TOG
Member
Ephesians 4:11 lists the so-called fivefold ministries - apostles, prophets, evangelists, pastors and teachers. Verse 12 gives us the reason why God gave us these ministries. I have seen Eph. 4:12 translated in three different ways. there are only very minor differences in the wording of these translations, and those differences don't change anything. The real difference is in the punctuation. Some Bible versions have two commas in that verse, while others have only one. The versions that have only one comma differ on where it is. This may seem like a minor issue at first, but the placing of commas in this verse can totally change it's meaning. Let's look at the different possibilities. (Since I want to emphasize the punctuation, I'll use the same wording for all possibilities.)
My question to you all is where does the comma (or commas) belong and why?
- ...for the perfection of the saints, <comma> for the works of ministry, <comma>for the building up of the body of Christ
- ...for the perfection of the saints, <comma> for the works of ministry for the building up of the body of Christ
- ...for the perfection of the saints for the works of ministry, <comma> for the building up of the body of Christ
- Apostles, prophets, evangelists, pastors and teachers have three jobs to do - perfect the saints, do works of ministry and build up the body of Christ. The entire workload is put on the people with these ministries.
- This is pretty much the same as option 1. but building up the body of Christ isn't listed as a separate item, but as a result of the ministers doing the works of ministry. The entire workload is still placed on the people with the fivefold ministry.
- The people with these ministries have only one job - to perfect the saints. It is then the job of the saints (all Christians) to do works of service and thereby build up the body of Christ
My question to you all is where does the comma (or commas) belong and why?
The TOG