A:
Although attributed to the Apostle Paul, Ephesians was actually written during the eighties of the first century, long after Paul's death. Much of the material was copied from the Epistle to the Colossians, also a pseudepigraphical letter, with some changesof wording. As with any pseudepigraphical work, we can not assume that the intended audience really were the Christians of Ephesus, and in any case the opening address to the Ephesians is probably a late addition. Otherwise, the epistle is not a letter to a church or group of churches, but an encyclical.
This author indicates that believers have already been saved by the grace of God, whereas for Paul salvation is not something people already have but what they will have when Jesus returns on the clouds of heaven and delivers his followers from the wrath of God.
It is important to understand the historical context of the epistles because it explains what the authors including Paul was discussing and had been through before writing their epistles. It is also important to understand the literary context so you know what points should be emphasized.
Ephesians, a book in the New Testament of the Bible, is pronounced ee-FEE-shuhnz.
The Epistle to the Ephesians was not actually written to the Ephesians, but was an encyclical to the Church as a whole. In contrast to Paul's own use of the term church ( ekklesia, congregation), which he used only to refer to a local congregation, the author of Ephesians used the term in the singular to refer to the universal Church, and the opening address to the Ephesians is probably a late addition. Ephesians is supposedly addressed to a community of only Gentile Christians, but scholars doubts whether such a community yet existed in Pauline times.The Epistle to the Ephesians copied much material from the pseudo-Pauline letter to the Colossians, which was in turn written sometime during the 70s, and was intended to address a sectarian conflict that had arisen in Asia Minor.
Ephesians 6: 4 and in Colossians 3:21, New Testament of the standard Christian Bible, are the verses you're looking for. But it is really important that they not be taken out of context and used for a purpose other than what they are meant for.Ephesians 6:4 (which should be read and weighed with Ephesians 1-3) gives direction to fathers to not exasperate their children (NIV version).The King James Version of Ephesians 6:4 instructs fathers to not provoke their children to wrath.Colossians 3:21 essentially says the same thing, but it must be taken into context with what is said in the preceding verse, verse 20.These are two sides of the same coin, and you cannot have one without the other. It's the only way that coins come and the only way you can spend them.
why did Paul persecute Christians?
the historical context of the typewritter is non of your buisness! =))
the historical context is turn of the twentieth century, London.
the historical context of the epic of gilgamesh is that ilgamesh is the king
An event's historical context is the social or political setting in which it occurred.
historical context
Who was president during the poet's historical context. APEX.....
Historical context helps readers better understand the meaning of a text.
The historical context is when Edward tells about Carlisle's past.
Each was influenced by his own time, place, and historical context.
pertaining statement
The historical context of change is essentially what the environment does to change due to historical events or trends. For example, how the world changed when dinosaurs became extinct.
Historical context can tell us important information about