Ephesians 2:19 – Communion of Saints
Target year level: Year Six
Scripture text
Ephesians 2:19
Introduction
The text is part of the Epistle or Letter to the Ephesians. Modern scholarship is inclined to assign Ephesians to the Deutero-Pauline Epistles written after Paul’s death (circa 67 CE) but in line with Pauline tradition.
For an overview of the Letter to the Ephesians see the New American Bible, Revised Edition (NABRE) Introduction to Ephesians.
World behind the text
Just as contemporary scholarship asserts that the Apostle Paul is probably not the actual author of the Letter to the Ephesians, it likewise notes that the Christian community at Ephesus was not the sole Christian community envisaged by the letter’s author. For a detailed discussion of authorship and audience of the Letter to the Ephesians, see Michael Fallon 538 (pdf).
Authorship and audience of the letter is still a matter of dispute and the writer of the New American Bible, Revised Edition (NABRE) Introduction to Ephesians seems to favour Pauline authorship while acknowledging the Deutero-Pauline alternative. Scholars who think that the Apostle Paul is the actual author of the letter tend to date the Epistle to the Ephesians in the early 50’s CE. Those who place the letter as a Deutero-Pauline Epistle, of unknown authorship, tend to date the letter as having been written between 80 CE and 100 CE. These latter Deutero-Pauline advocates say that the ecclesiology, or theology of Church, in the letter reflect a more developed stage in the history of the Christian community than was the case during Paul’s own lifetime (circa 5-67 CE).
World of the text
Ephesians 2:19 is in Part One of the letter which the commentator Michael Fallon labels ‘God’s plan revealed’ Eph 2:1-3:21. In particular, Michael Fallon summarises the section Eph. 2:1-22 as ‘The Gentiles are called to be united to the Jews living Christ’s life in the church’. Go to Michael Fallon the Structure of Ephesians 540. A major focus of Ephesians is the nature of the Christian Community (the Church). The Church is understood as a communion; as the Body of Christ. Key themes in Ephesians are oriented to the Church as the Body of Christ. God’s plan is that all - Jews and Gentiles alike - are gathered into the Church. Unity in the Church is achieved and maintained by diligent use of the gifts of the Spirit, living a moral Christ-like life and engaging in harmonious relationships with others. This means entering into the daily struggle to curb behaviours that destroy relationships and acting in ways that promote a Christ-like life.
Eph 2:19 is a summation of God’s plan for the Church and for humanity – ‘no longer strangers and aliens’; ‘citizens with the saints’; ‘members of the household of God’. In particular, in its original context, the text is a call for reconciliation between Jewish and Gentile Christians in the early Christian communities who had struggled with themselves and each other to understand the nature of the Christian Church and of their place in the communities of Christ’s followers.
For a fuller commentary on the Ephesians 2:19 go to Michael Fallon 562 .
World in front of the text
Diversity and difference often lead to disharmony and conflict in our schools, in our neighbourhoods, cities and nations. Ethnic differences, economic disparities, religious diversity and a myriad of other differences often create misunderstanding, dislike and in the extreme can lead to alienation and violence. Yet Ephesians 2:19, and indeed the Letter to the Ephesians as a whole, is a reminder that it is possible to find a meaningful unity and live harmoniously in spite of differences. The Christian Church continues as an important environment in which, and through which, a viable unity and harmony can be created.