete truth. The Gospel is the consequence and the manifestation of the love of God, which delights to be known and possessed by loving souls, and being known, changes them into its own likeness, which to know is to be happy, which to resemble is to be pure.
The first thing that strikes me about this representation of our text is the profound sense of human sinfulness which underlies it.
The language is utterly unmeaning-or at all events grossly exaggerated-unless all have sinned, and the nature which belongs to men universally, apart from the transforming power of Christ’s Spirit, be corrupt and evil. And that it is so is the constant view of Scripture. The Bible notion of what men need in order to be pure and good is very different from the superficial notions of worldly moralists and philanthropists. We hear a great deal about ‘culture,’ as if all that were needed were the training and strengthening of the nature, as if what was mainly needed was the development of the understanding. We hear about ‘reformation’ from some who look rather deeper than the superficial apostles of culture. And how singularly the very word proclaims the insufficiency of the remedy which it suggests! ‘Re-formation’ affects form and not substance. It puts the old materials into a new shape. Exactly so-and much good may be expected from that! They are the old materials still, and it matters comparatively little how they are arranged. It is not re-formation, but re-novation, or, to go deeper still, re-generation, that the world needs; not new forms, but a new life; not the culture and development of what it has in itself, but extirpation of the old by the infusion of something now and pure that has no taint of corruption, nor any contact with evil. ‘Verily, I say unto you, ye must be born again.’
All slighter notions of the need and more superficial diagnoses of the disease lead to a treatment with palliatives which never touch the true seat of the mischief, The poison flowers may be plucked, but the roots live on. It is useless to build dykes to keep out the wild waters. Somewhere or other they will find a way through. The only real cure is that which only the Creating hand can effect, who, by slow operation of some inward agency, can raise the level of the low lands, and lift them above the threatening waves. What is needed is a radical transformation, going down to the very roots of the being; and that necessity is clearly implied in the language of this text, which declares that a nature possessing righteousness and holiness is ‘a new man’ to be ‘put on’ as from without, not to be evolved as from within.
It is to be further noticed what the Apostle specifies as the elements, or characteristics of this new nature-righteousness and holiness.
The proclamation of a new nature in Christ Jesus, great and precious truth as it is, has often been connected with teaching which has been mystical in the bad sense of that word, and has been made the stalking horse of practical immorality. But here we have it distinctly defined in what that new nature consists. There is no vague mystery about it, no tampering with the idea of personality. The people who put on the new man are the same people after as before. The newness consists in moral and spiritual characteristics. And these are all summed up in the two-righteousness and holiness. To which is added in the substantially parallel passage in Colossians, ‘Renewed in knowledge after the image of Him that created Him,’ where, I suppose, we must regard the ‘knowledge’ as meaning that personal knowledge and acquaintance which has its condition in love, and is the foundation of the more purely moral qualities of which our text speaks.
Is there, then, any distinction between these two? I think there is very obviously so. ‘Righteousness’ is, I suppose, to be understood here in its narrower meaning of observance of what is right, the squaring of conduct according to a solemn sovereign law of duty. Substantially it is equivalent to the somewhat heathenish word ‘morality,’ and refers human conduct and character to a law or standard. What, then, is ‘holiness’? It is the same general conduct and character, considered, however, under another aspect, and in another relation. It involves the reference of life and self to God, consecration to, and service of Him. It is not a mere equivalent of purity, but distinctly carries the higher reference. The obedience now is not to a law but to a Lord. The perfection now does not consist in conformity to an ideal standard, but in likeness and devotion to God. That which I ought to do is that which my Father in heaven wills. Or, if the one word may roughly represent the more secular word ‘morality,’ the other may roughly represent the less devout phrase, ‘practical religion.’
These are ‘new,’ as actually realised in human nature. Paul thinks that we shall not possess them except as a consequence of renovation. But they are not ‘new’ in the sense that the contents of Christian morality are different from the contents of the law written on men’s hearts. The Gospel proclaims and produces no fantastic ethics of its own. The actions which it stamps in its mint are those which pass current in all lands-not a provincial coinage, but recognised as true in ring, and of full weight everywhere. Do not fancy that Christian righteousness is different from ordinary ‘goodness,’ except as being broader and deeper, more thorough-going, more imperative. Divergences there are, for our law is more than a republication of the law written on men’s hearts. Though the one agrees with the other, yet the area which they cover is not the same. The precepts of the one, like some rock-hewn inscriptions by forgotten kings, are weathered and indistinct, often illegible, often misread, often neglected. The other is written in living characters in a perfect life. It includes all that the former attempts to enjoin, and much more besides. It alters the perspective, so to speak, of heathen morals, and brings into prominence graces overlooked or despised by them. It breathes a deeper meaning and a tenderer beauty into the words which express human conceptions of virtue, but it does take up these into itself. And instead of setting up a ‘righteousness’ which is peculiar to itself, and has nothing to do with the world’s morality, Christianity says, as Christ has taught us, ‘Except your righteousness exceed the righteousness of the scribes and Pharisees, ye shall not enter into the kingdom of God.’ The same apostle who here declares that actual righteousness and holiness are new things on the earth, allows full force to whatsoever weight may be in the heathen notion of ‘virtue,’ and adopts the words and ideas which he found ready made to his hands, in that notion-as fitly describing the Christian graces which he enjoined. Grecian moralists supplied him with the names true, honest, just, and pure. His ‘righteousness’ accepted these as included within its scope. And we have to remember that we are not invested with that new nature, unless we are living in the exercise of these common and familiar graces which the consciences and hearts of all the world recognise for ‘lovely’ and ‘of good report,’ hail as ‘virtue,’ and crown with ‘praise.’
So, then, let me pause here for a moment to urge you to take these thoughts as a very sharp and salutary test. You call yourselves Christian people. The purpose of your Christianity is your growth and perfecting in simple purity, and devotion to, and dependence on, our loving Father. Our religion is nothing unless it leads to these. Otherwise it is like a plant that never seeds, but may bear some feeble blossoms that drop shrunken to the ground before they mature. To very many of us the old solemn remonstrance should come with awakening force-’Ye did run well, what did hinder you?’ You have apprehended Christ as the revealer and bringer of the great mercy of God, and have so been led in some measure to put your confidence in Him for your salvation and deliverance. But have you apprehended Him as the mould into which your life is to be poured, that life having been made fluent and plastic by the warmth of His love? You have apprehended Him as your refuge; have you apprehended Him as your inward sanctity? You have gone to Him as the source of salvation from the guilt and penalties of sin; have you gone to Him, and are you daily growing in the conscious possession of Him, as the means of salvation from the corruption and evil of sin? He comes to make us good. What has He made you? Anything different from what you were twenty years ago? Then, if not, and in so far as you are unchanged and unbettered, the Gospel is a failure for you, and you are untrue to it. The great purpose of all the work of Christ-His life, His sorrows, His passion, His resurrection, His glory, His continuous operation by the Spirit and the word is to make new men who shall be just and devout, righteous and holy.
II. A second principle contained in these words, is that this moral Renewal is a Creation in the image of God.
The new man is ‘created after the image of God’-that is, of course, according to or in the likeness of God. There is evident reference here to the account of man’s creation in Genesis, and the idea is involved that this new man is the restoration and completion of that earlier likeness, which, in some sense, has faded out of the features and form of our sinful souls. It is to be remembered, however, that there is an image of God inseparable from human nature, and not effaceable by any obscuring or disturbance caused by sin. Man’s likeness to God consists in his being a person, possessed of a will and self-consciousness, and that mysterious gift of personality abides whatever perishes. But beyond that natural image of God, as we may call it, there is something else which fades wholly with the first breath of evil, like the reflexion of the sky on some windless sea. The natural likeness remains, and without it no comparison would be possible. We should not think of saying that a stone or an eagle were unlike God. But while the personal being makes comparison fitting, what makes the true contrast? In what respect is man unlike God? In moral antagonism. What is the true likeness? Moral harmony. What separates men from their Father in heaven? Is it that His ‘years are throughout all generations,’ and ‘my days are as an handbreadth’? Is it that His power is infinite, and mine all thwarted by other might and over tending to weakness and extinction? Is it that His wisdom, sunlike, waxes not nor wanes, and there is nothing hid from its beams, while my knowledge, like the lesser light, shines by reflected radiance, serves but to make the night visible, and is crescent and decaying, changeful and wandering? No. All such distinctions based upon what people call the sovereign attributes of God-the distinctions of creator and created, infinite and finite, omnipotent and weak, eternal and transient-make no real gulf between God and man. If we have only to say, ‘As the heavens are higher than the earth, so are’ His ‘ways higher than’ our ‘ways,’ that difference is not unlikeness, and establishes no separation; for low and flat though the dull earth be, does not heaven bend down round it, and send rain and sun, dew and blessing? But it is because ‘your ways are not as my ways’-because there is actual opposition, because the directions are different-that there is unlikeness. The image of God lies not only in that personality which the ‘Father of Lies’ too possesses, but in ‘righteousness and holiness.’
But besides this reference to the original creation of man, there is another reason for the representation of the new nature as being a work of divine creative power. It is in order to give the most emphatic expression possible to the truth that we do not make our righteousness for ourselves, but receive it as from Him. The new man is not our work, it is God’s creation. As at the beginning, the first human life is represented as not originated in the line of natural cause and effect, but as a new and supernatural commencement, so in every Christian soul the life which is derived from God, and will unfold itself in His likeness, comes from His own breath inbreathed into the nostrils. It too is out of the line of natural causes. It too is a direct gift from God. It too is a true supernatural being-a real and new creation.
May I venture a step further? ‘The new man’ is spoken of here as if it had existence ere we ‘put it on.’ I do not press that, as if it necessarily involved the idea which I am going to suggest, for the peculiar form of expression is probably only due to the exigencies of the metaphor. Still it may not be altogether foreign to the whole scope of the passage, if I remind you that the new man, the true likeness of God, has, indeed, a real existence apart from our assumption of it. Of course, the righteousness and holiness which make that new nature in me have no being till they become mine. But we believe that the righteousness and holiness which we make ours come from another, who bestows them on us. ‘The new man’ is not a mere ideal, but has a historical and a present existence. The ideal has lived and lives, is a human person, even Jesus Christ the express image of the Father, who is the beginning of the new creation, who of God is made unto us wisdom and righteousness. That fair vision of a humanity detached from all consequences of sin, renewed in perfect beauty, stainless and Godlike, is no unsubstantial dream, but a simple fact. He ever liveth. His word to us is, ‘I counsel thee to buy of me-white raiment.’ And a full parallel to the words of our text, which bid us ‘put on the new man, created after God in righteousness and holiness,’ is found in the other words of the same Apostle-’Let us cast off the works of darkness, and let us put on the armour of light. Put ye on the Lord Jesus Christ.’
In accordance with this-
III. It is further to be noticed that this new creation has to be put on and appropriated by us.
The same idea which, as I have already remarked, is conveyed by the image of a new creation, is reiterated in this metaphor of putting on the new nature, as if it were a garment. Our task is not to weave it, but to wear it. It is made and ready.
And that process of assumption or putting on has two parts. We are clothed upon with Christ in a double way, or rather in a double sense. We are ‘found in Him not having our own righteousness,’ but invested with His for our pardon and acceptance. We are clothed with His righteousness for our purifying and sanctifying.
Both are the conditions of our being like God. Both are the gifts of God. The one, however, is an act; the other a process. Both are received. The one is received on condition of simple faith; the other is received by the medium of faithful effort. Both are included in the wide conception of salvation, but the law for the one is ‘Not by works of righteousness which we have done, but by His mercy He saved us’; and the law for the other is-’Work out your own salvation with fear and trembling.’ Both come from Christ, but for the one we have the invitation, ‘Buy of Me white raiment that thou mayest be clothed’; and for the other we have the command, ‘Put on the Lord Jesus Christ, and make not provision for the flesh.’ There is the assumption of His righteousness which makes a man a Christian, and has for its condition simple faith. There is the assumption of His righteousness sanctifying and transforming us which follows in a Christian course, as its indispensable accompaniment and characteristic, and that is realised by daily and continuous effort.
And one word about the manner, the effort as set forth here; twofold, as I have already pointed out-a negative and positive. We are not concerned here with the relations of these amongst themselves, but I may remark that there is no growth in holiness possible without the constant accompanying process of excision and crucifixion of the old. If you want to grow purer and liker Christ, you must slay yourselves. You cannot gird on ‘righteousness’ above the old self, as some beggar might buckle to himself royal velvet with its ermine over his filthy tatters. There must be a putting off in order to and accompanying the putting on. Strip yourselves of yourselves, and then you ‘shall not be found naked,’ but clothed with the garments of salvation, as the bride with the robe which is the token of the bridegroom’s love, and the pledge of her espousals to him.
And let nobody wonder that the Apostle here commands us, as by our own efforts, to put on and make ours what is in many other places of Scripture treated as God’s gift. These earnest exhortations are perfectly consistent with the belief that all comes from God. Our faithful adherence to our Lord and Master, our honest efforts in His strength to secure more and more of His likeness, determine the extent to which we shall possess that likeness. The new nature is God’s gift, and it is given to us according to His own fulness indeed, but also according to the measure of our faith. Blessed be His name! we have nothing to do but to accept His gift. The garment with which He clothes our nakedness and hides our filth is woven in no earthly looms. As with the first sinful pair, so with all their children since, ‘the Lord God made them’ the covering which they cannot make for themselves. But we have to accept it, and we have by daily toil, all our lives long, to gather it more and more closely around us, to wrap ourselves more and more completely in its ample folds. We have by effort and longing, by self-abnegation and aspiration, by prayer and work, by communion and service, to increase our possession of that likeness to God which lives in Jesus Christ, and from Him is stamped ever more and more deeply on the heart. For the strengthening of our confidence and our gratitude, we have to remember with lowly trust that it is true of us, ‘If any man be in Christ he is a new creature.’ For the quickening of our energy and faithful efforts we have to give heed to the command, and fulfil it in ourselves-’Be ye renewed in the Spirit of your minds, and put on the new man.’
IV. And, finally, the text contains the principle that the means of appropriating this new nature is contact with the truth.
If you will look at the margins of some Bibles you will see that our translators have placed there a rendering, which, as is not unfrequently the case, is decidedly better than that adopted by them in the text. Instead of ‘true holiness,’ the literal rendering is ‘holiness of truth’-and the Apostle’s purpose in the expression is not to particularise the quality, but the origin of the ‘holiness.’ It is ‘of truth,’ that is, produced by the holiness which flows from the truth as it is in Jesus, of which he has been speaking a moment before.
And we come, therefore, to this practical conclusion, that whilst the agent of renovation is the Divine Spirit, and the condition of renovation is our cleaving to Christ, the medium of renovation and the weapon which transforming grace employs is ‘the word of the truth of the Gospel’ whereby we are sanctified. There we get the law, and there we get the motive and the impulse. There we get the encouragement and the hope. In it, in the grand simple message-’God was in Christ, reconciling the world unto Himself, not imputing their trespasses unto them,’ lie the germs of all moral progress. And in proportion as we believe that-not with the cold belief of our understandings, but with the loving affiance of our hearts and our whole spiritual being-in proportion as we believe that, in that proportion shall we grow in ‘knowledge,’ shall we grow in ‘righteousness,’ in the ‘image of Him that created us.’ The Gospel is the great means of this change, because it is the great means by which He who works the change comes near to our understandings and our hearts.
So let us learn how impossible are righteousness and holiness, morality and religion in men, unless they flow from this source. It is the truth that sanctifies. It is the Spirit who wields that truth who sanctifies. It is Christ who sends the Spirit who sanctifies. But, brethren, beyond the range of this light is only darkness, and that nature which is not cleansed by His priestly hand laid upon it remains leprous, and he who is clothed with any other garment than His righteousness will find ‘the covering narrower than that he can wrap himself in it.’ And let us learn, on the other hand, the incompleteness and monstrosity of a professed belief in ‘the truth’ which does not produce this righteousness and holiness. It may be real-God forbid that we should step into His place and assume His office of discerning the thoughts of the heart, and the genuineness of Christian professions! But, at any rate, it is no exaggeration nor presumption to say that a professed faith which is not making us daily better, gentler, simpler, purer, more truthful, more tender, more brave, more self-oblivious, more loving, more strong-more like Christ-is wofully deficient either in reality or in power-is, if genuine, ready to perish-if lit at all, smouldering to extinction. Christian men and women! is ‘the truth’ moulding you into Christ’s likeness? If not, see to it whether it be the truth which you are holding, and whether you are holding the truth or have unconsciously let it slip from a grasp numbed by the freezing coldness of the world.
And for us all, let us see that we lay to heart the large truths of this text, and give them that personal bearing without which they are of no avail. I need renovation in my inmost nature. Nothing can renew my soul but the power of Christ, who is my life. I am naked and foul. Nothing can cleanse and clothe me but He. The blessed truth which reveals Him calls for my individual faith. And if I put my confidence in that Lord, He will dwell in my inmost spirit, and so sway my affections and mould my will that I shall be transformed unto His perfect likeness. He begins with each one of us by bringing the best robe to cast over the rags of the returning prodigal. He ends not with any who trust Him, until they stand amid the hosts of the heavens who follow Him, clothed with fine linen clean and white, which is the righteousness of His Holy ones.
Fuente: Expositions Of Holy Scripture by Alexander MacLaren
put on. Greek. enduo. See Rom 13:12, Rom 13:14. Gal 1:3, Gal 1:27.
the new man. The new nature.
which = that which.
after. App-104.
is = was (Aor.)
created. Greek. ktizo. See Eph 2:10.
righteousness . . . holiness = true holiness and righteousness. Contrast Adam, Gen 1:27.
righteousness. App-191.
true. Literally of the truth. Greek. alstheia, as Eph 4:21.
holiness. Greek. hosiotes. Only here, and Luk 1:75.
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
24.] and put on (see on above) the new man (as opposed to ; not meaning Christ, any further than as He is its great Head and prototype, see on .), which was created (mark the aorist, as historical fact, once for all, in Christ. In each individual case, it is not created again, but put on: cf. Rom 13:14) after God (= , Col 3:10 : also , Gen 1:27 : so 1Pe 1:15, … The doctrine of the restoration to us of the divine image in Christ, as here implied, is not to be overlooked. Mller, Lehre von der Snde, ii. p. 485 ff., denies any allusion to it here, but on insufficient grounds, as indeed he himself virtually allows. Not the bare fact of Gen 1:27, but the great truth which that fact represents, is alluded to. The image of God in Christ is a far more glorious thing than Adam ever had, or could have had: but still the , = , is true of both: and, as Mller himself says, jenes ist erst die wahrhafte Erfllung von diesem) in (element, or sphere, of the character of the new man) righteousness and holiness of truth (again, beware of true holiness, E. V.-as destroying the whole antithesis and force of the words. The genitive, too, belongs to both substantives.
, Gods essence, Joh 3:33; Rom 1:25; Rom 3:7; Rom 15:8, opposed to above. and occur together, but in contrary order, in ref. Luke, and Wis 9:3. The adjectives and adverbs are connected, 1Th 2:10 : Tit 1:8. betokens a just relation among the powers of the soul within, and towards men and duties without. But , as the Heb. (Pro 2:21. Amo 5:10), betokens the integrity of the spiritual life, and the piety towards God of which that is the condition. Hence both expressions together complete the idea of moral perfection (Mat 5:48). As here the ethical side of the divine image is brought out, Col 3:10 brings out the intellectual. The new birth alone leads to : all knowledge which proceeds not from renewal of heart, is but outward appearance: and of this kind was that among the false Colossian teachers. On the other hand, in Wis 2:23 ( , (. F. (not A.)) ) the physical side of the divine image is brought out. Olsh. Stier suggests that there is perhaps a slight contrast in to Eph 4:19, and in ( , Chr.) to ).
Fuente: The Greek Testament
Eph 4:24. ) is used, Col 3:10, of that which is native [the new man becomes natural, i.e. the true nature] in believers; but here has been used by him just before. [Therefore he does not repeat , the conjugate]. Vice versa in the passage of Col. just quoted, is subjoined [ having gone just before] concerning the aims and pursuits of believers.[69]-, which has been created) at the beginning of Christianity. This new man is created in Christ: comp. ch. Eph 2:10.
[69] , recent, lately originated, in opposition to what was originated some time back. , new, not yet used, in opposition to that which has existed long and been in use: , but , Mat 9:16-17. So in Col. refers to the , whereas the is one who differs from the former man: the is one who is of God.-Tittm. Syn. Gr. Test. more applied to the results of renewal on the Christian character and walk. , the new nature of believers. is applied to persons in the sense young, which is not. is what is fresh, as opposed to what is worn and trite. It is also said of what is strange and foreign.-ED.
Fuente: Gnomon of the New Testament
Eph 4:24
Eph 4:24
and put on the new man, that after God hath been created in righteousness and holiness of truth.-Jesus Christ was God manifest in the flesh. He was the perfect likeness of God, after which the Christian is to model his life. He came as the final and perfect teacher to prepare man to dwell with God. He gave the precepts that would fit man in character to dwell in his presence. He not only gave the precepts, but he also gave the example in his own life of what they would make of man if perfectly practiced. Christ is the only perfect teacher of earth-he perfectly practiced what he taught, and if perfectly obeyed will make man in life just what Christ was. All the instruction as to how to live was illustrated in his own life. If we will carefully examine the record of his life, we will not be at a loss to know how to apply them in our own life. When we determine what he would do, we learn what we should do. Hence, Paul said: Be ye imitators of me, even as I also am of Christ (1Co 11:1); and Peter: For hereunto were ye called: because Christ also suffered for you, leaving you an example, that ye should follow his steps (1Pe 2:21); and John: He that saith he abideth in him ought himself also to walk even as he walked (1Jn 2:6). The precepts, examples, and provisions he gave were all to help man to form the character that will fit him to dwell with God. Man is fitted for union with God only in so far as he follows the teachings of Jesus,
Fuente: Old and New Testaments Restoration Commentary
new man
The new man is the regenerate man as distinguished from the old man (See Scofield “Rom 6:6”) and is a new man as having become a partaker of the divine nature and life 2Pe 1:4; Col 3:3; Col 3:4 and in no sense the old man made over, or improved; 2Co 5:17; Gal 6:15; Eph 2:10; Col 3:10. The new man is Christ, “formed” in the believer; Gal 2:20; Gal 4:19; Col 1:27; 1Jn 4:12.
righteousness (See Scofield “Rom 10:10”).
Fuente: Scofield Reference Bible Notes
put: Eph 6:11, Job 29:14, Isa 52:1, Isa 59:17, Rom 13:12, Rom 13:14, 1Co 15:53, Gal 3:27, Col 3:10-14
new: Eph 2:15, Rom 6:4, 2Co 4:16, 2Co 5:17, 1Pe 2:2
after: Gen 1:26, Gen 1:27, 2Co 3:18, Col 3:10, 1Jo 3:2
created: Eph 2:10, Gal 6:15
righteousness: Psa 45:6, Psa 45:7, Rom 8:29, Tit 2:14, Heb 1:8, Heb 12:14, 1Jo 3:3
true holiness: or, holiness of truth, Joh 17:17
Reciprocal: Gen 5:1 – in the likeness Pro 31:25 – Strength Isa 45:8 – I the Lord Jer 43:12 – putteth Mat 22:11 – which Luk 1:75 – General Gal 4:19 – Christ Col 3:12 – Put Heb 12:10 – partakers 2Pe 1:4 – ye might
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
(Eph 4:24.) -And put on the new man. Col 3:10. The renewal, as Meyer remarks, was expressed in the present tense, as if the moment of its completion were realized in the putting on of the new man, expressed by the aorist. The verb also is middle, denoting a reflexive act. Trollope and Burton discover, we know not by what divination, a reference in this phraseology to baptism. The putting on of the new man presupposes the laying off of the old man, and is the result or accompaniment of this renewal; nay, it is but another representation of it. This renewal in the spirit, and this on-putting of the new man, may thus stand to each other as in our systems of theology regeneration stands to sanctification. The new man is , not -recent. The apostle, in Col 3:10, says ; here he joins with . In the other epistle the verbal term from is preceded by ; in the place before us the verbal term from is followed by . generally is recent- , wine recently made, opposed to , made long ago; -fresh skins-opposed to , which had long been in use. Mat 9:17. So is opposed to the economy so long in existence (Heb 8:8), but once it is termed (Heb 12:24) as being of recent origin. Compare Rom 12:2; 2Co 4:16; 2Co 5:15; 2Co 5:17; Gal 6:15. Hence also, Joh 19:41, -not a tomb of recent excavation, but one unused, and thus explained, . Pillon, Syn. Grecs. 332. The new man is in contrast with the old man, and repres ents that new assemblage of holy principles and desires which have a unity of origin, and a common result of operation. The new man is not, therefore, Christ Himself, as is the fancy of Jerome, Ambrosiaster, and Hilary, De Trinitate, lib. xii. The origin of the new man is next shown-
-who was created after God. Winer, 49, d. What the apostle affirms is not that creation is God’s work and prerogative and His alone, but that as the first man bore His image, so does the new man, for he is created , according to God, or in the likeness of God; or, as the apostle writes in Col 3:10, . Hofmann’s exegesis is feeble and incorrect-von dem gttlicher Weise geschaffenen Menschen. The allusion is to Gen 1:27. What God created, man assumes. The newness of this man is no absolute novelty, for it is the recovery of original holiness. As the Creator stamps an image of Himself on all His workmanship, so the first man was made in His similitude, and this new man, the result also of His plastic energy, bears upon him the same test and token of his Divine origin; for the moral image of God reproduces itself in him. It is no part of our present task to inquire what were the features of that Divine image which Adam enjoyed. See under Col 3:10; Mller, Lehre von der Snde, vol. ii. p. 482, 3rd ed. The apostle characterizes the new man as being created-
-in the righteousness and holiness of the truth-the elements in which this creation manifests itself. Morus and Flatt, on the one hand, are in error when they regard as instrumental, for the preposition points to the manifestation or development of the new man; and Koppe and Beza blunder also in supposing that may stand for , and denote the result of the new creation. In Col 3:10, as Olshausen remarks, the intellectual aspect of the Divine image is described, whereas in the passage before us prominence is given to its ethical aspect. In Wis 2:23, the physical aspect is sketched. is that moral rectitude which guides the new man in all relationships. It is not bare equity or probity, but it leads its possessor to be what he ought to be to every other creature in the universe. The vices reprobated by the apostle in the following verses, are manifest violations of this righteousness. It follows what is right, and does what is right, in all given circumstances. See under Eph 5:9. , on the other hand, is piety or holiness- . Scholium, Hecuba, 5.788. The two terms occur in inverted order in Luk 1:75, and the adverbs are found in 1Th 2:10; Tit 1:8. The new man has affinities not only with created beings, but he has a primary relationship to the God who made him, and who surely has the first claim on his affection and duty. Whatever feelings arise out of the relation which a redeemed creature bears to Jehovah, this piety leads him to possess-such as veneration, confidence, and purity. Both righteousness and holiness are-
-of the truth. Joh 1:17; Rom 1:25; Rom 3:7. This subjective genitive is not to be resolved into an adjective, after the example of Luther, Calvin, Beza, Bodius, Grotius, Holzhausen, and the English version, as if the meaning were-true righteousness and holiness; nor can it be regarded as joining to the list a distinct and additional virtue-an opinion advanced by Pelagius, and found in the reading of D1, F, G- . Those critics referred to who give the genitive the simple sense of an adjective, think the meaning to be true, in opposition to what is assumed or counterfeit; while the Greek fathers imagine the epithet to be opposed to the typical holiness of the ancient Israel. The exegesis of Witsius, that the phrase means such a desire to please as is in harmony with truth (De OEconomia Foederum, p. 15), is as truly against all philology as that of Cocceius, that it denotes the studious pursuit of truth. in connection with the new man, stands opposed to in connection with the old man, and is truth in Jesus. While this spiritual creation is God’s peculiar work-for He who creates can alone re-create-this truth in Jesus has a living influence upon the heart, producing, fostering, and sustaining such rectitude and piety.
The question of natural and moral ability does not come fairly within the compass of discussion in this place. The apostle only says, they had been taught the doctrine of a decided and profound spiritual change, which had developed its breadth and power in a corresponding alteration of character. He merely states the fact that the Ephesians had been so taught, but how they had been taught the doctrine, in what connections, and with what appliances and arguments, he says not. Its connection with the doctrine of spiritual influence is not insisted on. Whatever, says Dr. Owen, God worketh in us in a way of grace, He presenteth unto us in a way of duty, and that, because although He do it in us, yet He also doth it by us, so as that the same work is an act of His Spirit, and of our own will as acted thereby. On the Holy Spirit, Works, iii. p. 432; Edinburgh, 1852. See under Eph 2:1.
The apostle descends now from general remarks to special sins, such sins as were common in the Gentile world, and to which Christian converts were, from the force of habit and surrounding temptation, most easily and powerfully seduced.
Fuente: Commentary on the Greek Text of Galatians, Ephesians, Colossians and Phillipians
Eph 4:24. Put on is the opposite of put off that is used in verse 22, and new man is the opposite of old man in the same verse. In ordinary language it means to cease doing worldly things and begin doing those that are spiritual. God is the creator of the material universe and also gives man his fleshly body. And He also is the creator or originator of the spiritual life that is to be practiced in Christ. True holiness does not imply there could be such a thing as false holiness. The phrase means that holiness is that kind of life that is according to truth.
Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary
Eph 4:24. And that ye put on; once for all.
The new man. New, not young, as in Col 3:10. Comp. Rom 13:14 : Put ye on the Lord Jesus Christ
Which after God hath been created. The allusion to Gen 1:26-27 is unmistakable (comp. also Col 3:10 : after the image of Him that created him), but the immediate reference is to the new creation in Christ, the new human personality into which the believer is transformed. Hath been created suggests this reference, better than was created. More than was lost in Adam has been given in Christ, but both creations are after the image of God, This new man we can be exhorted to put on, since once for all in the Person of Christ is that created and prepared for us, which we are to put on (Stier). In Col 3:12, the Apostle exhorts, in consequence, to put on the several virtues which characterize the new man.
In righteousness and holiness of the truth. In these, with these endowments or characteristics, the new man hath been created; the former points to moral rectitude, external and toward men; the latter, to the internal quality of spiritual life, its relation to God. The two combined express moral perfection. Of the truth is added, as the ground of both, truth being personified. There may be an antithesis to deceit (Eph 4:22), but Gods truth is indicated as the ultimate source of these moral perfections, since the creation is after God Hence truth is more than our true knowledge of God. It appears from this verse that the image of God in which man was originally created consisted in moral likeness, not merely in rational powers, immortality, or dominion over other creatures.
Fuente: A Popular Commentary on the New Testament
And that ye put on the new man, which after God is created in righteousness and true holiness.
We put on the new man – a one time act that is accomplished by our own action. This results in God taking action, that “created in righteousnes” or if you will the rebirth of salvation.
Let’s recap. We are corrupt but we can put off that old man, and we can put on the new man, but it is God that does the rest. When we accept Christ, we reject the old and put on the new by a conscious decision and from their God recreates our worthless beings into something that He can use and we can live with – literally live with eternally.
Now, the ramifications of this: Remember all of these actions are aorist, or one time acts, not a continuing action. We put it off, we put it on and God recreates – done deals everyone. Remember that when you start to consider the teaching that says we have a struggle going on between the old man and the new creation – these facts of Paul’s don’t seem to fit into that teaching very well – please reconsider that teaching if you hold to it.
Fuente: Mr. D’s Notes on Selected New Testament Books by Stanley Derickson
4:24 And that ye put on the new man, which {g} after God is created {h} in righteousness and {i} true holiness.
(g) After the image of God.
(h) The effect and end of the new creation.
(i) Not fake nor counterfeit.
Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes
Paul identified our responsibility in this verse. We are to put on the new self as a garment. The new self (or man) is the person the Christian is after he or she experiences regeneration. We put on the new man as we pursue the things of Christ rather than the desires of the flesh. God has created the new self (the Christian) in regeneration after the image of our spiritual parent, God Himself. Righteousness and holiness mark our new life rather than sensuality, impurity, and greed (Eph 4:18-19). Moreover it is a life based on the truth rather than on ignorance (Eph 4:18). [Note: See Don Matzat, Christ-Esteem.]