E-Book, Englisch, 304 Seiten
Reihe: Preaching the Word
Hughes Ephesians (ESV Edition)
1. Auflage 2013
ISBN: 978-1-4335-3629-8
Verlag: Crossway
Format: EPUB
Kopierschutz: 0 - No protection
The Mystery of the Body of Christ
E-Book, Englisch, 304 Seiten
Reihe: Preaching the Word
ISBN: 978-1-4335-3629-8
Verlag: Crossway
Format: EPUB
Kopierschutz: 0 - No protection
R. Kent Hughes (DMin, Trinity Evangelical Divinity School) is senior pastor emeritus of College Church in Wheaton, Illinois, and former professor of practical theology at Westminster Theological Seminary in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Hughes is also a founder of the Charles Simeon Trust, which conducts expository preaching conferences throughout North America and worldwide. He serves as the series editor for the Preaching the Word commentary series and is the author or coauthor of many books. He and his wife, Barbara, live in Spokane, Washington, and have four children and an ever-increasing number of grandchildren.
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EPHESIANS 1:1–3
WHEN ONE TAKES UP the study of Ephesians, he finds that commentators and preachers outdo themselves in lavish encomiums. It has been called “[t]he crown and climax of Pauline theology,”1 “[t]he sublimest communication ever made to men,”2 “the quintessence of Paulinism,”3 “the consummate and most comprehensive statement which even the New Testament contains of the meaning of the Christian religion. It is certainly the final statement of Pauline theology.”4 Samuel Taylor Coleridge called it “the divinest composition of man.”5 John A. Mackay, past president of Princeton Theological Seminary, waxed eloquent as well: “Never . . . was the reality of Revelation more obvious and the reflective powers of the Apostle’s mind more transfigured than in the great book which is known by the title, The Epistle to the Ephesians.”6
These eloquent recommendations alone are sufficient reasons to be enthused about the prospect of study, but there is furthermore the grand theme of Ephesians and its dual focus on Christ and on the Church—the “mystery” of “Christ and the church” (5:32). The theme is clarified when we compare it to that of Colossians. Colossians explains Christ’s person and work in relation to the whole universe—the cosmic Christ, whereas Ephesians explains what the Church’s cosmic role is as the Body of the cosmic Christ. Ephesians reveals the position and job description of the Church in effecting God’s new order. It answers the question, what does it mean to be in Christ, and what does this demand of us?
Because Ephesians has such a magisterial theme and because it is so practical, it is also immensely powerful. John Mackay, in his book God’s Order, recounts how he became spiritually alive as a fifteen-year-old. One Saturday about noon in the month of July 1903, young Mackay was attending a “preparation” service for an old-time Scottish Communion in the open air, among the hills in the Highland parish of Rogart, in Sutherlandshire. A minister was preaching from a wooden pulpit to several hundred people sitting under the shade of trees in the glen. Though Mackay could never remember what was said, he was quickened that halcyon day and knew he was called to preach. For the rest of the summer he lived in the pages of a tiny New Testament that he had purchased for a penny. Most of his time was spent in Paul’s letters—especially Ephesians, which became his favorite book of the Bible.7 Mackay later wrote:
From the first, my imagination began to glow with the cosmic significance of Jesus Christ. It was the cosmic Christ that fascinated me, the living Lord Jesus Christ who was the center of a great drama of unity, in which everything in Heaven and on earth was to become one in him. I did not understand what it all meant, but the tendency to think of everything in terms of Jesus Christ and a longing to contribute to a unity in Christ became the passion of my life. It became natural then, and it has remained natural ever since, to say “Lord Jesus.”8
Ephesians—carefully, reverently, prayerfully considered—will change our lives. It is not so much a question of what we will do with the epistle, but what it will do with us.
We should also note that the Letter to the Ephesians is compellingly ecumenical and catholic in the primary sense of these words. The designation “in Ephesus” is not in the earliest manuscripts, and we conclude that it was a circular letter meant for all the churches in Asia Minor.9 Thus, its ecumenical message is for the Church everywhere and in every age: namely, that Christ reconciles all races and cultures by bringing them to himself and making them one with him and with one another. It is a message of unity, a message for the Church, and a message for a fragmented, war-torn world.
The structure of the book is typically Pauline: first Paul states the doctrine (chapters 1—3), then he states the duty (chapters 4—6). The duty section ends with a description of spiritual battle, so some like to divide it in two. Thus the book can be given an easy-to-remember division such as:
The wealth (1–3), walk (4—5), warfare (6:10f) 10
Or,
sit (1–3), walk (4—5), stand (6:10f) 11
The opening verses of Ephesians are a “celebration of blessing.” The mood is exuberant joy. Paul buoyantly begins a song (modeled on the Hebrew berakhah or blessing song) celebrating God’s work in bringing us salvation. In quick order Paul celebrates himself, the saints, their God, and their blessings.
Celebrating Self (v. 1a)
Paul’s personal celebration is centered in the fact that he is “an apostle of Christ [Messiah] Jesus by the will of God” (v. 1a). This certainly was not due to his own will. At the onset of Christianity he had been a militant opponent of Christ, even an accessory to the murders of believers (Acts 7). But then on the Damascus off-ramp he met the Lion of the Tribe of Judah and heard his call: “Saul, Saul, why are you persecuting me. . . . I am Jesus, whom you are persecuting” (Acts 9:4, 5). The effect was radical conversion, so radical that in a few days Saul “confounded the Jews who lived in Damascus by proving that Jesus was the Christ” (Acts 9:22). It was a miracle, and nothing else, that made him one with the Twelve!
As an apostolos, one sent, Paul’s authority was not self-generated but was ordained of God. He therefore could not help but preach Jesus. “[I have] no ground for boasting,” he said, “For necessity is laid upon me. Woe to me if I do not preach the gospel!” (1 Corinthians 9:16). This was something to celebrate! But it was not a cause for selfish vanity. Before he met Christ he was “Saul,” named after the tallest (and vainest) of the Benjamites, King Saul, from whom he was descended (Philippians 3:4–6). But now, after coming to know Christ, he takes the name “Paul”—small. The Lion had cut him down to size. Now he humbly says, “But we have this treasure in jars of clay, to show that the surpassing power belongs to God and not to us” (2 Corinthians 4:7). Paul’s smallness became the medium for God’s bigness, his weakness a channel for God’s power.
Paul’s opening words celebrate a self that had been liberated from the crushing bondage of ego, included (by God’s sovereign decision) in the apostolic band, and imbued with divine authority and purpose. And so, writing from prison, Paul’s song went forth, just as later would that of St. John of the Cross from his Toledo cell, and John Bunyan from the Bedford jail, and Charles Colson from a modern prison.
Paul’s song is ours in a less dramatic, perhaps, but equally significant way. For in Christ, every one of us has been delivered from self and has been given position and purpose and authority in him. And that is something to continually celebrate.
Celebrating the Saints (vv.1b, 2)
Paul’s celebration moves from self to others with his simple designation, “To the saints who are . . . faithful in Christ Jesus” (v. 1b), for the designation is a celebration in itself. Why? Because in the Greek translation of the Old Testament, the people of Israel, and sometimes even the angels, were given the honored title “saints.” Therefore, as Marcus Barth explains, “By using the same designation . . . the author of Ephesians bestows upon all his pagan-born hearers a privilege formerly reserved for Israel, for special (especially priestly) servants of God, or for angels.”12 Applying the privileged word “saints” to pagan Greeks was mind-boggling to those with a Jewish background. Hebrew detractors considered it a rape of sacred vocabulary. But from the Christian perspective it was a fitting word to celebrate the miracle of God’s grace.
“Saints” means “holy ones, those set apart and consecrated.” The word was descriptive of what had happened in their hearts. They were saints though living under the shadow of pagan temples amidst the moral decay of Asia Minor. They were saints while going about their lives—shopkeeping, sailing, building, raising children.
Paul also adds that they were “faithful”—they were actively believing and trusting God. Their saintliness grew out of their believing. As Calvin said, “No man is . . . a believer who is not also a saint; and, on the other hand, no man is a saint who is not a believer.”13 This was all because they were “in Christ Jesus”—they were personally and intimately in him, as appendages are part of the body or branches are part of the tree.
“Saints”—“faithful”—“in Christ Jesus”—what a cause for celebration! And how does he celebrate it? “Grace to you and peace from God our Father and the...