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Ephesians: An Exegetical Commentary is unavailable, but you can change that!

For the past 30 years, Harold Hoehner has trained thousands of seminarians in the art of New Testament exegesis. He now brings his skill and experience to this commentary on Ephesians—a commentary that no serious student can afford to ignore. Hoehner begins with a helpful introduction to the letter of Ephesians in which he addresses issues of authorship, structure and genre, historical setting,...

here is controversial. Many think this refers to baptism.1 Unfortunately, this is reading patristic and modern liturgy into the first century, and, moreover, there is nothing in the present context or in Titus 3:5 to indicate that this has reference to a baptismal rite. Furthermore, the rite of baptism does not cleanse one from sin. Even in the Qumran community the ritual washing was not considered as that which cleansed them (1QS 3.4–5, 8–10).2 Rather, it was God who wiped out their transgressions
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