Ephesians 2:1 And you hath he quickened , who were dead in trespasses and sins; Ephesians 2:1-3
Paul setteth before the Ephesians their former
corrupt heathen state,
Ephesians 2:4-7
and God’s rich mercy in their deliverance.
Ephesians 2:8-10
We are saved by grace, not of works, yet so as to be
created in Christ unto good works.
Ephesians 2:11-18
They who were once strangers, and far from God, are
now brought near by Christ’s blood; who having
abolished the ritual law, the ground of distinction
between Jew and Gentile, hath united both in one
body, and gained them equal access to the Father.
Ephesians 2:19-22
So that the Gentiles are henceforth equally privileged
with the Jews, and together with them constitute a holy
temple for the habitation of God’s Spirit.
And you hath he quickened;
his verb
quickened
is not in the Greek, but the defect of it may be supplied from
Ephesians 1:19, thus:
The greatness of his power to us-ward, and to you that were dead in trespasses and sins;
the remaining part of that chapter being included in a parenthesis, which, though long, yet is not unusual. Or rather, as our translators and others do, from
Ephesians 2:5
of this chapter, where we have the word
quickened.
It imports a restoring of spiritual life by the infusion of a vital principle, (in the work of regeneration), whereby men are enabled to walk with God in newness of life.
Who were dead;
piritually, not naturally; i.e. destitute of a principle of spiritual life, and so of any ability for, or disposedness to, the operations and motions of such a life.
In trespasses and sins:
he preposition
in
is wanting in the Greek by an ellipsis, but the expression is full,
Colossians 2:13; this dative case therefore is to be taken in the sense of the ablative. By these words he means either all sorts of sins, habitual and actual, less or greater; or rather, promiscuously and indifferently, the same thing several ways. expressed. Sin is the cause of spiritual death; where sin reigns, there is a privation of spiritual life.