Commentaries:
Adam Clarke
To the saints which are at Ephesus - As some learned men think that this epistle was written to the Church of the Laodiceans, and that the words ͅ , in Ephesus, were not originally in this epistle, the consideration of the subject has appeared to be more proper for the preface; and to that the reader is referred for a particular discussion of this opinion. By the term saints we are to understand those who in that place professed Christianity, and were members of the Christian Church. Saint properly signifies a holy person, and such the Gospel of Christ requires every man to be, and such every true believer is, both in heart and life; but saint appears to have been as ordinary a denomination of a believer in Christ in those primitive times, as the term Christian is now. Yet many had the name who had not the thing.
The faithful in Christ Jesus - · the believers - the persons who received Christ as the promised Messiah, and the Savior of the world, and continued in the grace which they had received.
Other commentary entries containing this verse:
Colossians 1:2
Colossians 4:16
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