Do you realize that 3:16 through 4:16 is one of the most
beautiful passages of Scripture on the Christian life in the whole New
Testament? We have approached it piece by piece. Some of you may have
missed something, therefore, you don’t see the whole picture of what we
have covered. Well, I want to put it all together. I want to review what a
Spirit-filled believer is like. I want us to understand how we tap into
that which we already have.
You have something; how do you tap into it? How do you appropriate it?
That is what the apostle Paul is telling the Ephesian church in Ephesians
3:16 through 4:16. I really believe you can understand how to appropriate
what is yours in Jesus Christ if you will just listen to what we have
already studied in Ephesians 3:16-4:16.
Let me tell you something again about that prayer in chapter 3. The prayer
from verse 14 to verse 21 of chapter 3 is a hinge that the whole book
rests on. Chapters 1, 2 and 3 tell you who you are in Christ. They
tell you your identity in the Lord Jesus Christ, the riches of your
salvation. But chapters 4, 5 and 6 tell us about our responsibilities to
Christ. Actually chapters 4, 5 and 6 would be better titled "Whose
We Are in Christ." It is one thing to know who you are. It is another
thing to know whose you are. One is identity, the other is responsibility.
Getting to the meat of the prayer in verse 16, he says, "that He would
grant you, according to the riches of His glory, to be strengthened with
power through His Spirit in the inner man." Paul is praying for the
Ephesian believers that they might be strengthened with God’s power, with
God’s ability. You have already received Jesus into your life. You say, "I
want to walk in the fullness of what He has to offer. Where do I start?"
It starts when you realize how weak you are and how desperate we all are
to tap into His strength. You see, weakness is an absolutely necessity if
you are going to be strengthened in the inner man by the Spirit of God.
God will bring people and circumstances into your life that will cause you
to get down on your face and say, "Oh, God, I can’t." He says, "That’s
right. I never said you could. I can. I always said I would. Now tap into
Me. Appropriate what is already yours."
So many Christians go before God and they beg Him, but they are never
willing to bow down and say, "God, I bow before You." You can pray all you
want, "God, help me." God is not going to help you until you bow down and
do what He says. That is what Paul is trying to tell the Ephesian church.
You have to see where you are weak first. Strong people don’t pay any
attention to this kind of message. Weak people do. Wise people are weak
people who know what they can’t do apart from the Lord Jesus Christ. Maybe
you are envious of someone or whatever. You can take this into any
category you want. God is so faithful to orchestrate life so that we are
able to identify our weaknesses. When I realize I can’t be what God wants
me to be in my strength, then I become a candidate to be strengthened in
the inner man by the Spirit of God.
How does it work? It says in verse 16,
"that He would grant you, according to the riches of His glory."
That tells you of a level of life that most people aren’t living.
"According to" doesn’t mean "out of." He has lavished Jesus upon us and
given us every spiritual blessing. We are "to be strengthened so that
Christ may dwell in your hearts through faith." It should really read,
"Christ dwelling in your hearts through faith." What is going on in the
first sentence of verse 17 is the same thing that is going on in verse 16.
If I am being strengthened in the inner man by the Spirit of God, then
Christ is dwelling in my heart by faith. Do you know what that means? The
word "dwell" in verse 17 means "made to feel at home." Actually it means
"to settle down and to feel at home." Christ is in your life already. He
came in when you were saved. His Spirit dwells in your heart. Now, we need
let Him do what He came into our lives to do.
Most of us are frustrating the very grace of God. He has given us Himself
and said, "Now trust Me. You work with Me. Cooperate with Me. Obey Me. I
will do what you can’t do and show you what the Christian life is all
about." Jealousy locks Him out. Bitterness locks Him out. Immorality locks
Him out. Worry locks Him out. I must make Him at home in all the areas of
my heart. He needs to be accommodated. He is already there. He needs to be
able to do what He came to do.
Look at what he says in verse 17:
"so that Christ may dwell in your hearts
through faith."
It means "by the means of your faith." You see, I have to
learn to accommodate Him by my faith. Do you understand what that means?
The word "faith" is pistos, which comes from pistoo,
which comes from peitho. It means to obey it. I can tell you all
day about my faith, but until you see me obey it, I don’t have any faith.
Faith is not something you tell people about, James says; faith is
something you show people that you have by your willingness to obey Him.
Surrender is the key to the Christian life
Some days my flesh does not want to obey Him. I have other thoughts in my
mind, but God says, "You had better obey Me." I choose to obey and
immediately step into what was already there—the presence of God. Folks, I
am telling you, obedience, surrender, is the key to the whole Christian
life. I have to let Him in. Purity, holiness, and cleansed hearts have to
be the norm if a person is ever going to experience the strengthening of
God in the inner man. I surrender my thoughts, my attitudes, my emotions,
and my secrets, and through my faith I begin to appropriate and to
accommodate the Lord Jesus Christ in my heart.
Now how do I do that? First of all, I confess to Him the sin of the wrong
attitude. What does the word "sin" mean? Miss the mark. In other words,
any time I am not strengthened by His power, I am going to miss the mark
that He had for me. Not only that, but look at the word "confess." So many
of us think that confession is telling God something He didn’t know. Oh
no, He already knows. Confession means to say the same. Confession is for
my benefit, so I am reminded of the detestable direction my flesh will
take me. When I confess it, I become aware there is another way of doing
it. So I simply confess it and repent of it.
What does that mean, to repent? It means to change my mind. I am going to
do it differently. I do what the Word of God tells me to do in whatever
area I am struggling. If it is in the area of immorality, I look and see
what God has to say about it. When God is not pleased, I confess it.
When God tells you what to do, do it. Do it in the power of the Spirit
that lives within you and you begin to accommodate the Lord Jesus in your
heart. He replaces your thoughts with His; He replaces your attitude with
His; He replaces your emotions with His; and you begin to experience His
power in your life by accommodating His presence.
This prayer has levels to it. You start off by saying, "God, I can’t. In
my weakness, strengthen me." Then you obey Him in whatever area it is and
you move up to another level. You begin to experience God’s preference.
What do I mean by that? Folks, most Christians don’t seem to understand
that God prefers them. They always think God is mad at them. God prefers
me even when I, in my flesh, don’t prefer Him. God loves you. He is not
mad at you. He may not be pleased with what you do, but He chastens and He
disciplines those whom He loves. You mean He brings pain in my life
because He loves me? That is exactly right. He hurts me to heal me. God
loves me. You don’t understand that until you have learned to trust Him by
surrendering to Him. That is the way it works. It is so simple and yet it
is so profound. Then you move into another level.
In verse 17 it says,
"and that you, being rooted and grounded in love, may be able
to comprehend [mentally understand] with all the saints what is the
breadth and length and height and depth."
Let me just give you some observations on that. I am supposed to live down
and not up. "God, I am willing to surrender whatever it is. I will go Your
way. I won’t go my way." When I am willing to do that, I begin to tap into
His strength and ability.
God begins to open my mind and show me the breadth of His love. Ephesians
2:11-18 has already covered that. There are only two groups of people on
earth. That is the Jew and the Gentile. That is everybody. In other words,
God loves them all. Any kind of prejudice, any kind of ethnic prejudice or
whatever we have is something strictly of the flesh and of hell itself. It
is not from God. When you begin to live the life that you say you have,
then you begin to comprehend that God loves the whole world.
You see the length of God’s love. It goes all the way back before the
foundations of the world. He loved people before they did anything. He
loves everybody and He wants them to know His Son Jesus Christ.
You begin to see the height of it. Listen, He gave us blessings out of
heaven itself, every spiritual blessing in the heavenlies in Christ Jesus.
He has seated us in the heavenlies in Christ Jesus.
You see the depths of it for the first time, how far He had to stoop to
reach down to sinful, detestable man. As the Psalmist says, "Oh, God, what
is man that Thou art mindful of him?" I begin to understand His love.
But it is more than that. In verse 19 I begin to experience Him for
myself:
"and to know the love of Christ which surpasses knowledge."
Nobody can teach it. You’ve got to experience it for yourself. Paul only
uses this twice in the New Testament. The other time is in Romans 8:35, in
the context of all kinds of suffering and distress. He even quotes out of
the Psalm where the Jews were upset. "God, if you love us, why are you
letting them kill us all the time?" He comes back and says, "In all of
these things we overwhelmingly conquer. Who can separate us from the love
of Christ." What is his answer? Nothing. "You mean to tell me that God is
loving me all the time?" "Do you mean He is loving me when I go through
the difficult things in life?" That’s right. Folks, you can’t experience
it or even understand it until you start living what God says is what the
Christian life is all about.
We have to stop thinking more highly of ourselves than we ought to think,
and get down on our knees and say, "God, I can’t. God, I am willing to do
whatever You tell me to do. I am willing to break to Your will." God says,
"Alright, now you can understand." We begin to see a love like we have
never known before. We begin to experience it and realize God is loving us
all the time. He never stops loving us.
Well, you understand the length and the depth and the height and all those
things about it, but you also experience it for yourself. Now, watch this.
There’s another level. You begin to experience God’s potential in your
life. No longer is it what man can do for God; it is what God can do in a
man. Look at verse 19:
"that you may be filled up to all the fulness of God."
In other words, everything that fills God fills me and controls me and
satisfies me. I am living in a realm now that I didn’t know was possible.
I am loving people I didn’t think were lovable. I have put up with people
who used to give me a fit. I am handling circumstances like never before.
God, what is going on inside of me? God says, "You haven’t seen anything
yet. Keep on trusting Me. I have other levels I want to take you to. Walk
in the fullness of what I have to offer you." That is it. That is the
Christian life.
You understand now why verses 20 and 21 come at the end of the prayer and
not the beginning of the prayer. If they were put first, everybody would
be getting on their knees so God could do exceeding abundantly beyond all
things. That is not there. They are at the end of the prayer because we
don’t even comprehend the end of the prayer until we have gone through the
levels. Look in verse 20. "Now to Him who is able [present tense] to do
exceeding abundantly beyond all that we ask or think, according to the
power that works within us" "You mean all that is possible within me?"
Yes. But you will never know what to ask and never even know how to think
the way He wants you to ask and think until you start living like He wants
you to live.
You see, Ephesians 1:1 tells us these are faithful believers. They were
the faithful saints at Ephesus. Paul is telling them, "You haven’t
arrived." Spirituality is not an arrival. it is a pursuit. Listen, if you
are living in the past, you are missing out on what God wants to do right
now. If you are not pursuing Him with all your heart and your mind and
your soul and your strength, you have missed the point of what
Christianity is all about. Until the day we die, this truth is ours. It is
exceeding abundantly beyond all that you could ask or think. That is the
potential of God in our life.
Now, it is interesting to me how that flows right into chapter 4. As a
matter of fact, Ephesians 4:1-16 is the continuation of this. Then it ends
and he puts up another subject, the Christian’s walk, the holy walk of the
individual believer. You have a person living in the potential of God,
filled to the fullness of God, all that fills God fills him. Go on into
chapter 4 and verse 1.
"I, therefore, the prisoner of the Lord, entreat you to walk in a manner
worthy of the calling with which you have been called."
The word "worthy"
means the intrinsic value of something, the proper estimate of something,
to measure up.
If in chapters 1, 2 and 3 you have a proper estimate of your salvation,
then you live worthy of that, you measure up to it. If you find a
Christian on Tuesday having a problem and he tries to figure it out
himself and leaves God out of it, that shows you he has such a low view of
salvation that he doesn’t even believe God can handle it. Folks, we are
telling a message to the world that is causing the world to turn their
back on us. They say, "You churches, you preach it but you Christians
don’t live it." Mahatma Gandhi said, "I would have been a Christian had it
not been for Christians." It is not a low view of self that is our
problem, it is a low view of salvation, a low view of Christ, a low view
of Scripture. When that view rises and I start living according to what my
view is of Jesus Christ, He is, He can, He will, He is in my life, then my
whole lifestyle changes. Guess what happens? I become one who begins to
preserve the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace.
Every preacher would want this. Paul certainly wanted it. Every Christian
should want a church full of people who would put Jesus first and live in
the fullness of God! Wouldn’t that be something? It would be seen in the
way we behave towards each other. All of a sudden people start learning
how to resolve their differences and understand God is loving them even
through people that are unlovable. God creates and orchestrates our
circumstances. God is sovereign. God is in control. Do we believe it? It
will show up next week how you live and how you talk and how you think.
How do we live? In verse 2 it is clear: humility is a proper attitude
towards ourselves. Paul uses that in several places. In Romans 12 he says
not to think more highly of yourselves than you ought to think. We begin
to realize we fit someplace, but don’t try to fit in every place. We begin
to have a proper attitude of serving the other person with the gifts God
has given us. It is humility of mind.
Gentleness is a proper attitude towards God. The word is sometimes
translated "meekness." It is the Greek word praiotes. It is the
idea of a wild horse being tamed. Sure you have energy. It is not
weakness, it is meekness. But you see, since I have been tamed, I am
comfortable sitting in the saddle of the One who has tamed me. Here is
what I am saying. When a crisis develops in your life and you panic and
try to make it happen the way you want, it will tell you right quick
whether or not you have been tamed by the Master. If He can tame you, He
can tame the circumstance! Which means we have an inner calm inside of us
that we don’t react, blow up, or bail out. We say, "Okay, God. You are in
control. What are you doing?"
You not only have gentleness, but you have patience. That is the attitude
you have towards others. You can tolerate them and not even give up on
them and say, "God, only you could tell me this. I know there is hope for
that man but it is in You. It is surely not in him." You begin to be able
to tolerate them and not give up on them.
If you put all three things together, it equals up to the last thing he
mentions there, your forbearance, showing forbearance to one another in
love. You can’t be forbearing unless there is humility, gentleness and
patience. Do you know what forbearing means? It means you don’t fold, you
are able to stand until the very provocation is over. Wow! The Spirit of
God is the divine ligament. We are preserving the unity of the Spirit. You
see, you can’t produce it as we have said earlier. You can only preserve
it. You can’t take chapter 4 and disassociate it from chapter 3 and the
prayer that Paul prays. Unless you have people living it in the prayer,
you don’t have people preserving it over here.
The second thing you will see is in the way they believe. There are seven
doctrines he gives here. First of all, there is only one body. There is
one Spirit. Thirdly, there is one hope of one calling. (I believe that is
the rapture.) One Lord, that is our Lord Jesus Christ. One faith, the Word
of God. One baptism. Finally there is one God and Father of all. Those are
your seven doctrines. You will never depart from that.
If you find division in the church, I guarantee it will be around one of
those seven doctrines right there. If you find a man who is right
doctrinally, you will find a man that is right devotionally. But if you
find a man is right devotionally, you will find him right doctrinally.
They do not contradict.
Well thirdly, we will preserve the unity of the Spirit by the way we
cooperate with the Spirit in the building of the body of Christ. You see,
you can sit down and organize anything you want, but I guarantee you if
you organize it, you are going to have to keep it running. If you get in
touch with the head and be filled with His Spirit, you start, as a joint,
to begin to function in the supply of the Holy Spirit of God, the ligament
holding us together. Watch how marvelously the organization will take care
of itself.
Well, of course, on down he says He gives gifted men to encourage them and
equip them. Then in verses 14-16 here is the result. "As a result, we are
no longer to be children, tossed here and there by waves, and carried
about by every wind of doctrine, by the trickery of men, by craftiness in
deceitful scheming; but speaking the truth in love, we are to grow up in
all aspects into Him, who is the head, even Christ, from
whom the whole body, being fitted and held together by that which every
joint supplies, according to the proper working of each individual part,
[according to, not out of] causes the growth of the body for the building
up of itself in love."
Do you realize there is only one message really in Scripture? That is
surrender and obey. That is it. Trust and obey for there is no other way.
We can play church, do church or whatever. But the church is not to appear
to the world as some fantastic organization. It is to appear to the world
as an organism that reflects the visibility of the living life within it
which is Jesus Christ.