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Ephesians 2:11-22

Greek Key Terms:

  • μεσότοιχον (mesotoichon) - "dividing wall, partition" — "destroyed the dividing wall of hostility" (v.14); a hapax legomenon (unique NT term) referring to the barrier separating Jew and Gentile
  • μακράν (makran) - "far away, at a distance" — "you who were far away" (v.13, 17); the same spatial language as the ten lepers standing "at a distance" (Luke 17:12) and Naaman's condition of exclusion
  • προσαγωγή (prosagōgē) - "access, right of approach" — "through him we both have access to the Father by one Spirit" (v.18); the technical term for access to the divine presence, the antonym of the leper's exclusion
  • συμπολίτης (sympolitēs) - "fellow citizen" — "you are fellow citizens with God's people" (v.19); the direct reversal of Naaman's condition as an alien outside the covenant community

Context: Ephesians 2:11-22 forms the second half of Paul's great theology of new-creation humanity, following the resurrection-and-grace passage (2:1-10). Paul addresses Gentile believers specifically: "Remember that at one time you Gentiles in the flesh... were at that time separated from Christ, excluded from citizenship in Israel, foreigners to the covenants of promise, without hope and without God in the world" (vv.11-12). This four-fold description of Gentile exclusion—separated, excluded, foreigners, without hope—maps precisely onto the Levitical leper's condition: separated (outside the camp), excluded from the covenant community, foreigner (Naaman was literally a Syrian), without hope of self-cleansing. But Christ has acted: "now in Christ Jesus you who once were far away have been brought near by the blood of Christ" (v.13). The mechanism is the cross: Christ's body is the site where the dividing wall is demolished. Both Jew and Gentile now have access to the Father through one Spirit (v.18), forming a single new humanity (v.15) and a holy temple in which God dwells (vv.21-22). The passage functions as Paul's systematic theological exposition of what Naaman's healing enacted historically and what Luke 4:25-27 announced programmatically.

OT-to-OT Development: The "dividing wall" Paul invokes in Ephesians 2:14 has multiple OT antecedents. The physical wall that separated the Court of the Gentiles from the inner courts of the Jerusalem temple (with its Greek warning inscription threatening death to Gentile intruders) was itself the architectural expression of the Levitical purity laws that excluded the unclean from the divine presence. Isaiah 56:3-7 anticipates its demolition: foreigners (בֶּן הַנֵּכָר, ben han-nekar) who "join themselves to YHWH" will be brought to God's holy mountain and given "a name better than sons and daughters." Isaiah 57:19's "peace to the far and near" (שָׁלוֹם לָרָחוֹק וְלַקָּרוֹב) is directly quoted in Ephesians 2:17, revealing that Paul is consciously reading the Naaman-to-Isaiah-to-Ephesians trajectory as a single line of development: what the Levitical law excluded, Isaiah promised to restore, Christ enacted, and Paul systematizes.

Connections:

  • TO: Leviticus 13:45-46 (the exclusion Ephesians 2:11-12 describes in theological terms), 2 Kings 5:15 (Naaman's confession — the historical prototype of Gentile inclusion)
  • FROM OT: Isaiah 56:3-7 (foreigners brought to God's holy mountain), Isaiah 57:19 ("peace to the far and near" — directly quoted in Eph 2:17)
  • FROM NT: Acts 10:34-35 (Peter's conclusion after Cornelius: the Ephesians 2 theology lived out narratively), Galatians 3:28 ("neither Jew nor Gentile... all one in Christ Jesus")

Christological Connection: Ephesians 2:11-22 is the NT's most complete systematic exposition of what the entire Naaman trajectory has been moving toward. The fourfold description of Gentile exclusion in verses 11-12—separated from Christ, excluded from citizenship, foreigners to the covenants, without hope and without God—is the theological anatomy of Naaman's condition: he was all four. He was outside the covenant (he served Aram's gods), a foreigner to Israel's promises, without hope of self-cleansing from his leprosy, and without access to Israel's God except through the gracious initiative of a slave girl's testimony and a prophet's word.

Christ's work is described in spatial terms that directly reverse the leper's exclusion: "you who once were far away have been brought near" (v.13). The mechanism is the cross: "He himself is our peace, who has made both groups one and has destroyed the barrier, the dividing wall of hostility, by abolishing in his flesh the law of commandments expressed in ordinances" (vv.14-15). The Levitical law that excluded the leper from the camp is not merely suspended but abolished in its separating function through Christ's flesh. The leper who had to stand at a distance now has "access to the Father by one Spirit" (v.18) — direct, Spirit-enabled, unmediated approach to the divine presence that Naaman could only approximate by carrying a bagful of Israelite soil home.

The consummation: the "holy temple in the Lord" being built in the present age (v.21) — living stones of Jew and Gentile together — is the architectural reversal of the temple's "dividing wall." What was stone-and-warning-inscription is now "a dwelling place for God by the Spirit" (v.22), a living temple with no excluded court and no warning to Gentile intruders.

Connection Method(s): Promise-Fulfillment — Ephesians 2:11-22 is not typology but the explicit doctrinal exposition of how Christ fulfills the Abrahamic promise (Gen 12:3), the Isaianic Servant's mission (Isa 49:6), and the inclusion-of-the-nations theme. Paul quotes Isaiah 57:19 (v.17) as fulfilled Scripture. Also Redemptive-Historical Progression — the passage locates the Gentile inclusion within the grand narrative arc: the exclusion of Leviticus, the anticipations of the prophets, the historical type of Naaman, and the eschatological vision of the nations in Revelation 21 are all stages in the one divine purpose now realized in Christ.

Trajectory Table: 187 - Naaman the Leper (Sovereign Grace to the Gentiles)