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Ephesians 1:1-14
"What God Has
Done For Us"
[A transcript of a
sermon given by Pastor Joe Focht, Calvary Chapel of Philadelphia, http://www.ccphilly.org ]
Ephesians 1:1-14, "Paul, an apostle of Jesus Christ
by the will of God, to the saints which are at
Ephesus
, and to the faithful in Christ Jesus. Grace be to
you, and peace, from God our Father, and from the Lord Jesus Christ. Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus
Christ, who hath blessed us with all spiritual blessings in heavenly
places (or "things") in Christ: According as he hath chosen
us in him before the foundation of the world, that we should be holy
and without blame before him in love:
Having predestinated us unto the adoption
of children by Jesus Christ to himself, according to the good pleasure
of his will, to the praise of the glory of his grace, wherein he
hath made us accepted in the beloved.
In whom we have [the] redemption through
his blood, the forgiveness of sins, according to the riches of his
grace; wherein he hath abounded toward us in all wisdom and prudence;
having made known unto us the mystery of his will, according to his
good pleasure which he hath purposed in himself: that in the dispensation
of the fulness of times he might gather together in one all things
in Christ, both which are in heaven, and which are on earth, even
in him:
In whom also
we have obtained an inheritance, being predestinated according to
the purpose of him who worketh all things after the counsel of his
own will. That we should be to the praise of his glory, who first
trusted in Christ.
In whom ye
also trusted, after that ye heard the Word of truth, the gospel of
your salvation: in whom also after that ye believed, ye were sealed
with the Holy Spirit of promise, which is the earnest of our inheritance
until the redemption of the purchased possession, unto the praise
of his glory." Six chapters, I hope
that you read through it during the week, the book of Ephesians. Familiarize yourself with it. It divides very easily. First three chapters are in regards to what
God the Father, Christ and the Holy Spirit have done for us. The last three chapters, chapters 4 through
6 are in regards to our response to that. First three chapters, doctrinal, last three chapters, practical. First three chapters about
the wealth that we have in Christ, the last three chapters, about
our walk in Christ. Watchman
Nee did an old commentary called "Sit, Walk, Stand", because
in the first three chapters we're sitting in heavenly places in Christ. Chapter 4 begins 'Walk therein, worthy
of the vocation God has called you to.' And
the last chapter, of course, 'Stand' in regards to the warfare that
we have. But the point is,
we can't continue sometimes in our walk if we don't know where we
stand. We can't move forward without struggle if we're not assured of where we stand in Christ. Now
we find ourselves easily condemned, easily sometimes wanting to just
throw up our hands and give up because of our failings. And
I think it's as we grow in grace and the knowledge of Christ, as
we realize what is finished as far as God is concerned, that then
we're encouraged to get up again, to confess our sins, to know he's
faithful and just to forgive us and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness,
and to continue, and to go onward. You remember that Paul came to
Ephesus
in Acts chapter 19, and when he arrived there, there were a number
of disciples. He noticed there was something different about
them and he asked them if they had received the Holy Spirit, and they
said, 'We haven't even heard that there is such a thing as the Holy
Spirit.' He said, 'Unto what baptism were you baptized
then?' They said, 'Into John's
baptism [John the Baptist's].' And
he explained to them the way of Christ more perfectly, they were baptized
in the name of Jesus Christ, he laid hands on them, they received the
Spirit, and then Paul labors there. We
know he's there at one point for three years. You
remember, so touched was the community that the local craftsmen that
made little statues of Diana of the Ephesians, started an uproar because
he was shutting down the trades. The
temple to Diana was there, it was one of the seven wonders of the world,
it was the banking center of that part of Asia Minor, and Paul so touched
Ephesus and the outlying districts that sales dropped off for these
little idols of Diana because people were believing in the true and
living God, that it started a riot, and Alexander the coppersmith was
the man there that started all of this trouble. But Paul as he writes now to the Ephesians,
it's a letter to a church that's not filled with correction like the
Galatian letter or the Corinthians. This
is a letter where Paul breathes out some of the most remarkable things
about Christ and his love, and about their walk before the unsaved
world and their testimony. But
it's important for us to take note of these first three chapters, because
this is about 64AD, it's about 5 years after Acts chapter 20, and within
25 years to 30 years, John will be on the Isle of Patmos. And
Jesus there will dictate these letters to the 7 Churches which are
in
Asia
. And the first one will be to the church at
Ephesus
. And the Lord will say there, 'I've observed
your works, you're filled with good works, you're doing
everything that a church should do. You're
trying those who call themselves apostles that are not, you're filled
with good works. But, you have
left your first love, what should be driving and moving everything in
the church has waned. Not lost
your first love, left your first love. He
says, "Remember therefore from where thou art fallen", because
Paul takes us up into the heights, 'Repent, do the first works, come
back to your first love.' That
will be the call to this church, which is a remarkable church. Within
25 years Jesus Christ has to say to the church, 'You've got all the machinery
moving, but there's no more gas in the tank, there's
no more fuel. What should
drive you is no longer there.' I
think it's important for us, because we are this June at 20 years, since
we started a Bible study with 24, 25 of us [ http://www.ccphilly.org
], 20 years have gone by. And
I think it's always a great challenge to us, is: "Have we cooled? Have we taken things for granted?" Do we (are we saying to ourselves) 'Oh yeah,
we're in this chapter, Oh yeah, I heard that chapter before.' Do we realize that in churches across
America
, teaching through the [entire] Scripture is not the rule, it's the
exception? Do we appreciate
the freedom that we have to come and sing simple choruses and bring
our heart before Jesus Christ and ask him to speak to us and to open
his Word? Do we appreciate the freedom that we have in
Christ? Or have we grown up
in it? We've been raised in the church, been around
(it) our whole life, and somehow we don't appreciate it until we get
out and get in trouble, the doctor says 'You have cancer', till some
trauma comes, and all of a sudden we wake up, 'This is all
the most important thing in my life. I
have forgotten that, I have taken it for granted.' Well
so easily that can take place. And
that's why it's so important, these first three chapters, to see the
things that God has done for us. Before
we worry about what we need to do, it is essential that we know what
the Lord has done for us, so that our heart may continue to be stirred. 'We love him because he first loved us', that's
what the Scripture says. And
certainly, Paul tries to develop that and hold those things before
us as we begin and as we look into these first three chapters.
He begins, verse 1, "Paul, an apostle of Jesus
Christ, by the will of God, to the saints which are at
Ephesus
, and to the faithful in Christ Jesus." Paul,
an apostle of Jesus Christ, by the will of God. Important to know where you are and who you
are by the will of God. You can
cross out Paul and cross out apostle and fill that in "yourself",
by the will of God. Where are
you? You know, sometimes we have this foolish struggle
that one thing is more sacred than another. I mean, John, a carpenter by the will of God. That's
the way Jesus spent the first 30 years of his life, he only had a public
ministry for three and a half years. Was
one more sacred than another? When
he came to be baptized in the River Jordan the voice from heaven said, "This
is my beloved Son in whom I am already well pleased." Hadn't
preached a sermon, hadn't done a miracle. But he had fellowshipped with his Father, day
in and day out in the carpenter shop. Suzie, a grandmother, by the will of God--who knows who's behind
those little freckles, whether it's a Whitfield or a Deborah or a Ruth,
and what influence you're going to be in their lives? A mom, can that possibly be by the will of
God when you see the pile of wash every day? You
know, it isn't the pile of wash, how big it is, it's years
long. It just doesn't go away,
it's endless, it replenishes itself. [And you know, guys, it's not a bad thing to
help out your wonderful wife with some of those chores, or even to share
them with her, as much as is possible. Check
out the two "Love For A Lifetime" transcripts
in the Christian Growth section of this site for a couple wonderful sermons
on marriage.] And it's decades sometimes before you see or hear the fruit
of your labor. "Thank you,
bye." Your God is now my
God. Long labor, sometimes. 'Paul, an apostle by the
will of God.' How important
it was for him to stand in those things, how important for him as he,
in Acts 20, his meeting with the elders from
Ephesus
, on the beach at
Miletus
, headed to
Jerusalem
, knowing that bonds and afflictions await him. Saying,
'None of those things move me, that I might finish my course with joy. I haven't ceased to warn you over a period
of two or three years that after my departure grievous wolves will come
in from the outside, not sparing the flock. Men
are going to come out of your own midst and draw disciples after themselves
instead of after the Lord.' Then
it says 'Commending them to the grace of God.' Something
that was certain in his own life.
"Paul, an apostle of Jesus Christ by the will of God, to the saints
which are at
Ephesus
, and to the faithful in Christ Jesus." Now that's to us, also. 'To
the saints that are at
Ephesus
, to the faithful--well you might say, 'That's not to me, I ain't faithful--no
it's not faithful in that sense. It's
to the believing, to the trusting--those who believe or trust Christ. "To the saints at
Ephesus
"--you know, we've done a disservice to this whole idea of "saints",
Gr. Hagion, hagios, [Strong's # 40,
Hagios: sacred, (phys. Pure, morally blameless or religious, cer. Consecrated):
(most) holy, saint.] "to be holy, to
be a saint, to be set aside." And
we think that if you're a saint, you're on somebody's dashboard or on
somebody's front lawn. The Bible
says that you are saints. All those at
Ephesus
were saints. Look next to you, the person next to you is
a saint, you're a saint. Your
life has been set aside by God for his purposes, holy. We're
going to see how that he's going to talk about that in these first three
chapters. "The saints at
Ephesus
in Christ'--two addresses. First
three chapters are written to those in Christ, the last three are written
to those at
Ephesus
. We have two addresses, you and I. In Christ and in Philly, and our problem is
in Philly, not in Christ, if you've noticed. We
have two addresses, we live in two realms. We're in Christ, and that's something that's
settled by the work of Jesus. As
far as God is concerned that's signed, sealed, and delivered, we're in
Philly, in Christ. In traffic,
around people, would be nice if there was nobody on the planet but you, Huh? You'd never have any temptations or trials
or lose your temper…."behavior that is becoming saints and worthy
of our vocation", and that's the second half. "To
those saints which are at
Ephesus
, and to the believing in Christ"--that's us, it
includes us in this letter without any question. The greeting, verse 2, Grace be to you and peace, from God our Father and from the
Lord Jesus Christ"--always the order, grace then peace, we'll
never have peace without grace. Grace,
[ Strong's 5485, Greek: Charis…the divine influence upon the heart, and
its reflection in the life…] [You
might say by this central part of the definition, that the Grace of God
is the cleansing influence of his Holy Spirit acting on our lives, cleaning
out the sin, giving us the power to overcome sins we'd not be able to
on our own, and replacing that with God's nature, the fruits of the Spirit
described in Galatians 5:21-22. So grace, the grace of God comes first, and
then as a result of that, a great inner peace is the end result.] the typical Greek
greeting, and then from the Jewish tradition, which was Shalom, but here
in the Greek, peace, [Strong's 1515, Eirene; peace; prosperity:--one,
peace, quietness, rest + set at one again.] the peace, which means 'to put together' when something
is disjointed or something is disconnected, there's no peace. You know how that is. It means to bring together. Of course it's the believer in God, but peace. 'Grace,
peace be to you from the Lord Jesus Christ.' Now
the Lord, Kurios, [Strong's # 2962, Greek: Kurios, kuros; supreme authority,
i.e. controller…God, Lord, master, Sir.] is title. He
is the Lord. Jesus is his name. When
you first get saved, you think "The Lord Jesus Christ" is like "Smokey
the Bear", you think it's all his name. The "Lord" is who he is, Kurios,
he's Lord, not just Savior, he's Lord. Jesus,
Joshua, [Yeshua in modern Hebrew, for the
Messianics reading this], his name. Jesus or Yeshua of
Nazareth
. [For example Judas Iscariot is really in Hebrew
"Judas Ish Keriot", which = "Judas, man of Keriot",
Jesus of
Nazareth
would be in Hebrew Yeshua Ish Nazareth, or Jesus man of
Nazareth
.] Christ is his mission, Christ
is the Greek for Messiah. It's
"The Lord" Yeshua Meschiach, the Lord Jesus the Messiah. He's the one who has been prophecied, of the
line of David, of the seed of Abraham, of the tribe of Judah, the Jewish
Messiah, according to the Hebrew prophets, born of a virgin [Isa. 7:14]. [To see this awesome chain of fulfilled prophecies
of who Jesus is, the authenticity of his Messiahship, log onto http://www.UNITYINCHRIST.COM/prophecies/1stcoming.htm .]
This
is the One, the Lord, Kurios, Jesus the Christ. "Grace
be to you and peace, from God"--notice--"our Father,
and from the Lord Jesus Christ."
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