12. without Christ--Greek, "separate from Christ"; having no
part in Him; far from Him. A different Greek word (aneu) would
be required to express, "Christ was not present with you"
[TITTMANN].
aliens--Greek, "alienated from," not merely "separated
from." The Israelites were cut off from the commonwealth of God, but it
was as being self-righteous, indolent, and unworthy, not as
aliens and strangers [CHRYSOSTOM].
The expression, "alienated from," takes it for granted that the
Gentiles, before they had apostatized from the primitive truth, had
been sharers in light and life (compare
Eph 4:18, 23).
The hope of redemption through the Messiah, on their subsequent
apostasy, was embodied into a definite "commonwealth" or polity,
namely, that "of Israel," from which the Gentiles were alienated.
Contrast
Eph 2:13;
Eph 3:6; 4:4, 5,
with Ps 147:20.
covenants of promise--rather, ". . . of the promise," namely, "to
thee and thy seed will I give this land"
(Ro 9:4;
Ga 3:16).
The plural implies the several renewals of the covenant with Abraham,
Isaac, and Jacob, and with the whole people at Sinai
[ALFORD]. "The promise" is singular, to signify
that the covenant, in reality, and substantially, is one and the same
at all times, but only different in its accidents and external
circumstances (compare
Heb 1:1,
"at sundry times and in divers manners").
having no . . . hope--beyond this life
(1Co 15:19).
The CONJECTURES of heathen philosophers as to a
future life were at best vague and utterly unsatisfactory. They had no
divine "promise," and therefore no sure ground of "hope." Epicurus and
Aristotle did not believe in it at all. The Platonists believed the
soul passed through perpetual changes, now happy, and then again
miserable; the Stoics, that it existed no longer than till the time of
the general burning up of all things.
without God--Greek, "atheists," that is, they had not
"God" in the sense we use the word, the Eternal Being who made and
governs all things (compare
Ac 14:15,
"Turn from these vanities unto the living God who made heaven,
and earth, and the sea, and all things therein"), whereas the Jews had
distinct ideas of God and immortality. Compare also
Ga 4:8,
"Ye knew not God . . . ye did service unto them which are no
gods"
(1Th 4:5).
So also pantheists are atheists, for an impersonal God is NO GOD, and an ideal immortality no immortality [THOLUCK].
in the world--in contrast to belonging to "the commonwealth of
Israel." Having their portion and their all in this godless vain world
(Ps 17:14),
from which Christ delivers His people
(Joh 15:19; 17:14;
Ga 1:4).
JFB.
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