27. he--The oldest manuscripts and authorities read, "That He might
Himself present unto Himself the Church glorious," namely, as a
bride
(2Co 11:2).
Holiness and glory are inseparable. "Cleansing" is the
necessary preliminary to both. Holiness is glory
internal; glory is holiness shining forth outwardly.
The laver of baptism is the vehicle, but the word is the
nobler and true instrument of the cleansing [BENGEL]. It is Christ that prepares the Church with the
necessary ornaments of grace, for presentation to Himself, as the
Bridegroom at His coming again
(Mt 25:1,
&c.; Re 19:7; 21:2).
not having spot--
(So 4:7).
The visible Church now contains clean and unclean together, like Noah's
ark; like the wedding room which contained some that had, and others
that had not, the wedding garment
(Mt 22:10-14;
compare
2Ti 2:20);
or as the good and bad fish are taken in the same net because it cannot
discern the bad from the good, the fishermen being unable to know what
kind of fish the nets have taken under the waves. Still the Church is
termed "holy" in the creed, in reference to her ideal and ultimate
destination. When the Bridegroom comes, the bride shall be presented to
Him wholly without spot, the evil being cut off from the body for ever
(Mt 13:47-50).
Not that there are two churches, one with bad and good intermingled,
another in which there are good alone; but one and the same Church in
relation to different times, now with good and evil together, hereafter
with good alone [PEARSON].
JFB.
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