In attempting to follow the logic in this chapter, it is helpful to trace the various similies indicated by the tenfold repetition of the word “as.” In that manner one can recognize that there are two major subsections, the second one is similarly divided into two parts, each organized a little differently.
Introduction: Walking wisely (5:1-20)
Ephesians 5:1-20 (Walking in the Light)
A Be imitators of God as beloved children (5:1)
B. Live as children of light (5:8)
C. Live not as unwise, but as wise (5:15)
Specific examples of wise and unwise living (5:16-20)
In these verses we see a straightforward progression of thought in which first believers are called children A, followed by further clarification in B as to what kind of children they are. And since “light” is a metaphorical term, it is next explained as being wise in C. And if any further doubt is in the mind of the reader at this point, Paul in D provides concrete examples of what he is talking about. This logical exposition approaches the way we would attempt to explain a concept to someone else today, but you may be surprised to learn that it is actually fairly rare in biblical writings. Much more common are the sorts of arrangements we see in the next two sub-sections of Ephesians 5.
2 The image of a fragrant offering also appears in II Corinthians 2:15-16 and Philippians 4:18.
4. Hoehner: “Paul was not intimating that humor itself is sin, but that it is wrong when it is used to destroy or tear down others.”
8. Maclean notes that darkness and light are used as “apocalyptic imagery for the domains of the hostile spiritual powers and of God and Christ.”
11-12. An anonymous contributor to Dictionary of Biblical Imagery says that “darkness keeps some very bad company, made all the more devious by virtue of the concealment of evil activity from ordinary view.”
14. The source of this quotation is unknown. Metzger attributes it to an early Christian hymn based on Isaiah 60:1.
15-17. Banks says,that “there is a need to avoid ways of using time that divert us from our main priorities. We should identify when and where evil is active, how it seeks to tempt us, and what we can do to defend ourselves. This entails 'redeeming' time that would otherwise be spent unfruitfully (Eph. 5:15-17). This is a call not to busyness, as some modern translations suggest.., but to a judicious use of time, one that 'seeks first the kingdom of God' rather than an anxious quest for material security (Matt. 6:33).”
18. Duff: “Almost all negative texts regarding alcohol warn against its abuse and condemn drunkenness (e.g., Isa. 28:1; Eph. 5:18). One NT passage, however, speaks of abstaining from wine in order to prevent a brother or sister from stumbling (Rom 14:21)..”
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Introduction: Be subject to one another (5:21)
Ephesians 5:22-24 (Instructions to Wives)
A. Wives, be subject to your husbands (5:22a)
B. as you are to the Lord (5:22b)
C. Husband is the head of the wife (5:23a)
C'.as Christ is the head of the church (5:23b)
B'. as the church is subject to Christ, (5:24a)
A'. wives ought to be (subject) to their husband (5:24b)
Now we come to a much more common arrangement of ideas, at least in biblical terms. Note how these three verses present teachings in a mirror-image manner (technically called a chiasm) so that they present three teachings which are then repeated in reverse order, ending up where they started.
21. “The biblical text...speaks first of mutual subordination (5.21), never of submission, and only of married persons. It controls and qualifies the husband's headship by making it clear that only an unselfish and self-giving love characterizes such a 'head.'” (M; Barth)
22-24. Hoehner states, “'As to the Lord' does not mean that a wife is to submit to her husband in the same way she submits to the Lord, but rather that her submission to her husband is her service rendered 'to the Lord' (cf. Col. 3:18).”
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Ephesians 5:25-33 (Instructions to Husbands)
A. Husbands, Love your wives (5:25a)
B. as Christ loved the church (5:25b)
A'. Husbands, love your wives (5:28a)
B'.as you do your own bodies (5:28b)
A''. One cares for his body (5:29a)
B''. as Christ does for the church (5:29b)
A'''. Each one love his wife
B'''.as himself (5:33)
Now finally in the last sub-section we see a prime example of another common way biblical writers express themselves, in parallel statements which are organized in the same manner and ring all the changes to reinforce each thought with another similar one.
25-27. “The lyric language of 5:25-27 (sometimes thought to come from a baptismal hymn) brings Christ and the church into the relationship of husband and wife, so that respectively the subjection and the love are given a uniquely Christian stamp.” (R.E. Brown)
25. “Baptism is compared to the Jewish custom of a bride's prenuptial bath.” (Maclean) The annotation in the Jerusalem Bible adds, “As applied mystically to the Church, Christ washes his bride himself in the bath of baptism, and makes her immaculate...”
26. “The marriage metaphor in Eph 5 is...a mixed one; for the duty of presenting the bride to the bridegroom would normally be that of the bridegroom's friend. Cf. II Cor 11:2, where Paul regards himself in this light. Here Christ is both the one who presents and the one who receives.” (Payne)
28-30 “Weddings are public professions of loyal devotion. The first joyful profession is given by Adam before God to Eve (Gen 2:22-24); his commitment resounds in Paul's command that husbands love their wives as themselves (Eph 5:28-30). The promised union of Adam and Eve as 'one flesh' before God is echoed and imitated in every wedding by these mutual professions.”(DBI)
31-32. “Verse 31 is a free rendering of Genesis 2:24, indicating that the bond between husband and wife is greater than that between parent and child. The greatness of the mystery refers to the two becoming one flesh. But then Paul returned to mention the wonderful bond between Christ and the church, which illustrates the love of a husband for his wife.” (Hoehner)
33. Keener: “Because Paul's instructions specifically address institutions as they existed in Paul's day, interpreters of Paul who do not insist on reinstituting slavery or the monarchy should not insist on patriarchal marriages which subordinate wives, either. Indeed, given Paul's weak definition of the wife's submission as 'respect'.., it appears that Paul advocated her submission in only a limited manner even for his own social situation.”.