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Spiritual Blessings
in Christ
Ephesians 1:1-10
Paul calls himself an apostle of Jesus (Apostle means ‘to
send out’). It’s probably easier for us to think of
the job title Ambassador, someone sent out by a government to
be its representative, someone with the authority and power behind
him of the government who sent him, a man with a mission!
And Paul, the Ambassador from Jesus brings a message to those
who read or listen to this letter, one which begins with this
wonderful phrase
‘Grace and peace to you from God our Father and the Lord
Jesus Christ.’
Two words which seem to be at the very heart of our worship and
Christian experience - ‘Grace’ anThere should be an
attractiveness about a Christian and the life we lead, a beauty
which makes others not only sit up and notice but want to know
more about. d ‘Peace’ - but what do they actually
mean, in the context that Paul uses them?
I looked in the dictionary for a definition of ‘Grace’
and it turned up among others ‘elegance and beauty of movement’
and ‘a pleasing or charming quality’.
What’s that got to do with Christianity? Well, if you’re
looking at the way Christians live their lives then there’s
something here that maybe should apply to us all. There should
be an attractiveness about a Christian and the life we lead, a
beauty which makes others not only sit up and notice but want
to know more about. Yes, there should be a ‘pleasing or
charming quality’ about a Christian. A grumpy, miserable
or short-tempered individual is not a good advert!
I was also reminded that the Queen has ‘grace and favour’
apartments which she gives mainly to the minor Royals –
a free gift, graciously given to a favoured person.
In Greek mythology the Three Graces were givers of charm and beauty.
But to a Christian, Grace must always mean more than this and
at its simplest it is a gift, one that is impossible to earn or
deserve but is freely and graciously given. This is the Grace
of God which Paul brings to the people, God’s love and mercy
freely given and shown to a people who can never hope to deserve
it – and that of course brings Paul’s words bang up
to date, as it has been throughout all generations. No man or
woman, however good they might be in human terms can ever match
up to the perfection of God, or deserve all that God would give
us – but that’s the wonder of Grace; it’s not
what we can do, it’s what God freely offers!
That’s Grace, then! Well, a rather brief look at it, anyway.
So what about Peace, which Paul also brings by way of blessing
from God? Well, my dictionary starts of by defining peace as ‘the
state existing during the absence of war’, ‘an absence
of violence’ or ‘a state of harmony between people..’
We might also add that peace is what we find in the countryside,
a quietness away from the noise of everyday life. But you could
look at these definitions and say that most of them are actually
a bit negative – they’re simply the absence of something
bad; be it violence, war, noise or the bustle and stress of everyday
existence.
What is the peace that comes to us from God? Well, for that we
have to go back to the Hebrew word Shalom, because in the Bible
peace is not the absence of trouble or strife, it is concerned
with all that is good in a person’s life, a wish for wholeness
and that has nothing to do with external circumstances. You could
be a millionaire with a beautiful house, a stable full of expensive
cars and the yacht in the Med and still lack peace. On the other
hand you could be living in abject squalor in a refugee camp somewhere,
with barely enough to eat to keep you from starvation and yet
be at peace. Just as there is a mystery around the word ‘Grace’
because it is such an amazing concept to get to grips with, so
it is with the peace that comes from knowing God and doing his
will. When we are in that state, then there is a contentment that
comes which can overcome the inconveniences of life, be they ill
health, unemployment, lack of money or whatever.
Shalom can mean just ‘hello!’ But there’s more
in the word than that. At its root it is a desire for more than
just a day without trouble, it is wishing for a person all that
is good for their life, all that will enable them to be at peace
and contentment with themselves and with God, whatever happens
through the day. In a sense it’s a very modern concept which
comes to us from across the centuries. We hear the word ‘holistic’
used quite a bit. I heard a doctor talk about taking a holistic
approach to treatment the other day. It means looking at the whole
body, rather than concentrating on a part. That’s what shalom
means, and that’s what the Bible means when it talks about
the peace that comes from God.
So Paul wishes his readers knowledge of the grace and peace of
God, and then goes on to remind them that God has so blessed their
lives in every way, and why? Because he has, to quote Paul, adopted
us into his family.
In love he predestined us to be adopted as his sons through Jesus
Christ, in accordance with his pleasure and will— to the
praise of his glorious grace, which he has freely given us in
the One he loves.
We can only begin to understand this idea of adoption if we go
back in time to when Paul was writing his letter, because family
life was a lot different in areas where Roman law prevailed than
it is now. We are used to stories in our papers of unruly teenagers
running amok, or even young children becoming out of control where
the parents seem to have lost the ability, if they ever had it,
to offer a child the loving support as well as the freedom to
develop into what we might think of as a normal upstanding member
of society.
Well, things were a little different under Roman rule. Then, a
family was under what was called patria potestas – the father’s
power! A father had absolute power over his children as long as
he and they lived – he could order his children to be imprisoned,
whipped, chained up and made to work as a slave on his estate
and in the last resort even killed, and all quite legally!
Even if a son grew up to be a local magistrate or politician,
he was still under the authority of his father. He couldn’t
own anything in his own name, and any inheritance that he got
would belong to his father until his father’s death.
Within that system, however authoritarian we might think it, there
was also an established tradition of adoption and this was taken
very seriously, particularly if a family line was about to be
lost. There was an established ritual between the real father
and the adopting father, culminating in an appearance before the
local magistrate to plead the case for adoption. Only then was
the process complete.
And the result of this adoption process? I think it’s interesting
from a Christian point of view, because the adopted child now
had all the legal rights of a legitimate child in the new family,
and lost all rights in their old family. In the eyes of the law
they were a new person, completely free of any debts or obligations
connected with their old life.
Do you see how that fits in with the Christian message? When we
become a Christian we put behind us the old life and begin again.
At one time we were subject to the power of sin, now we are subject
to the love of God. When God adopts us into his family then he
also wipes out the past that we’d rather not talk about,
and enables us to start again. This is the new life which Jesus
called people to, life in the kingdom of God, life as brothers
and sisters of a heavenly Father, with all the blessings that
come with that new status.
Ephesians 1:11-14
Paul covers quite a lot of ground in the opening words of his
letter, but there did seem to be a common thread running through
these verses as I was looking at them. We’ve looked at some
of the blessings which God grants, including that wonderful picture
of our adoption into God’s family. But we know from our
own experience and that of the world around us that family life
is not always harmonious; there are times when arguments and disagreements
take place.
What might not have been obvious when the passage was read was
that Paul was actually talking about the way that God had opened
the way up for the whole world to know his Salvation. Paul tells
his readers that it all started with the Jews, as God chose them
to be the first to know his love and will. But then, through Jesus
the Gentiles were brought into the family as they believed and
put their trust in him. And now, says Paul we’re all part
of that same united and enlarged family.
The sad thing of course is that throughout their history the Jews
were looking forward to the coming of the Messiah. They believed
so strongly that it would be through the Jewish nation that God’s
chosen one would appear, and yet when Jesus came into the world
so few of them actually recognised him then, or indeed now.
Jesus chose a small number of people and entrusted them with the
task of spreading the Gospel message of Good News. It could all
have gone wrong, but Jesus had enough faith in those who he sent
out as his Ambassadors to know that they would not let him down,
and so it was that the message of truth found its way to Samaritan
and Greek and to the whole world. It was the message about God’s
Grace and Peace which Paul was reminding his readers about. And
the Gentiles, says Paul not only believed but were given God’s
seal of approval, the Holy Spirit, who was a guarantor of the
blessings to come. The actual word that Paul uses means a deposit
– a deposit guaranteeing that at a future date the full
experience of God’s blessings will be obtained.
And that’s the hope of the Christian. We have experienced
God’s precious Grace in bringing us into His family, adopting
us as sons and daughters with all the benefits that go along with
that honour. We know his Peace in our lives, that peace which
gives us contentment whatever the world tries to throw at us,
and we know that we are part of a worldwide family that includes
people from all races and cultures. A family that has a promised
inheritance, of which we have been given just a foretaste, as
the Holy Spirit, working in our lives enables us to understand
more and more about the love, grace, peace and joy which is ours
by right as sons and daughters of a heavenly father.
Let me finish by reading again some verses from our reading but
from The Message translation, which brings these words to life!
3-6How blessed is God! And what a blessing he is! He's the Father
of our Master, Jesus Christ, and takes us to the high places of
blessing in him. Long before he laid down earth's foundations,
he had us in mind, had settled on us as the focus of his love,
to be made whole and holy by his love. Long, long ago he decided
to adopt us into his family through Jesus Christ. (What pleasure
he took in planning this!) He wanted us to enter into the celebration
of his lavish gift-giving by the hand of his beloved Son......
13-14It's in Christ that you, once you heard the truth and believed
it (this Message of your salvation), found yourselves home free—signed,
sealed, and delivered by the Holy Spirit. This signet from God
is the first instalment on what's coming, a reminder that we'll
get everything God has planned for us, a praising and glorious
life.
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© John Birch, FaithAndWorship.com (Email
Me! )
Scripture taken from the Holy Bible, NEW INTERNATIONAL
VERSION®. Copyright © 1973, 1978, 1984 International Bible Society.
All rights reserved throughout the world. Used by permission of International
Bible Society.
Scriptures marked as "(CEV)" are taken from
the Contemporary English Version Copyright © 1995 by American Bible
Society. Used by permission.
Holy Bible. New Living Translation (NLT) copyright ©
1996, 2004 by Tyndale Charitable Trust. Used by permission of Tyndale
House Publishers.
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