Healing through Ephesians, Ephesians 4:7-16
leading a host of captives in your train and receiving gifts among men” But in Ephesians, Paul writes: “When he ascended on high he led a host of captives, and he gave gifts to men.” Why the difference? Paul is getting the point across that Christ has richly provided for us all things. He is the fulfillment of the OT and is keeping His promise of never leaving us nor forsaking us.
Healing through Ephesians: Eph. 3:14-21 So far in the book of Ephesians, Paul has reminded the Ephesian believers in 1:1-14 of the truth of the Gospel, that they are saved by grace. He prays for them in 1:15-23 that God would fill them with all the riches of His grace. Paul lays out for the Ephesians that salvation is all of grace in chapter 2:1-10. In 2:11-22 Paul describes how both Jews and Gentiles are one people under the grace of God. Paul begins in 3:1-13 describing how the OT was always about God creating new a people from all the peoples in the earth. There’s a mystery that’s now revealed on this side of the cross that God was always working toward. In v. 13 Paul also reminds the Ephesians that what he is suffering is for their glory.
v.14-15 Paul picks up his train of thought from 3:1 “For this reason” What reason? That the Gospel is for Gentiles the same way it is for Jews. That we’re one body in Christ. Paul writes a bit of a pun in using “Father” and the Greek word for “family” here is patria which Pater is related. Another way to put it is, “I bow my knees before the Father from whom all fatherhood in heaven and on earth is named.” Paul launches into another prayer in this section as he’s bringing the doctrinal section of the book to a close and fixing to move into the practical implications of the doctrine of salvation by grace he’s just described. So often, we want to skip all the “head stuff” and go to “just tell me what to do.” Paul doesn’t let us do that, and by the grace of God, let’s not either. Sit under the awe of God and His amazing grace. That He would save a wretch like me. That I, a member of the nations of the OT, would be saved to inherit Christ and His kingdom along with the rest of God’s people is enough to blow anyone’s mind. Any contemplation of God’s grace should result in thanksgiving. Paul is asking God to empower the Ephesians in the way that to see in the next several verses. I confess, I don’t pray for my brothers and sisters like that on a consistent basis. God grant that we would be a praying people. Paul is also making a statement about the nature of God Himself. He’s not a mere tribal deity. In Greek and Roman paganism the gods are just extra powerful humans to some degree. They have limits to their ability. If a god is over the sea, they’re useless on land. They’re beset by wrong desires (looking at you, Zeus) and fight amongst themselves. Paul is describing God in VERY different terms from that. God is the God of all the peoples of the earth. Not that everyone is saved through faith, but that there’s nowhere on the globe that God in his immanence is not. V. 16 – 17a Paul prays that the Ephesians would be empowered at the same level of power that God’s glory is. Back in Ephesians 1, Paul writes about the riches of God’s grace, about the glorious inheritance of the saints and how He’s working at that level in our lives. Paul is not referring to material riches, but spiritual richness of God Himself that we get by the empowering Holy Spirit in our “inner being.” Where does this power come from? And what is this power for? This power comes from God as a gift, it’s by grace. And it comes in order that Christ may dwell in our hearts through faith. Some may object, “Aren’t we already saved? Aren’t we already believers?” Yes. Paul is praying that they would have more – that they would go deeper. The same Gospel that saves is the same Gospel that sanctifies. We should pray for more of the Spirit, to know Christ more. That Christ Himself would dwell in our hearts, that He would increase our faith. John 15:1-11 V.17b – 19 Our root and foundation is always and only the love of Christ. If it’s anything else, we’ve missed the boat. This is the point of power from v. 16. Paul prays that the Ephesians would be strengthened, not for their own aggrandizement, not so the Ephesian church would be a “great church”, or that they would accomplish lots for God’s kingdom, or give tons of money away, or attract a huge crowd, or turn away a huge crowd. The power Paul is praying for is an inner power to love and understand the Gospel through Christ’s indwelling. What you’re rooted in matters. What your foundation is built on matters. A plant is only as good as the soil it’s planted in. Amy has a lot of houseplants, some of them need this kind of soil or that kind. The plant that needs a dry, sandy soil won’t do well if she were to plant it in moist peat moss. Or vice versa. Some plants thrive in rocks and little bit of water. Others wouldn’t last 5 minutes like that. A building is only as good as its foundation. If cracks appear in the wall and they’re caused by foundation problems, filling the crack and painting only does so much. The house is still shifting. This knowledge that Paul prays in v. 18 for doesn’t exist in a vacuum. Paul prays that the Ephesians would be strengthened to comprehend the “breadth and length and height and depth.” Where does this strength come from to understand all these things? I would argue that Paul is writing about knowledge of God and His Word. That as we know God and His Word more fully, we are changed to know and love Him. God must grant this. He alone can empower us to take His Word and He roots it deep into our lives. Paul doesn’t say “just use your reason, or feelings, or a great teacher, or a pastor, or a commentary.” All those are good tools, but there’s something different that Paul is referring to – the illumination of the Holy Spirit. God must reveal Himself in His Scripture for our lives to be changed. Paul prayed that for the Ephesians and, by extension, us. We can pray that same prayer for ourselves and one another. That we would be empowered by the Holy Spirit to love God’s Word and the God Who reveals Himself in it, and that we would have fellowship with all the saints through that. How do you know this love? How do you deepen your fellowship with other believers? How do you commune more deeply with Christ and be filled with the Spirit? Know your Bible. Dig deep into Scripture. There’s an embarrassment of riches in the Western world to help you further your study of Scripture. Study Scripture in community. “Knowledge puffs up” as we know from 1 Corinthians, but Scripture studied in community gives an outlet for knowledge of Scripture. The love of Christ surpasses knowledge, but rather than despair that Christ’s love is unknowable, let’s dive into that pool and drown in the knowledge of His love. We can’t figure out all of God and Who He is. Even the study of one attribute of God is just scratching the surface of the knowledge of God Himself. V. 20-21 Paul ends his prayer with a benediction, summing up what he just wrote in the preceding verses. May God be glorified in our sanctification. May He look marvelous to a watching world when they see how He is working in us through His Spirit. May we, as we preach the Gospel to each other and the lost, make much of God and His glory that it would always and only be able to be attributed to God. May God heal us from our past hurts and sin and use us as willing vessels to carry the light of Christ to the world. Remember from v. 16 how much power that God has empowered us with? “According to the riches of his glory.” God has empowered us to the level of His own glory, and He’s glorifying Himself in the worship of his saints in all times and places and in the work that Jesus has accomplished and is accomplishing in His people. Application God wants us to know Him in His Word. Drink deeply from the fountain of His revealed Word. There’s so much treasure there. The Bible isn’t a magic book that “a chapter a day keeps the Devil away.” I’m praying for us a body that we would be filled with such a love for Christ that we would be so enamored with God’s Word that we would become what Paul prays for in this section. That we would study Bible and have such a love for the Bible that it would change us to love one another and abide in Christ. Ephesians 1:1-14 Eph 1:1-14
Introduction Before we start on the actual book of Ephesians, let’s take a look at some of the background for Paul’s relationship with the church in Ephesus. The Ephesians know Paul. They have been with him through some high points and some very low points. In Acts 18 and 19, Luke describes Paul’s ministry in and around Ephesus. Paul left Priscilla and Aquila there to continue the work and they discipled Apollos to understand the Gospel more fully. After Apollos went on to other ministry in Corinth, Paul came back and worked at evangelism and church planting for three years. Paul left after the riot sparked by idol-crafting silversmiths, but not before encouraging the Ephesian believers to continue in the faith. After Paul visited other churches in the area, he came back on his way to Jerusalem, called the elders of the Ephesian church and spoke to them in Acts 20, warning them among other things, (Acts 20:29-31). Now, Paul is writing the Ephesians a letter from prison, following up on his ministry in Ephesus. Ephesians 1:1-14. Vv1-2 Paul’s introduction to the Ephesians. The will of God is a big theme in this section, Paul is an apostle by God’s will. Paul’s ministry isn’t something he cooked up on his own. He also refers to the Ephesians as “saints”, “holy ones” even though they, like us are still fighting sin in their sanctification. V 3 in the same way God is blessed, he also pours his blessing out on us. God does not halfway bless. He’s poured it all onto us through Christ. If you’re in Christ right now, you’re blessed with every heavenly blessing. Romans 8:28-30 This section has been referred to as the “golden chain of redemption.” Our final glorification with Christ is so solid, so real that Paul can speak of us as already being glorified. (v 4) The point of salvation is for us to be holy and blameless before God. God chose us in Christ. I know we can get off into the weeds with the details of how it works itself out. Holiness and blamelessness are the point of salvation. We are called to be like Christ. Not in the way Adam and Eve wanted to be “like God” in Genesis 3. We are called to be like God in how we’re committed to his glory and freedom from sin. Are we going to do that perfectly in this life? No, of course not. But that’s our calling. I’m hesitant to preach on holiness because of how the word has been tied to legalism. But holiness is being committed to God’s glory. God is holy because he’s committed to his own glory. Objects and days in the OT were holy because they were committed or dedicated to God’s purposes. We’re called to be holy as we’re committed to God’s glory. How do we accomplish that? The Law is summed up in two words, love God, love our neighbor. Are we going to do either of those any way close to perfectly? No, of course not. But that’s what grace is for. Even the ability to desire to bring God glory is an outworking of grace in our hearts. Both those propositions have been difficult in the past month. It’s been hard for me to trust God in the suffering. It’s been hard for me to treat fellow image-bearers as fellow bearers of God’s image. Even before the foundation of the world, if you’re a believer, God knew you. It’s not that God just knew facts or what would happen, or a general idea of people, but God knew YOU personally. v.5 We’re not just called to be holy and blameless like God wants a bunch of tin soldiers to put on his dresser that look like him. God predestined us in love to adoption as sons and daughters along with His Son Jesus. We get to be in the family of God. We’re not just the second-rate children that are merely tolerated. We’re adopted. We’re part of the family. We’re in. We have a Father who not only loves us, but wants us. And, it’s according to the purpose of his will. This is what God has willed. We as the church are not the second best option for God’s plan. We’re part of God’s plan from the beginning. That’s some good news. You being here right here and now is not a mistake. You are not a mistake. In verse 11, we’ll see that not only are we part of the family, we’re also heirs. We’ve received an inheritance as a son or daughter would. V.6 We should praise God for his glorious grace. Grace should always be in our thoughts. That God would see rebels such as us and will to redeem us from the sin that we’re loving is so astounding as to be scandalous. Grace is scandalous. There is a sense where we want justice. That’s a good thing. We should want and work and speak for justice. Also within the human heart is “I want justice for everyone else’s sin, but mercy for mine.” As it's been said before, we’re just beggars telling other beggars where to find bread. It’s hard to see in English, but you can see it in the Greek text, Paul switches words for blessed in verse 6. In v 3 Paul uses the word εὐλογητός and the verb form εὐλογέω to speak of blessed be God who has blessed us with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places. But he switches in v 6 to χαριτόω which is the verb form of χάρις which means grace. A more woodenly literal translation could be “to the praise of his glorious grace which he has graced us in the Beloved.” V 7 God’s grace is just. God can show us grace because Jesus died on the cross in our place. Jesus’ blood provides us with redemption. We’re bought back as it were from our slave master sin. How much redemption and forgiveness do we have? All according to the riches of His grace. If God’s grace is unfathomable, then we have unlimited grace. v8 not only are we swimming in the riches of God’s grace, but God has lavished that grace upon us. We can’t run out of it. We can’t swim deep enough and get to the bottom. Even in eternity, I don’t think we’re going to know all the ins and outs of God’s grace still. We’ll know more. We won’t have the blinders of the flesh and sin upon our hearts, but God’s grace is so unfathomable. I just want to weep when I hear of God’s grace; that he would love a sinner like me. V9-10 God has not left us on our own to figure out life for ourselves. He’s made known to us the mystery of his will. What does God want for our lives? V10, he wants us to be united to Him. God the Father has sent Christ as the Redeemer who will, according to the purpose of God, accomplish his plan of redemption of the world. Not just heaven. Not just earth. Both heaven and earth are part of God’s redemptive story. We get to participate in that in the Gospel. Vv 11-14 Not only do we have redemption and forgiveness in Christ, not only are we adopted into God’s family, not only are we called to become like Christ in his righteousness and holiness, but we also have obtained an inheritance, an inheritance of God Himself, where the indwelling Holy Spirit is just the down payment. How can we know that we’re in the kingdom? If God has called us, and He works all things according to the counsel of His will, then we know that He cannot not complete it. What is the point of all this? Election, calling, redemption, forgiveness, regeneration, justification, sanctification, it’s all to the praise of His glory. Conclusion A favorite book series of mine and my kids is The Wingfeather Saga. One recurring line the mom speaks in the story is she reminds her three children to “remember who they are.” One theme of this letter is remembering who you are in Christ. So, who are you in Christ? Meditate this week on what God has done and is doing in your life through the Gospel. |
Andrew
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