Commentary
Paul breaks off his prayer to explain his imprisonment in light of the Gentile mission. The revealed "mystery of Christ" is stated plainly in verse 6: through the gospel, Gentiles are fellow heirs, fellow members of the body, and fellow partakers of the promise in Christ Jesus. Paul's ministry and chains belong to that grace-given stewardship. The paragraph then widens to God's larger aim: the church's united existence now makes God's many-sided wisdom known to the rulers and authorities in the heavenly realms, while giving believers bold and confident access to the Father in Christ.
Paul explains that his ministry and imprisonment for the Gentiles are part of God's now-disclosed purpose: in Christ, Gentiles share equally in the promised inheritance through the gospel, and the resulting church displays God's wisdom before the heavenly realm.
3:1 For this reason I, Paul, the prisoner of Christ Jesus for the sake of you Gentiles - 3:2 if indeed you have heard of the stewardship of God's grace that was given to me for you, 3:3 that by revelation the divine secret was made known to me, as I wrote before briefly. 3:4 When reading this, you will be able to understand my insight into this secret of Christ. 3:5 Now this secret was not disclosed to people in former generations as it has now been revealed to his holy apostles and prophets by the Spirit, 3:6 namely, that through the gospel the Gentiles are fellow heirs, fellow members of the body, and fellow partakers of the promise in Christ Jesus. 3:7 I became a servant of this gospel according to the gift of God's grace that was given to me by the exercise of his power. 3:8 To me - less than the least of all the saints - this grace was given, to proclaim to the Gentiles the unfathomable riches of Christ 3:9 and to enlighten everyone about God's secret plan - a secret that has been hidden for ages in God who has created all things. 3:10 The purpose of this enlightenment is that through the church the multifaceted wisdom of God should now be disclosed to the rulers and the authorities in the heavenly realms. 3:11 This was according to the eternal purpose that he accomplished in Christ Jesus our Lord, 3:12 in whom we have boldness and confident access to God because of Christ's faithfulness. 3:13 For this reason I ask you not to lose heart because of what I am suffering for you, which is your glory.
Observation notes
- The unit is tightly linked to 2:11-22 by the opening "For this reason" and by the continued focus on Gentile inclusion and shared access to God.
- Verse 1 does not complete the expected prayer; the actual prayer resumes at 3:14 with the same phrase, showing that 3:1-13 functions as an intentional explanatory digression.
- The repeated first-person references to Paul are not self-promotional; each is tied to divine grace, revelation, stewardship, service, and suffering for the Gentiles.
- The mystery is not left undefined. Verse 6 states its content explicitly in three compounded expressions beginning with syn-, stressing full co-participation rather than second-tier inclusion.
- The contrast in verse 5 is not absolute ignorance versus total prior disclosure, but lesser prior disclosure versus present revelatory clarity, marked by "not... as it has now been revealed.
- Apostles and prophets in verse 5 are the recipients of the revelation in the present era; this matches 2:20 where they form the foundational witness for the church's structure.
- Paul moves from personal calling (vv. 2-9) to cosmic purpose (vv. 10-12), showing that the church's Jew-Gentile unity is not merely sociological but revelatory before heavenly powers.
- Verse 10 makes the church the means through which God's wisdom is displayed; the church is not merely the audience of revelation but also its instrument in salvation history's present stage.`
- Verse 12 grounds boldness and access "in whom" and "through faith/faithfulness," linking the cosmic purpose back to the believers' direct standing before God rather than leaving the paragraph at the level of abstract plan alone.`
- Verse 13 interprets Paul's sufferings within God's purpose, preventing the readers from reading imprisonment as ministerial failure or divine abandonment.
Structure
- 3:1 opens with "For this reason" and begins a prayer, but the sentence breaks off as Paul digresses about his imprisonment for the Gentiles.
- 3:2-6 defines Paul's entrusted stewardship and states the content of the revealed mystery: Gentiles are fellow heirs, fellow body-members, and fellow partakers in Christ through the gospel.
- 3:7-9 describes Paul's ministerial role as a grace-given service empowered by God to preach Christ's riches to the Gentiles and bring the hidden plan to light.
- 3:10-12 gives the divine purpose behind this revelation: through the church God's manifold wisdom is now made known to heavenly powers, according to His eternal purpose accomplished in Christ, in whom believers have bold access.
- 3:13 closes the digression with a pastoral appeal that the readers not lose heart over Paul's sufferings, since those sufferings serve their glory.
Key terms
mysterion
Strong's: G3466
Gloss: secret, previously hidden divine plan now disclosed
The word governs the paragraph and prevents reading Gentile inclusion as an afterthought; it is a revealed stage of God's eternal purpose.
oikonomia
Strong's: G3622
Gloss: administration, commission, stewardship
The term frames Paul's role as entrusted responsibility under God, not private ambition or ethnic preference.
apokalypsis
Strong's: G602
Gloss: unveiling, disclosure
This locates the content of the gospel's Jew-Gentile unity in divine disclosure rather than human deduction.
synkleronoma / syssoma / symmetocha
Strong's: G4789, G4954, G4830
Gloss: co-heirs, co-bodied, co-sharers
The clustered terms press beyond mere admission into proximity; they assert equal incorporation into the same promised inheritance and body.
anexichniastos ploutos
Strong's: G421, G4149
Gloss: incalculable, unsearchable riches
The phrase broadens the message beyond ethnic reconciliation alone to the abundance of Christ Himself as the content of gospel blessing.
polypoikilos sophia
Strong's: G4678
Gloss: multi-faceted, richly varied wisdom
The term interprets the church's unified existence as a theater of divine wisdom, not merely a practical arrangement.
Syntactical features
anacoluthon / broken sentence
Textual signal: 3:1 begins "For this reason I, Paul..." but the thought is suspended until 3:14.
Interpretive effect: The break signals a deliberate digression, showing that Paul's explanation of his ministry and suffering is inserted to support the prayer that follows.
conditional assumption
Textual signal: 3:2 "if indeed you have heard"
Interpretive effect: The phrase likely assumes the readers' awareness rather than expressing doubt, introducing the explanation of Paul's stewardship in a rhetorically modest way.
comparative contrast in revelation history
Textual signal: 3:5 "was not disclosed... as it has now been revealed"
Interpretive effect: The syntax leaves room for prior hints while asserting the superior clarity and corporate apostolic-prophetic disclosure of the present era.
epexegetical infinitive and content clause
Textual signal: 3:8-9 "this grace was given, to proclaim... and to enlighten..."
Interpretive effect: These infinitives define the concrete tasks that belong to Paul's grace-given commission, linking gift to mission.
purpose clause
Textual signal: 3:10 "so that... through the church the manifold wisdom of God should now be made known"
Interpretive effect: This clause identifies God's intended outcome behind the revelation and preaching of the mystery, moving the argument from apostolic ministry to divine purpose.
Textual critical issues
Reference in verse 9 to the administration/fellowship of the mystery
Variants: Some manuscripts read oikonomia (administration/stewardship) of the mystery, while others read koinonia (fellowship/participation) of the mystery.
Preferred reading: oikonomia
Interpretive effect: "Administration" better fits the surrounding emphasis on God's plan, stewardship, and disclosure; "fellowship" would shift the line toward shared participation.
Rationale: The external support and the immediate context of stewardship and divine planning favor oikonomia.
Phrase in verse 9 "through Jesus Christ" after "God who created all things"
Variants: Some manuscripts include "through Jesus Christ," while others omit it.
Preferred reading: omit "through Jesus Christ"
Interpretive effect: Its omission leaves the focus on God as Creator without changing the Christ-centered argument of the paragraph as a whole.
Rationale: The shorter reading is widely preferred and the added phrase likely reflects orthodox expansion from nearby Christological language.
Old Testament background
Isaiah 19:23-25
Connection type: thematic_background
Note: The astonishing inclusion of former outsiders among God's people forms a prophetic backdrop for Gentiles sharing covenant blessing with Israel.
Isaiah 49:6
Connection type: thematic_background
Note: The servant's mission reaching the nations coheres with Paul's Gentile commission and the extension of salvation beyond Israel.
Genesis 12:3
Connection type: thematic_background
Note: The promise of blessing to the nations stands behind the claim that Gentiles are partakers of the promise in Christ Jesus.
Daniel 4:17; 7:9-14
Connection type: pattern
Note: The presence of heavenly rulers and authorities observing God's purposes resonates with apocalyptic scenes where earthly redemption has heavenly spectators and implications.
Interpretive options
Was the mystery completely unknown in the Old Testament or only not fully disclosed?
- It was entirely absent from prior revelation and belongs only to the present church age.
- It was present in earlier promise and pattern but not disclosed with its present clarity and form until the apostolic era.
Preferred option: It was present in earlier promise and pattern but not disclosed with its present clarity and form until the apostolic era.
Rationale: Verse 5 says not "not disclosed" absolutely but "not disclosed... as it has now been revealed," which supports continuity with prior hints and discontinuity in present clarity.
Who are the "apostles and prophets" in verse 5?
- New Testament apostles and prophets who receive and articulate the now-revealed mystery.
- Old Testament prophets together with New Testament apostles.
Preferred option: New Testament apostles and prophets who receive and articulate the now-revealed mystery.
Rationale: The wording parallels 2:20, and the phrase "has now been revealed... by the Spirit" suits the foundational witnesses of the present church era rather than a mixed temporal grouping.
What does "through faith of Christ / Christ's faithfulness" in verse 12 most likely mean?
- Primarily through believers' faith in Christ, stressing the human means of access.
- Primarily through Christ's own faithfulness, stressing His obedient reliability as the basis of access.
Preferred option: Primarily through believers' faith in Christ, stressing the human means of access.
Rationale: In the immediate context Paul speaks of access "in him" and throughout Ephesians regularly presents faith as the means by which believers receive what Christ secured, though that faith rests entirely on Christ's faithful accomplishment.
Who are the rulers and authorities in the heavenly realms in verse 10?
- Holy angelic beings who observe God's wisdom in the church.
- Hostile spiritual powers opposed to God's purposes.
- A comprehensive reference that includes heavenly powers generally, with emphasis on the church as the public display of God's wisdom before the unseen realm.
Preferred option: A comprehensive reference that includes heavenly powers generally, with emphasis on the church as the public display of God's wisdom before the unseen realm.
Rationale: Ephesians uses this language broadly, and the text here foregrounds disclosure to the heavenly realm rather than specifying either only benevolent or only hostile powers.
Conner principles audit
context
Relevance: high
Note: The paragraph must be read as a digression from 3:1 to 3:14 that explains 2:11-22; without that flow, Paul's prison reference and mystery language are easily detached from Gentile inclusion.
mention_principles
Relevance: high
Note: The mystery is defined by explicit mention in verse 6; interpreters should not replace that content with a vaguer notion of private spirituality or merely individual conversion.
election_covenant_ethnic
Relevance: high
Note: The unit concerns Gentiles entering full covenant blessing in Christ without remaining alienated; this guards against both ethnic superiority and erasure of the Jew-Gentile issue actually under discussion.
christological
Relevance: high
Note: The mystery, promise, access, and eternal purpose are all located "in Christ"; the paragraph cannot be reduced to social reconciliation abstracted from Christ's person and accomplishment.
chronometrical_dispensational
Relevance: medium
Note: Verse 5 marks a now-revealed phase in salvation history. The text supports a real redemptive-historical development without requiring a denial of earlier prophetic anticipations.
prophetic
Relevance: medium
Note: The contrast between former generations and present revelation requires care with progressive revelation; earlier prophecy contained genuine anticipations, but the apostolic unveiling provides the decisive interpretive clarity.
Theological significance
- The inclusion of the nations is not an afterthought in God's saving work; verse 11 ties it to his eternal purpose accomplished in Christ.
- Verse 6 presents Jew-Gentile unity as a matter of shared inheritance, shared body-life, and shared promise, not mere proximity or toleration.
- Paul's role is that of steward and servant, so ministry is measured by fidelity to what God has revealed, not by prestige or self-advancement.
- Through the church, God's wisdom is made visible in the present age even to heavenly rulers and authorities; the church is part of the message, not only the audience for it.
- The cosmic scope of verses 10-11 does not leave believers at a distance: verse 12 brings the argument to bold and confident access to God in Christ.
- Paul's sufferings are interpreted within this mission, so his chains are not evidence that the gospel project has stalled.
Philosophical appreciation
Exegetical and linguistic: The paragraph is shaped by interruption and disclosure. Paul begins a prayer in verse 1, suspends it, and fills the gap with the language of revelation, stewardship, and grace. Verse 6 is especially compact and forceful: the three co- compounds make the claim of equal participation audible in the wording itself.
Biblical theological: The passage joins promise and fulfillment without collapsing either. Earlier Scripture anticipated blessing for the nations, but here that promise is named in its present form: Gentiles share the same inheritance and the same body in Christ through the gospel, as now revealed to the apostles and prophets by the Spirit.
Metaphysical: History is not treated as a chain of disconnected events. Paul's calling, his imprisonment, the formation of the church, and the notice taken by heavenly powers all stand inside a purpose hidden in God and now made manifest in Christ.
Psychological Spiritual: Verse 13 addresses a predictable human response: readers may see Paul's suffering and conclude that his mission has gone wrong. Paul counters that instinct by teaching them how to read affliction through revelation rather than appearances.
Divine Perspective: God does not merely save scattered individuals. He forms a reconciled people whose existence makes his wisdom publicly known across both visible and invisible realms.
Category: works_providence_glory
Note: God orders revelation, apostolic service, suffering, and church formation toward the display of his wisdom.
Category: revelatory_self_disclosure
Note: What human beings could not infer, God has now made known by the Spirit.
Category: character
Note: God's wisdom appears in the joining of former outsiders to the same promise in Christ.
Category: attributes
Note: The passage highlights divine wisdom, purpose, and power rather than improvisation or mere reaction.
- The mystery was hidden and yet related to earlier promise; the newness lies in present disclosure and form.
- Paul is both imprisoned and entrusted with grace; suffering and privilege coincide.
- The church is an earthly community whose existence has heavenly visibility.
- Believers approach God boldly, yet that boldness is wholly dependent on Christ.
Enrichment summary
Paul's "mystery" language refers to God's hidden plan now disclosed, not to secret spirituality. Verse 6 gives the content directly: Gentiles do not merely draw near to Israel's blessings but share the same inheritance, body, and promise in Christ through the gospel. The access of verse 12 also continues the temple-nearness logic of 2:18-22, and verse 10 gives the church's unity a cosmic horizon by presenting it as a display of divine wisdom before the heavenly realm.
Traditions of men check
Treating the church as a voluntary affinity group with mainly therapeutic or social purpose.
Why it conflicts: This paragraph presents the church as the concrete result of God's eternal purpose and the instrument through which His wisdom is displayed in the heavenly realm.
Textual pressure point: Verse 10 makes the church the means of divine disclosure to rulers and authorities, far exceeding a merely consumer-oriented view of church life.
Caution: This does not minimize pastoral care or local community life; it relocates them within a larger redemptive and doxological framework.
Assuming suffering in ministry necessarily signals strategic failure or lack of divine favor.
Why it conflicts: Paul explicitly interprets his imprisonment as occurring for the Gentiles' benefit and as their glory.
Textual pressure point: Verses 1 and 13 frame Paul's chains as bound up with his Gentile stewardship rather than as a contradiction of it.
Caution: This should not be used to romanticize every hardship; the point is that faithful suffering can accompany genuine divine calling.
Using inclusion language while emptying it of Christological and gospel content.
Why it conflicts: Gentile inclusion here is specifically "through the gospel" and "in Christ Jesus," not a free-standing principle of social acceptance.
Textual pressure point: Verse 6 anchors shared inheritance, body membership, and promise participation in Christ and the gospel.
Caution: The passage does have social implications, but they cannot be detached from union with Christ and apostolic revelation.
Thought-world reading
Dynamic: covenantal_identity
Why It Matters: Verse 6 uses three co-participation terms to define Gentile inclusion. The point is full standing within the promised people of God, not tolerated attachment to someone else's covenant center.
Western Misread: Reading the paragraph as a vague endorsement of inclusiveness or as a statement about private spiritual equality detached from the church.
Interpretive Difference: Paul is describing a newly revealed shared status in Christ that takes corporate form in one body.
Dynamic: temple_cultic_frame
Why It Matters: The language of access in 3:12 continues the movement from 2:18-22, where Jews and Gentiles are built together as God's dwelling. Access therefore carries the sense of real approach to the Father, not only inward confidence.
Western Misread: Reducing access to a feeling state or to prayer psychology cut loose from the corporate temple context.
Interpretive Difference: The verse speaks of granted nearness to God in Christ within the reality of God's newly constituted people.
Idioms and figures
Expression: the mystery / secret of Christ
Category: idiom
Explanation: In this Jewish-apocalyptic register, "mystery" means God's hidden saving purpose now disclosed at the appointed time, not secret technique or elite knowledge.
Interpretive effect: It blocks mystical or gnostic readings and keeps the focus on redemptive-historical revelation, explicitly defined in verse 6.
Expression: fellow heirs, fellow members of the body, fellow partakers
Category: parallelism
Explanation: The stacked co- compounds form a rhetorical triad pressing the same point from several angles: equal inheritance, equal incorporation, equal participation in promise.
Interpretive effect: The repetition intensifies the claim so that Gentile inclusion cannot be softened into second-tier membership or mere association with Israel's blessings.
Expression: the multifaceted wisdom of God
Category: metaphor
Explanation: "Multifaceted" portrays God's wisdom as richly variegated, displayed through the unexpected formation of one reconciled people out of former divisions.
Interpretive effect: The church's unity is presented as a crafted display of divine skill, not just a practical arrangement for mission or harmony.
Application implications
- Churches should treat the shared standing named in verse 6 as part of the gospel's content, not as an optional social add-on.
- Believers should make use of the access described in verse 12, approaching the Father with confidence grounded in Christ rather than in status, heritage, or performance.
- Ministers should regard their work as stewardship, aiming to clarify what God has revealed instead of building identity around novelty, charisma, or faction.
- Congregations should not assume that visible hardship disproves faithful ministry; verse 13 teaches them to read suffering within God's purpose.
- Local churches should remember that their common life is not spiritually private. According to verse 10, their reconciled existence has witness beyond the human audience they can see.
Enrichment applications
- Churches should treat reconciled shared belonging in Christ as revealed gospel reality, not as a secondary program that can be neglected without doctrinal loss.
- Christian assurance should be framed not merely as feeling confident but as having real access to the Father in Christ.
- Ministry hardship should not be judged only by public shame or visible weakness; in verse 13 Paul's suffering is interpreted within God's purpose for the nations.
Warnings
- Do not treat "mystery" as esoteric knowledge; Paul defines it concretely in verse 6.
- Do not force verse 5 into either total Old Testament silence or full prior clarity; the contrast is between earlier concealment and present revelation.
- Do not let Paul's biography overshadow the paragraph's main subject, which is the disclosed purpose of God in Christ.
- Do not over-identify the rulers and authorities of verse 10; the point is the church's revelatory role before the heavenly realm.
- Do not isolate verse 12 from verses 3-11; bold access is the believer's share in the same Christ-centered purpose Paul has been expounding.
Enrichment warnings
- Do not say the Old Testament gave no anticipation of Gentile blessing; Paul's wording allows real antecedents while stressing present clarity.
- Do not claim that Second Temple Jewish expectation commonly matched Paul's equal-status formulation in verse 6; that sharpened claim is part of the passage's force.
- Do not detach verse 12 from 2:18-22; the access language continues the temple-and-dwelling logic already in view.
Interpretive misread risks
Misreading: Treating "mystery" as private spiritual insight or hidden religious technique.
Why It Happens: Modern usage often hears "mystery" in esoteric or psychological terms.
Correction: Verse 6 defines it openly: Gentiles share inheritance, body, and promise in Christ through the gospel.
Misreading: Reading Gentile inclusion as welcome without equal standing.
Why It Happens: The wording can be softened if the three co- compounds are treated as decorative rather than decisive.
Correction: Paul piles up these terms to rule out second-tier membership.
Misreading: Making verse 10 mainly a map of angelic or demonic ranks.
Why It Happens: The mention of rulers and authorities invites speculation about the unseen realm.
Correction: The emphasis falls on what is displayed through the church—God's manifold wisdom—not on a detailed taxonomy of heavenly beings.
Misreading: Reducing verse 12 to self-confidence or healthy religious feelings.
Why It Happens: "Boldness" and "access" are easily psychologized.
Correction: In the flow from 2:18-22 into 3:12, the point is actual nearness to the Father in Christ.