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BIBLICAL
SNAPSHOTS
'THE BOOK of EPHESIANS'
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The Bible is like a mountain range having many peaks
dominating the skyline. One
mountain might stand out and
catch the eye because of noble
and exalted beauty. The more we
look, the more we are impressed
by its majesty and grandeur.
Which 'mountain' of the Bible
has the potential to so thrill
and captivate us? The Epistle of
Paul the Apostle to the
Ephesians could be the one. C J
Ellicott described Ephesians as
'sublime' and that is no
exaggeration, for consider some
of its themes: God's sovereignty
in election; the unveiling of
the great 'mystery' of
redemption; the marvels of the
church as the Bride of Christ.
Chapter One alone, with just 23
verses, has enough material to
engage us in many hours of
profitable study, or provide the
preacher with a multitude of
sermons that could last for
months.
SETTING THE SCENE
Authorship. The Apostle
Paul was regarded as the writer
of the Epistle from a very early
date. But since the mid 19th
century, the critics of the
Bible have sought to undermine
his authorship. Suffice it to
say that there is plenty of
evidence for us to believe that
Paul wrote the Epistle under the
inspiration of the Holy Spirit.
His name appears in the book
(1:1-3:1) as does his literary
style, language, theology and
structure.
Date. Paul probably
penned the work during his first
captivity at Rome, perhaps in
the early part of AD 62.
Colossians bears a number of
similarities, strengthening the
idea that Ephesians was written
at about the same time. Some
writers even suggest that
Ephesians was a kind of circular
letter meant for all the
churches in the province of
Asia. Whatever the truth of
this, Ephesus was a chief city
in the area and the Epistle
naturally came to be addressed
to it.
The city. Situated at the
junction of natural trade
routes, it was eventually
dominated by the Romans and
became the capital of their
province in
Asia. A city of splendour, riches and earthly glory, it housed a
large temple, noted for its
worship of the goddess Diana.
Ephesus had a large population
of Jews with Roman citizenship.
They maintained a synagogue and
it was here, on his second
missionary journey, that Paul
preached and founded a Christian
church. He returned and laboured
in the city for over two years,
until a riot compelled him to
leave. Yet as we read the
Epistle, we see that Paul never
forgot the believers or ceased
loving them.
WHY DID PAUL WRITE EPHESIANS?
We are not given any reasons in the Epistle. All the same we
can discern some of the
Apostle's motivation in writing.
1: Throughout, there are expressions of Paul's love for the
believers. For example: "Grace
be to you, and peace'" (1:2).
Constant prayer and giving of
thanks (1:15-23
and 3:13-21). Tender appeals
(4:1-3). Loving Benediction (6:23,24).
2. Paul also sought to teach the believers and establish them
in Apostolic doctrine. There was
a great need for this in the
light of a large Jewish presence
in the city, as well as
paganism, idolatry and many
other differing ideologies and
life-styles.
3. Paul was also concerned to exhort his readers to godly
living. What we learn, we must
put into practise. Remember
James 1:22: "Be ye doers of the
word, and not hearers only... "
STRUCTURE OF THE BOOK
Not unusually with Paul, two clear sections present
themselves to the reader:
Doctrinal Section:
(Chapter 1:1- 4:16)
1. Greetings and Opening remarks: (1:1-2).
2. Thanks for the election of
every believer. God's love is
the motive; Christ's sacrifice
makes that election sure and
effective. In addition, Jew and
Gentile are called in the
Gospel: (1:3-14).
3. Prayer for greater
understanding and appreciation
of God's electing grace: (1:15-23).
4. Gentiles are also called into
the fellowship of Christ. There
are not two different churches,
that is, one for the Jews and
another for Gentiles. Instead,
believers are brought into
ONE gospel church, through faith in Christ's completed work at
the cross: (2:1-22).
5. Unfolding the mystery of the
gospel call: (3:1-13) and prayer
for a deeper knowledge and
experience of the indwelling
Christ: (3:14-19).
Quite naturally, Paul breaks out
in praise to God at such a
thought: (3:20-21)
6. Teaching on the unity of the
church: (4:1-6).
7. Christ imparts differing
gifts to the church for the
establishment of believers and
their spiritual unity:
(4:7-16).
Practical Section:
(chapter 4:17-6:24)
1. Sanctification and conquering
sin: (4:17-5:21).
2. Family, domestic and wider
relationships coming under the
reign of grace: (5:22-6:9).
3. The armour of God and the
battles with Satanic powers: (6:10-20).
4. Closing salutations and
benediction: (6:21-24).
IMPORTANT THEMES IN EPHESIANS
These we have already hinted at above, but it is necessary
for us to look at them a little
more closely.
Spiritual blessedness:
after opening greetings and
salutations, the Apostle blesses
God for spiritual blessings
(v3). What are they? They
include: Justification;
forgiveness; being at peace with
God; adoption; sanctification
and eternal life. We are blessed
with them now, but the
completion and fullness of these
blessings will follow in heaven
(see the end of verse 3).
Chosen and Predestinated: all the above blessings are made over to
believers because God has chosen
them for salvation 'before the
foundation of the world' (v4).
Electing love wrote our names in
the Lamb's Book of Life before
anything was made. Such choice
is 'in him', that is, Christ,
His work at the cross, including
his divine Person having
underwritten our election. What
was God's purpose in choosing?
In answer: to make us holy and
'without blame before him in
love' (v4). Verse 5 speaks of
"having predestinated us ..."
This underlines the eternal
decree of God. As sovereign, he
has unchangeably ordained
whatever comes to pass. Four
things need to be borne in mind,
however:
(i) This does not make God the
author of sin.
(ii) He does not force men
against their will.
(iii) 'Freedom' is not destroyed
or the relationship of cause and
effect. On the contrary, God's
eternal decree establishes
these.
(iv) Evangelism is not hindered.
If anything, it ought to
motivate us to greater love and
service. In addition, we have
the assurance that Gospel
preaching will most certainly
bear fruit.
Christ will build his Church:
Not even hell will frustrate
this part of the divine decree.
This is seen in the way that
Jews and Gentiles are called
into the ONE and the same
church, which is variously
called: one new man (2:15); one
body (2:16); household (2:19);
holy temple (2:21); body of
Christ (4:12); bride (cf
5:23-33). This bringing of
converted Gentiles into the
church and making them one with
believing Jews, is unfolded more
fully by the Apostle from
2:11-3:12. For long ages this
was kept almost secret, called
by Paul, 'the mystery' (1:9 and
3:3,4 and 9). But now, the truth
is out. It is an 'open secret'
(3:5,6) and Paul can scarcely
restrain himself. No wonder he
offers up the doxology of
3:20,21: 'Now unto him,...'
Paul's prayers for the
Ephesians: there are two
main ones. The first is:
1:15-23. Here he prays that his
readers would grow in spiritual
understanding, especially in
what it means to be united to
Christ. Of course, not with a
mere head knowledge, but knowing
Christ by experience and being
fully united to him in his
resurrection and ascended power.
The second main prayer is
recorded in 3:14 - 19. In this,
he desires the believers to
fully comprehend the glory of
the Gospel. The 'glory' of it is
bound up in Paul's word
'mystery'. He means the great
wall of separation and partition
has been broken down in Christ
(2:14). The Gospel is to be
proclaimed to all, Gentile as
well as Jew. That is not all.
Paul wants his readers to be
strengthened and enlightened,
but also to know Christ and his
love flooding their hearts.
Notice: the Apostle's religion
is not a dead, cold affair. It
is always full of life and
power!
Teaching on the church:
Paul stresses her unity (4:1-6):
(i) Foundation. The
ONE Godhead is her only
foundation.
(ii) Life. One Spirit baptism
gives her life and existence.
(iii) Results. The results are a
single faith, hope and body.
How do we maintain this unity
amongst ourselves? Firstly,
exercise spiritual graces; that
is: humbleness, longsuffering,
loving each other etc. Secondly,
going to great lengths to keep
the unity of the Spirit. How
vital it is; for where there is
strife and disunity, there will
be little or no blessing from
the Lord.
In addition, the ascended Lord
pours out his gifts upon the
church (4:7-16). Some were extra
ordinary, like those mentioned
in the first part of verse 11;
while pastors and teachers
remain throughout the life of
the church. Why these gifts? Two
important reasons:
(a) they establish believers in
their faith and
(b) bring about spiritual unity
in the church. Unity can only
come in the truth, not by some
shared mystical experience or
accepting the lowest common
denominator.
THE APOSTLE'S PRACTICAL HEART
From
4:17 to almost the end of the
Epistle, Paul turns his
attention to applying his
doctrine and teaching. Do you
notice throughout the writings
of this great Apostle, that his
concern is not just with
doctrine and theology? He is at
pains to draw out practical
lessons. 'If you believe certain
things,' he seems to say, 'well,
now, DO This! Let your life
reflect what you have been
taught!'
What are these down to earth matters that are so important to
Paul?
Firstly: The pursuit of
holiness or, as we call it,
sanctification (see
4:17-5:21). Those bom of God
have new life dwelling within
them and this new, regenerate
image must reveal itself,
especially by conquering sin.
Specific ones are mentioned:
lying; passion and anger;
dishonesty; earthy, worldly
talk; malice and bitterness;
impurity and lust; careless and
drunken living.
Secondly: Instead of
being motivated by sin and a
carnal nature, believers are to
be under the constant control
and lordship of the Holy Spirit
(5:18). The end result will be grace reigning in family, domestic
and wider relationships (5:19-6:9)
Thirdly: Believers, as
soldiers of Christ (cf2 Timothy
2:3 and 4) must fight
spiritually (6:10-18).
Our foes are not flesh and
blood, but powers regarded as
extremely wicked and
'unearthly'.
Fourthly: Paul makes a
personal request for prayer (6:19-20).
He sees prayer as vital, even to
his very existence as a preacher
of the Gospel. The Apostle is
desirous that the Spirit gives
him the divine word. In
addition, he longs for holy
boldness, despite the many
trials and tribulations that
beset him.
MORE THAN A SCRIPTURAL BEAUTY
SPOT!
In a few more short verses (6:21-24)
Paul makes some personal
allusions and then closes with a
benediction. With that, this
grand Epistle has drawn to a
close and we are left to
contemplate its mountain-like
majesty and glory. May the
contents lead us to worship the
Godhead and bless him for the
redemption given us in Christ.
In addition, we should aim to
love the Lord more than we did,
say, a year ago, and be prepared
to venture all in the fight of
faith.
Brian Garrard
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I gratefully acknowledge my
thanks to
Our Inheritance Bible Ministries
for their
kind permission in allowing me
to reproduce this article.
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