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one Lord, one faith, one baptism,
Verse Takeaways
1
The Unifying 'Ones'
Commentators unanimously agree that this verse provides the theological bedrock for Christian unity. Paul isn't just listing facts; he's arguing that because all believers share one Lord (Jesus), one core faith (trust in Him), and one baptism (the shared rite of entry into the church), they are fundamentally bound together. This shared identity makes internal division illogical and unity essential.
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Ephesians
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10
18th Century
Presbyterian
One Lord. This evidently refers to the Lord Jesus. The "Spirit" is mentioned in the previous verse; the Father in the verse following. For…
One Lord (εις Κυριος). The Lord Jesus Christ and he alone (no series of aeons).
One faith (μια πιστις). On…
19th Century
Anglican
One Lord, one faith.—From the idea of the calling, the Apostle passes naturally to Him who calls—the one Lor…
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Baptist
One Lord, one faith, one baptism,
There is only one Lord in the Christian Church; and there is only one faith. There may be many fo…
The second trio of unities is related to the “one Lord” or master to whom all Christians owe their allegiance. The three expressions may well be in…
16th Century
Protestant
One Lord. In the first Epistle to the Corinthians, he employs the word Lord to denote simply the government of God.
“T…
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17th Century
Reformed Baptist
One Lord The Lord Jesus Christ, who, by right of creation, is Lord of all; and by right of marriage, and redemption,…
Nothing is urged more earnestly in the Scriptures than to walk in a manner worthy of those called to Christ's kingdom and glory. By lowliness, unde…