Living in the New Creation: The Household Code in Ephesians as Theological Instruction
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Divisio of Eph 6:1–4
- Paul’s command to children (6:1)
- Paul’s quotation of the decalogue, part 1 (6:2a)
- Paul’s interjection (6:2b)
- Paul’s quotation of the decalogue, part 2 (6:3)
- Paul’s command to fathers (6:4)6
3. Eph 6:1–4 in Light of the Other Household Codes
presents a subtle amalgamation of ecclesiology and Christology by describing the church as the earthly focal point of the divine presence (πλήωμα) and suggesting that Christ is engaged in the process of extending his triumph (πληψρουμένου) throughout the cosmos (τὰ πάντα).
4. Eph 6:1–4 in the Epistle at Large
4.1. Fathers
4.1.1. God the Father of Christians in Christ
4.1.2. The Roman Paterfamilias
4.1.3. The Father’s Benevolence
4.1.4. Unity in God’s Household
This cosmic unity can be comprehended by them only as a worshiping community in union with all the holy ones; it is only as united within the church, the body of Christ, the holy temple of the Lord, that believers can comprehend it. And it is this grand comprehension that enables them to experience the great and gracious love of Christ that surpasses all other experiences (3:14–19). Paul then climactically concludes this prayer by leading his Ephesian congregation in an inspiring act of doxological worship.
4.2. Children
4.2.1. Children in God’s Household
4.2.2. Children Outside God’s Household
4.3. Summary
4.4. Promise
The Holy Spirit is called in Ephesians “the Holy Spirit of promise” (Eph. 1:3). This does not mean, as the RSV and NEB render it, that he is “the promised Holy Spirit (true though that is, as witness Acts 1: 4 f.; 2: 33); the context rather indicates that to those whom he indwells the Holy Spirit is himself the promise of resurrection life and all the heritage of glory associated with it.
5. Conclusions
The household code, then, is not an attempt to impose pagan, patriarchal values onto an otherwise Christian value system. Rather, it is an attempt to apply the notion of mutual submission, of mutual cruciformity or Christlike love, to an inherently patriarchal structure, recognizing the Christian household as an alter-culture (Gorman 2017, p. 604).50
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | Lincoln (1990, p. 397) sees an apologetic purpose, although he bases his assertion on the use of household codes in other works. See Balch (1988, pp. 25–50), who argues for this interpretation of the codes based on his work on the historical Roman situation of 1 Peter. See also Christensen (2016, pp. 173–93), who nicely summarizes the methods and conclusions of Balch’s and Elliott’s work on 1 Peter. This question is tied to the potential sources of the Pauline household codes. It is generally acknowledged that Paul was aware of household codes in Hellenistic sources, including Hellenistic Jewish sources. Rey (2009, pp. 231–55) notes the interesting parallels between Eph 6:1–4 and 4QInstruction (e.g., both quote the commandment and omit the phrase “which the Lord your God gives you”), which suggests that, in addition to its supposed dependence on Colossians and on Hellenistic codes, Eph 6:1–4 also depends on a Jewish source or tradition such as 4QInstruction. |
2 | See also Lookadoo (2019, pp. 43–46), who, exploring codes in the New Testament and in the Apostolic Fathers, identifies the household codes in Ephesians (and in Ignatius’ To Polycarp) as uniquely based in the imitation of Christ as their theological grounding. Christensen (2016, p. 191) argues that the codes in 1 Peter are meant to encourage the church to maintain “contact [with the world] for the sake of mission”. |
3 | The unity of the church is the aspect long recognized as one of the main themes of this epistle. |
4 | The phrase ἐν κυρίῳ is missing in B and original D, yet its presence in Papyrus 46, other Alexandrian type codices, and the majority text are in favor of its inclusion. |
5 | Whether or not one includes the phrase ἐν κυρίῳ, the instruction to children has more than twice as many words as the instruction to fathers. |
6 | Relatedly, Thomas Aquinas, Eph. C6 L1 336, divides the section concerning children into two parts: (1) the instruction proper, and (2) the reason for the command, beginning with “for this is just”, inclusive of the commandment and interjection (Aquinas 2012). |
7 | Hoehner (2002, p. 808) states that “more likely it refers to the outward activity of work without the corrersponding [sic] inward dedication”. |
8 | Barth (1974, p. 756) states: “The Christological argument [as the rationale of the household codes] has the strongest and the determinative position. It implies that both the supposedly high and the supposedly low are subordinated to the same highest authority”. |
9 | Owens (2016, p. 141) speaks contra Gombis, who sees the world creation epic motifs common in ancient Near Eastern texts being appropriated. While Owens admits these thematic connections, he refers them to the Old Testament passages. |
10 | John Chrysostomn (2023), Homily 3 on Ephesians, likewise understands these verses. He teaches: “Awful indeed are these things; every created power has been made the slave of man by reason of God the Word dwelling in Him. […] Amazing again, whither has He raised the Church? As though he were lifting it up by some engine, he has raised it up to a vast height, and set it on yonder throne; for where the Head is, there is the body also. There is no interval to separate between the Head and the body; for were there a separation, then were it no longer a body, then were it no longer a head”. Aquinas, Eph. C1 L8 66, teaches essentially the same; all things are subjected to Christ’s humanity. Commentators understand these verses to indicate Christ’s dominion over all creation and over the church is particular (e.g., Aquinas, Eph. C1 L8 66; Hoehner (2002, p. 282)). Against this interpretation, Ambrosiaster (2009, p. 38) understands Eph 1:22–3 as indicating the dominion had by the Son of God even before the Incarnation. |
11 | Hoehner (2002, p. 107) states: “There are forty references to God as Father in Paul’s letters and more references to God as Father in Ephesians than in the other letters: eight times in Ephesians (1:2, 3, 17; 2:18; 3:14–15; 4:6; 5:20; 6:23) whereas only four times each in Romans, Galatians, Colossians, and 1 Thessalonians; three times each in 1 Corinthians, 2 Corinthians, Philippians, and 2 Thessalonians; twice in 1 Timothy; and once each in Philemon and Titus”. |
12 | Barth (1974, p. 73) likewise states: “He is God our Father because he is ‘God of our Lord Jesus Christ’ (Eph 1:17)” (emphasis added). |
13 | Similarly, Paul describes both Jesus and Christians as occupying the heavens: Christ dwells there in light of the Resurrection and Ascension (1:20), but Christians dwell there “in Christ” (1:3). |
14 | For further information on research of the Roman family, cf. Rawson (2003, pp. 119–38). |
15 | Joubert (1995, p. 215) notes that the right of fathers to kill children was only revoked in 374 under Valentinian. |
16 | MacDonald (2008a, p. 295) notes that the increasing independence of women also had a mitigating effect. For some reason, affection is not normally discussed in this literature. |
17 | Barth (1974, pp. 176–79) identifies the significance of the phrase τὰ πάντα in the benediction. He observes: “While Paul speaks in many other texts of ‘all (things)’ in a general sense, in these specific passages the term “all things” appears to possess a special meaning” (176), and “both the anthropological-historical [God’s victory over his enemies] and the physical-biological [earthly prosperity] realms are subsumed and held together under the promises given the Messiah” (179); cf. Friedrich Hauck, “περισσεύω”, TDNT, 6.59. |
18 | Aquinas, Eph. C1 L1 11. |
19 | See Aasgaard (2008, p. 273), who discusses Paul’s portrayal of himself as father in the Corinthian correspondence: “What emerges is not a picture of a harsh, authoritarian father, but of a father concerned with his children and attentive to their abilities and needs”. In this case, it seems that Paul’s conception of fatherhood entails aspects of clemency, that this kind of fatherhood belongs to God, and that it should be imitated. |
20 | Outside of the household is only division, principally that between Jew and gentile (2:11–22). |
21 | Hoehner (2002, p. 519) argues, contra Barth (1974, p. 471), that this verse pertains to God’s salvific fatherhood over Christians. Likewise, Ambrosiaster (2009, p. 46) summarizes: “He is not in pagans, because they deny that he is the Father of Christ”. So also, Aquinas, Eph. C4 L2. |
22 | As noted by Hoehner (2002, p. 473), the manuscript evidence can be taken to be preferential toward “Father of our Lord Jesus Christ”, though not definitively. |
23 | However, he understands 3:14–5 to refer to God’s universal fatherhood (475). Ambrosiaster (2009, p. 45) reasonably understands this verse in light of the gentile audience, i.e., Paul is praying that they would persevere through persecution. |
24 | Gorman (2017, p. 594) states: “Paul addresses his prayer (3:14) to the Father (pater) as the one source (and thus, implicitly, unifier) of every human family and nation (familia, patria)”. On Eph 1:22–3, Chrysostom (2023), Homily 3 on Ephesians, similarly teaches: “In order then that when you hear of the Head you may not conceive the notion of supremacy only, but also of consolidation, and that you may behold Him not as supreme Ruler only, but as Head of a body”. |
25 | Similarly, Joubert (1995, p. 217) summarizes: “Paul describes the invisible world of God in terms of the first-century Mediterranean institutions of kinship and politics”. |
26 | Thomas Aquinas, Eph. C1 L1, sees vv. 3–5 as part of the letter’s salutation. |
27 | Despite its obscurity, the teaching that human families are named after God the Father (3:14) also seems to play into the basis of the imitatio dei. |
28 | The phrase ἐν ἀγάπῃ also appears in 4:2 with περιπατῆσαι. |
29 | In Eph 2:2, Paul indicates the past behavior of his audience. He uses it again at the end of that section in 2:10 in the subjunctive to indicate how they ought to behave in the household of God. Its next three occurrences are in 4:1 and 4:17. In the former, Paul describes the proper behavior of his audience, specifying what is required to maintain the “bond of peace” (4:2), namely, “all humility and meekness”, which he contrasts with the behavior of outsiders in 4:17. Gorman (2017, p. 589) observes: “Indeed, the Jewish metaphor of life as a walk, appearing here in verses 2 and 10 [of Eph 2], becomes a major metaphor for life in Christ in the remainder of Ephesians (4:1, 17; 5:2, 8, 15; cf. 6:15), though it is consistently missed in most modern translations. ‘Walking’ suggests that being in Christ is a dynamic, missional reality rather than a static one”. |
30 | Barth (1974, p. 383) suggests that naming has to do with giving “a person or thing identity, essence, function”. |
31 | As Bakke (2005, pp. 156–57) argues that any disobedience of children immediately exposes the father to ridicule from his neighbors. He applies this awareness to Paul’s concern in the pastoral letters, wherein he enjoins Christians to exercise control over their own households before being a candidate to govern the church. |
32 | Paul develops this theme in 2:3, when he refers to outsiders as the “rest of mankind” (2:3), while he assures his audience that they are united in common sonship “with the holy ones” (1:18; 2:19), with whom they are being built up into a “holy temple” (2:21). MacDonald (2008b, p. 236) thus senses a “strongly ‘sectarian’ response to the wider social order” in Ephesians. |
33 | MacDonald (2008b, p. 230) notes the similarity of this phrase to “sons of darkness, as in 1QS 1:10” and states: “It constitutes very strong language assigning all nonbelievers to the realm of sin”. |
34 | Larkin (2009, p. 30) considers ὀργῆς a “metonymy pointing to the outcome of God’s anger.” Commentators appear to be agreed that disobedience and wrath are to be understood in relation to the unbelief of those outside God’s household. Hoehner (2002, p. 316) states: “it is no wonder they are called the sons of disobedience for they follow their commander who is the prototype of disobedience”. Thus, while Christians imitate God their Father (5:1), outsiders walk according to their father, who is the devil (2:1–3, cf. Jn 8:44). |
35 | Schnackenburg interprets φύσει in light of Wis 13:1. |
36 | This is the case whether one sees a connection to the doctrine of original sin or not, cf. MacDonald (2008b, pp. 230–31). Barth (1974, p. 231) states: “In their commentaries on Ephesians, Chrysostom, Jerome, (in other contexts Augustine) but also Thomas and Calvin have elaborated upon the contrast of the ‘nature’ mentioned in 2:3 to the ‘grace’ praised in 2:5, 8. For them the juxtaposition of ‘nature’ and ‘grace’, perhaps to a lesser degree also the formula ‘children of wrath’, attests and confirms the doctrine of ‘original sin’, understood in the sense of a sinful quality and state which is passed on from generation to generation”. |
37 | Augustine teaches that such are “children of vengeance, children of punishment, children of hell”, that is they are cut off from the forgiveness of God (cf. Hurst 1999). |
38 | The separation of Christians from the world operates in Ephesians in a network of terms and Old Testament allusions. For example, the term “holy” as used in 1:4, especially in light of the adoption in 1:5, suggests to some the theme of Israel being a holy congregation, chosen and set apart from other nations by God, who calls Israel his “firstborn” (Exod 4:22). Lindemann (1985, p. 23) argues this, stating that 1:5 “ist im Grunde nur eine Wiederholung von V. 4”. Thus, in Eph 2, outsiders are related to the evil spirit of the air (2:2), while Christians are animated by the Holy Spirit. |
39 | It is important for understanding Paul’s soteriology to note that even in the state of wrath, God nevertheless extends to such a one his love. The situation is precisely one of wrath due to the human agent’s intransigence in refusing God’s love. God’s wrath is described by Barth (1974, pp. 231–32) as “the temperature of God’s love” that burns away obstacles to conversion. Williamson (2009, p. 58) describes it as “God’s unalterable opposition to evil.” |
40 | ‘Obedience’ is also inherent in the word “faith”, used throughout Paul’s letter. The Old Testament usage of “faith” or “believe” sometimes means “obey”. Rudolph Bultmann, “πιστεύω κτλ.”, TDNT, 6:198–9, also states that faith has sometimes meant “obedience to the Law”. For instance, it occurs in this sense in Jer 25:8. Significantly, the preceding verse (Jer 25:7) states that the people did not obey and have thereby provoked God to anger. Obedience and anger are thus linked as they are in Eph 2:2 and 2:3, where the “sons of disobedience” and “children of anger” are mentioned. Therefore, the obedience incumbent upon children in Christian households is antithetical to anger, which is linked with disobedience. This background has implications also for Paul’s command to fathers. Whereas the populace of the Roman empire would have owed obedience primarily to the emperor, who was paterfamilias of all the people, Paul reorients the audience to render obedience to God the Father first. In fact, he says nothing about obedience to the state in this letter. Further, the audience has already heard how they are to be obedient through the terms “humility”, “meekness”, “patience”, and “forbearance” (4:2); Paul connects them with “maintaining the bond of peace” (4:3) and again opposes them to anger (4:26). Through the word “walk”, they are commanded to imitate God as children (5:1) and walk as “children of light” (5:8). These comparisons connect the behavior of the audience to the behavior of children in Christian households; obedience serves peace and unity, which are (1) contrary to anger, (2) the marks of the church, and (3) the marks of the Christian family. |
41 | “[T]here is no direct evidence that Ephesians was written under circumstances in which believers were called upon to explain their beliefs to outsiders.” MacDonald (p. 338) nevertheless states that the correspondence of content to Roman ideals at once sets the church apart by rendering them less conspicuous to outsiders. |
42 | It is often explained as a promise of long life that would likely follow upon obedience to parents (i.e., children are safer when they obey), e.g., Ambrosiaster (2009, p. 59), Williamson (2009, p. 181). |
43 | Aquinas, Eph. C6 L1 340–1, indicates that the blessing is primarily spiritual but entails material blessings “insofar as they are related to spiritual benefits”. |
44 | Hoehner (2002, p. 255) observes that the appellation “Father of glory” “is unique in Jewish and NT traditions”—one would have expected “God of glory” (e.g., Ps 29:3), “Lord of glory” (e.g., Num 24:11), or “king of glory” (e.g., Ps 24:7). Aquinas, Eph. C1 L6 49, understands the phrase “Father of glory” as equivalent to “Father of Christ”, “who is his glory”. Similarly, Barth (1974, p. 148) notes the connection between glory and enlightenment in 2 Cor 4:4, 6, where “Christ is denoted as the image of God”. However, he implausibly suggests the origin of this phrase in a Canaanite tradition. |
45 | In the background of this teaching is Deut 32, where God is called Father in 32:6, and his gratuitousness is highlighted in 32:8, where inheritance is also mentioned. |
46 | Best (1998, p. 152): Inheritance is “implicit in sonship”. In a Roman context (as was true elsewhere), the purpose of adoption was often to perpetuate inheritance (pp. 124–25). Bakke (2005, p. 24) notes that people often had children for the purpose of passing along their property as an inheritance. MacDonald (2008b, p. 199) states: “In order to describe the relationship that new believers had with God, Paul called to mind the practice of a well-to-do, childless adult wanting to adopt a male heir”. Similarly, Aasgaard (2008, p. 255) states that “Paul’s use of this language shows that he shares current notions about inheritance and transfers and exploits them in the religious—that is, Christian—domain”. Lyall (1969, p. 459) notes that Hebrew law had other ways of providing such protection, namely, levirate (Deut 25) and subsidiary marriages (Gen 16, 19, 30). |
47 | Hoehner (2002, pp. 266–67) sees the inheritance of glory as God receiving the saints into his presence (i.e., “his inheritance”). |
48 | Paul prays to the Father of glory in 1:17 that the audience would know (1) the hope to which he has called them, (2) the wealth of his inheritance of glory, and (3) the greatness of his power at work in believers (1:18–19). Barth tentatively prefers understanding the latter two as descriptive of hope. It may also be that the knowledge Paul prays for consists in these three phrases. Barth, Ephesians, 150. |
49 | Similarly, Heil (2007, p. 71) states that the mention of the Holy Spirit in 1:14 builds on the injunction that Christians should be “holy (ἁγίους) and blameless” from 1:4. Schnackenburg (1991, p. 66) also notes the “internal connection in the Holy Spirit between our present state of salvation and the total redemption which we shall achieve with our coming into our ‘inheritance’”. |
50 | Likewise, as Hoehner (2002, p. 725) states: “The most important difference [between Paul’s household codes and Hellenistic codes] is the model or basis for the codes. Whereas in Hellenism the model was political, the Christian model is Christ himself, and he is also the motivating force”. He goes on to describe the codes in Ephesians as “a distinctly Christian ethic”. |
51 | Gombis states that the codes are “aimed at counteracting the devastating effects of the powers upon human relationships and in transforming relationships within appropriate hierarchical structures. The solution that Paul provides does not involve overthrowing such structures, but rather subjecting them to new creation dynamics so that relationships within the New Humanity take on a renewed character” (p. 324). |
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Montanaro, A. Living in the New Creation: The Household Code in Ephesians as Theological Instruction. Religions 2025, 16, 258. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16020258
Montanaro A. Living in the New Creation: The Household Code in Ephesians as Theological Instruction. Religions. 2025; 16(2):258. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16020258
Chicago/Turabian StyleMontanaro, Andrew. 2025. "Living in the New Creation: The Household Code in Ephesians as Theological Instruction" Religions 16, no. 2: 258. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16020258
APA StyleMontanaro, A. (2025). Living in the New Creation: The Household Code in Ephesians as Theological Instruction. Religions, 16(2), 258. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16020258