Taught by
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Taught by
Stephen ArmstrongIt’s our third week in this study, and we’re barely four verses into Paul’s letter to Ephesus
There are 155 verses in this letter, so I’m 2.5% done
At this rate, we would finish the letter in Spring 2018
While some of you aren’t surprised to hear me say that, to the rest of you, let me assure you my intention is to pick up the pace eventually
But some parts of this letter require extra attention, so we’ll go slower than usual at times
Then in other places the material will permit a faster pace
As it turns out, the first three chapters, where the doctrine of the letter resides, will go more slowly
Doctrine can be tough to chew on, and there are few places in the New Testament with deeper doctrine than in Ephesians 1-3
We’ll speed up in later chapters where we’ll study Paul’s instructions for living in the light of this doctrine
So if you’re wondering whether you will live to see the end of this study, don’t worry
You will…probably
Last week I ended our study at the beginning of a controversial passage, on the topic of God the Father choosing us for salvation
Let’s reread that passage
There is hardly a topic more hotly debated in the church than the doctrine of predestination
Did God choose us to believe or did we choose to believe in the Gospel? Or is it some combination of the two?
Practically anyone whose been a Christian longer than about a day is at least aware of this debate
And most believers have planted their flag on one side of this divide or the other
But this isn’t a sporting event, and we’re not rooting for a winning team
This is a question of truth, of knowing what the word of God truly says on important matters of faith
And clearly, one side of this debate is wrong
So let’s return to our study determined to hear from the Spirit and to set aside pride and preconceived ideas
Last week Paul explained that we can be confident in our riches in Heaven because the Father has chosen us to receive them
He chose us to be in Christ, that is to be a born-again child of God
Today as we move forward to the next verse, v.5, we find Paul doubling-down on his statement that we were chosen
In v.4 he said we were chosen before the foundations of the earth
And now in v.5 he adds we were predestined to become a child of God
I wonder if there is any word in the Bible that causes more discontent, disagreement and dispute than the word predestined (or predestination)
It’s such a shame, because there is no more beautiful nor comforting word in all scripture
And the meaning of the Greek word is easy to define
The word in Greek is proorizo
The definition of proorizo – its only definition – is “to determine an outcome beforehand”
So on the matter of our salvation, Paul says (twice now) that the Father determined beforehand, before the foundations of the earth, that we would be saved
That decision was specific to you…God chose you personally
And it was for the purpose of bringing you to salvation
Paul says you were predestined to adoption as sons and daughters of God
The Bible frequently uses the concept of adoption to explain our salvation
Adopting a child means taking someone who was not born naturally into your family and making them family
Before the adoption, they were strangers
After the adoption, they are equal in every way with natural children
This picture fits our situation perfectly
Later in Chapter 2 Paul will explain this idea further, reminding his readers that they were strangers to God and children of His wrath
Likewise, Peter says we were once not in the family of God
But then the Lord adopted us into His family
Like all adoptions, the child doesn’t choose the parent
The parent chooses the child personally, just as the Father chose you personally to become His child by faith
And His choice of you had nothing to do with merit…children don’t audition for their adoptive parents
The child is simply the beneficiary of a decision made by the parent
This is exactly what the Bible teaches happened to you and me
We were originally born into the family of Adam
But the Lord determined before the world began that in a day to come we would be adopted into His family by faith in Jesus Christ
And when that day came, the Father sent His Spirit to carry out that plan
Still struggling with this concept? Then consider what Paul says in Romans:
In that verse, Paul introduces another controversial term: foreknew
In Greek it’s the word proginosko, which means to know beforehand
So the Lord had us on His mind before the first day of Creation
Having us in mind, He then determined that we should become His children
Some Christians, who reject the idea that God chooses us for salvation, have tried to confuse the meaning of these two words
Some would tell you the word predestination means God knew beforehand that we would choose to believe in Christ
So then they say God simply confirmed our choice by predestining us
As you can probably tell, this is circular logic
If God is merely confirming our own choice in advance, then He isn’t choosing us at all
Under that interpretation, the word predestination no longer means determining an outcome beforehand
They redefine the word predestination to mean the same thing as foreknowing…God knowing something we would do before we did it and then confirming it in some sense
It’s like taking the word “cat” and deciding it means “dog” instead
In reality, to predestine means something different than to foreknow
And we can see these words mean different things by looking at Roman 8:29
Paul uses both words in the same verse to represent completely different yet complimentary ideas
Predestination means to decide the future in advance, to determine an outcome before it comes to pass
While foreknowing means to have a thought in advance of an action
So God had us on His mind before He acted to choose us
More importantly, as a result of God’s choice to adopt us, we now have the promise of sharing in the riches of Christ’s inheritance
Notice Paul said in Romans 8:29 that we are predestined to follow in Christ’s footsteps, Who was the firstborn of many brethren
Jesus was the firstborn of Creation, meaning he was the first to resurrect into an eternal body
As children of God, we share this same future, to receive a new, eternal body that can never die
But more than that, as children of God we will share in God’s inheritance
The Bible says that Christ as the Son of God received an inheritance on the occasion of His own death
An inheritance is something a person receives on the occasion of a death
A person’s wealth is transferred to someone else at the moment they die
When your rich uncle dies, he leaves his inheritance to his heirs
That transfer of wealth couldn’t happen until he died
Normally when a person dies, his Last Will and Testament dictates that his wealth be transferred to a living relative
But in the case of Christ, He died but then He lived again
So at His resurrection, He received His own inheritance back
The irony is Christ’s own death produced His inheritance
Paul says Christ is the firstborn of the Father, and we are likewise children of God by faith
So Christ’s inheritance will be shared among all the children of God
Because we are all children of God by faith, then we are also heirs who share in the inheritance of God
As Paul says in Galatians
Notice, Paul says because you were already predestined to be a son or daughter of God, He sent His Spirit into our hearts leading us to confess Christ
And then as we confess, we realized God’s plan for our life
We ceased being a slave to sin and became an adopted son or daughter of God
And if we are a child of God, Paul says we are also an heir
Hebrews explains how we can share in Christ’s inheritance
The writer of Hebrews says that those who have been called (again, those chosen of God for salvation) receive the promise of an eternal inheritance
That inheritance is the consequence of a covenant
The word covenant in Greek can also be translated “testament” as in a Last Will and Testament
When someone makes a Last Will and Testament, they specify who receives their wealth when they die
That’s why the writer of Hebrews says a covenant always necessitates a death
You can’t gain the inheritance of a covenant (or testament) until the one who made it dies
Jesus established His covenant (or we could say His Last Will and Testament) at the cross
Jesus’ covenant comes with an inheritance to pass along to His heirs
God owns everything in Creation
So when God dies, the estate He passes along to His children is the Earth and all it contains
Then God (Jesus) rose from the dead, and claimed the right to receive His own inheritance back
Since God’s children are also heirs with Christ, then we too share in the inheritance Christ gained by His death
So Hebrews says Jesus shares His inheritance with those who have been called to be like Christ, to be God’s children…you and me
Now you see the significance of the Father choosing us before the foundations of the earth
Paul says we were chosen to receive a portion of God’s Creation as our inheritance in the coming Kingdom
When God died on the cross in the Person of Christ, God’s riches were inherited by all God’s children
But you and I weren’t alive on the day Christ died, so does that mean we aren’t eligible to receive our portion?
We qualify to receive a portion of an inheritance only if we are specifically listed in deceased’s Last Will and Testament, in their covenant
That’s why Paul emphasizes that God foreknew and predestined us to be His child and heir before the foundations of the world
Paul is saying that Christ’s Last Will and Testament, His covenant, was written before the world began
So that covenant had the names of everyone predestined to become an heir from the very beginning
Even as Christ was dying on the cross, your name was already included in the covenant as an heir of Christ
You were chosen from the beginning to become a child of God so that your inheritance would be assured
Therefore, Paul says confidently we have already been blessed with spiritual blessings in heavenly places
And finally, just in case there is still someone resisting the idea that God brought us into the family of God by His choice and not our own, Paul adds this plan was the kind intention of God’s will
In Greek, that phrase could be literally translated God’s good pleasure or desire
This entire plan is God’s desire for us, and it’s a good plan
Don’t let someone tell you that a “good” God wouldn’t dictate the outcome of salvation
That it would be “wrong” of God to determine to decide for us
That a loving God respects our right to choose or reject salvation
It’s a bizarre and nonsensical statement
Would you rather be assured of salvation by the kind intention of God’s will?
Or would you prefer to take your chances with your own fickle, sinful will?
I define a loving God the way the Bible does:
A merciful God chose me before I knew I needed a Savior
Before I was even alive, before I had even sinned, He knew I would need the salvation He was prepared to grant me
Finally in v.6, Paul says this predetermined plan of the Father was designed to ensure He would be praised for the glory of His grace
Now we come to the biblical definition of “grace”
I’m sure most of us already know the definition of the word itself: unmerited favor
But have you ever heard someone describe God’s grace as something that comes in the form of an offer?
They tell you God offers His grace to mankind in the form of the Gospel message
Like a wrapped present, you have to accept the gift, you have to receive God’s grace
That notion certainly seems to fit with our perception of how we came to believe in the Gospel of Christ
Someone delivered the Gospel message to us
We heard it, considered what it said and then accepted it
So to us it may seem that God’s grace comes as an offer, one we have to choose in order for His grace to manifest in our life
But now, by the word of God, we come to see that this is not the definition of grace
Grace is not an offer or an opportunity
God’s grace is the predestined and finished work of God choosing us for salvation
We didn’t merit God’s choice; we receive it purely as a matter of the kind intention of His will
Grace is not the offer…grace is God choosing us in Christ
So as we come to understand the Father’s role in choosing us for salvation, we will find ourselves praising Him for His grace
Anyone who truly understands the sovereignty of God in our salvation will naturally feel even more desire to praise the Lord for His grace
God looked down the corridors of history and chose you from among the billions of people who walked the earth
He chose you, not because you deserved it, but because he determined to do it
Paul says the Father freely bestowed His grace upon us
He didn’t owe it to us
It wasn’t His obligation to grant us salvation because we said the sinner’s prayer
Or walked the aisle or got baptized
Nothing forces God’s hand or obligates Him to save anyone
He says those He predetermined to save, He does so freely by His grace
Understanding this truth rocks your theological world like nothing else
It turns everything upside down
It puts God where He deserves to be: in control of all things
And it puts us back where we always were: completely dependent on God’s mercy
I wonder how these truths impacted that materialistic culture in Ephesus?
They were so busy at work to maintain their status in a status-conscious society
They were taken with doing work to earn the praise of their employer or neighbor
They left their first love, serving Christ
And they succumbed to the pressure of the rat race
But now they hear that they have a portion of the earth reserved for them
Without working for it, without deserving it
They have been saved from the penalty of their sin
And beyond that, the Father has reserved for them a share of the eternal inheritance
So then why work for things that perish? Why not redirect that effort to things that are eternal?
When you were a child, did you get excited for Christmas?
To see what presents your parents gave you?
You knew they would find a way to get you something special
Well then, can you imagine what the Father has in store for you in the Creation to come?
What part of this beautiful earth, what kind of home, of farm or hillside?
Maybe you’ll get an island all to yourself
Maybe a mountain top
Obviously, we don’t know what exactly the Lord has in store for His children, but do we expect it will be disappointing?
As Jesus says:
Our Father in Heaven is perfectly good
And by the kind intentions of His will, He has predestined you to share in the inheritance of Christ as a child of God
Knowing this gives us cause to praise Him for the incomparable glory of His grace
This grace was bestowed upon us in the Beloved, Paul says at the end of v.6
The plan of the Father to extend us grace centers on the Person and work of Christ
So next week we move forward to the Second Person of the Godhead
Each Person of God played a role in securing an inheritance for us
The Father chose us to be included in His plan
But without the obedience of the Son, the plan of the Father could never have come to pass
So it required Christ enact the plan for our behalf
That’s what we study next week