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Love in the Supreme Ethics

Thursday 18 August 2016

Learning Ephesians: four Shifts in Perspectives


The letter to the Ephesians is one of the most encouraging and instructive books in the Bible. The Book of Ephesians is home to some of the Bible's greatest promises and deepest spiritual insights. Apart from the Epistle to the Romans, few who have studied Paul’s Epistle to the Ephesians would challenge the statement that it is the “Rolls Royce of the epistles.” F. F. Bruce, noted New Testament scholar, calls Ephesians “the quintessence of Paulinism.” C. H. Dodd called Ephesians “the crown of Paulinism.” According to William Hendriksen, Ephesians has been called “the divinest composition of man, the distilled essence of the Christian religion, the most authoritative and most consummate compendium of the Christian faith, full to the brim with thoughts and doctrines sublime and momentous.

Hetty Green was known as America's greatest miser. She managed an inherited fortune so shrewdly that she was also considered the greatest woman financier in the world. In 1916 she died leaving an estate that was worth nearly 100 million dollars. Yet she would eat cold oatmeal because she didn't want to spend the money to heat the water. Her son eventually lost his leg from a relatively minor injury because she took him to a number of free medical clinics instead of calling for a doctor. When it comes to spiritual blessing many Christian do the same mistake as Hetty Green. This letter tells us what riches we have in Christ. However, here in this meditation we shall look at the four shifts in our perspectives, that Paul wants us to make in this crucial end times. 

1. FROM SUFFERING TOWARDS SERVING 
    (Ministerial Aspect)

“Your most agonizing moment of pain is the founding stone of a Barnabas in you”
We must not forget the context of the epistle, the first century was the era of great persecution and suffering. And this letter of Paul reminds us of the significance of serving amidst of suffering that every mature believer is called to do. Many great writers of the world take off and go to some multi-star hotels or resort where they find a sea view of some other aesthetic scenarios to make their mind active for producing some of the finest writings. Unlike many of us Paul didn’t wait for the comfortable situations to give or write a theological discourse. He himself was in a prison, which is, of course, not a desirable place for anyone, from where he wrote this masterpiece; queen of epistles. He foresaw the great apostasy that would rise as we know now that the persecution in the Asia Minor encroached, and encouraged believers to come in unity to stand firm amidst such crisis.

2 Corinthians 1:4-54 who comforts us in all our troubles, so that we can comfort those in any trouble with the comfort we ourselves have received from God. 5 For just as the sufferings of Christ overflow to us, so also through Christ our comfort overflows. 

It’s his suffering, which shaped him in becoming an encourager to the suffering ones.

So when God works in you through the hour of suffering, its not limited to you alone but the results of your suffering is far-reaching to the people you will be ministering in future. 

2 Corinthians 6:8- 108 through glory and dishonor, slander and praise; viewed as imposters, yet genuine; 9as unknown, yet well-known; dying, and yet we live on; punished, yet not killed;10 sorrowful, yet always rejoicing; poor, yet making many rich; having nothing, and yet possessing everything having nothing, and yet possessing everything.

You can’t encourage someone unless you have walked on the path that they are in. you can’t help the one with your sympathy unless you have experience God’s sympathy. You can’t empathize the broken unless you have been broken and made whole by God.

This to me seems a answer to an age old question “Thorn of Paul” God kept the thorn up there in Paul’s flesh to make him a first aid to others wound and which is to this day remains a first aid to all spiritually sick.

Anni Johnson Flint

He giveth more grace when the burdens grow greater, 
He sendeth more strength when the labors increase; 
To added afflictions He addeth His mercy, 
To multiplied trials, His multiplied peace.
When we have exhausted our store of endurance, 
When our strength has failed ere the day is half done, 
When we reach the end of our hoarded resources
Our Father’s full giving is only begun.
His love has no limits, His grace has no measure, 
His power no boundary known unto men;
For out of His infinite riches in JesusHe giveth, and giveth, and giveth again.

Anni wrote this with her swollen fingers while she, herself was in the sore bed unbearable.
You can’t be a source of living water unless you have a source being poured unto you. You can’t become the source of encouragement unless you have been encouraged.

As we look about, it is undeniably problematic to find much cause for positivity in this world in which we live. Our environment is slowly being poisoned, the ozone layer is vanishing, viruses like AIDS, Ebola and ZIKA are on the verge of destroying the population of some nations, our economy is wavering, politicians are corrupt, and government is not able to solve the evils facing it. There is room for hope, for confidence, for joy, but it is not in the world around us, it is in the God whom Paul served, the God of whom he writes, whom he worships, and to whom he prays in Ephesians. The truths of this great epistle can transform your life, and the God of this epistle can give you faith, hope, love and above all a capacity amidst suffering to serve others with God’s heart.

2. FROM PAIN & PROSPERITY TOWARDS PRAYER &                 PRAISES (Spiritual Aspect)

This letter contains prayers and praises more than other letters of Paul put together. Comparing all other epistles that Paul wrote, this epistle contains most of Paul’s prayer and the praises. 
Now one has all right to question Paul saying, "Come on Paul you are already appear to be very scarce with this tiny piece of letter which has 6 small chapters and adding two long prayer besides many words of praises is little too much odd for a writer of your credential." 
We may also end up asking this question if only if we underestimate the value of prayer and praises in Christian life. This also tells about the attitude towards God when we are in moments of pain or pleasure. As we saw earlier that Paul was in prison. Now Paul, by doing this himself, sets an example for the church at Ephesians that you are going to go through the such calamity in the imminent future remember to praise God.

Philippians 4:66 Be anxious for nothing, but in everything, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, present your requests to God.

Paul is not preaching or teaching in Ephesians as much as he is praying and praising God for who He is and what He has done, as evidenced in the person and work of Jesus Christ and in the gospel. After a brief greeting in verses 1 and 2, Paul’s first words in Ephesians begin,

 “Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ …” The character of Ephesians, and especially the first three chapters, is one of praise toward God. 

Christian history has rich track of influential hymns and songs of all time. Most importantly, if one tries finding the reason behind those masterpieces of all compositions; its nothing but the hour of Praising-Praying God amidst own excruciating pain and sorrow alongside God-given joy and peace in those moments. There are times in our life when no amount of human words; though be it relatives' or outsiders' (preachers or counsellors), can never heal our wounded agonising heart but only praising God for who He is regardless of what He has done or not done or will do in future and praying with hope for the same, can and will pacify and conciliate a aching soul.      

We also need to understand flip side of the coin. The city of Ephesians was known for its economic and entrepreneurial achievements; means people here were quite affluent. Therefore, one can easily assume that the Church at Ephesus must have had a community of people within its boundaries who belonged to this elite segment of society of the city, as do our churches today incorporate. So its not as much pain and poverty that moves people away from God as much prosperity does. As poignantly stated by Chesterton, 

“Meaninglessness does not come from being weary of pain; Meaninglessness comes from being weary of pleasure (prosperity).”  ― G.K. Chesterton
   
Men form the beginning has this tendency to question God during pain and dessert Him during prosperity. 
As seen in Proverbs 30:8-9;

"Give me neither poverty nor riches; Feed me with the food that is my portion, 9 That I not be full and deny You and say, "Who is the LORD? Or that I not be in want and steal, And profane the name of my God."

Let's be able to balance between these two extreme by remaining a worshipper and prayer warrior in both aspect of life; pain and prosperity. We see both of these pictures in this letter; Paul who is in pain praising and praying God and hopefully some believers who are in prosperity after receiving this letter must have praised and prayed God, as Paul is asking them to do so.   

The first three chapters are addressed to God as much as to men, with the reader being given the privilege of overhearing Paul’s response to God in both praise and prayer, and then having the opportunity to join with him. This tells us the significance of praise and prayer in the painful and pleasurable moments of our life. 

3. FROM KNOWLEDGE OF GOD TOWARDS KNOWING               GOD  (Practical Aspect)

One would hardly think that another epistle was needed to further teach the Ephesian saints. We read in the Acts of the Apostles that Paul was here for more than three years just teaching and having dialogues with believers. As you read and study the Epistle to the Ephesians it becomes increasingly evident that it is not a teaching document. Paul writes to those who have been well taught. He uses terms with very precise theological meanings, terms like “chose” (1:4), “predestined” (1:5), “redemption” (1:7), and “sealed” (1:13). Yet Paul neither defines, develops, or defends these theological concepts, he simply declares them. He calls these truths to the attention of his readers, knowing that they understand what he means by them.
Paul now gives them practical instructions on how they are to live a life worthy of the calling they have received. 

Broadly speaking, this part of the letter falls into four parts:

1. Living a Christian life in the local church (4:1-16).
2. Living a Christian life in the world (4:17-5:21).
3. Living a Christian life in the home (5:22-6:9).
4. Living a Christian life in spiritual World (6:10-20).

All these armour are not enlisted to become an aid to cerebral knowledge of any believers but these armours are to help them live their brand new Christian life in spiritual realm and cope up with day today's challenges they happen to encounter. And this is how believers not only experience God they once knew rationally as powerful, as protecting and as providing as Bible or theological literature depict but also be able to demonstrate the same before others.     

Through this letters Paul communicates to the readers to know God with your experience and by acting on the God-given principles (like praying, praising, uniting, loving, believing and experiencing peace of God). This is very important for the student if theology to maintain a balance life; rational and empirical. For all these years you may have had accumulated the knowledge of God but might have fail to know God personally. Remember Paul’s prayer for Spiritual Wisdom, which is something more or additional to the theological information available in the literature. 

4. FROM EARTHLY THINKING TOWARDS ETERNAL                   THINKING (Eternal Aspect)

Faith in Jesus Christ, often spoken of as being born again (see John 3:3), brings about a far-reaching change. If salvation brings one from “death” to “life,” from the “kingdom of darkness” to the “kingdom of light,” then one would suppose that conversion would likewise bring about a massive change in the way we look at our present life on this earth.
Ephesians 1:33 Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us in Christ with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly realms.
1:4-20 there are 15 blessings for the believers; let's have a look at those in contrast to worldly riches.

1. Understanding of our heavenly riches- so that the worldly     riches
2. Understanding the magnitude of heavenly riches- so that     the finitude of worldly riches
3. Understanding the fullness of heavenly riches- so that           emptiness of worldly riches
4. Understanding the guarantee of heavenly riches- so that       the uncertainty of worldly riches
5. Understanding the basis of heavenly riches- so that               the baselessness of worldly riches.

Many Christians fail to recognise and differentiate between the two separate concepts; Earthly and Eternal. This in effect, forms all of our life's meaning and priority. A lot of believers fail to prioritise eternal perspectives over earthly. Because the process prioritising has all to do with the value that particular entity holds for a particular individual. Paul in Ephesians ardently portrays and reminds  us about the significant value eternity has over earthly. Let's, as we keep learning form this rich letter, change our perspective from earthly to eternal and not doing that by loosing something precious as many would tell you, but doing that with the whole conscious and knowledge of attaining something more significant more  valuable more beneficial than the earthly riches. Ironically, this can never be fathomed by a natural man, who craves for earthly materialistic life and after having attain all of those material things finds them meaningless as Solomon tells us. 

Ephesians is the highway of a revelation, shifting our perspective from that of a citizen of this world to that of a citizen of heaven.  
So becoming a Christian necessitates us to think not so much in physical terms, but in spiritual terms, not so much in earthly terms as heavenly terms. That is to think beyond time and space you see but space that heavenly and time that is eternal. No epistle penned by the Apostle Paul is so compelling in the change of thinking it challenges us to adopt.

Since we live in a physical world, it is quite imperative to develop a physical perspective. Human run for food, shelter and cloth, sometimes it is possible to ignore what we are meant to think as Christians. Because we are in this world our spiritual centre of gravity is too low, too human, too temporal, too material, too earthly and too self-centred. Ephesians is written to help us in changing our centre of gravity from earthly to heavenly. With a cosmic scope of this epistle, Paul writes to change our thinking, to see earthly attractions in the light of heavenly realities, time in the light of eternity, and the spiritual life as a struggle a spiritual warfare, not merely with human opponents, but with a host of heavenly forces.


God Bless You!!!!



Further Reading and Sources:
http://www.gracepointfamily.com/Websites/gracepointfamily/images/Sermon_Series/2013/ephesians_banner.jpg
Charles Hodge, Ephesians, Edinburgh: Banner of Truth, 1964.
Walter Liefield, Ephesians, Leicester: IVP, 1997.
Sinclair Ferguson, Let’s Study Ephesians, Edinburgh: Banner of Truth, 2005.

2 comments:

It's nice brother. May the Lord continue to bless you.