26. sanctify--that is, consecrate her to God. Compare
Joh 17:19,
meaning, "I devote Myself as a holy sacrifice, that My
disciples also may be devoted or consecrated as holy in (through) the
truth" [NEANDER]
(Heb 2:11; 10:10; 13:12
see on
Heb 10:10).
and cleanse--rather, as Greek, "cleansing," without the "and."
with the washing of water--rather as Greek, "with," or "by the
laver of the water," namely, the baptismal water. So it
ought to be translated in
Tit 3:5,
the only other passage in the New Testament where it occurs. As the
bride passed through a purifying bath before marriage, so the Church
(compare
Re 21:2).
He speaks of baptism according to its high ideal and
design, as if the inward grace accompanied the outward rite;
hence he asserts of outward baptism whatever is involved in a believing
appropriation of the divine truths it symbolizes, and says that Christ,
by baptism, has purified the Church [NEANDER]
(1Pe 3:21).
by the word--Greek, "IN the word." To be joined with "cleansing
it," or "her." The "word of faith"
(Ro 10:8, 9, 17),
of which confession is made in baptism, and which carries the real
cleansing
(Joh 15:3; 17:17)
and regenerating power
(1Pe 1:23; 3:21)
[ALFORD]. So AUGUSTINE
[Tract 80, in John], "Take away the word, and what is the water
save water? Add the word to the element, and it becomes a sacrament,
being itself as it were the visible word." The regenerating efficacy of
baptism is conveyed in, and by, the divine word alone.
JFB.
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