The Most Misread Verse in the New Testament
Ephesians 1:4 has been at the center of the election debate for five centuries. Most of that debate has been conducted without taking the Greek seriously.
"According as he hath chosen us in him before the foundation of the world."
Two words determine everything: en autō — in him. The election is in Christ, not prior to and independent of Christ. This is not individual pre-selection of specific persons who will be saved while others are passed over. This is the corporate election of all who are genuinely united to Christ by faith.
The Elect One is Christ himself (Isaiah 42:1 — "Behold my servant, whom I uphold; mine elect"). Those who are in him participate in his election. The path into that participation is described three verses later: "in whom ye also trusted, after that ye heard the word of truth... in whom also after that ye believed, ye were sealed" (Eph 1:13). Hear, believe, be sealed. That is the entry sequence into the corporate election.
Thread 2 is not a small theological footnote. It is the answer to one of the most important questions in Christian history: what does "elect" mean in the Bible?
The Three Corporate Elections (Rob Congdon)
Dr. Robert Congdon of Congdon Ministries International made an observation that cuts through centuries of theological confusion: there are exactly three groups in the Bible called "elect," and in every case the election refers to a corporate group called to serve God — never to individuals pre-selected for salvation.
Elect Angels (1 Timothy 5:21) — Paul writes "before God and the Lord Jesus Christ and the elect angels." The elect angels are those who did not fall with Satan. Their election is constituted by their faithfulness — they remained in their proper domain (Jude 6) when others abandoned it. No individual angel was pre-programmed to remain; the fallen angels had the same original standing. The elect angels are a corporate group defined by faithful service to God.
Elect Israel (Isaiah 45:4; Romans 11:28) — God calls Israel "mine elect" while simultaneously acknowledging that individual Israelites could be "cut off from their people" for covenant violation. Israel's election is corporate and covenantal — the nation descended from Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, through whom God's redemptive purposes unfold. Individual Israelites participate in that election through covenant faithfulness; they can abandon it through covenant violation. The corporate promise stands regardless.
Elect Church — The Bride of Christ (Ephesians 1:4; 1 Peter 2:9) — The Church is the corporate body of all who are genuinely in Christ by faith. The election is certain at the corporate level. Individual entry is through genuine faith, genuine hearing, genuine response. Peter quotes Exodus 19:6 — the language of Israel's corporate election — and applies it directly to the Church: "a chosen generation, a royal priesthood, an holy nation." Same pattern. Corporate calling to service, not individual pre-determination of destiny.
Congdon's summary: "In all three situations, in every case it refers to a group that is serving God, and never do you find salvation tied to the word 'elect.'" The Calvinist definition of election — individual pre-selection for salvation in eternity past — has no biblical support across any of the three groups that the Bible actually calls elect.
The Abrahamic Root
Thread 2 begins not at Ephesians 1:4 but at Genesis 12:1-3.
God calls Abraham: "Get thee out of thy country... and I will make of thee a great nation, and I will bless thee... and in thee shall all families of the earth be blessed."
This is corporate election in its foundational form. God is not choosing Abraham as an individual to be saved while passing over everyone else. He is choosing Abraham as the head of a covenant community through whom the redemptive plan will advance. The "blessing of all families of the earth" embedded in the Abrahamic call is Thread 7 — the open invitation — nested inside Thread 2 from the beginning. The corporate election exists for the universal invitation. God elects a people not to exclude the world but to reach it.
Paul in Galatians 3:16 identifies the "seed" of Genesis 22:18 — the singular seed promised to Abraham — as Christ himself: "Now to Abraham and his seed were the promises made. He saith not, And to seeds, as of many; but as of one, And to thy seed, which is Christ." The Abrahamic covenant was always pointing to one Person. Those who are "in Christ" (en Christō) share in what was promised to Abraham's seed. This is corporate election working exactly as Scripture designed it.
The En Autō Construction
The Greek phrase en autō — "in him" — is the structural spine of Thread 2 in the New Testament. It appears dozens of times in the Pauline letters and carries the weight of the corporate election argument every time.
In Ephesians 1 alone it appears multiple times: - v.4: "chosen in him" — the election is located in Christ - v.7: "in whom we have redemption" - v.9: "according to his good pleasure which he hath purposed in himself" - v.11: "In whom also we have obtained an inheritance" - v.13: "In whom ye also trusted... in whom also after that ye believed, ye were sealed"
The progression in verses 4 and 13 is the key. Verse 4: chosen in him. Verse 13: in whom you also trusted, in whom you believed, in whom you were sealed. The path from the corporate election (v.4) to the individual's participation in it (v.13) is: hear the word of truth, believe, be sealed by the Spirit. Corporate election en autō; individual entry through genuine faith.
This is not a mechanical sequence that bypasses human response. It is a description of how God constitutes his elect community — through the preaching of the gospel, the genuine exercise of faith, and the sealing of the Holy Spirit that confirms genuine membership in the body.
What Corporate Election Answers
Corporate election answers the question that individualist election cannot: how can the warning passages of Scripture be genuine?
Hebrews 6:4-6 describes people who have been "enlightened," who have "tasted of the heavenly gift," who have been "made partakers of the Holy Ghost" — and who can fall away. Hebrews 10:26-29 describes those who have "received the knowledge of the truth" and can still trample underfoot the Son of God. Revelation's seven letters to the churches warn genuine believers that they can lose their lampstand, be spat out as lukewarm, have their name removed from the book of life.
If individual election is unconditional and irresistible, these warnings are theatrical — directed at people who cannot possibly heed them or fail to heed them. They are meaningless. But if election is corporate — if the community is elect while individual participation requires genuine ongoing faith — then the warnings are exactly what they appear to be: genuine warnings to genuine members of the covenant community about the genuine possibility of genuine departure.
Thread 4 (real human response) exists because Thread 2 (corporate election) is properly understood. The corporate election stands. The individual's participation in it requires real, ongoing, genuine faith. The warnings are real. The grace that sustains genuine faith is also real.
Scholars Who Anchor This Thread
Rob Congdon — His three-elections framework (elect angels, elect Israel, elect Church) is the single most clarifying tool for this thread. His video and Berean Call interview are essential.
Leighton Flowers — His corporate election exposition at Soteriology 101, drawing on scholars like Robert Shank (Elect in the Son) and Brian Abasciano, provides the exegetical depth behind the Ephesians 1:4 argument.
Robert Shank — Elect in the Son is the definitive book-length treatment of corporate election. Every serious student of Thread 2 should read it.
Chuck Missler — His canonical integration method demonstrates that the corporate election runs from Abraham through Israel through the Church in a single unbroken architectural thread, not as a later revision of the plan.