11. Greek, emphatical. "Himself" by His supreme power.
"It is HE that gave," &c.
gave some, apostles--Translate, "some to be apostles, and some
to be prophets," &c. The men who filled the office, no less than the
office itself, were a divine gift [EADIE].
Ministers did not give themselves. Compare with the list here,
1Co 12:10, 28.
As the apostles, prophets, and evangelists were special and
extraordinary ministers, so "pastors and teachers" are the ordinary
stated ministers of a particular flock, including, probably, the
bishops, presbyters, and deacons. Evangelists were itinerant preachers
like our missionaries, as Philip the deacon
(Ac 21:8);
as contrasted with stationary "pastors and teachers"
(2Ti 4:5).
The evangelist founded the Church; the teacher built it
up in the faith already received. The "pastor" had the outward
rule and guidance of the Church: the bishop. As to
revelation, the "evangelist" testified infallibly of the past; the
"prophet," infallibly of the future. The prophet derived all from the
Spirit; the evangelist, in the special case of the Four, recorded
matter of fact, cognizable to the senses, under the Spirit's guidance.
No one form of Church polity as permanently unalterable is laid
down in the New Testament though the apostolical order of bishops, or
presbyters, and deacons, superintended by higher overseers (called
bishops after the apostolic times), has the highest sanction of
primitive usage. In the case of the Jews, a fixed model of hierarchy
and ceremonial unalterably bound the people, most minutely detailed in
the law. In the New Testament, the absence of minute directions for
Church government and ceremonies, shows that a fixed model was not
designed; the general rule is obligatory as to ceremonies, "Let
all things be done decently and in order" (compare Article XXXIV,
Church of England); and that a succession of ministers be provided, not
self-called, but "called to the work by men who have public authority
given unto them in the congregation, to call and send ministers into
the Lord's vineyard" [Article XXIII]. That the "pastors" here were the
bishops and presbyters of the Church, is evident from
Ac 20:28;
1Pe 5:1, 2,
where the bishops' and presbyters' office is said to be
"to feed" the flock. The term, "shepherd" or "pastor," is used of
guiding and governing and not merely instructing, whence
it is applied to kings, rather than prophets or priests
(Eze 34:23;
Jer 23:4).
Compare the names of princes compounded of "pharnas,"
Hebrew, "pastor," Holophernes, Tis-saphernes (compare
Isa 44:28).
JFB.
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