Knowing God – Eph 1:17

JI Packer wrote a book titled “Knowing God.” I’ve borrowed the title for this message, and I’ll ask his permission when I meet him in heaven! He said that man’s supreme need is to know God. The reason the whole world is perishing under wrath, and the source of all the pain and evil in this world, is an ignorance of God. Romans 1:28 says, “And even as they did not see fit to retain God in their knowledge, God gave them over to a debased mind,” which resulted in them worshiping creatures instead of the Creator and being filled with all kinds of sins like covetousness, lust, envy, and hate.

The primary reason a Christian or a church doesn’t grow and lives a pathetic, sad life is that although they start their Christian life with joyful first love, as soon as they stop growing in the knowledge of God, they lose their first love and backslide. Our personal, family, and church prayers and worship can become dull, ritualistically dead, and meaningless if we stop knowing God. So, the greatest need of our world, our families, our church, and us personally as Christians is to know God.

On the other hand, we must realize that even though this is our greatest need, we cannot know God by our own greatest efforts as fallen beings. So what is the solution to this problem? Paul tells us the solution in Ephesians 1:17 in a prayer.

We saw how he prayed and learned the seven traits of prayers God answers, which we can remember by the acronym RACE-SSS. If you forget those, you will never learn how to pray biblically. After seeing how to pray, today we come to the big section on what he prayed for. What do we typically pray for? “Lord, give me prosperity in my job, good health and healing in my body, bless my family and children, protect us, give us peace, joy, and bless us.” There is nothing wrong with such prayers, but they are shallow. If you really want to be blessed and joyful, you have to learn to pray Paul’s prayer from your heart unceasingly. “Lord, give me a spirit of wisdom and revelation in the knowledge of You. Grant the same for my spouse, my children, and for all of the saints in our church.” That is a great prayer that God answers and brings the fullness of His blessings to us.


The Structure of Paul’s Prayer

Let’s understand the full structure of his prayer. The central burden of his prayer is found in verse 18, “the eyes of your understanding being enlightened.” He is praying, “Lord, open the Ephesians’ eyes by increasing their spiritual illumination.” Why open their eyes? So they can see three specific things:

  1. “What is the hope of His calling” – what it means to be saved now.
  2. “What are the riches of the glory of His inheritance in the saints” – what glorious blessings await me.
  3. “What is the exceeding greatness of His power” – the power that brought us to this state and will bring us to the final blessings of our inheritance.

He wants their eyes to be opened through spiritual illumination to see these three blessings. Why is it so important that God should open our eyes to these three things? If our eyes are not opened to see them, even though we are the richest, most blessed people in the universe, we will live pathetically like beggars. We will never be able to live out the truths he will tell us from chapter 4 onwards. We cannot be proper husbands loving our wives like Christ loved, wives submitting to husbands, children obeying parents, witnesses in our workplace, and live lives glorifying God. So, it was the great burden of Paul’s heart that the Ephesians’ eyes should be opened by spiritual illumination to grasp these three tremendous things that can transform our lives.

Now, before God opens our eyes, we need a gift of God for that to happen. That is what Paul prays for in verse 17. We will see that in three parts:

  1. The gift: the Spirit of wisdom and revelation.
  2. The sphere or extent in which the gift is given: in the knowledge of Him.
  3. The manner in which this gift is operative: “the eyes of your heart being enlightened.”

Today, we will cover the first two things.

First, Paul prays for the gift of the Spirit of Wisdom and Revelation. Is he asking for the Holy Spirit to be given, but we have already been sealed with the Holy Spirit? So what is this? Sometimes the Holy Spirit is described not in terms of what He is but in terms of what He does. The Holy Spirit is called the Spirit of truth and counsel. He gives wisdom and He gives revelation, so Paul is praying for the Holy Spirit’s ministry to grant the work of the spirit of wisdom and revelation in their spirit.

We already saw what wisdom is in verse 8, “grace overflowed in all wisdom and prudence.” We saw wisdom is a penetrating insight into divine realities. So, Paul prays that God would first grant a penetrating insight into divine realities and describes three specific realities: the hope of His calling, the riches of the glory of His inheritance in the saints, and the exceeding greatness of His power. Those are not just words or religious jargon. Those are tremendous spiritual realities. The Holy Spirit would function in such a way as to give the Ephesians a penetrating insight into those realities. We don’t know the magnitude of these blessings. The Holy Spirit knows the great glory of these blessings; He alone can give penetrating insight into those realities.

Next, the word “revelation.” What is that? The word means to unfold that which is otherwise hidden. Our Lord said to Peter, “Flesh and blood hath not revealed it unto thee, but my Father.” Revelation means the disclosure of something that cannot be known in any other way but by the divine disclosure of God. Some things you can know by the exercise of your natural faculties—by reading, efforts, and using your senses. You can gain enough Bible knowledge, but no matter how much you read or use all your senses, you cannot have divine revelation. It is only granted by God through His Spirit as divine revelation.

1 Corinthians says the Spirit of God knows the deep things of God. By nature, we do not know them, but we have received the Spirit that we might know the things that are freely given to us by God. “Those things that the human mind could not see nor hear, God hath revealed them unto us by His Spirit.” Revelation comes by the Spirit. The Holy Spirit does not give us new revelation, but He illuminates us to understand the depth of truths already written in Scripture. So the Holy Spirit operates as the Spirit of wisdom and of revelation. Now put the two things together and you see the close connection: true wisdom comes by revelation and revelation produces true wisdom. Hence, Paul is praying for the Holy Spirit’s ministry of wisdom and revelation in the spirit of the Ephesians.

So, Paul prays for the gift of the Spirit of Wisdom and Revelation. Yes, it is the Holy Spirit who always gives wisdom and revelation as an answer to prayer, but He always gives this gift in a specific sphere or extent: in the knowledge of Him. The word “in” talks about the scope, the circle in which this gift comes. It’s pointing to the nearest proper noun, which is “the God of Jesus Christ and the Father of glory.” The objective source of this knowledge is Scripture. This God has revealed Himself in the Bible.


What it Means to Know God

I want to talk about “knowing God” for a moment, which is why I titled this message this way. This is one of the most profound and most confused concepts in all of Holy Scripture. I want to explain what “knowing God” means. Let me give a word of caution. Someone said, “Pastor, I heard your sermon about prayer last week, and you made me realize I don’t know how to pray biblically at all.” But that is not the goal. I explain the Bible, and you feel that way. At least now you can pray properly according to the Bible. In the same way, maybe if I explain today what “knowing God” means according to the Bible, most of you may realize you don’t know God. That is good, but at least that realization should drive you to know God properly from now on. Our eternal destiny hinges on whether we know God or not. Christ will say to many who thought they knew God, “I never knew you.”

There is so much confusion and deception in “knowing God.” Knowing God is not knowing about God, not knowing some facts about God from the Bible. The word Paul uses here is Epignosis, differentiating it from mere knowledge about something. The word means an exact, certain, and experiential heart knowledge of God that comes with actual, true, direct personal contact or relationship. I can know about the Prime Minister—his age and all the knowledge from Wikipedia—but I don’t have an experiential knowledge through personal contact.

Galatians 4:8 says that a great common trait of all natural men is that they do not know God. That’s the state of every unregenerate man. Many nominal Christians claim to know Him, but they only know about Him. They don’t know God.

So what does it mean to biblically know God? There are two steps: initial knowing God and a growing step in knowing God. The first step of knowing is conversion. When you realize you are far from God, repent, and come to God and believe in Jesus Christ, your journey of knowing God starts. Galatians 4:9 says, “You have come to know God.” Knowing God is a synonym for being saved. Knowing God is defined by our Lord in John 17:3, “And this is life eternal, that they should know Thee, the only true God, and Him whom Thou didst send, even Jesus Christ.” That is the first step of knowing God.

But you don’t stop with that. Now, you have to grow in knowing God. Knowing God is not a past event; it is a present, continuous, ever-growing experience. We may know God initially and be excited in our first love, but later we may stop knowing God, our first love grows cold, and this creates many problems in our Christian life. Again and again, Scripture points out that all spiritual blessings come to us through the knowledge of God. 2 Peter 1:2 says, “Grace to you, and peace be multiplied.” Oh, isn’t that what you long for? Peace to be multiplied? In what sphere? “In the knowledge of God.” So if you don’t grow in the knowledge of God, grace and peace will not grow in your life. I can go on and say peace beyond understanding, joy unspeakable, true rest, wisdom, guidance, strength, hope, power to serve, God’s presence, and even eternal life is promised in growing in the knowledge of God. That is why Paul, out of all he could pray, first prays for a spirit of wisdom and revelation in the knowledge of God. So the great question is, how do I grow in knowing God?

Knowing God involves your mind, your heart, and your will. If you remove any one of these, you are not growing in knowing God.

  1. Mind: God’s wisdom has divinely ordained to reveal His knowledge in the written word of the Bible, which our confession calls “special revelation.” If you want to grow in knowing God, you have to expose your mind to Scripture by reading and receive those truths into your mind through meditation. Exposure and reception of Scripture truths in the mind is the first step of knowing God. Exposure happens by direct contact with reading, and reception happens by meditation. It is not enough to just read, hear, and go. Just exposure will not work. Exposure and reception, both mental activities, are the first step. There is no way you can grow in knowing God without this first step of exposing and receiving the truth of God in your mind. Psalm 1 and Joshua 1 emphasize reading and meditating on God’s word.
  2. Heart: As your mind is exposed to and receives what is revealed about God, your heart responds in faith and love. This is an authentic, true sign that reveals whether you are truly knowing God or deceiving yourself. A person who knows God has a heart’s response to that revelation that is always faith and love. John 17 gives an excellent commentary on what it means to know God. Verse 8 says, “For I have given to them the words which You have given Me; and they have received them, and have known surely that I came forth from You; and they have believed that You sent Me.” You see the progression? He gave them words; they heard it. What did they do? Not merely heard but received them in their understanding, and their heart responded by believing. You know they loved Him more than anything in life. When everyone else left, they said, “To whom else can we go? You have the words of eternal life.” That faith will be a tangible act. Daniel 11:32 says, “They that know their God shall be strong and do exploits.” What exploits? Faith exploits listed in Hebrews 11. So I say, to know God means not only hearing and reading but also the heart’s response of faith and love. 1 John 4:7-8 says, “Everyone who loves is born of God and knows God. He who does not love does not know God, for God is love.” Though it talks about loving brothers, it is implied that it is impossible to know God and not love God. It is a great moral impossibility.
  3. Will: Not only does knowing God involve the mind’s exposure and the heart’s response, but the will also responds in obedience to God’s word. 1 John 2:3-4 says, “Now by this we know that we know Him, if we keep His commandments. He who says, ‘I know Him,’ and does not keep His commandments, is a liar, and the truth is not in him.” He’s saying it’s impossible for the knowledge of God to exist while living in continual disobedience. If you are living in disobedience to God’s word and say you know God, you are living in a lying dream world.

I hope I have given a clear biblical definition of knowing God. If someone asks you, “What does it mean to know God?” you can tell them that knowing God involves your mind, heart, and will. Your mind is regularly exposed to and receives what is revealed about God in Scripture. As a response, your heart always responds in believing and loving, and your will responds in obeying God’s word. If you find someone who is not believing, loving, and obeying God, it means that whatever they may say, they do not know God.

So how do I get this knowledge of God, which not only crosses intellectual and emotional boundaries but also transforms me ethically, practically, morally, and spiritually? It comes when God grants the Spirit of wisdom and revelation because He grants this insight into divine realities within the sphere of the knowledge of God. As your mind is exposed to Scripture and receives it with meditation, then the Holy Spirit grants this insight into divine realities. It impacts your heart, brings a response of faith and love, and bends your will to obey God in every area of life. Then you know God experientially, savingly, and sanctifyingly. It is such knowledge that has the power to renew our minds, transform our hearts, and bend our wills to obey God’s commands. All this hearsay, theoretical, and head-knowledge has no power to do that work. God’s goal of revelation doesn’t stop with the intellectual; it is an ethical, moral, and spiritual transformation.

As you grow in this knowledge of God, when you live with your spouse, you are becoming more and more Christ-like. You go to work, and people can see a Christ-like colleague or employee. This knowledge will make you more and more embody the likeness of Christ in all the details of your life. When anyone sees you, they will say, “That man knows God.” “That woman knows God.” This is an old phrase people have forgotten now. It means he lives with the reality of God in every area of practical life. Knowing God should impact where the rubber meets the road; otherwise, you don’t know God.

This knowledge of God doesn’t stop with the intellectual or end with an experience. No. We have to use our mind, heart, and will. If you leave anything out, you can have all kinds of false, deceiving Christian experiences. This knowledge always starts with the intellectual, moves to an experience, and the true test of that knowledge is ethical, moral, and spiritual transformation.

This truth exposes two extremes in Christianity. One group bypasses the mind, doesn’t use the mind, has no theology, no truth, and has direct experiences and feelings with God like charismatics, which welcomes demonic activities. The other extreme stops with the intellectual and doesn’t move to an experiential knowledge of God. And then there is a large group who are dissatisfied with these two extremes and move from charismatic to liberal, fundamentalist to Arminian, to being Calvinist to being hyper-Calvinist to low-Calvinist—their whole lives are wasted dabbling in different schools of ideas without actually truly knowing God. Then they face disappointment when Christ comes and they hear His judgment, “I never knew you, you never knew me.” You wasted your years just in superficial intellectual dabbling.

So I hope you see the great need of Paul’s prayer here. So from now on, our greatest prayer should be, “Lord, give us a spirit of wisdom and revelation in the knowledge of You.” Think of all the functions of the Holy Spirit that Paul could have prayed for. Is not the Holy Spirit the Spirit of power, the Spirit of love, the Spirit of joy, the Spirit of peace, the Spirit of counsel? Out of all of these, why does Paul zero in on two functions of the Spirit? That He would give you the spirit of wisdom and revelation in the knowledge of Him. Why? Because he understood that the primary means by which the Holy Spirit carries on His sanctifying work in believers is as the Spirit of truth. The health, joy, peace, and blessings of your Christian life all depend on you knowing God by the Holy Spirit’s wisdom and revelation.


Application

As an application, I want to bring a few lessons from this Paul’s prayer. You can only know God like this when God gives a spirit of wisdom and revelation, and the only sphere within which the spirit is given is in the knowledge of God revealed in Scripture. The knowledge of God begins with the mind’s exposure to and reception of what is revealed about God in Scripture. If this is so, oh, do you see our great need for two activities in our Christian life?

  1. Unceasing prayer: The knowledge of God comes through the work of the Holy Spirit as He works as the spirit of wisdom and revelation. He alone can give a penetrating insight into divine realities. How does the Holy Spirit give this spirit of wisdom and revelation? It is when we unceasingly pray for ourselves and others. That is why even as a Holy Spirit-inspired apostle, he is not satisfied just writing this letter revealing glorious truths. He doesn’t assume that reading this will open their eyes. He knows that they will not understand these things as truly knowing God unless God Himself performs an operation upon their spiritual eyes. So he says he unceasingly prays. “I do not cease to give thanks for you, making mention of you in my prayers: that God may give to you the spirit of wisdom and revelation in the knowledge of Him.” A man so busy with all the concerns of planting churches, writing letters, and being a missionary and an apostle, and that too, imprisoned now, why does he discipline his life to pray specifically for each individual with this request? Why does he constantly emphasize his prayer for the people of God? Not because he was trying to appear spiritual, but because he knows the Holy Spirit always works in the atmosphere of prayer; flesh and blood, whatever their efforts, cannot achieve this. He knows he cannot accomplish anything for the kingdom without prayer. God gives this wisdom and revelation by the specific means of unceasing prayer. We don’t earn this by unceasing prayer; it is a blessing already purchased by Christ. But unceasing prayer creates a condition in our soul fit to receive and experience the spirit of wisdom and revelation. We don’t understand it fully, but amazing things are promised to a Christian and a church that learns to pray unceasingly. Most of the gifts Christ purchased are showered on people only through unceasing prayer. James says, “He hath not because ye ask not.” Jesus says, “If ye who are evil know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more shall your Father in heaven give the Holy Spirit to those who ask Him?” Hence, the apostles’ prayer holds a profound lesson for us. It underscores the specific means by which Christians know increased measures of the Spirit’s work in their hearts and lives. It’s as they pray. The spirit of wisdom and revelation is poured on them. We have been seeing this in Psalm 119 again and again: “Open thou mine eyes, that I may behold wondrous things out of thy law.” The measure of a church’s true spirituality as a general rule is not its Sunday morning attendance. Even unsaved people who are born into a Christian family may come on Sunday mornings out of habit, but it is the attendance and the spirit of prayer in a weekly prayer meeting that show the growth of a church. Someone said, “Don’t trust the spiritual health of people who only attend on Sundays. Only those who attend prayer meetings are truly growing.” The apostles in Acts 6:4 realized this, which is why they said, “we will give ourselves continually to prayer and the ministry of the word.” They realized prayer is just as important as sermon preaching and good preaching is no substitute for prayer. This should make many of you who neglect prayer meetings and think the church is all about preaching realize you are completely wrong. This is why you are not growing. Church is fellowship. Why do some people come in the evening? Not just to hear messages, but to get a relaxed time to joyfully fellowship and talk. We as a church should always strike a balance between preaching and prayer meetings. If this is the rule, as church members, may your conscience tell you if any of you are not attending church prayer meetings. Whatever truths you hear on Sunday, will God grant you a spirit of wisdom and revelation and enlighten you and bless you with these truths?
  2. Unceasing scripture reading and meditation: To pray for a spirit of wisdom and revelation and not use the means of written revelation is to mock God. This spirit of wisdom and revelation comes in the sphere of the knowledge of God found in Scripture. So believers must settle in Scripture. This is our book for life. “Ignorance of the Bible is ignorance of God. I never saw a growing, useful Christian who is not reading his Bible daily,” said D. L. Moody. “When you open your Bible, God opens His mouth.” The Bible will keep you from sin, or sin will keep you from the Bible. “The vigor of our spiritual life will be in exact proportion to the place held by the Bible in our life and thoughts,” said George Muller. Whatever your busy life is like, if you don’t set aside time to read Scripture, you cannot have this spirit of wisdom and revelation. It all starts with the regular exposing of the mind to Scripture and receiving it through meditation. The sooner you learn that, the sooner you will stop living like a fool. Joshua 1:8 says, “This Book of the Law shall not depart from your mouth, but you shall meditate in it day and night, that you may observe to do according to all that is written in it. For then you will make your way prosperous, and then you will have good success.”
  3. Get rid of laziness in Christian life: One Puritan says the great reason why Christians don’t grow in knowing God is laziness. Isn’t that true with most of us? Do you know laziness is a sin? Spiritual laziness is a terrible sin. Pure mental laziness—not reading the Bible, spiritual laziness—not praying unceasingly. It comes from terrible, false contentment in our Christian life. Once saved, we assume a state of salvation is a kind of easy chair in which we may just sit still, lie back, and be happy. “Once saved, always saved.” You are dead wrong; that route can take you to hell. The Christian life is a tireless and persevering journey for a deepened understanding and experience of salvation. Think about this: Paul stated in the first paragraph that the Ephesians were already blessed with every spiritual blessing—they were elected, predestined for sonship, redeemed, under administration, had an inheritance, and had the sealing of the Holy Spirit to experience all that. These are what we call the doctrines of grace. He said these things are all yours in your past experience. Moreover, you are continuing in faith and love as a sign that you are truly recipients of these blessings. There is a present spiritual reality in their lives. Does he say, “Relax and enjoy your blessings. You are blessed.” No. He says, “I unceasingly pray for God to give you more wisdom and revelation in His knowledge.” Why? The great lesson we learn is that no matter how great their past blessings, no matter how real their present expressions of life, Paul longs for a deepened experience of understanding and Christian grace. Why? Because God’s goal for our life is not to just relax in an easy chair and say, “I am saved.” No, God’s goal is stated in Ephesians 5, that the church might be presented to Him without spot or wrinkle. Romans 8 says, “Whom he foreknew he predestined to be conformed to the image of his Son.” Hebrews 12 says we have to run the race perseveringly. We have to run so that not only our thoughts and feelings but every area of our life reflects the Lord Jesus Christ. God’s glory in our lives hinges on the realization of that goal in redemption. So Paul is expressing God’s great desire for you and me. Yes, you are blessed with amazing blessings, yet there is more to know, more to experience in Jesus Christ. We cannot rest short of anything other than a deepened understanding and experience. This is God’s ambition expressed through Apostle Paul to us. God wants us to make this our ambition. We see people with ambition so restless, pursuing it in studies, wanting to become a doctor, an engineer, a sports star, or to become rich. Oh, how their ambition drives them not to waste time but to achieve things. Shouldn’t they shame our Christian laziness?

This prayer is an answer to extremism. We always love going to extremes, either Arminianism or hyper-Calvinism, legalism or antinomianism. Some of you still don’t know what these are. Here also, we go to extremes. We have to deeply appreciate what God has already done for us in Christ—that we are “blessed with every spiritual blessing”—and with that motivation, long for a greater reality to experience these blessings. People don’t realize this balance. One side goes to the extreme like the charismatics, who minimize the great work of God already done in our lives, denying the first paragraph that we are “blessed with every spiritual blessing.” They say all that is nothing, we need a “second work of grace” or a “baptism of the Holy Spirit.”

The other extreme is when it stops with the intellectual and does not move to the experiential knowledge of God. Then there is a large group of people who are dissatisfied with these two extremes and move from being Pentecostals, liberals, or fundamentalists to Arminians, to being Calvinists, to being hyper-Calvinists, to low-Calvinists, or to four-point or five-point Calvinists. They waste their whole lives dabbling in different schools of ideas without actually truly knowing God, and then face disappointment when Christ comes and they hear his judgment: “I never knew you, you never knew me.” You wasted your years just in superficial intellectual dabbling.

So I hope you see the great need of Paul’s prayer here. From now on, our greatest prayer should be, “Lord, give us a spirit of wisdom and revelation in knowing You.”

Think of all the functions of the Holy Spirit that Paul could have prayed for. Is not the Holy Spirit the Spirit of power, the Spirit of love, the Spirit of joy, the Spirit of peace, the Spirit of utterance, the Spirit of counsel? Out of all of these, why does Paul zero in on two functions of the Spirit? That he would give you the spirit of wisdom and of revelation in the knowledge of him. Why? Because he understood that the primary means by which the Holy Spirit carries on his sanctifying work in believers is as the spirit of truth. Your Christian life, health, joy, peace, and blessing all depend on you knowing God by the Holy Spirit’s wisdom and revelation.

As an application, I want to bring a few lessons from this prayer of Paul’s.

You can only know God like this when God gives a spirit of wisdom and revelation, and the only sphere within which the spirit is given is in the knowledge of God revealed in Scripture. That is the only circle where this is given. The knowledge of God begins with the mind’s exposure to and reception of what is revealed about God in Scripture. If this is so, oh, do you see our great need for two activities in our Christian life? First: unceasingly praying for the Spirit of wisdom and revelation on one hand, and meditating on God’s word day and night on the other hand. That is why Scripture points to these two great activities as the primary activities of Christian life.

First: The great need for unceasing prayer. This knowledge of God comes through the work of the Holy Spirit as the spirit of wisdom and revelation. He alone can give penetrating insight into divine realities. How does the Holy Spirit give this spirit of wisdom and revelation? It is when we unceasingly pray for ourselves and others.

That is why even as a Holy Spirit-inspired apostle, he is not satisfied just with writing this epistle revealing glorious truths; he doesn’t assume that reading this will open their eyes. He knows that they will not understand these things as truly knowing God unless God himself performs an operation upon their spiritual eyes. So he says he unceasingly prays. “16 I do not cease to give thanks for you, making mention of you in my prayers: that God may give to you the spirit of wisdom and revelation in the knowledge of Him.”

Do you say you are too busy to pray unceasingly? Here is a man so busy with all the concerns of planting so many churches, writing epistles, being a missionary and an apostle, and now imprisoned. Why does he discipline his life to pray specifically for each individual with this request? Why does he constantly emphasize his prayer for the people of God? Not because he was trying to appear spiritual, but because he knows the Holy Spirit always works in the atmosphere of prayer. Flesh and blood and whatever efforts they make cannot achieve this. He knows he cannot accomplish anything for the kingdom without prayer.

God gives this wisdom and revelation by the specific means of unceasing prayer. We do not earn this by unceasing prayer; it is a blessing already purchased by Christ. But the means of unceasing prayer creates a condition in our soul that is fit to receive and experience the spirit of wisdom and revelation. We don’t understand it fully, but amazing things are promised to a Christian and a church who learn to pray unceasingly. Most of the gifts Christ purchased are showered on people only through unceasing prayer. James says, “He has not because you what? You ask not.” Jesus says, “If you who are evil know how to give good gifts to your children, how shall you give the Spirit to those who ask him?”

Hence, the apostles’ prayer holds a profound lesson for us. It underscores the specific means by which Christians know increased measures of the Spirit’s work in their hearts and lives. It’s as they pray that the spirit of wisdom and revelation is poured on them. We have been seeing this again and again in Psalm 119: “Open thou mine eyes, that I may behold wondrous things out of thy love.”

So, the measure of a church’s true spirituality as a general rule is not its Sunday morning attendance, since even the unsaved who are born in a Christian family may come on Sunday morning as a practice. But it is the attendance and the spirit of prayer that comes in a weekly prayer meeting that shows the growth of a church. Someone said, “Don’t trust the spiritual health of people who only attend Sundays. Only those who attend prayer meetings are truly growing.”

In Acts 6:4, the apostles realized this, and that is why they said, “We will give ourselves continually to prayer and the ministry of the word.” They realized prayer is just as important as sermon preaching, and good preaching is no substitute for prayer. This should make many of you who neglect prayer meetings and think church is all about preaching feel that you are completely wrong. This is why you are not growing. Church is fellowship. Some people come in the evening not just to hear messages, but because we get a relaxed time to joyfully fellowship and talk. We gather on Fridays. I always pray and yearn to gather physically, to pray with one heart. We as a church should always strike a balance between preaching and prayer meetings. If this is the rule, as church members, may your conscience tell you if any of you are not attending church prayer meetings. Whatever truths you hear on Sunday, will God grant you a spirit of wisdom and revelation and enlighten you and bless you with these truths?

Second: The great need for Scripture reading and meditation. To pray for a spirit of wisdom and revelation and not use the means of written revelation is to mock God. This spirit of wisdom and revelation comes in the sphere of the knowledge of God found in Scripture. So believers should settle in Scripture. This is our book for life. D. L. Moody said, “Ignorance of the Bible is ignorance of God. I never saw a growing, useful Christian who is not reading his Bible daily.” Someone else said, “When you open your Bible, God opens His mouth.” The Bible will keep you from sin, or sin will keep you from the Bible. George Müller said, “The vigor of our spiritual life will be in exact proportion to the place held by the Bible in our life and thoughts.”

Whatever state of busy your life is, if you don’t set aside time to read Scripture, you cannot have this spirit of wisdom and revelation. It all starts with the regular exposing of the mind to Scripture and receiving it through meditation. The sooner you learn that, the sooner you will stop living like a fool.

Joshua 1:8-9 says, “This Book of the Law shall not depart from your mouth, but you shall meditate in it day and night, that you may observe to do according to all that is written in it. For then you will make your way prosperous, and then you will have good success. Have I not commanded you? Be strong and of good courage; do not be afraid, nor be dismayed, for the Lord your God is with you wherever you go.”

Third: Get rid of laziness in the Christian life. One Puritan says a great reason why Christians don’t grow in knowing God is laziness. Isn’t that true for most of us? Do you know that laziness is a sin? Spiritual laziness is a terrible sin. Pure mental laziness—not reading the Bible—and spiritual laziness—not praying unceasingly—come from a terrible false contentment in Christian life. Once saved, we assume the state of salvation is a kind of easy chair in which they may just sit still, lie back, and be happy, thinking, “once saved, forever saved.” You are dead wrong; that route can take you to hell.

The Christian life is a tireless and persevering journey for a deepened understanding and experience of salvation. Think of this: Paul stated in the first paragraph that these Ephesians were already blessed with every spiritual blessing, with election, predestined sonship, redemption, inheritance, and the sealing of the Holy Spirit to experience all that. These are what we call the doctrines of grace. He said these things are all yours in your past experience. Moreover, you are continuing in faith and love as a sign that you are truly the recipients of these blessings; there is a present spiritual reality in their lives. Does he say, “Relax and enjoy your blessings. Blessed you are”? No, he says, “I unceasingly pray for God to give you more wisdom and revelation in his knowledge.” Why?

A great lesson we learn is that no matter how great their past blessings, no matter how real their present expressions of life, Paul longs for a deepened experience of understanding and Christian grace. Now, why? Because God’s goal for our life is not just to relax in an easy chair and say, “I am saved, once saved forever saved. So relax.” No. God’s goal is stated in Ephesians 5: that the church might be “presented to him without spot or wrinkle.” Romans 8: “Whom he foreknew he predestined to be conformed to the image of his Son.” Hebrews 12: “We have to run the race perseveringly.” We have to run so not only our thoughts and feelings, but every area of our life, reflects the Lord Jesus Christ. God’s glory in our lives hinges on the realization of that goal in redemption. So Paul is expressing God’s great desire for you and me this morning: Yes, you are blessed with amazing blessings; yet there is more to know, more to experience in Jesus Christ. We cannot rest short of anything other than a deepened understanding and experience.

This is God’s ambition expressed through the apostle Paul to us. God wants us to make this our ambition. We see people with ambition so restless, pursuing it in studies; someone wants to become a doctor, an engineer, a sports star, or to earn money and become rich. Oh, how their ambition drives them not to waste time but to achieve things. Shouldn’t they shame our Christian laziness? It’s like, “Come Sunday, it’s over.”

If you are living in some relaxed, lazy world, you have to examine if these blessings are yours. Laziness is a great curse in our lives. I am appalled at the spiritual laziness in some of your lives. Some of you, I tell you, for years you should have gone somewhere. I didn’t even know how to speak English until I was 20; I went to a government school. All I learned was in church. I would attend a Tamil service word for word and then an English one. “Oh, learn words, read books.” It was a tireless effort and ambition: “I have to grow, grow.”

This prayer is the answer to extremism. We always love going to extremes, either Arminianism or hyper-Calvinism, legalism or Antinomianism. Some of you still don’t know what these are. Here also, we go to extremes. We have to deeply appreciate what God has done for us in Christ, and with that motivation, long for a more realistic experience of these blessings.

People don’t realize this balance. On one side, they go to the extreme, like Pentecostals, who minimize the great work of God already done in our lives, denying the first paragraph where it says we are “blessed with every spiritual blessing.” They say all that is nothing, that we need a second work of grace, the baptism of the Holy Spirit. That is one extreme. The other extreme is the “positionalists.” They say, “Yes, I am blessed in Christ with every spiritual blessing. I am elect, no worries. I will not trouble myself with earnest prayers for the spirit, so I will relax in an easy chair and enjoy life.” My friend, you are in a dream world.

How can you not minimize the salvation Christ has given, like the Pentecostals, and at the same time never become indifferent, lazy, or without earnestness, like the positionalists? Here is the biblical balance: Thanking God for all that we have in Christ, using that to motivate and stir us and to plead with God to open our eyes to experience more and more of these blessings he has already given us.

I’m not looking for some new experience that I didn’t get when I was saved, but I’m longing for an ever-increasing realization and experience of what Christ has already given me. I’m not content to say, “It is all mine in Him,” and sit lazy. No, I stir myself; I want to effectually experience more of what he has already blessed me with. That is the biblical balance.

Some of you sitting here think that the spirit of wisdom and knowing God is something unimportant. That actually shows how much the god of this world has blinded you. Because if there is something of the utmost importance for your life now and for eternity, it is knowing God. God takes it very seriously whether or not you know Him. Romans 1 says God’s anger from heaven is revealed on all those who “did not see fit to retain knowledge of God.” He gave them up to a depraved mind and the desires of their lusts, so they live like animals. It makes God angry every minute when you live not knowing God in this life. Because in his grace, he has revealed himself in his word and in his Son. And he sets the knowledge and calls you to know him.

It will not only impact your life, but all of eternity. Because the Scripture says in 2 Thessalonians 1:8 that Jesus Christ will “come in flaming fire taking vengeance on all those that know not God.” What do you need to do to go to hell and suffer eternal wrath? Just live ignorant of the knowledge of God. Keep your mind far from exposing yourself to the Bible. If you are forced to read a Bible calendar, just read and forget. Hear a sermon and forget it, don’t receive it by meditation, and don’t pray this prayer. You will go to hell because you will not know God, and your heart will not respond in faith, love, and obedience, like I explained. Hence, the tremendous importance of you knowing God.

The Bible calls all unregenerate people “those not knowing God.” How do you know God? First Step: Repent of your sins, turn to God believing in Jesus Christ’s blood and righteousness, and God will suddenly become real. You will realize there is a world you never knew and have lived so blindly. Then, grow in knowing God.

Prayers God Answers: 7 Traits – Eph 1:16-17

It’s true that when we talk to people about prayer, we often just say, “I’m praying for you,” without sharing the entire prayer. But in Ephesians 1, after his greeting and praise, Paul writes his complete prayer to the Ephesians. I believe the Holy Spirit inspired him to do this to give the Ephesians, and us today, an example of how to pray acceptably. Ephesians 2 says apostles are the foundation of the church. So here, God had Apostle Paul write his prayer to teach his church the principles of true prayer that God will answer—prayer that builds up God’s church. There are millions of things done in the name of prayer today, but the Holy Spirit, through Paul, teaches in these verses what prayers God really answers.

The Ephesians were Gentiles, and the only prayers they knew were chanting and repetitive prayers to dead idols, so they needed to be taught how to pray to the true living God. Paul teaches them by the best method, by writing his own prayer. This is a great example of true, God-answering prayer.

We all need help with prayer, especially in our country with its idolatrous background. God teaches us in His word not only to pray, but how to pray and what to pray. You might say, “Oh, Pastor, isn’t it enough that we pray? Don’t worry about how and what.” God’s word says if you don’t learn how and what from His word, your prayer itself is a sin. Proverbs 28:9 says, “If someone turns away his ear from hearing the law, even his prayer shall be an abomination.” Without learning the rules of Scripture about prayer, if we pray simply with heartfelt outpourings and emotions, while our mind remains ignorant of God’s guidance on prayer, the very act of prayer may be an abomination in the sight of God. That is why the Lord was so careful in the Sermon on the Mount, teaching His disciples not only how and what to pray but also how not to pray.

Our country, like the Ephesians’ culture, has 101 deceptions in the name of faith, and 1001 deceptions in the name of prayer in churches today, which all come from Hindu culture and background. We come from a culture of repetition, repeating phrases or words mindlessly, believing that the quantity of words will make the prayer more effective, with prolonged prayers without substance. Matthew 6:7 says, “And when you pray, do not use vain repetitions as the heathen do. For they think that they will be heard for their many words.” That is exactly what happens today—vain repetitions like “blessings” or “fire, fire.” The Lord said not to pray to allure men, but to come to prayer with humility and reverent fear. “Our Father in heaven, hallowed be thy name.” Today, instead of pleading with humility, we command, we claim, we demand with authority. “I demand my financial breakthrough this week!” or “I bind the spirit of poverty over my life!” or “I loose prosperity into my bank account!” These prayers are often accompanied by loud, exaggerated vocal inflections or dramatic physical gestures, primarily to create an impression on the congregation, evoke an emotional response, or demonstrate perceived spiritual power rather than genuinely communicating with God. We have seen all that, with the whole place on “fire,” and wondered, “Wow! If this is prayer, we don’t know how to pray at all.” When I simply prayed with a low voice, speaking humbly to my Father, they said, “Your pastor doesn’t know how to pray.” The point is, the target of our prayers is not to impress people that we know how to pray, but the target of our prayers is God. The power of our prayers isn’t measured by human applause, but by God’s answer. Are these prayers God will answer? According to the Bible, no. In fact, people should actually repent for praying like this. Matthew 6:5 says, “And when you pray, you shall not be like the hypocrites. For they love to pray standing in the synagogues and on the corners of the streets, that they may be seen by men. Assuredly, I say to you, they have their reward.” This means men may appreciate them, but that is all. When you pray as God commands, your Father, who sees in secret, will reward you openly.

In the midst of 101 wrong prayers, the Holy Spirit recorded this prayer to show us that this is the kind of prayer God is pleased with and will answer. It is very important to learn this. We will not be able to do anything for God’s kingdom without learning such acceptable prayer. We may be blindly doing something and calling it prayer. May God transform our prayer lives as we go through Paul’s prayer.

We saw in verse 15 what made Paul believe the Ephesians were truly elect and what moved him to start this prayer: two indispensable signs—faith and love. The structure of Paul’s prayer is that verses 16 and 17 tell us how Paul prayed for them, and verses 18-23 tell us what Paul prayed for them. Today, we will look at verse 16 and the first part of verse 17 to learn seven traits of prayers God answers.

Let’s use the acronym RACE-SSS to remember them: Reverent, Always Thankful, Constant, Earnest, Selfless, Specific, Spiritual.

This message should make us all start the race of prayer. The three “S”s are a reminder to “start, start, start.”


1. Reverent

Our prayers must be reverent. Reverence is the recognition that we, as inferiors, are in the presence of a superior. It is the recognition that we are creatures coming to the Creator, sinners coming to the infinitely pure. Reverence is a profound respect and esteem, mingled with both love and awe. This reverence holds a two-fold tension: on one side, I come with an awareness that I am utterly unworthy to be in His presence, and yet with an equally clear awareness that I am welcome and accepted. Where do I get all that from this verse?

Notice the object of Paul’s prayer. Who is the proper object of acceptable prayer? The first commandment is applicable to prayer: “Thou shalt have no other gods before me.” When you go to pray, what do you bring before your mind? This determines whether your prayer is acceptable or just vague talking to the air, or if you are praying to an idol of your imagination. The first commandment says you shall not have any other gods before Me. So, as we enter our prayer, we should self-consciously attempt to bring before our mind the great God as revealed in the Bible, not our god of imagination, a friend, or an “idol Jesus,” but the God of the Bible. I wonder what a pathetic God these charismatic people must have whom they can command.

Notice the object of Paul’s prayer. He describes Him in two phrases: “the God of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of glory.” You see, when Paul opened his prayer, he paused and considered who it was he was coming to. He did not just rush into God’s presence without pausing to consider the majesty of His person. It is important for us when we come to prayer not to just spill out our petitions without considering to whom we are coming. Isn’t this exactly what our Lord Jesus Christ taught about how to come to prayer in the Lord’s Prayer? “Our Father, who art in heaven, hallowed be thy name.” The very first thing Jesus taught us when we begin to pray is to pause and consider the person to whom we are praying. He is in heaven, you are on earth; His name is to be hallowed, you are a depraved sinner; realize the glory that He is worthy of, but He is also your Father, and you are welcome. Paul is exactly practicing that.

Let us look at the two phrases. First, “the God of our Lord Jesus Christ.” When Paul says this is the object of his prayers, what does he mean? He is packed into that phrase the sum and substance of the whole biblical revelation concerning the nature of God and His work of salvation through His Son. He doesn’t use the full title he used in verse 3, “Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ.” He drops “Father” and just uses “God” to emphasize the work of Jesus Christ as the God-man. Let me suggest at least three minimal things this means:

  1. He prays to the God who exists as one essence with the Lord Jesus Christ in the mystery of the Trinity. He is praying to the triune God.
  2. This is the God who revealed Himself through Jesus Christ. Jesus said everything He did was to reveal the Father to us. John 14:9 says, “He that hath seen me hath seen the Father.” Christ said, “I don’t speak my words, but what I hear of the Father, that I speak.” So all the truths Christ spoke about this life, death, hell, and heaven are all a revelation of this God. You can never know this God except through faith in Jesus and His work.
  3. This God anointed and sent the Lord Jesus Christ to the world to be the only mediator between Himself and man. Jesus said, “No one can come to the Father except through me.” This God will not accept sinners on any other basis than the blood and righteousness of this Christ. “The God of the Lord Jesus Christ” talks about the whole spectrum of biblical revelation concerning the Father’s sending the Son, born of a virgin, His ministry, suffering, dying, rising, and the Father’s exaltation of the Son. It is all bound up in that phrase. We come with that recognition; He is the God who revealed Himself through Jesus, and the only way we can come is through Jesus Christ.

The proper object of the apostles’ prayer is not only the God of our Lord Jesus Christ, but Paul also uses a wonderful phrase: “Father of Glory.” Glory is the outshining of the perfections of the divine essence. The glory of God is the bursting forth of all the beauty of His own being. This is the sum total of all His marvelous attributes. He is the source of all glory. He is the King of Glory in Psalm 24. In Acts 7:2, He is called the God of Glory. Whenever this God of glory revealed Himself, men were overwhelmed. The glory of God was an awesome thing. No man who ever saw the glory of God remained the same. When the shadow of His glory passed by, Moses automatically fell prostrate. Isaiah 6 saw His glory, and the Lord was high and lifted up, and His glory filled the temple. Isaiah screamed, “Woe is me! I am shattered to pieces. I cannot bear this glory as a sinful man.”

He is a supreme majesty dwelling in the light which no man can approach, a transcendent realm outside of us in immortality and eternity, with all beauty and power and sovereignty. He is worthy of all worship, praise, respect, fear, trembling, and obedience. Heavenly hosts worship Him in glory. What does this all say to us? If you have any real understanding of who this God of glory is when you come to pray, you will come with the utmost reverence.

But look at the marvelous combination of words. On one side, He is the God of glory, with the awesome splendor of His presence. Lest we, as sinful beings, be driven away by seeing the glory, He adds a beautiful word: He is the “Father of glory.” This is a beautiful balance of God’s nature. He is the terrible God of glory, but He is my Father in Jesus Christ; there is intimacy and filial tenderness that is in God as my Father. So when Paul approached God, he approached Him reverently, but also with all the freedom of an adopted son, calling Him “Abba Father.” How sweet! By nature, we should shrink from a God of glory and hide ourselves in shame, but now we may come and say, “Abba Father.” Take all the tender love that was ever in the heart of every father who ever lived. If you could compress all of that genuine fatherly affection into one heart, it would be but a drop of water compared to the ocean when we think of the love in the Father’s heart for His children. Yes, He is our Father; we can come to Him for everything, but always come with reverence, realizing His majesty and the transcendent concept of an exalted God. So the first way we come to God is with reverence, holy trembling. We are not to just waltz into the presence of God and begin demanding things of Him. We need to have all of the reverence due to a sovereign. If we do not have the spirit of Isaiah, a sense of unworthiness, or the spirit of Moses prostrating ourselves, knowing we are on holy ground, we are not praying to the God of the Bible. Do you see how these charismatics have a different object of prayer than the God of our Lord Jesus Christ and the Father of glory? If they came to Him, they would not pray so irreverently like that. This was the first quality of Paul’s prayer, and it must be the quality of our prayer as well. So, R stands for Reverent.


2. Always Thankful

“I do not cease to give thanks for you.” When you have the proper object before you—this God of Jesus Christ and this Father of Glory—you will always go to Him with thanksgiving. It is only when you have a helpless idol of your imagination, who cannot do anything and your circumstances seem bigger, that you cannot thank Him always. But when you bring this sovereign God of the Bible before you, you will always be thanking Him, no matter what. If your prayers are always grumbling and complaining, you don’t have the right object of prayer. Remember all these blessings from Ephesians 3-14? “Why did He elect me, predestine me, redeem me, give me an inheritance, and seal me with the Holy Spirit?” For the praise of His glory and His grace! How do we glorify Him? When we are always thanking Him. How do we frustrate and spoil that purpose? When we fail to thank Him always. If you have properly learned Ephesians 3-14, you will practice regular thanksgiving.

As people blessed so much by God, whatever situation you may be facing in life—whether it is a marital difficulty, a problem with a child, a job difficulty, health, financial, family, or any tragic, sad incident—those circumstances, dramatic as they can be, can seem bigger than God and overwhelm us. You should put your circumstances next to this infinite, amazing, incomprehensible God and how much He has blessed us, and realize that my God is bigger than my current circumstances. His blessings are beyond any difficulty I am facing. None of these temporary trials can take away what He has given me. You have to see all your life circumstances in the light of these blessings of past election, predestination, redemption, administration, and future inheritance. Then you will be able to thank God in every situation.

I was surveying Paul’s prayers and was amazed that every prayer of his was always filled with thanksgiving. You can go home and see the verses; I will just take you through the survey. Romans 1:8, “I thank my God through Jesus Christ for you all that your faith is spoken of throughout the whole world.” 1 Corinthians 1:4, “I thank my God always on your behalf for the grace of God, which is given you by Christ Jesus.” Philippians 1:3, “I thank my God upon every remembrance of you, always in every prayer of mine for you making request with joy.” Colossians 1:3, “We give thanks to God and the father of our Lord Jesus Christ praying always for you.” 1 Thessalonians 1:2, “We give thanks to God always for you all making mention of you in our prayers.” 2 Thessalonians 1:3, “We are bound to thank God always for you.” 2 Timothy 1:3, “I thank God whom I serve from my forefathers with a pure conscience that without ceasing, I have remembrance of thee in my prayers night and day.” Philemon 4, “I thank God making mention of thee always in my prayers.”

You see, thanksgiving was never absent in Paul’s prayer. We learned in Philippians 4:6, “Be anxious for nothing, but in everything by prayer and supplication, with thanksgiving, let your requests be made known to God.” You may say he had no worries, but where was Paul when he wrote most of these prayers—Philippians, Colossians, Ephesians, Philemon? In jail. It was a very sad situation, yet thanksgiving was a major theme of that prayer. He did not tire of thanking God for the same thing over and over and over again.

So, brothers, when you come reverently with the proper object of prayer, no matter how unpleasant your circumstances, it’s important that we learn to thank God, because when we thank God, it expresses something about God and something about us. It expresses our faith that we believe every circumstance in our life comes from God, and it glorifies Him by saying He is beyond our circumstances. You know, unlike the Old Testament people, we don’t have to bring animals or birds for all God has done. The only New Testament sacrifice we can give is thanksgiving. The great sacrifice of praise that you can give to God for all He has done for us is thanksgiving. Oh, how little we give. Hebrews 13:15 says, “Therefore by Him let us continually offer the sacrifice of praise to God, that is, the fruit of our lips, giving thanks to His name.”

So, R is Reverent, A is Always Thankful.


3. Constant

“I do not cease to give thanks for you.” You see a great difference between Paul’s prayer and ours is a lack of constancy. We think of prayer and say, “Okay, five minutes, and it’s over.” Yes, we should do that, but we should also learn this practice of constancy in prayer, thanking and praying without ceasing. If you make this a conscious rule, you will not believe how many thousands of reasons you will find to praise God daily.

When we realize what we saw in Leviticus 15, we are so soaked in sin. There is a constant, involuntary flow of sins from the heart. Our Lord said in Mark 7:20, “Out of the heart proceed evil thoughts, murders, adulteries, fornications, thefts, false witness, coveting, wickedness, deceit, licentiousness, envy, slander, pride, foolishness, blasphemies; these things which defile the soul.” That defilement is the cause of our inward miserable state; they stack up in our subconsciousness. As guilt and defilement grow and restlessness increases, we feel shame, peacelessness, and deadness of soul. This sense of defilement makes us unfit to come to God and even hide, and strangely, even hate God sometimes. What is the cure for a constant flow of defilement? Christ said, “Abide in me, then you will have my joy, my peace, and will bear much fruit.” What is abiding in Christ? It is this constant prayerfulness. It not only saves us from defilement but makes us fruitful.

The idea of biblical prayer is constant. In Luke 18, our Lord taught we have to always pray and not be discouraged. Each of us faces only those two options. You learn to pray always, or you are always discouraged. If we are not praying, we will always be discouraged. What is the secret of the joy of this man who faced terrible discouragements and even now is in jail? He ceased not to give thanks. He didn’t pray once a week and think it was enough; no, his prayers were a continuous, repetitive activity over and over again. This was a daily, continuous practice.

He teaches in Ephesians 6:18, “praying always with all prayer and supplication in the Spirit.” 1 Thessalonians 5:17, “pray without ceasing.” Romans 12:12, “continuing instant in prayer.” Colossians 4:2, “watching thereunto with all perseverance, continuing instant in prayer.” What does this mean? It doesn’t mean that you are praying every minute. That would be to negate all the other commands he gives in Ephesians about husbands, wives, and workers doing their duties. What does “praying without ceasing” mean? It means making prayer a central part of your life, practicing a lifestyle of disciplined, persistent prayer. Persevere in it. Stay at it. Be devoted to it. Don’t give up or slack off. Be habitual. It’s the opposite of random, occasional, and intermittent. In other words, Paul is calling all Christians to make prayer a regular, habitual, recurring, and disciplined part of your life. Treat prayer the way you treat eating, sleeping, and doing your job. Don’t be hit-and-miss about it. There is constancy, regularity, and it works into your total lifestyle. Learning to cultivate the attitude of prayer, so we live with the spirit of prayer always. Oh, may God teach us this constancy in prayer.

So, R is Reverent, A is Always Thankful, C is Constant.


4. Earnest

By “earnest,” I mean heartfelt prayers. Paul’s prayers were not just repetitions or lip prayers like most of ours. He deeply felt the needs and prayed. The words in his prayers were expressions of what he felt and what he thought. We don’t find any formal words, catchphrases, or clichés. His prayers were never spoken to impress other people, but rather he expressed what he really felt in his heart. We have to be careful when we teach our kids. Until a certain age, Lord’s Prayer repetition is fine, but we have to teach them to speak from their heart, or we will be training them to pray hypocritically, saying words that have no connection to their mind and heart from a young age. Prayers have to be spontaneous. If our children can talk to us spontaneously, they can speak to God spontaneously as well. So, biblical prayer is an earnest, free, original, and heartfelt expression.

We have to watch that our prayer meetings don’t become like this. Yes, we share a list of items as a guide to pray for those points, but you should not just repeat those words as if it were a grocery list. Frankly, that is what some of you do, and prayers become so monotonous. You have to deeply think of those needs, think of God’s promises to fulfill those needs, and pray from the heart. Sometimes you hear someone praying and you can almost predict what they’re going to say next because they’ve said it so many times, like a broken record. That is because there is no preparation, no thinking, no feeling; they just take those words and repeat them. It’s not coming from a heartfelt need. Brothers, this should change; we should set our Zoom meetings on fire with our earnest prayers. I heard a women’s prayer meeting, and though there were only a few, it was full of earnest fire.

So, R is Reverent, A is Always Thankful, C is Constant, E is Earnest.


5. Selfless

The predominant trait of biblical prayer is selflessness. Notice Paul says, “I cease not to give thanks… for all God has done for me… me… me… no, for you, making mention of you in my prayers.” Although Paul in jail needed prayer the most, you find Paul never prays for himself primarily. He asks them to pray for him, but I couldn’t find any prayer where he prays for himself. It is not wrong to pray for ourselves, but the curse of our prayers is that they are predominantly 99% self-obsessed. “Me, my condition, my soul, my family, my job, me, me.” “Give me, me.”

Most of our prayers lack power because of this. We have never learned to pray for others seriously. I can say it is this self-obsession that makes our prayers dull and meaningless. We are not able to follow any of these biblical principles. We cannot be thankful always because it is all focused on “me” in any situation. I can never thank God for others. It is because of self-obsession that our prayers are very short. You pray for yourself, your family, your work, and the prayer is over in three minutes. We don’t have much else to pray for; where is the “unceasing prayer”? Just start practicing praying for others, and you will have enough constancy in your prayers. Oh, may God teach us selflessness in our prayers.

You know, there’s not a single “first person” pronoun like “me” or “mine” in the Lord’s Prayer. Not one. “Our Father, give us this day our daily bread. Forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those who trespass against us. And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil.” The whole prayer is for “us” and “we.” When the Lord taught His disciples to pray, one of the things He wanted to impress on them was that their prayers were not to be selfish, but rather they were to include the body of Christ, the people of God, in their prayers. And so, we see Apostle Paul practicing that; his prayers were selfless.

We saw that love for the saints is an inevitable mark of the elect. One of the greatest ways we can love one another is to pray for one another. There is no better way to express affection for our fellow saints than to pray for them on a regular basis. If you struggle to express love in church, if you don’t know what to say or how to say it, start praying for them. You will see the Holy Spirit filling your heart with love for them, and that will teach you to express love in words and actions. Just like with a Bible calendar, we have to keep a list of everyone in the church and cover praying for everyone in the church, at least once a week. Maybe pray for five or ten people daily in turns.

So, the first S is Selfless.


6. Specific

We see Paul’s prayers were specific. We will see next week that he prays to God to open their eyes, and then prays that their eyes would open to see three things, which are very specific. They were prayers asked for concrete, sharply defined blessings and privileges. You will notice all his prayers were based on God’s promises; he didn’t ask for anything that came to his heart. They were specific prayers based on God’s promises.

Oh, isn’t this a great problem with our prayers? They are not at all specific. It is often aimless wandering or broad generalities. It is again primarily our mental laziness and not knowing the needs of others or meditating on the promises of God. We allow our prayers to degenerate into vague generalities. “Lord, bless the family, bless the church, bless the pastor. Amen.” What to bless? How to bless? Why bless? What specific areas to bless? What are their needs? What promises? Nothing. Just general prayers. No goal, no target.

You could pray, “Lord, so-and-so has marriage problems; help them to love each other as husbands love wives, as in 1 Corinthians 13. Teach them to be patient and kind; pour your love into their hearts. This family has young children; give them wisdom to raise their children properly. Lord, this brother and sister are not able to read the Bible regularly; open their eyes to see wonderful things in your word. Give them the desire and time. So-and-so’s family never attends evening service; please make them realize their wrong and make them attend regularly.” Pray in specifics. You see, specific prayers get specific answers, and vague prayers get vague answers or no answers at all. Paul’s prayer was specific, and he based it always on God’s specific promises.

You know, in order to be specific in our prayers, it requires two things of us. Number one, an awareness of other people’s needs. And number two, a thoughtful meditation regarding those needs and connecting them with God’s promises. Oh, may God teach us specific prayers.

So, the second S is Specific.


7. Spiritual

Paul’s prayers were spiritual prayers. You don’t find Paul praying for someone’s health in Ephesians, or for someone’s job problem in the church, or for debt, or for deliverance from poverty, or for a child, or for pregnancy. No. But he prays for the Ephesians that they might understand spiritual realities, that they might experience spiritual power, and that they might grow in conformity to Christ. This doesn’t mean we shouldn’t pray for physical needs. The Bible says we can pray for everything that makes us worry. But our priority should be spiritual prayers. All these false prosperity preachers and churches, with their 24-hour prayers and preaching on prayers, are all about worldly needs.

More than anything, it is our prayers that reflect our spiritual maturity. You notice most of the prayers in the churches are shallow, only for physical needs; that shows a spiritual famine and blindness, as churches don’t rise above all worldly needs. The quality and level of our spiritual lives are reflected mainly in our prayers. Whatever we may preach and speak about truths, our prayers show what we really believe, what we really think, and what our primary concerns are. But, you know, in order for us to have spiritual prayers, we must be aware of our spiritual realities and needs, and we only realize our spiritual needs when we understand spiritual truths. As we study in Ephesians and even in the Psalms, we realize our spiritual needs and pray for them like the Psalmist. Paul’s prayers are spiritual because he believes those are the greatest needs. Eighty percent of our prayer time should be spiritual prayers.

Prayers for spiritual enlightenment, more spiritual power, spiritual growth, transformations of character, a greater drawing near to Christ and becoming more like Christ. Prayers for the true conversion of souls. These false churches say, “Oh, we also pray for Hindus and Muslims to be saved.” Their meaning of “saved” is just a religion change and joining their church without any heart change, becoming double children of hell. No, we don’t want that. We want true repentance and conversion, the work of God.

If your prayers are all worldly, it shows a poverty of soul. It shows you don’t meditate on God’s truth at all and see your spiritual needs. When you start meditating on God’s word, God opens your eyes to see spiritual realities. When you come to prayer, you will begin to think not in terms of your physical needs but in terms of your spiritual needs. Paul’s prayers were spiritual prayers. I believe most of our physical needs will be taken care of if we seek His kingdom and righteousness first in priority.

Well, here are the seven traits of prayers God answers: Reverent, Always Thankful, Constant, Earnest, Selfless, Specific, Spiritual. RACE – SSS.  

I’d like to close with three applications.

1. Prayer is a Duty

Prayer is an indispensable duty of every believer. The Bible reveals that prayer is our duty, and true prayer should have all these traits. Do you understand what “duty” means? Most people never progress in their Christian life because they don’t understand the concept of duty. In the world, we understand we have to go to work; it’s not an option. You can’t just say, “I don’t feel like going,” and not go. No, no matter how you feel, it’s your duty, so you have to do it.

People think you should pray and read the Bible only when you feel like it, and you should come to the evening service only when you feel like it. But no, it is your duty. As a Christian, whether you feel like it or not, prayer is your duty. You have to pray, and you have to pray like this. When you realize it’s a duty, you gain dignity and discipline.

I would encourage you to write down the seven adjectives we’ve discussed—Reverent, Always Thankful, Constant, Earnest, Selfless, Specific, Spiritual—and when you go to pray, practice each of them one by one. It’s much easier to preach or hear a sermon on prayer than to actually pray. I find it easier to prepare a sermon than to pray. We all know the hardest thing to do is to spend concentrated, focused time in private prayer that is significant and meaningful. Don’t you find that after a few minutes, your mind just starts wandering off into outer space? Mine does. This requires us to be disciplined. If your mind wanders like that, try speaking your prayers out loud when no one is around; you’ll be amazed at how concentrated you can be without distraction.

Prayer is our duty, and we have to practice it. We have to learn that discipline, or else we haven’t even begun the race of faith. Don’t deceive yourselves by calling yourselves believers if you don’t have a true saving faith. A true saving faith will always reveal itself in such prayers. We don’t put on a show for people; we act our trust most at the throne of grace. Faith is most revealed in the exercise of prayer. A believing man will be a praying man. When you start practicing, you will see that you are actually running the race of faith and growing in faith. You will also see your prayers are answered because God answers only such prayers.

Don’t just listen and go. Take some positive, concrete steps to follow the example of Paul’s prayer, which was written by the inspiration of the Holy Spirit. God’s desire is that we learn from Paul, which is why He had him write this prayer. God is more than willing to bless us; He blesses us always as a result of true prayers like this. May God drill into our hearts that prayer is not an option but a duty.


2. God’s Predestination and Prayer are Not Contradictory

People struggle with this idea. They think, “If God has predestined everything, why pray? It will happen anyhow.” That is a wrong hyper-Calvinism heresy. So what’s the other extreme? You abandon predestination and become Arminian and pray. No, the same Paul who spoke about predestination also prays earnestly. Paul didn’t see any contradiction between the two. This is because Paul understood the divine logic that the same God who has predestined the end plan has also predestined all the means by which His plan will be accomplished. The end plan and the means are inseparable. Prayer is an inseparable and indispensable means by which God’s plan is accomplished.

He has said again and again in Scripture that He accomplishes His purposes through the prayers of His people. In fact, He commands them to seek Him in prayer so He can accomplish His purposes, and He gets angry with His people when they don’t seek Him. The same applies to praying for unsaved people and preaching the Gospel to them. The same Paul who wrote about the great chapter 9 about God’s sovereignty, “I will have mercy on whom I will have mercy,” also wrote in the very next chapter, Romans 10, “Brethren, my heart’s desire and prayer to God for Israel is that they might be saved.” Why? Because Paul knows predestination is not an excuse for neglecting prayer and preaching the Gospel. Instead, predestination is a great motivation and provocation to pray because our prayers are woven right into the fabric of God’s sovereign plan. God’s plans are always accomplished through the prayers of His people. Any other idea of prayer is a terribly wrong, unbiblical, and God-dishonoring idea.


3. What is Taught to People Must be Prayed Into People

We will see in the next verses that the petition Paul prays is directly related to what he taught in verses 3-14. What God is teaching us here is that it is not enough to just objectively present the truths to the minds of the people, but we should also pray that God would subjectively make people see and experience the reality of those truths. If we pastors, deacons, and Sunday school teachers think that we’ve done enough by teaching the truth clearly and that people have heard it, we are dead wrong. Only half of the work in building the church is done. The other half is diligent, faithful, consistent, specific, and spiritual prayer for them.

Yes, as a pastor, I need to regularly pray before and after every message. And you, as a congregation, should pray before and after the message, sandwiching the truths you hear with prayers on both sides. Otherwise, all those truths will be taken away by Satan on the wayside. Do we realize that our failure in this is where we have lost the blessings of hundreds of sermons?

Those who lead in Friday and Sunday prayers often pray about the sermon truths unclearly and confusingly because they forget them within a week. So, can I plead with you for your own good and the church’s benefit, that all who lead prayers listen to the sermon once more during the week and note some points to pray about? What is taught to people must be prayed into people. This also teaches that there must be a balance between the teaching of people and prayer for people. There must be a balance between messages and prayer meetings in the church. In Acts 6:4, the apostles realized this, which is why they said, “we will give ourselves continually to prayer and the ministry of the word.” They realized that prayer is just as important as preaching, and good preaching is no substitute for prayer.

This should make many of you who neglect prayer meetings and think the church is all about preaching realize you are very wrong. This is why you are not growing. We as a church should always strike a balance between preaching and prayer meetings. I am still praying for in-person prayer meetings. Maybe we should plan for more prayer meetings, at least once a week on Sunday evenings. If this is the rule, may your conscience tell you if you are not attending church prayer meetings. Whatever truths you hear on Sunday, will God enlighten you and bless you with these truths?

Finally, we see the proper object of prayer is “the God of our Lord Jesus Christ.” For those of you who don’t believe in Christ, until the Lord Jesus becomes your Lord, you should know that God doesn’t hear any of your prayers until you come to God through Jesus Christ. All prayer and praise are acceptable only through the mediation of Christ. Because you are a rebel against God, you don’t believe His word, His work through His Son to forgive and accept you, and you are living in arrogant pride against His Gospel commands to repent and believe. The only first prayer God eagerly wants to hear from you is, “Lord, be merciful to me, a sinner, and forgive my sins for Jesus’ sake.” Once you pray that, heaven will open for you. God will forgive and save you, and God promises to hear all your prayers. May you pray that today.

Two signs of Elect – Eph 1:15

Eph 1:15-23:15 Therefore I also, after I heard of your faith in the Lord Jesus and your love for all the saints, 16 do not cease to give thanks for you, making mention of you in my prayers: 17 that the God of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of glory, may give to you the spirit of wisdom and revelation in the knowledge of Him, 18 the eyes of your understanding being enlightened; that you may know what is the hope of His calling, what are the riches of the glory of His inheritance in the saints, 19 and what is the exceeding greatness of His power toward us who believe, according to the working of His mighty power 20 which He worked in Christ when He raised Him from the dead and seated Him at His right hand in the heavenly places, 21 far above all principality and power and might and dominion, and every name that is named, not only in this age but also in that which is to come. 22 And He put all things under His feet, and gave Him to be head over all things to the church, 23 which is His body, the fullness of Him who fills all in all.

Someone was telling me about the great benefit of praying in tongues. “Brother,” he said, “I used to labor in prayer, but now I can pray for hours.” I asked him, “But what do you pray?” He replied, “I don’t know what I’m praying, but I am praying for one hour in tongues.” I told him to read the marvelous praise of Paul in Ephesians 1. Paul prays, filled with the Holy Spirit, but also with full understanding, knowing what he is praying. His head is so clear and active while his heart is burning. You can decide what kind of prayer will be pleasing to God. I don’t want to learn to pray for hours in tongues and waste my time, not knowing what I am praying. I want to learn from Paul to pray so not only my heart burns with emotions, but my mind burns with enlightenment, because it is by the renewing of our mind that we are transformed and live for God’s glory.

At last, we have come to the end of the praise section of Ephesians. What a glorious, thrilling passage, and I never saw this treasure all my life! My personal praise and worship have been so transformed by this passage. With whatever sadness, I go to prayer and start seeing on the left side: election, predestined to sonship, redemption in time, administration now, and eternal inheritance for the future. To assure that I have all this experientially, I have the sealing of the Holy Spirit inside me. Oh, that lifts my soul immediately in praise and worship, and we experience a foretaste of the bliss of heaven. I sincerely feel sad Paul had to end his glorious praise in just 14 verses, but comforted myself saying it is this praise that will expand infinitely and go on forever and ever endlessly. I think Paul was caught up in the spirit to the heavens in verses 3-14, that is why he wrote that long sentence without any comma or full stop. He ended this section realizing he is still in the world with several burdens and needs. He not only has to praise, but he has to pray for needs.

So far, we have learned to praise God; now let us learn from Paul to pray for our needs. We all need help in prayer. When we praise God like Paul, we are kind of caught up to taste eternal blessings, but when we come back to the world, what do we face? We face only discouragement and disappointment on every side: discouragement at home, at work, in the world, and even in the church.

Discouragements at home: we try to evangelize our unbelieving family members and children. Discouragements of parenting: from childhood, we teach God’s word, but they continue in unbelief and are careless about their souls. As our children grow older, we discover over and over again how little control we have over them. We can compel their outward obedience, but we cannot compel their hearts. We argue, plead, cajole, threaten, and quote Scripture, sometimes even yell, all to no avail. Or you may be struggling with an unbelieving wife, husband, or parents. What is their main problem?

Discouragements at church: you can never imagine the discouragements of a pastor who does spiritual parenting. Childishness not only at home, but even in church after years and years of feeding, but no progress or growth. I still wonder whether some members are truly saved; I cannot see any fruits or signs of saving faith. Will our labors go in vain? Most people think church is like going to a cricket stadium, sitting in the last row, watching the match, and then going home when it’s over. That is all their Christianity—a little religious inconvenience on Sunday. They still don’t realize God has called them to be players, not last-row watchers or Sunday Christians.

There is so much false teaching; the true gospel has to spread, but no one is preaching the true gospel. God has taught us so much. Is this one man’s work? Most of my weeks are continuously busy; I don’t get a few hours or minutes to relax. I have a daily groaning: “Why can I not do more?” I wanted to share the gospel with two people last week, but I couldn’t get the time. I don’t know when I will burn out and fall sick, and I don’t know what will happen after that. With such a burden, sometimes I get so frustrated, “Lord, how long!” When will our church become a vibrant, gospel-participating church, with every member in the body doing their work and using their talents to build the kingdom? Why do we do so little for the gospel and the growth of the church? Why are most of you last-row watchers? I teach, I exhort, I rebuke, but nothing moves… nothing changes. Even leaving a comment “thank you” on YouTube so our truths can reach more people is so difficult. Why? You just hear, grow in knowledge, and go. The days are going by. What is our great problem as a church? What is the great problem in our families, with our unsaved children?

The problem is spiritual blindness. The god of this world has blinded them. The devil is a great beggar’s mafia; his great work is to blind us and make us keep begging in the world. This is a picture from Pilgrim’s Progress: all our eyes are on the sweeping broom, and we never lift up our head to see the great crown and glory God gives. So we stumble blindly through life, making one dumb choice after another, wasting our lifespan without the realization of eternal consequences.

So what do we do? Will it continue like this? Will there not be a revival? If we feel that way, can you imagine how much Paul must have been discouraged? It is like going to high heavens and when you come down, what a discouragement to see the state of family, community, and church. Do you know what Paul does? He prays for the most important need of the people. Because he knows all this can change if this prayer is answered, and when we learn his prayer, get into the spirit of his prayer, and pray like him, there will be a great revival in GRBC church.

The central petition of his prayer comes in verse 18, to state simply, “God may open the eyes of their heart.” All this state is because of their blindness. Everything will change if eyes are opened. Oh, this is a great need for each one of us in this place.

He doesn’t ask, “Lord, give us new blessings,” but “Help us to realize the blessings we already have.” Not “Give us new truth,” but “Help us experience the truth we already know.” Most of us have more knowledge; even our children know more Bible than most Old Testament saints. But the eyes of the heart are closed to the truth of God. And until those eyes are opened, all the yelling in the world won’t make much difference. Just knowledge doesn’t transform anyone. But the thing we need is for the Holy Spirit to do what only the Spirit can do—open our eyes, to make the truth come alive in our hearts.

This is the great need of our families, community, and church. Opening blind eyes is the supernatural work of the Holy Spirit. He and he alone can do it. This is our only hope in the sea of discouragement. But when the Spirit of God comes and opens eyes, and the light floods in, they will never be the same again; there will be a radical change. They will get into the stadium and play for the Lord. We will have an army in the church saying, “Lord, I’m ready to do whatever you say.” But how does the Holy Spirit open eyes? Where does he open eyes?

Though the Holy Spirit works sovereignly, he always works in the context and atmosphere of earnest, acceptable prayer. So if we want to see eyes opened in our families, churches, and communities, we have to get into the spirit of Paul’s prayer and pray like Paul. We need to deeply grasp and personalize this prayer, praying and praying, keep on praying. Pray for each other: husbands for wives, wives for husbands, parents for children, Sunday school teachers for students, pastors for members, new visitors.

Yes, we have seen glorious truths from 3-14, but we have to realize it is not learning these truths that will change people, but after teaching, you’ve got to pray that God will make it alive and energize these truths. That’s why, in Acts 6, the apostles said, “We will give ourselves continually to the ministry of the Word and prayer.” Why? Because the ministry of the Word must be energized by the Spirit of God, and that is sought in intercessory prayer on behalf of the people. So this great prayer of Paul will be the focus of our study for the next few weeks. It is a marvelous, unceasing, earnest prayer.

As an introduction to this prayer, we will study verse 15 today. The second major paragraph in the letter, which begins in verse 15, continues down through to the end of the chapter, 23. Like the first paragraph, this is also one long, complex sentence with the most lofty, most profound, mind-stretching concepts to be found anywhere in the Word of God on petition prayer. So we will go at a pace to not only grasp this, but also allow the Holy Spirit to see the depth of this prayer and fill us with the spirit of prayer.

Verse 15 tells us the news that motivated Paul’s prayer. 15 Therefore I also, after I heard of your faith in the Lord Jesus and your love for all the saints. This new section starts with the connector word in verse 15: Therefore. This word tells how Paul knew for sure these Ephesians were truly the recipients of these blessings in 3-14. The glorious blessings listed 3-14 are not for everyone. All of you should not deceive yourself into thinking these blessings are all mine. On what basis did Paul know these were loved and elected by God before the foundation of the world, predestined for their adoption? How did he know Christ redeemed them by his blood, forgave all their sins, they had eternal inheritance, and were sealed by the Holy Spirit? Verse 15 starts with the word “therefore” and tells us two signs by which, without a doubt, he knew that they are elect, adopted, sealed, and had received all the blessings from 1-14. How can you know for sure that you are truly saved and not deceived about your salvation like millions today? Here are two indispensable evidences of every elect of God: faith and love.

15 Therefore I also, after I heard of your faith in the Lord Jesus and your love for all the saints. Notice he says, “I heard of your faith and love.” This church was formed by Paul’s tremendous efforts and tears for three years, publicly as a church and privately house to house, as he says in Acts 20 with tears and humility. If a man built a church with his sweat and blood, he can never forget those people wherever he goes in the world. Leaving them, he will always bear them in his heart and want to know how they are doing spiritually. After many years, he left them, and now though Paul is in prison, he is trying to know how they are doing. He gets a report that the church is growing and they are all continuing in faith. He must have heard many things about them, but interestingly, he specifically points out two important things about them. These two things give Paul assurance they are elect of God and will receive all these blessings.

There are many other signs of salvation, but the supremely indispensable signs are faith in the Lord Jesus Christ and love to all the saints. For Paul, if these two are not there, you do not have a basis to say you are a believer. If there is a true work of God in a person’s heart, it always reveals itself in faith and love.

As a church, it is so important to learn and examine ourselves because anyone who comes to us can say 101 things about us. No church is perfect. If they cannot see these two signs of faith and love dominantly in our church, we can never be a true church of Christ. There is no work of God happening in our midst. To make it personal and individual, if you profess to be a Christian, growing in grace, these are the two characteristics that should dominate above all others: faith and love. These are the acid tests of true conversion. Let us look at each of them.

First, Faith. Young people are wonderfully sharing the importance of sola fide, faith alone. You not only have to share, but you have to really believe and exercise faith. Many are not truly saved because they don’t understand this concept of faith. Lots of people say, “Well, I have faith in Christ. I believe in Christ.” They really don’t know what they are saying. Demons also believe and tremble, but they will go to hell. The Bible says many people will be surprised on the day of judgment because they thought they believed, but their faith was false faith. How do we know we have true faith and not false faith? What, then, are the characteristics of true saving faith?

This passage gives us four characteristics of true saving faith. Saving faith is Tangible, Accurate, Exclusive, and Continuing faith. T-A-E-C.

The first thing we see about the faith that these Ephesians had is that it was a tangible faith. If something is tangible, it is visible or observable, the opposite of something that cannot be seen. Now, notice what Paul says about the Ephesians’ faith. He says here, “therefore, I also after I heard of your faith.” How can someone hear another’s faith? Does it make a sound? Someone came to Paul in jail and told him about the Ephesians’ faith. How could they tell him about their faith? Because it was something which they had observed. It had outward manifestations that were reportable and describable by a third party. They could tell him about it because there was something to tell, something they observed.

Can I ask you, do you have a faith that people can observe? What tangible evidence do you have? Do you speak of Christ as a real person who is precious to you? Do people see you happily take personal risks and suffer inconvenience for Jesus and his church selflessly, for no human reason, but only because of your faith? Can others report your faith to someone? Hebrews 11 again and again tells us the faith of people by what they did. Their faith was able to be reported by the tangible actions that they did with personal cost and risk, like Abraham, Moses, and even Rahab. It was the visible manifestations that proved the reality of their faith. You can see their faith in their obedience, faithfulness, and commitment. They took risks to obey the commandments of God because they believed the promises of God.

Now let me ask you this question. What could someone report about you as the result of your faith? What could they say was an act of faith that they had observed in your life? If someone were writing Hebrews 11 today, could they mention your name because there was something in your life that could be seen as an act of faith? A time when you took some risk for the sake of obedience to Christ, a time when you took some risk for the sake of ministry to others, a time when you suffered inconvenience to help promote the work of God, or endured some weariness for the advancement, or suffered loss for his name’s sake? Could these things be reported about you? You see, these are the things that make up tangible faith. The people in Hebrews 11 gave their reputations, possessions, family security, and even lives for their faith. And we can’t suffer the inconvenience of coming to church twice on a Sunday. Who can write about our faith? James says faith without works is dead; it is not saving but deceiving faith. If people can’t see our faith in our works, risks, and sacrifices, please don’t deceive yourself. So the first trait of Ephesians’ saving faith, which proves they are elect, is that their faith was a visible, tangible, reportable faith, something that can be talked about to other people.

Secondly, it was accurate faith. Notice in verse 15, Paul says, “I heard of your faith in the Lord Jesus.” Many have faith—in what? Faith in faith; that is all. No, saving faith will be accurate faith, with an accurate object. The object of saving faith is the Lord Jesus. Lord Jesus is not just a name. The two terms are packed full of theological truth and significance. It points to the uniqueness of his person and the sufficiency of his work. This is where people go wrong.

We live in a time where people view doctrinal precision and theological accuracy with either indifference or outright hostility. No one cares about what we believe; if you just believe, that is more than enough. Someone was telling me, “Oh, I go to all denominations, and we don’t discuss doctrines; we just discuss Christ.” Listen, a Christ who is stripped of doctrinal truth and doctrinal distinctives is no Christ at all. He is merely reduced to a vague, content-less ethical influence and a name used for bringing fighting people together. You cannot talk about the Christ of the Bible for two minutes without talking about doctrinal truths, because John 14 says Jesus Christ is the truth. You can have all kinds of loose faiths in 101 Jesuses in the world; it is not saving faith. There is one true faith of God’s elect. If you ask me, “Is doctrinal accuracy important when it comes to legitimate, true saving faith?” It is indispensable. If your Christ is not the accurate Christ of the Bible, then he is an idol of your own imagination and an idol useless to save your soul. The sooner you throw away that Christ, the sooner you will be closer to the kingdom of God.

Notice the object of the Ephesians’ faith was accurate. Paul says their faith was “in the Lord Jesus.” These two titles, Lord and Jesus, comprehend the two aspects of his unique person and work. Though he is the glorious eternal Son of God, he manifested amongst men in the flesh as Jesus to be a Savior from sin. To save us from our two great problems: I am born in sin, I have a sinful nature. Because I have a sinful heart, I commit sinful acts. Those are the two great problems of every human being: our person with a sinful nature and our sinful acts. This sinful condition separates us from God. Not only have I done bad things, I do them because I am a bad person. I am unfit for heaven not only because of my conduct but because of who I am by nature.

Jesus as Savior not only takes all my guilt and punishment and dies a sinner’s death, solving my problem of actual sins, but also lives a perfect, sinless life, solving my second problem of a depraved nature. Jesus not only died a substitutionary death, he also lived a substitutionary life upon this earth. The word Jesus shows this Savior lived a perfect life and died the sinner’s death. The word Lord covers that he also was raised from the dead, ascended, exalted to the highest glory, and now reigns with all authority in heaven and on earth. You can never have saving faith unless you believe all this about him which is covered in the title “Lord Jesus.” The Ephesians believed in his work as Savior on earth. They believed he is Lord, the sovereign master of their lives. They didn’t just call him “Lord, Lord,” but submitted to his commands.

You see, many people want Jesus, but they don’t want the Lord Jesus. According to their own desires, each one has their own Jesus: a baby Jesus, a superhero Jesus, a friend Jesus, a peace-giver Jesus, a healer Jesus, a prosperity Jesus. Some want him as Lord to solve their political problems separated from his cross, and they never preach his cross. Some want only the cross without his sovereignty. All these are the wrong object of faith. The accurate object of faith is fusing together Lord and Jesus—his sovereignty and his work on the cross.

If you do not have the Lord Jesus of the Bible, your Jesus is an idol. Do you have this saving faith? Ask yourself, “Am I recognizing the rule of Jesus Christ in every area of my life and seeking to submit to that rule?” In every area of your life, the question is, “Lord, what should I do?”

The Ephesians had not only tangible but also this accurate faith. Thirdly, it was exclusive faith.

It was faith in who? In the Lord Jesus, period, full stop. You see, these people believed in the Lord Jesus Christ plus nothing. No plan B. Faith alone in Christ alone. A saved person does not trust in Christ plus something else. He has no faith in himself, in his works, in his church, in his baptism, in his own faithfulness, no faith in anything other than Jesus Christ, in him alone. The essence of saving faith is a wholehearted reliance upon the Lord Jesus as their only ground of acceptance before God. I found an acronym for faith. Forsaking All I Trust Him. Remember, forsaking all, I trust him.

We are continually in danger of moving away from this one exclusive object. God has ordained man to be saved only through faith because faith is an emptying grace. Faith alone gives God all the glory. Faith in Christ alone can give us full assurance of salvation. If we add our works, we destroy our assurance because we will never know if we have done enough; our works are always defective. But when you realize that salvation is grounded entirely and exclusively upon the work of Jesus Christ, he purchased and gives a perfect, finished, and complete salvation. We don’t have to add anything to that. Then you can have the assurance that the work has been done right, the work has been done perfectly, and the salvation is finished and complete.

If I ask on what grounds you believe you are accepted by God, and if those grounds are anything other than the blood and righteousness of Jesus Christ, I am sorry to say you are not a Christian. Because a Christian is one who has an exclusive faith. It is not enough to believe in Jesus; you have to believe in Jesus alone.

So saving faith is Tangible, Accurate, Exclusive, and Continuing faith.

Paul started the Ephesians church several years ago. Now after many years, he says, “I still heard about your continuing faith.” This faith that these Ephesians had was not a temporary, rocky-ground or thorny-ground faith—faith so eager for a few years and then becoming lukewarm. With the same tangible, visible evidences, accuracy, and exclusivity, they continued even after several years. It was an ongoing faith in spite of the difficulty, trials, and satanic opposition in the midst of the evil city of Diana temple worship and the grossest form of idolatry and witchcraft practices. These people persevered in the faith.

You are not like many who start in faith in the Lord Jesus and move on to other things. This was the problem with the Galatians. They began by “forsaking all, I trust Him.” Then they listened to some Judaizers, started trusting in circumcision and ceremonial law, and became Pharisees; their Christianity became dead. He rebukes them, “Foolish Galatians, you have moved away from faith.” When you move away from faith, you move away from grace. Grace and faith are joined together inseparably. Then all kinds of Arminian works come in, with no grace, and life becomes dead.

But Paul is rejoicing that the Ephesians were continuing to have as the object of their faith the Lord Jesus. Some claim they are saved by some experience years ago; they don’t continue with any tangible evidence or accuracy and stop following Christ, yet they believe they are saved. If your faith is not continuing and persevering, it is not saving faith.

Can I ask you why you believe you are saved? If it is because of some experience in the past and you don’t have an active faith now, you may not have saving faith. Conversion without continuance leads to condemnation. We see years after, the Ephesians are still growing in faith.

So the first sign of salvation is faith. Saving faith is Tangible, Accurate, Exclusive, and Continuing faith. Now let’s see the second indispensable evidence of salvation.

Notice in verse 15, “your love for all the saints.” Love is the second sign. If there is a word more perverted, more prostituted, more misunderstood in our day, it is the word love. The world mixes infatuation, lust, and family bonds with love. We need to understand that Bible love is different. Just like true faith has some traits, true love also has three traits: Selfless, Tangible, and Impartial. S-T-I.

First: It is selfless love. The word for love is agape; it is selfless love. A good definition of love is that principled divine affection which seeks the good of its object even at personal cost. This agape love doesn’t rise up out of fallen Adam; it comes down from Christ. It is not sentimental, emotional gushes and oozes; it is principled. It acts intelligently and volitionally. Its outstanding characteristic is that it’s selfless. It seeks the good of its objects even at personal cost. It’s 1 Corinthians 13: “Love is patient, love is kind. It does not envy, it does not boast, it is not proud…it does not seek its own.” Love shows itself by its passiveness sometimes, its ability to take hurt and insult. With its passive graces, it “bears all things.” By its active graces, it “hopes all things,” and “believes all things.” When he says “your love for all saints,” the Ephesians were seeking one another’s well-being volitionally and intelligently, even at personal cost, and practicing the traits of 1 Corinthians 13.

Second, it is always a fruit of saving faith. Notice the order: he first says “faith” and then “love.” This is a beautiful balance in the order. When talking about faith alone, we can go to the extreme of easy, cheap belief: “Yes, pastor, faith alone, nothing in my hands I bring.” That is why anyone who says, “I believe,” we should immediately take them into membership. “Why are you adding anything? You are legalists, adding to Christ.” That is an extreme reaction against “faith plus.” We should not add. No, no, you don’t correct one error by spawning another. You just end up with two errors. On one side, you need to hold tenaciously with a death grip to this fundamental principle: faith alone in the Lord Jesus, don’t add anything. But on the other side, this faith should not be an easy, dead faith; it has to be saving faith that always reveals itself in good works of love. A man cannot have faith in the Lord Jesus without loving those for whom Jesus died and to whom he is joined by the Spirit of Christ.

Scripture is very clear that an inseparable and distinguishing mark of true conversion is love for the brethren. Scripture categorically declares that we are unconverted if we do not have it. 1 John 3:14: “We know that we have passed from death to life, because we love the brethren. He that loves not his brother abides in death. Whosoever hates his brother is a murderer, and you know that no murderer has eternal life abiding in him… We ought to lay down our lives for the brethren.” So this agape love is always a fruit of saving faith.

Thirdly, it is also tangible. Just as we saw faith was reported, here someone can say the Ephesians had love because they saw acts of love. If the Ephesians’ love was all gushy feeling, sentimental words, “Oh, how I love,” and nice greetings and words, they cannot be reported. As 1 John says, “Let us not love in word only, but also in deeds.” The Ephesians displayed their love in deeds that could be seen and reported.

Fourth, it is impartial and universal.

Though we will love everyone, the priority of the objective of love will be for saints, meaning believers in the church. Notice the impartiality of this love. The love which they showed was toward “all the saints.” They loved all members in the church. Like our church, the Ephesians’ church would have had a different set of people. There will be lovable ones, some not so lovable, the mature and the immature, the extroverts and the introverts, some shy, some patient, some short-tempered, some thoughtless, some thoughtful, some irritating, some comforting. They will have all kinds of people in every church. But this agape love loved everyone in the church. You see, Paul not only loved Timothy, but he also loved the Corinthians. One was a great blessing to him, and the other a great irritation to him. And you see, it is the nature of biblical love to love with impartiality everyone in the church.

The four traits of biblical love are Selfless, Tangible, Fruit, and Impartial. S-T-F-I.

Two traits of salvation: Faith and Love.

Application Imagine if some new visitor comes to our church. They have never heard anything about us and don’t know reformed truth, but they are just an impartial observer. They simply sit in the service, and after that, observe all the members for three or four weeks, and then someone asks him, “How is the GRBC church?” As he thinks of words to describe it, he may mention this and that, some weaknesses, but two things stand out above all else. “It is obvious they believe only in the Lord Jesus revealed in Scripture; you can see their faith in acts. Secondly, it is obvious that as a fruit of their faith, they have genuine love for one another.” Oh, my church GRBC, this is what we need to strive to achieve every week. Otherwise, we can call ourselves a church, but we are not. Our Lord himself said, “By this men shall know you are my disciples, if you have love for one another.”

The Bible commands us to make our election and calling sure. We all rejoiced when we studied those blessings in 3-14. But this verse calls us to make our election and calling sure. How do we know if we are partakers of all the blessings in 3 through 14? Two great acid tests: Faith and Love. Oh, eternal souls; may God save you from your blood guiltiness. If you don’t display these signs, let me clearly say you will not go to heaven, and don’t dream of any of the Ephesians 1 blessings.

So the great business of our life is to make sure if we have these signs. “Have I believed in the Lord Jesus Christ?” “Ah yes, I am coming to church…” No, no.

Is my faith tangible? Is there something more than just a religion of convenience of coming to church on Sunday? Do my pastor and others see that faith? Can they go somewhere else and report my faith to a third party? Is my faith in the Lord Jesus visible in the way I worship, in the way I hear his word when preached, in the way I meditate on those words and make sure I obey and follow his commandments? Is it visible to people in the way I live my life? Do they see me obey and serve my Lord, whatever the risks, even at personal cost? The only explanation for my service and taking those risks is my faith.

Is it accurate? Is it not satisfied with some old, sentimental, vague Jesus that I dream up in our own minds, but my faith is daily renewed by reading about the Jesus of the scripture, and it is becoming stronger and accurate by a growing knowledge of God’s word?

Is it exclusive and continuing—one that perseveres in good times and in bad, through trials and difficulties? One that no matter how it is beaten upon, continues to rise up and remain faithful to Jesus Christ?

Persevering faith in the Lord Jesus is the offense of the gospel. It is foolishness to the world. Today everyone says “faith in Christ,” that’s just sort of the starting point. Even some of you say, “Oh, it is the same thing, I know. Now we go on to something else.” No, you don’t. You go on in that, not from it. No matter how spiritual it may appear, that was the deceptiveness of the Galatian heresy; it seems spiritual to say, “Look, Christ was enough to get in. Faith was enough to get in. But now if you are to go on, you need Christ plus.” And Paul says the minute you start putting your plus signs, you have gone the wrong way; you’re in the realm of the flesh.  You’ve moved from the principle of grace. 

One preacher very profoundly says your salvation depends upon grasping two principles. The first is that as a sinner, I am accepted by God entirely on the basis of the doings and sufferings of Christ. That’s the first leading doctrine of the Gospel. The second is this: as a saved sinner, I can enjoy and partake of the benefits of the doings and sufferings of Christ entirely on the basis of continuing in that same faith.

Do you see how these two principles are crucial for our salvation and growth in Christian life? We are not only saved entirely by faith but also enjoy the benefits of Christ’s work entirely by continuing in that same faith. These two principles should be engraved in our consciences. The moment you move away from that faith, you become a self-righteous Pharisee and stop enjoying the benefits of Christ’s work. I should not mix my works, my obedience, or my virtue with my faith. As the hymn says, “Nothing in my hands I bring, simply to thy cross I cling.” This is so very important because most of us fail here. We think we start right, with all Christ, and then we add our own works and become like the Pharisees and the Galatian church.

Many people can start right, seeing nothing good in themselves and placing their faith in Christ, but then they go wrong and start living a Pharisee’s life. Once the spirit of the Pharisee and self-righteousness takes hold, it creates indifference, satiety, a feeling of being used to it, and a distaste for the doings and sufferings of Christ. A Pharisee never runs to Christ; he’ll flee to his own resolutions, his own resolves, and his own determination to make himself better, trusting in an outwardly decent life. Then faith goes away, and we become dead Christians. When faith goes, all graces go away, for faith is the mother of all other graces. You and I must be very careful of anything that will change the object of faith.

But when Paul sees people who started right and continue in the same faith, it is great evidence of the supernatural work of the Spirit being done in their hearts. This is because the Holy Spirit doesn’t just remove all self-righteousness and trust in ourselves and put our faith entirely in Christ once; He continuously works in our hearts to show us how helpless we are and takes away every self-refuge and self-trust, so we continually put our faith only in the doings and sufferings of Jesus Christ. Our own pride, with remaining sin, the world, and the devil, constantly tries to move us from this pivotal resting point of Christ to something else, but the Spirit will continually bring us back to this point, forsaking all and trusting in Him and Him alone. Oh, may God help us to have this trait of saving faith.

Think about the four traits of biblical love. Do you love the saints?

  • Selfless: It’s not about what they did to me. Agape is selfless love that seeks the highest good of the other person, regardless of the cost to oneself. This is how Jesus loved us, and this is the standard He holds up for us to follow. He says in John 13:34, “A new commandment I give unto you, that you love one another.” How? “As I have loved you, that you love one another.”
  • Tangible: Does your love go beyond saying hello and shaking hands? Do people see that you love the saints? If you run away as soon as church is over, it actually shows you don’t love the saints at all. When we love the people of God, it shows itself, and then we have an attachment. You love to be with them. You are drawn to them. You see, love is never content to have its object at a distance. If you love your wife or husband, you want to be with them. The more love, the greater your effort to always be with them. If you love the saints, every time the doors are open, every time you have a free evening, you have to be with the people of God.
  • A Fruit of Faith: This is a test for some of you to seriously examine: Do you love to be with church people, or do you prefer the company of the world and its entertainments and the ease of Pharaoh’s house rather than to suffer affliction? Do you see meeting as a duty or a delight to be enjoyed? If you don’t enjoy it now, how will you enjoy it for all eternity with the people of God when one or two hours a week is all you want now? Listen, if the seed of the matter is not in you now, the fruit of it will not be born in eternity. David said in Psalm 84:10, “A day in thy courts is better than a thousand. I’d rather be a doorkeeper in the house of my God than to dwell in the tents of the wicked.”
  • Impartial: “Oh yes, I love, I have two friends who are alike.” Both of them every week discuss what wrong things the pastor did or what wrong clothes others are wearing. Is that love? No. Love is for all the saints. Do people see you love everyone in the church? When you love the people of God, you long for their good growth. You labor for it in ministry. You cry out for it in prayer. You take thoughtful initiative in seeking to help them grow and labor. You are not content to merely be fed yourself. You seek to feed and build up your Christian brothers around you. You say, “But it’s hard to minister to the people of God.” Well, then, endure hardness as a good soldier of Jesus Christ. We weren’t called to a life of ease when we became Christians.

We were called to carry a cross. “If any man will come after me,” Jesus says, “let him deny himself and take up his cross daily and follow me.” To deny yourself means to get your body off the bed or the sofa in the evening, to switch off the TV, and to come to church on Sunday evening. Don’t keep missing services and say you have faith and love the church. Hebrews says not to make it a habit but to meet as often as you can, lest you be hardened by the deceitfulness of sin. May God stir you to obedience in these areas.

If you have these two signs of faith and love, even if not perfectly but faintly, blessed be God! You can have all the confidence that you are elect and partakers of all the blessings of Ephesians 3-14. Otherwise, can I plead with you to work on expressing this faith and love visibly?

Sealed Guarantee – Eph 1:13-14

In him you also trusted, after you heard the word of truth, the gospel of your salvation; in whom also, having believed, you were sealed with the Holy Spirit of promise, who is the guarantee of our inheritance until the redemption of the purchased possession, to the praise of His glory.

When Peter fixed his gaze on Christ, he was able to walk on any storm calmly. When he took his eyes off our Lord, he was filled with fear and tension. The reason we get so shaken, tense, upset, confused, and filled with grief and bitterness is that we are over-focused on ourselves and this world. God’s great desire and will for His people is that we be focused on Him and His unchangeable blessings, so we feel completely secure in Him. Even if the whole world seems to be shaking, God wants us to be unshakable in Him.

Everything else in life may be unstable—our health, our family, our job, our society, our world. You may feel as if you are in a building on the 100th floor and there is a big earthquake, and you are falling down, down, not knowing what will happen next. You feel yourself losing balance and falling, and everywhere you try to keep your feet, you slip and fall down; every brick you grab comes out of the wall, and you feel yourself falling down without control. Even then, God wants His children not to fear and to feel 100% secure in God, like the Psalmist in Psalm 46:1-3, “God is our refuge and strength, a very present help in trouble. Therefore we will not fear, even though the earth be removed, and though the mountains be carried into the midst of the sea; though its waters roar and be troubled, though the mountains shake with its swelling.”

Apostle Paul lived such a fearless life in God. He summarizes his life in Christ in 2 Corinthians 11:25-28, “Three times I have been beaten with rods; once I was stoned. Three times I have been shipwrecked; a night and a day I have been adrift at sea; on frequent journeys, in danger from rivers, danger from robbers, danger from my own people, danger from Gentiles, danger in the city, danger in the wilderness, danger at sea, danger from false brethren; in toil and hardship, through many a sleepless night, in hunger and thirst, often without food, in cold and exposure. And apart from other things, there is the daily pressure upon me of my anxiety for all the churches.” How can such a man, instead of dying from tension, a nervous breakdown, or a heart attack, be so stable and powerful in his soul? How can he plant and strengthen many churches, write letters that will change world history, and, while jailed for preaching the gospel and knowing his head may be cut off at any moment, still dream of going to Spain to spread the gospel if released? The unshakable stability, determination, and assurance of the apostle Paul came from one great discovery: even if the whole world shakes, we can be unshakable in God. God’s will is that we feel so fully secure and assured in Him. That is what God wants us to feel today in verses 13 and 14.

In verse 13, the key word is “sealed,” and in verse 14, the key word is “guarantee.” Both words are used to give unshakable, infallible assurance in our hearts of God’s grace. But you may say, “Pastor, that is how I want to feel about God’s eternal love and security, but there are some verses of warning or some messages you give that seem to shake that assurance.” There are many warning verses in the Bible, and some tell us to self-examine. It would be wrong to avoid those texts; the way to have biblical assurance is not to avoid them. It is a misunderstanding to think those verses take away our assurance. In fact, they are given as a warning not to feel secure in anything other than God. This is because our default mode is to base assurance on worldly things. If you find security in your feelings, devotion, pride, self-righteousness, good works, circumstances, family, job, or money, those texts are given to make us turn away from those things and feel 100% secure only in God and His grace.

So today, we come to verses 13-14. Paul concludes his praise—he praised the Father for election and predestination and the Son for redemption and administration. Now he finally moves to the work of the Holy Spirit. The key phrase is “sealed with the Holy Spirit.” We will cover three headings: 1. The meaning of sealing, 2. The means of sealing, and 3. The goals of sealing.


The Meaning of Sealing

“Sealing” was a common word in those days, and Paul takes this common word to show us what a glorious work the Holy Spirit does in us. A seal in biblical times was used for three things.

1. A Sign of Ownership: Something marked a slave or an animal to show “this is mine; this is my purchased property.” In the old days, we would engrave a seal on steel. Today, companies put a patented trademark on a product to show ownership.

2. Authenticity and Authority: Kings would seal a letter with their signet ring to place their authenticity and authority behind the message. If someone says, “We have a letter from the King,” how do we know the message is not false? Because the seal confirms its originality and his authority. In our currency, the only difference between a counterfeit note and an original is the seal.

3. Security and Protection: This involves keeping something valuable safe and inviolable. Revelation 7:3 mentions the seal of God put on the forehead of God’s servants both to show His ownership and to protect them from the wrath coming upon the world. In Matthew 27:66, the tomb of Jesus was secured by a seal of protection. Anyone who broke that seal would face the wrath of the Roman government. Even books were sealed to protect them so no one should violate the message.

These are the three basic uses of a seal: ownership, originality, and protection. So when Paul says you were sealed, he means three things. By giving the Holy Spirit to you, firstly, God marked His ownership on you. You belong to God, bearing the mark of God’s own possession. You are His trademark, and He is working in you; you are His product. God says, “Hands off, this is my property.”

Secondly, out of millions of Satan’s counterfeits claiming to be God’s people, God has taken His royal signet ring and marked you as His original. There is a true work of God in our lives; the Holy Spirit’s seal is God’s patented mark.

Thirdly, God not only marked you as His own and authenticated your originality, but this seal secures you now and for all eternity. This seal makes you an indestructible, protective seal. In Revelation, there are billions of cruel, torturing demons in the world who want to enter and control us and destroy us, with millions of false teachings, but the Holy Spirit as a seal is protection against all those evil forces. No demons would dare to enter a person bearing the mark of God’s own possession. In a way, demons come rushing, but they see this mark and stand back, thinking, “This person is sealed with the Holy Spirit.” That is why you are daily protected in this world. The seal makes you off-limits to evil forces.

There are millions of temptations to sin that we could easily fall into every minute and perish eternally, but the Holy Spirit will not allow us to continually go on sinning and apostatize and perish. The reason you have not fallen and you persevere, and the reason you continue to this day in His truth and you came to church today is this seal. This seal will protect us until He completes His full work of redemption in us. So the next topic of Paul’s praise is God sealing us with the Holy Spirit as His own, original, and protected treasures.

Paul uses a particular aspect of the Holy Spirit’s ministry to give us assurance. The word “seal” is used because God wants us to feel an unconditional guarantee, secure and safe in His love and power. “Don’t worry about anything, I have sealed you.” This should provide a solid foundation for peace and safety.

Last week, in my teaching about assurance, I taught that infallible assurance rests on three pillars. The first comes objectively from the blood and righteousness of Jesus Christ as revealed in the gospel. The two other pillars are the inward evidence of the graces of the Holy Spirit and the testimony of the Holy Spirit. It is the Holy Spirit’s work in us that gives us that unshakable, infallible, certain assurance in our experience that we are truly saved, our sins are forgiven, we are justified, and we are adopted. Do you see what a blessing the sealing of the Holy Spirit is? Oh, may He give that assurance today for every child of God.

Notice He is called the Holy Spirit of promise. Why? The gift of the Spirit was a great promise of the New Covenant (Ezekiel 36:27, Joel 2:28-29, and Jesus’s own promise in Acts 1:4-5). We have seen earlier that the giving of the Holy Spirit is the crowning blessing of redemption promised in the Old Testament. Christ could have come, died, risen, and gone to heaven, but if He didn’t send His Holy Spirit and we were not sealed with the Holy Spirit, none of the work of Christ could be applied to us. We would not experience any of those blessings. All the blessings stored up in Christ are conveyed as an experiential reality inwardly by the Spirit. Everything we enjoy right now in salvation is because of the Holy Spirit. He brings into our experience all the promises of God: the joy of forgiveness, the peace of justification, the acceptance, the witness of our adoption, and the assurance of our inheritance.

So as you go home, and your week becomes dull, when you are washing dishes, working at a low-paying job, or struggling, meditate on this blessing from God. God has put His original seal on you. You are His own; you are His original product in the midst of 101 counterfeits. Anyone who teaches you touches the apple of God’s eye. You are protected. “Blessed be God, I am sealed by the Holy Spirit.”

To those of you who are not sealed with the Holy Spirit, do you not want to be? There is no greater gift in the universe than the sealing of the Holy Spirit. What a wonderful, invaluable gift the Holy Spirit is. It was promised by the Father to Christ in an eternal covenant as a reward for His great work. Christ did all His work of redemption to purchase this gift for us. Christ said He would be “better than me.” All the rich blessings and inheritance I have purchased for you—my peace I leave you, my joy in fullness, my power, my glory, my love, my grace, my eternal life, benefits flowing from my sacrifice, resurrection, ascension, and session—He will make them an experiential reality for you, indwelling you in a way I couldn’t, so it is better. He is the Spirit of all gifts; He will give you gifts to serve, enlighten you, sanctify you, make you wise, and give you boldness and the right words to make you a powerful witness. The Holy Spirit is Christ’s greatest legacy wealth He left for us as believers. The Holy Spirit was sent to apply all the blessings Christ purchased for us in our lives. What an incredible promise. All should desire this sealing.

Revelation shows that there are only two groups of people in the world: those who have the seal of God and those who have the mark of the beast. The seal is put on the forehead and hand, indicating that you love to think of God’s word and you have a desire to obey God’s word. Those of you who do not have the mark of God are also sealed by the devil, with the mark of the beast on your head. You are always thinking of the world—the lust of the world, covetousness, anger, and bitterness—and that mark is also on your hand. According to the mark on your forehead, everything you do is against God; you disobey Him. Revelation 14:9 says, “If anyone receives a mark of a beast, he also will drink the wine of God’s wrath, poured full strength into the cup of his anger, and he will be tormented with fire and sulfur in the presence of the holy angels and in the presence of the Lamb. And the smoke of their torment goes up forever and ever, and they have no rest, day or night.” This is the future of whoever receives the mark of the beast. I fear some of you are receiving that mark. Wake up before it becomes a permanent mark. Now, the great question is, how can anyone be sealed with the mark of God?


The Means of Sealing

How is one marked with the ownership, originality, and protective divine seal of God? Oh, this is a great question for the ages. What should we do? Should we climb a mountain, do ten years of penance, or perform 101 rituals? Pentecostals say we have to fast for 40 days, wait for the Holy Spirit’s baptism, fully surrender to God, do this and that, and then you get a spirit that will make you jump for joy and speak gibberish. That is wrong because the Holy Spirit is not given for anything we do but is given as a gift of Christ’s ascension. How were the Ephesians sealed? Notice Paul mentions two steps in verse 13: hearing and believing. “In him you also trusted, after you heard the word of truth, the gospel of your salvation; in whom also, having believed, you were sealed with the Holy Spirit of promise.”

The first step is hearing. What did they hear? The world spends all their time hearing useless things. The Ephesians heard useless things all their lives, but one day they heard something. No one in the universe can be sealed without hearing this. What did the Ephesians hear that led to sealing? Paul uses two phrases: “the word of truth” and “the gospel of salvation.” These are not two different things; each phrase explains and supports the other.

“Word” means a verbal message. What message? The message of truth. Truth is the proclamation of ultimate reality. Then, the gospel of salvation is the good news of deliverance from sin and all its consequences. Why does he say “the word of truth”? It’s not a myth, a philosophy, or men’s opinion, but God’s absolute, unchanging truth about humanity’s condition (sin) and God’s provided salvation (Christ). The world never hears the truth because they always live with the devil’s lie that there is no one absolute truth. When we tell them the truth, they keep asking Pilate’s question, “What is truth?” They think there is no absolute truth. They think whatever one thinks or feels is truth, their tradition, circumstances, surroundings, troubles in life, or felt needs is truth. Paul says no, beyond all that, there is ultimate reality. Not only is there ultimate truth, but that truth can be intelligently expressed or spoken in human words. That is why he uses the phrase “the word of truth.” Some people would say, “Yes, there is absolute truth, but it’s somewhere up there and no one knows it or can tell us.” Paul says, “I told you the absolute one truth.” Paul also affirms that truth can be intelligently understood. He doesn’t say you felt or experienced it, but you “heard and understood.” Our blessed God has stooped to reveal truth in human words in such a way that they can be expressed and understood. People say, “Oh, you have to experience the truth; I cannot explain it.” No, no. Ultimate truth can be expressed and understood.

Then he uses the phrase “gospel of salvation.” The truth that can be spoken and understood through words is focused on the gospel of salvation: the good news of salvation. “Gospel” means joyous tidings, and “salvation” is deliverance from sin and all its consequences. What is the content of the gospel of salvation? He summarizes it for the same Ephesians church in Acts 20:27 as the “whole counsel of God.” It comes from God by revelation; it tells us how holy God is, and how sinful man is, and what God has done through His Son, Jesus Christ, for us. In Acts 20:21, he gives a summary of that gospel command: “testifying both to Jews and to Greeks repentance toward God and faith toward our Lord Jesus Christ.” Here is the substance of his gospel.

The gospel not only tells us that God is our creator, provider, and judge and how we destroyed that relationship with our fall and sin, but it tells us that the relationship can be restored by two things: repentance toward God and faith in Jesus Christ. This is faith in who Jesus Christ is and what He has done for sinners. His unique person and unique work are the only hope for sinners. We must fully believe in Him, forsake all other ways to God, leave our arrogance and pride, and humbly come as you are. You don’t have to achieve anything or do anything; just cast yourself upon Him as He is revealed in the gospel. When you do, you will be sealed with the Holy Spirit. This is the word of truth, the good news of salvation that the Ephesians heard through Paul. And what did they do? Unlike a few of you, you hear and don’t even give a proper response, but they believed it as the very word of God, as the ultimate truth.

What does “believe” mean? It is saving faith. Some have said that saving faith is self-commitment to Christ in all the glory of His person and in all the perfection of His work as they are so freely and fully offered to us in the gospel. They believed He lived the sinless life we can never live and died the death for our sins and drank the wrath of God for our guilt, and that He died, was buried, and rose again and ascended to the Father. Now, He is the only priest, king, and prophet through whom I can come to God. When this message came, they didn’t reject this message in arrogance, pride, false religion, or love of sin. They believed. They left all their false religion and ideas and believed the truth as the ultimate truth, transcending their problems, situation, and wrong religion. They didn’t wait for any experience or feeling to come to prove this message, nor did they wait until they became better to earn this salvation. No, they believed. They heard, they believed, and so as a result of that, they were sealed with the Holy Spirit.

The only means of sealing with the Holy Spirit is hearing and believing the gospel. Anywhere you see this in the New Testament, whether in Acts 3 on Pentecost, or 10 when the gospel went to the Gentiles, or in the epistles, it is always when the gospel is preached, when people hear and believe, that they are sealed with the Holy Spirit. Faith comes by hearing (Romans 10:17). If you read Acts properly with context, you will not see any foolish ideas of a second blessing, a second experience of the baptism of the Holy Spirit, or waiting for the Holy Spirit to be given only to advanced, committed Christians. No, when common people heard the gospel and believed, they received the Holy Spirit. This is because the Holy Spirit is not given based on our commitment and godliness as if we earn it, but it is the purchased possession of the ascended Christ and is given as the highest gift of the ascended Lord. Yes, there is an aspect of the Holy Spirit’s filling that depends on our obedience and walk with Him, and not grieving the Holy Spirit, but the gift of the Holy Spirit has nothing to do with our commitment and obedience. He is given freely and graciously as a promise of the gospel if you hear, believe, and repent.

Notice the phrase “we are sealed with what? the Holy Spirit of promise.” He is mentioned as the Holy Spirit of promise. There is so much confusion about the works of the Holy Spirit, and so many demonic activities happen in the name of the Holy Spirit. The Holy Spirit, in His work of sealing, seals as the promised Holy Spirit. What does this mean? Whatever the Holy Spirit does in His work of sealing, He does it in complete consistency with all that is promised about Him. In Ezekiel 36:27, He is promised as someone who will cleanse us, take away our heart of stone, give us a new heart of flesh, and make us walk in God’s laws. In John 14, Jesus Christ promised, “When I go away, I will send the promised Holy Spirit.” What will He do? When He comes, He will convict the world of sin, righteousness, and judgment. He is the Spirit of truth; He will lead you into all truth, remind you of all I taught, and He will come to glorify me.

You can completely go wrong into all kinds of demonic counterfeits if you don’t realize what the promised works of the Holy Spirit are. He was not promised to make us giggle, laugh, or jump, or to make us speak gibberish, unlike the actual understandable foreign tongue. People from different nations understood what was spoken. No nation, no country in the world will understand the gibberish of these strange blabberings. He came to reveal and glorify Christ, to apply Christ’s redemption, and to make us like Christ. As His name itself suggests, He comes as the Holy Spirit. He doesn’t come to make us put on a show in church, pushing ladies, screaming, shouting, or acting like disorderly demons, and then secretly robbing money in the church and having wrong relationships with women. No, He comes to make us holy.


The Goals of Sealing

There are two goals for sealing: one is related to us, and the other is related to God.

Goal of Sealing for Us

Verse 14 says, “…who is the guarantee of our inheritance until the redemption of the purchased possession, to the praise of His glory.” “Guarantee” can also be translated as “earnest,” “pledge,” or “down payment.” It is the price given as a part of the guarantee for the whole payment in due time. We go to a car showroom, and how does the salesperson know we are serious about buying and not just window shopping? We will pay a down payment. That down payment gives the salesperson the assurance that I will come back and make the full payment. In the same way, notice that the Holy Spirit’s sealing is a down payment. A guarantee of what? Of our glorious inheritance. Is God serious about making me an heir of His glorious kingdom? Is there a truly imperishable, undefiled, unfading inheritance waiting for me? God says, “Here is My guarantee.” It’s amazing to see how much God wants to make us feel 100% assured. Not only is it a predestined inheritance, not only is God working all things according to the counsel of His will to accomplish that—all these objective assurances—but He goes beyond that to give a subjective, experiential assurance of our inheritance as a guarantee. He sends and seals us with the Holy Spirit. The sealing of the Holy Spirit is actually a foretaste of our eternal inheritance.

It is that Holy Spirit’s sealing that gave us the salvation experience. He made us see our sin and hate sin, gave us the joy of forgiveness, and witnessed that we are children of God. It is the Holy Spirit who gave us the desire to read His word, makes us understand things that even great people cannot understand, and fills us with divine joy when we grasp some truth. It is that Holy Spirit who is sanctifying us, making us more like Christ. It is through the Holy Spirit that we will experience more glorious joys as we grow in Christ in the coming days. All that experience is an installment and will make us yearn and be restless for the full payment. We have some of the Spirit’s joy and peace, but we want more. God says this is a foretaste and a guarantee, but much more is yet to come. This is the first fruit; the harvest is coming. God says, “I am not playing with you. I am dead serious about giving you the inheritance with all its eternal rich blessings. The Holy Spirit’s sealing is My guarantee.” So the goal of sealing for us is the guarantee of our inheritance. Verse 14 goes on to talk about the goal of sealing for God.

Goal of Sealing for God

The second goal of sealing for God is the praise of His glory. When does God get His full praise of His glory? When we obtain our final inheritance and experience our full redemption, that is when God receives the full praise of His glory. This will happen, as the verse says, “until the redemption of the purchased possession.” Ephesians 4:30 says, “Sealed with the Spirit unto the day of redemption.” The day of redemption is Christ’s second coming. At that time, we will experience our full payment of the inheritance. We will be completely redeemed from every last effect of the curse and the fall, perfected in holiness with resurrected bodies, sinless souls, a new heaven and a new earth, and we will reach a state of glorification.

Yes, God has purchased us as His own and sealed us with the Holy Spirit. But God’s goal for sealing is that we become His purchased possession in such a way that it is to the praise of His glory. What did He purchase us to be? A people such as we now are? Loving Him feebly, serving Him so poorly, sometimes being downright disobedient, bringing reproach to Him, and other times wondering if indeed we are even His own by the way we act? Is that what He purchased to have? A people in this divided, poor, stumbling state? No, no. He died to have a people who would be so completely redeemed that the whole universe will praise Him.

So the sealing of the Spirit, with the first fruits of His working, gives us a hunger for holiness, makes us realize how sinful we are, gives us a desire for His truth, and helps us little by little to overcome sin and grow in truth and holiness. You may sit dissatisfied today, wondering, “Where is all this taking us?” A day will come when we will be so pure, spotless, and holy—purified and presented without spot and without wrinkle. We will be to the praise of His glory for all eternity!

Will that really happen? Now, all the Holy Spirit’s experience inside you, transforming you, is God’s guarantee that it will definitely happen. The Holy Spirit’s experience is God’s guarantee that the complete redemption will be realized. And if God had no intention of completing it, He never would have given the first installment. So the ultimate intention in the sealing of the Spirit is this pledge of certainty that the redemption will be completed. Paul says we’ll receive it as God’s special possession, and it will result in the praise of God’s glory.

The glory of God is the outshining of His attributes. What is praise? It is a conscious, adoring recognition with thanksgiving of those attributes. So the ultimate purpose for which God has sealed us is that God Himself might be adored and praised and honored for all the outshining of His perfections in the great blessings of salvation. The whole universe will praise His love, wisdom, power, and grace in saving and transforming such dead lepers to such a height of glory that they become God’s purchased possession for all eternity. This is the outshining of the perfections of God’s character through us, and seeing that, the universe will acknowledge it, perceive it, and then praise Him for it. So we see the meaning, means, and two goals of sealing.

Application

This should make us bless God in the assurance He gives. God gives us a sealed guarantee. You may not have an easy life or a happy life; through many tribulations, you must enter the kingdom. Everything in the world may seem shaky. God says you can find complete joy and feel secure in Him. Fix your eyes on Him.

Behold, not only have I chosen you, predestined you to sonship, and redeemed you by my son, and his administration of summing up all things in him is working for your good, and I have given a glorious future predestined inheritance and am working all things according to the counsel to grant this to you. I am not just stating all this objectively; I went a step ahead, and to make you feel this assurance, to give you subjective, experiential assurance, I have sent my own spirit, the third person of the Trinity, into your hearts, not temporarily, but permanently sealed you as my own original, secured possession, never to be taken away. I have done this as a down payment for your future inheritance, giving you infallible assurance here on earth. We don’t wait until we reach heaven to enjoy all those blessings. The Holy Spirit is a foretaste of all those blessings. Then I have tied your inheritance to my eternal glory. As determined as I am to glorify myself, so determined I am to bless you with my inheritance. This is the greatest way to love you. Therefore, rejoice in this assurance. You are not only elected and redeemed, but sealed!

The Holy Spirit is a down payment from God. Some buyers may give a down payment and then lie and not pay in full and escape. Our God is a God who cannot lie, faithful even to keep His word; how much more to His down payment? Some men give a down payment and then die and may not make the full payment. But our God is an eternal God. He binds His eternal glory to our inheritance. How sure! Oh, if we can feel this certainty of full redemption and assurance no matter the circumstance, you will jump for joy and praise God like Paul in prison! How horrible is unbelief if we don’t believe His word. It is a lack of this assurance and doubt that spoils joyful praise in our life.

Romans 8:31-39: “What then shall we say to these things? If God is for us, who is against us? He who did not spare his own Son but gave him up for us all, how will he not also with him graciously give us all things? Who shall bring any charge against God’s elect? It is God who justifies. Who is to condemn? Christ Jesus is the one who died—more than that, who was raised—who is at the right hand of God, who indeed is interceding for us. Who shall separate us from the love of Christ?”

The idea is that if God overcame the greatest difficulties and enemies to save us and give us a down payment, it should give us assurance that He will certainly overcome every difficulty so we might receive the full redemption. Think of the chain of the redemption story. Redemption had to be accomplished, applied, and completed fully. Think of the things God did to accomplish our redemption. What were the great hindrances? On one side, our oceans of sin had to be atoned for to purchase a perfect righteousness for us. How did God accomplish it? The difficulty of our sin in God’s justice seemed insurmountable and impassable that it caused the enfleshment of His Son, a mysterious fusion of God and man. He lived for our righteousness and died for our sins. Redemption was accomplished.

Then the story is not over; redemption had to be applied. What are the hindrances? We were not weak or sleeping, but dead in our sins. We were, in the opposite direction, so alive to sins, so perverted in our sinful minds that we loved the very things that would damn us and hated the very things that would bring us blessing. But what did God do? By the power of His own Spirit and His effectual call, using the same power to raise Jesus Christ from the dead, He gave us new birth. He opened our blinded eyes and deaf ears, enlightening our minds, renewing our wills, taking away our hearts of stone, and giving us hearts of flesh. He made us feel and see our sin and see the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ. He brought us out of spiritual death into spiritual life.

If God overcame all those impossible difficulties to accomplish and apply your redemption, how much more will He overcome any difficulties to complete that redemption? Oh, may the Holy Spirit make us feel the assurance and certainty of our inheritance. There is a song, “Blessed assurance, Jesus is mine! O what a foretaste of glory divine! Heir of salvation, purchase of God.” Tell me why we should not be extremely happy in God.

I am not asking you to be happy in yourself, your family, or your job; that is when the problem comes, and God warns us. Although everything may be falling apart and shaking, your hope in God is steadfast. As we endure life’s shaking, we can be assured and happy in God. Shout for joy! His ultimate salvation is absolutely certain. Our inheritance is certain because of the down payment from God, who never lies or dies. No power in the universe will stop the full payment. The Holy Spirit’s witness inside us is a constant monument that God has committed Himself to the full payment. You can sing with us, “When peace like a river attendeth your way, when sorrows like sea billows roll, whatever your lot—I have taught you to say, ‘It is well, it is well, with your soul.'”

Warning to False Believers

While I want to give assurance to God’s children, I want to remove false assurance from others so you can experience true assurance. This happens through self-examination. The Holy Spirit’s fruits are a down payment of a future inheritance. The down payment is given now as a foretaste. Heaven completes the work of grace begun now. If you don’t have any signs of the seal, do not live in false hope. Without the fruits of the Holy Spirit, you should not deceive yourself. I have taught the signs of salvation: love and a desire to learn God’s word, obedience to His commands, love for the people of God, not continuing in sin, and perseverance in all of these. These are signs of the Holy Spirit’s fruits. Galatians 5:22 lists the fruits of the Holy Spirit: love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control.

Is the quality of your life, not perfectly, but at least to some measure, showing this? Are you growing like this? Are you the same as you were five years ago, with no growth in love at all, always bitter and hateful? Do you have no joy, always grumbling? No peace, always restless? Do you lack patience and self-control, always bursting in anger? Are you never satisfied or grateful, with an uneasiness of spirit? Do you control yourself? Are you never content, always wanting something more, a new device or some novelty? Are you dreadfully scared of disease and death, of leaving this world? I do not want to give you false hope. These are not foretastes of your inheritance; they are a few sparks of that eternal fire, a foretaste of hell, not heaven.

These are the marks of the beast, not the mark of God. In the same passage, Galatians 5:19-21 says, “Now the works of the flesh are evident, which are: adultery, fornication, uncleanness, lewdness, idolatry, sorcery, hatred, contentions, jealousies, outbursts of wrath, selfish ambitions, dissensions, heresies, envy, murders, drunkenness, revelries, and the like; of which I tell you beforehand, just as I also told you in time past, that those who practice such things will not inherit the kingdom of God.”

My heart breaks when I see some of you who live like this, because we can never say you have not heard the gospel. You have heard it again and again. God alone knows the number and has noted it in His judgment book to increase your punishment in hell, thousands or hundreds of thousands of times. You have sat here and heard not just my ideas, myths, or experiences, but the authoritative word of the living God. The word of the truth has come to you week after week, month after month, year after year, yet you do not have a single sign of any of the blessings of the sealing of the Spirit. There is still pride, anger, and covetousness. There is no self-control in your mouth or your life. Why do some joyfully enjoy the message and live with joy every week, with their lives changing, but it does nothing to you? Why? It is the same message, I am the same preacher, in the same place.

Why? Because although you have heard it many times, you have never once believed. All your relatives and friends may have an excuse on judgment day that they haven’t heard the word of truth; you cannot say that. You cannot blame God that He didn’t save you; no, God blames you. You know in your conscience that the reason you don’t believe the gospel is because of your love for the world, your love for sin, your arrogance, and the perversity and stubbornness of your heart. You are fearful of having to give up your covetousness and your love for these animal pleasures. It’s your love of sin that keeps you from believing.

As we saw, you have to truly not only understand the word of truth but believe it—believe it as God’s word. What I am saying is not my gospel; God’s authority is behind it. Only when you believe it as God’s word can you be sealed. See the grace of God; you don’t have to do anything. All that you need to do is believe the gospel. He calls upon you to repent and to believe the gospel. You’ll never know anything of the blessings of the sealing of the Spirit unless you hear and believe the word of the truth. You can go out blaming God that He is not saving you or fall prostrate before God like the blind beggar and beg, “Son of David, have mercy on me,” until He saves you.

You will be sealed and experience the Holy Spirit’s work inside you and deliverance from your sins. Otherwise, like a leper, in a few years, you will not be able to live with yourself or bear to see how horrible you are. May God open your eyes.

Important Lessons for Gospel Ministry

This should teach us important lessons for gospel ministry: a full zeal to preserve the purity of the gospel’s content and a full zeal to proclaim that message to all people. Our forefathers persevered in the purity of the gospel and proclaimed it, even to the point of death. If we truly want to do God’s work, not just satisfy our conscience that we are doing some gospel work and feel good about ourselves, we must have a zeal to preserve the purity of the gospel’s content.

Since the sealing of the Holy Spirit is closely connected with clearly hearing and believing the word of truth, we must be careful. Today, people tell us, “Don’t be so careful about the truth; just pressure them to believe somehow. Say something that will appeal to their needs and make a decision.” But true doctrine is the gateway into a true experience. The sealing of the Holy Spirit is an authentic Christian experience. If you don’t preach the truth, you are giving people a false experience. The gate for a true experience is the truth, the gospel of salvation. When someone tampers with the gate, Paul says, “let the curse of God fall upon them.” In Galatians 1:8-9, he says, “But even if we or an angel from heaven should preach a gospel other than the one we preached to you, let them be eternally condemned!” In 2 Thessalonians 2, Paul says that they all might be damned who believe a lie. They have faith, but faith in the wrong thing, and he says that brings damnation.

That’s why he again and again repeats the basics of the gospel in 1 Corinthians 15, the irreducible elements of it: “Christ died for our sins according to the Scriptures. He was buried. He was raised on the third day according to the Scriptures.” And he says it is by that gospel you are saved if you hold it fast. If you leave that, you believe a lie, and you are damned. The gate for a true Holy Spirit experience is truth and theology. Don’t shut that and make people believe a lie and send them to hell.

The Bible calls the true church the pillar of truth. In this day, which is full of apostasy, we must stand and persevere in the truth of the gospel. Since the sealing of the Spirit comes by means of the truth preached and heard, we should be zealous in proclaiming that truth. We all have to be actively engaged in sharing this gospel because no one else is doing it. They are all telling lies. There are hundreds of churches in our city with no truth or gospel, but they say they experience the sealing of the Holy Spirit. We must be suspicious of anything that claims to be the work of the Spirit in which the word of the truth is not loved. God should open our eyes to see people who are without the sealing of the Holy Spirit. People in traditional churches say, “Oh, they go to church and are happy. So what?” See? They may have religion, they may have morality, and some degree of ethical respectability, but if they do not have the Spirit, they are deceiving themselves and going to hell.

God will not automatically save. Romans 10:11, “For whoever shall call upon the name of the Lord shall be saved.” But “how shall they call on Him in whom they have not believed? And how shall they believe in Him of whom they have not heard? And how shall they hear without a preacher?” If they are to believe, they must hear. If they are to hear, there must be a proclaimer, someone who comes with the word of the truth.

Predestined Inheritance – Eph 1:11-12

We cannot live a proper Christian life without proper worship. Our life is a reflection of our worship. The quality of our Christian life is directly proportional to the depth of our worship. If our worship is superficial and emotional, our life will be like that. Ephesians 1:3-15 is called the tallest praise of all human praise. It is the most profound doxology in all of Holy Scripture. Of all the Old Testament praise, Psalm 103 stands tall above all other eulogies as pure praise unto God. Ephesians 1 is like the Psalm 103 of the New Testament. It is the tallest praise of all human praise. No human praise has been raised higher than this praise of Paul for the concepts within it, for its comprehensiveness, and for its depth, height, breadth, and length. Praise to the Triune God, all His works, and all the blessings of salvation are included in this.

Many of you tell me these messages are having a deep impact on your lives. Why? Because our life is a reflection of our worship. As we are learning how to worship God with Paul, that is the impact you see in your life.

Paul, as he is praising God for the blessing of salvation, is not intellectually listing them, but is like a child who’s been brought into a room full of toys and gifts and told, “All this is yours.” And he stands back, amazed, exclaiming, “Ooooh, look at this! Ohh!” So Paul is like an excited child. “Look at this… oh, look at the past election, predestination in eternity, historical redemption for me before I was born, and then the present administration of Christ for my greatest good.” Now, moving on to verse 11, he looks at a future blessing and continues his marvelous worship. When we call people to worship, they often ask, “Do you have praise and worship?” We can say, “We are not interested in concert musical praise and worship.” Yes, we have Paul’s Praise and Worship. True worship is not a hot heart with an empty mind, but a hot heart with an enlightened mind. Let’s just join that.

Now we come this morning to verse 11. Let us understand it with three questions: What is this new blessing? How did you get this blessing? Why did you get this blessing? What, How, Why? All this tells us how glorious this blessing is.


What Is This Blessing?

Verse 11 says, “In Him also we have obtained an inheritance.” If you look at different translations, you will get different words. Different commentaries will explain it differently. You may say, “We don’t have time to read one translation, so how can we look at different translations? We trust you, Pastor, you just go on and explain.” There are some who do a deep study and compare verses, so I need to mention a few things for them. I believe we come here not to just get an emotional kick or a motivational speech, but to use our minds and conscience so we leave believing we have really heard God’s word. So if you, for five minutes, do some Bible trekking with me, I will teach you one of the most important principles on how to study difficult passages.

Our version, NKJV, says we have obtained an inheritance. NASB and many other translations say we were made a heritage. Commentators are divided on this. Many big commentators, like Hendrickson, say we are made God’s heritage. So which is right? The Bible teaches both. Has God made us His inheritance? Yes, the Bible teaches that in many places. If someone teaches that, it is not wrong. On the other hand, does the Bible teach that God gives us an inheritance? Yes. So both are biblical truths. How do we know which meaning Paul is using here? This is the challenge you face with some passages. For example, my dear brother Rajath was humbly debating with me, saying some people argue, and he also believes, that in verse 8, “wisdom and prudence” is talking about God’s wisdom and prudence, and not about us receiving wisdom and prudence.

Now how do we decide? This will be greatly helpful in your Bible study. In all such cases, the immediate CONTEXT is king. The reason I believe verse 8 talks about grace overflowing to us in all wisdom and prudence is because of the gospel, and here in verse 11, it is not God making us His inheritance, but we are receiving an inheritance. How?

Here are five reasons:

  1. Pre- and post-context. The whole context is all praise. Remember how he started this whole section? Verse 3 says, “God blessed us with every spiritual blessing.” He goes on with a long list of blessings that we have received. Therefore, anything that follows, we should be predisposed to think that Paul’s focus is upon a blessing we receive, because that’s the theme announced in verse 3. Not only the pre-context of verse 3, but the post-context also supports this. You’ll notice in verse 14, the Holy Spirit of promise, who is the guarantee of our inheritance, is talking about what we receive.
  2. Grammatical voice. The voice is passive, where we don’t do anything; we are not made anything; we just receive it as a gift.
  3. Analogy of Scripture. Compare other portions. Colossians is a parallel epistle to Ephesians with a similar flow. There, in Colossians 1:12, he talks about God having qualified us to be “partakers of the inheritance of the saints in the light.” You can see Colossians 1:9 also talks about wisdom and prudence, not as God’s. Verse 9 says, “Paul, I pray for you, and to ask that you may be filled with the knowledge of His will in all wisdom and spiritual understanding, that you may walk worthy of the Lord, fully pleasing Him, being fruitful in every good work.”
  4. Word meaning and relationship of other words in the verse. Verse 11 says, “In Him also we have obtained an inheritance, being predestined according to the purpose of Him…” Where did we see “predestination”? Verse 5 says, “having predestined us to sonship.” Common sense tells us that if there is adoption, there will always be an inheritance, right? Even Scripture inseparably links sonship and inheritance. Romans 8:16-17 says, “The Spirit Himself bears witness with our spirits that we are the children of God, and if sons, then heirs—heirs of God and joint heirs with Jesus Christ.”
  5. The progression of thought. The entire passage is a flow of blessings we have received from God, not what we are to God.

For all these reasons, I believe it talks about the inheritance we receive. Though both meanings are correct, they have different perspectives and applications. See how difficult it is to prepare a biblical sermon, not just to blabber something to make you feel good, but to accurately divide the Word. My son used to say when he was small, “What’s so difficult? You just sit on a laptop and type, and the sermon comes.” Now he is breaking his head preparing for youth meetings every week. I have a suspicion that God purposely makes some passages difficult. First, so we don’t throw pearls before swine and lazy people don’t get it. Second, to make us depend on the Holy Spirit. This passage has driven me to prayer so many times. “Oh Lord, what is Paul saying? Help me.” If it were easy, I wouldn’t have gone to God like that. Third, sometimes it is to make us realize that His ways are beyond our minds.

Also, I think a natural problem with many of us and with commentators is to interpret the Bible based on our own bias or experience. That is a big danger. If I don’t have much experience with wisdom and prudence and don’t experience much of an inheritance, I may say it is all talking about God’s wisdom and prudence, and not what we receive. We have to seek to experience what God has promised, but not interpret the Bible according to our present experience. Here, the author is Paul, who had experienced the height of God’s wisdom and prudence and in faith rejoiced about his inheritance.

Okay, Pastor, enough of the trekking; let us start the message. Okay, so what is this blessing? The blessing is an inheritance. Paul says we have also obtained an inheritance. Not only election in eternity, redemption, and forgiveness of all our sins in the past, but the present administration of a government to work all things for our good in our life now, but we also have a great, bright future hope. He calls it an inheritance. It is a wonderful word.

We have heard the story of an orphaned beggar living a miserable life, and one day a long line of cars picks him up and tells him he is the only heir to a vast fortune like that of Elon Musk, Ambani, or Tata. A very thrilling plot—overnight, he becomes the richest man. He didn’t receive this great inheritance because of anything he did. He is not a man who worked hard in life and came up, but the only thing that made him eligible for this vast inheritance was his birth into a family. Can you imagine his unbelievable excitement and joy? God wants us to experience an excitement far beyond any beggar becoming a billionaire overnight today.

That is Paul’s excitement when he thinks of his inheritance. This is the finale, the crescendo, the climax of his praise. You have seen the climax of a concert or a song will be very grand. I keep teaching people we should meditate until we are fired up like coals. Paul, sitting in prison, meditating on the panoramic blessing of salvation, felt a fire and suffering that started burning with unbearable pressure building up in his soul. As if a bomb had blasted, he began his praise, “Blessed be God the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ,” and the bomb kept blasting and blasting. Now this is the climax of its blast: “We have obtained an inheritance.” We need to feel that heat of his heart.

This is not a small thrill for Paul. Looking at other passages, we can say this is his highest thrill. Maybe someone asked Paul, “God may have blessed you in eternity, redeemed you, and is working all things for good now by His administration, but you are suffering in jail. What is your future?” Oh, his face would brighten, and he would say, “Listen; I may be suffering now in jail. If you ask me why I am so joyful and hopeful even in the midst of these sufferings, it’s because I have a grand future, a future that will bring an unprecedented experience of blessings.” He says in Romans 8:18: “For I consider that the sufferings of this present time are not worth comparing with the glory that is to be revealed to us.” And in 2 Corinthians 4:17: “For this light momentary affliction is preparing for us an eternal weight of glory beyond all comparison.” “There is laid up for me the crown of righteousness.”

There is such an amazing future inheritance coming to us. The Bible says no mind has imagined it, no eye has seen it, no ear has heard it. Now, how do you preach that eternal inheritance to people who are so absorbed in the temporary world? After the fall, our soul is dead, and all our excitement is for bodily pleasures, for the world, money, and food. How can we make you realize how glorious our inheritance is? We hear “inheritance” and think of crores of rupees and houses.

The challenge is, how can we teach a Stone Age tribal forest man about computers and AI? There are no examples in his world that can match the tech world. For most of us, this world is everything. We stand jaw-dropping at all the worldly things, like money. How can we explain the glory of eternal inheritance? Unless God opens our eyes, we cannot grasp it. That is Paul’s first prayer in verse 18: “the eyes of your understanding being enlightened; that you may know what is the hope of His calling, what are the riches of the glory of His inheritance in the saints.”

I also pray God should open our eyes even as we hear His word today. Oh, if God would but draw back the veil! If He were to grant us even a glimpse of the unfathomable splendor that awaits us, the resplendent glory of our future, we would be thrilled to our very marrow, ignited with an unquenchable joy. In that radiant light, the wealth and comforts of this life would fade to insignificance, and we would be very happy to live like a beggar our whole lives, like Lazarus, if God opened our eyes to see our inheritance. It is worldly attachment that blinds us.

God has been trying to teach us about the glory of His inheritance with types from the beginning. The concept of inheritance is progressively revealed in the Bible, from Genesis to Revelation. Let us see these types.

The Old Testament type is the promised land of Israel as a type of inheritance. When the people of God were still children in spirituality, God used worldly things to teach spiritual realities. We are clearly learning that in Leviticus. When God made a covenant with Israel, He promised them an inheritance. That was the worldly, temporal, large, fertile land of Canaan, flowing with milk and honey. Under that administration of theocracy, dealing with them as a nation, He gave them the material blessing of the land of Israel. That was a shadow of the coming eternal inheritance. When God’s people were in a nursery class in their spiritual life. After the fullness of time, when Christ, the full revelation, came, God wants to bring us to graduate in the New Testament. But many people today want to go back to the nursery class and stick with the land of Israel, always watching the news of Israel. False teachers use those Old Testament physical blessings and cheat millions today with prosperity gospel, without knowing the ABCs of progressive biblical revelation, or having any saving faith or spirituality. But many true saints, even in the Old Testament, matured in faith and saw beyond the promised material land. Hebrews 11:16 says they “looked for a better, that is, a heavenly country. Therefore God is not ashamed to be called their God, for He has prepared a city for them.” This was the hope of all spiritual, godly people in Israel. The land of Israel was a sample type of the eternal inheritance.

Secondly, the Bible shows our inheritance is all the glorious eternal blessings summed up in the phrase, Kingdom of God. 1 Corinthians 6:9: “Be not deceived, know ye not that the unrighteous shall not inherit the kingdom of God?” Galatians 5:21: “They who do such things shall not inherit the kingdom of God.” Jesus will say on the last day, as in Matthew 25:34, “enter into that kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world.” The idea is that our inheritance is so glorious that we will not inherit a dry, barren forest. But a prepared kingdom, filled with richness, glory, safety, happiness, vast wealth of gold, with God reigning and revealing His glory and grace. In those days, a big monarch would prepare a glorious kingdom and hand over their whole prepared kingdom to their children; it would be vast. And so, we will receive the whole Kingdom of God. How big and vast and rich the Kingdom of God will be! We will inherit a whole kingdom with all its glorious riches.

Thirdly, Peter says that however much we explain, you will not grasp it. So he will tell you negatively what our inheritance is not. 1 Peter 1:4 says, “to an inheritance incorruptible and undefiled and that does not fade away, reserved in heaven for you.” It has three traits.

My son was saying, “Dad, see my friend there, his father has a 3,500 crore asset. Don’t you feel anything?” I told him, “Once I used to beat my mouth and breast in envy, but I don’t have that feeling now, because I realized… with all that 3,500 crore, he will have more tensions and worries. But he will eat just like me, with one stomach. If he eats more lavishly, he will soon become sick and have to be on a diet; soon he will leave the world and then face eternal torment. But God has promised me something better.” “Here is my inheritance, and tell me if there is any 3,500 crore or Elon Musk’s 420 billion USD, or an Indian’s 3.5 lakh crore, if there is any inheritance that has these three traits.”

  • First, it is incorruptible. What is there in this world that is incorruptible? The same Elon Musk is now fighting with Trump, facing major problems in his company, and his stocks are going down. We don’t know if 420 billion will become 4 billion. How many rich men this world has seen, with how many mansions, fortresses, and kingdoms? They all perished or are now old museums. There is nothing incorruptible, but God has promised something that is incorruptible. No one can destroy it or reduce it. Sir, you may have wealth for 10 generations to sit and eat, but I ask, “What about the 11th generation? The children will beg.” See, my inheritance is incorruptible for thousands of generations. A 3,500 crore asset, if I spend 10 rupees, the 3,500 is reduced, right? You cannot say you have a 3,500 asset now. All wealth in this world has a trait that will be spent and perish. Isn’t that our worry always? All our wealth here is perishable. Oh, we spend so much, we will fall into debt or become a beggar. But God promises an inheritance you can spend for all eternity, and it will never perish. Wow! Many rich people don’t enjoy their wealth with the fear of a reducing asset. We also live with that fear. Imagine how much we can enjoy for all eternity if we have an incorruptible, imperishable inheritance. Daily world tours in a 5-star hotel… you should see me then! How generous I will be! Never a worry about a budget.
  • Second, it is undefiled. This talks about the defilement of sin. Everything in the world is defiled by sin. Even the money we give to God, the tithes we would have earned working hard, it could have been used for murder, adultery, or robbery. We don’t know. It is all defiled. We buy land, how many people have fought and killed to acquire lands? Then when buying the land, who pays the accurate government rate? The buyer and seller cheat the government. They don’t sell at the government rate. How many cheating and bribes happen when building a house? People may have pure 911 gold, but the money used to buy it… so much of it is defiled by sin. A 3,500 crore asset or some big Adani wealth… how much cheating, fraud, controlling the government, cheating the poor, tax evasion, cheating employees, not helping suffering people! See, our inheritances are all defiled. This is a sinful place, and it is purchased with a defiled cost. That is why it brings sorrow and sleeplessness. We live our lives with fear and tension, and then we die, and our children keep fighting for it. The ground is cursed, and all creation is defiled by man’s sin. Nothing is undefiled in this world.
  • Third, it is unfading. Where is there an unfading inheritance? We build a wonderful house with the ultimate paint outside. My uncle said, “a glass palace.” They built an apartment in front of it for two years. All the dust and mud made the new house look faded. My car, 10 years ago, “Oh, what a nice, big car.” My son keeps asking, “When will you change this car?” All faded. Also, whatever we buy, we are so excited when we buy it. We are excited for a month, but later we get used to it and get bored. Why does it fade? That is the nature of everything in the world. You buy a car for 10 crore, a 100 crore palace, a 3 lakh mobile. All of it fades. But this inheritance… we will never get bored or weary. It is always fresh, always bright, and always an exciting inheritance. It is unfading.

So choose your pick: Do you want 3,500 crore here or this glorious inheritance? Jesus said, “where your treasure is, there your heart will be.” Where is your focus? On the perishing, defiled, fading world, or on an imperishable, undefiled, unfading inheritance?

So Paul is bursting with joy thinking about the expansiveness of God’s salvation in Christ. He sees our past—election in eternity, history, past sins all forgiven and redeemed. He sees our present—administration all for my good, summing up everything in Christ. The climax of his praise is his future: “we have obtained an inheritance.”

We have seen the blessing of inheritance. Let us now see how this blessing came to us and why this came to us. All this further amplifies the glory of our inheritance.


How Did This Come to Us?

Verse 11: “In Him also we have obtained an inheritance, being predestined according to the purpose of Him who works all things according to the counsel of His will.” Having been predestined according to purpose. This is the exact same phrase used in verse 5, meaning “to decide upon beforehand.” This is again a great doctrine of predestination. This doctrine comes from the fact that God is eternal, outside of time and space. In eternity, before He created the world of space and time, God freely determined His purpose and plan. It didn’t depend on anything or any man; nothing of time can change what He predestined. Those are His decrees. Though everything may seem to work against it, what God predestined will come to pass. Just as evil men crucified Christ, Peter says in Acts that this was predestined by God, and that is why it happened.

I called this sermon “Predestined Inheritance.” I was amazed that Paul uses the great predestination plan for what? For our inheritance. Why? This is not some “pie in the sky by and by,” some distant, abstract concept. It shows the unshakable certainty of our inheritance. This predestined inheritance should give us complete assurance of our inheritance. If I am a child of God, come what may, I have an infinitely glorious inheritance reserved for me and will enjoy this inheritance forever with 100% guarantee. You can doubt anything, but you should never doubt your inheritance. Why? Because it is a predestined inheritance that you will attain. If God predestined something, it means it is a done deal! A wonderful comfort is that this predestined inheritance was not based on anything in us, anything in time. Nothing of time can change His predestination.

Our inheritance is predestined by God, promised by His Word, testified to by His Spirit, and has to be believed in by faith as if we see it with our eyes. And hope does not disappoint. This assurance fills us with our hope of glory, gives us joy, confidence, and boldness, even in the face of opposition and affliction, just as it did for Paul. Oh, if God opens our eyes, we will be like Moses, of whom Hebrews 11:26 says, “He considered the reproach of Christ greater wealth than the treasures of Egypt, for he was looking to the reward.”

So the question is, “How did this inheritance come to us?” The answer is that it came to us when God elected us and predestined us in eternity. Remember, He predestined us to adoption as sons. At that time, God had predestined that we should receive this inheritance as the ultimate, final blessing of our election. This inheritance is not something that was decided later in time, but this was the ultimate blessing of God’s predestination in the past eternity.

See, it was not because we did something. It was not by accident or human choice, or because we asked for or earned this inheritance. It comes to those for whom it was prepared and planned in God’s predestination. Paul is able to lift up his soul in pure praise to God alone because not only did He elect and redeem me, but He has predestined a glorious inheritance for me. It is all because of the Father’s benevolent design. Yes, we receive this inheritance because Christ by His life and blood purchased this. Christ’s work could be the effectual secondary cause, but the primary cause of our receiving this inheritance is the Father’s gracious predestination. That is why Paul goes beyond the work of Christ and traces this blessing to the eternal counsels of God, and he acknowledges that the fountainhead of this blessing is the sovereign elective purposes of God.

Do you see that a man cannot raise himself to this height of pure worship and praise unless he understands these grand truths of election and predestination? There is no merit of his own, no nonsense about free will, but it all comes from the Father through the Son by absolute sovereignty and free grace. So Paul traces this great blessing of the inheritance back to the predestinating work of God.

Then, notice verse 11: “In Him also we have obtained an inheritance, being predestined according to the purpose of Him…” He adds, “who works all things according to the counsel of His will.” Why does he add that? If you have any questions about whether we are going to attain that inheritance, or if any devil, sin, world, or powers of hell can stop us from attaining that inheritance, he adds this phrase to remove every milligram of doubt in your heart and give us 100% unshakable assurance. The God who predestined you to this inheritance is also the God who “works all things according to the counsel of His will.”

Oh, how this should fire up our praise! The word “predestination” itself is a big word. If God predestined something, nothing can change it. That is amplified by saying He “works all things.” The word “works” is a very strong word; “whose almighty power works all things.” “Works” means that He actively brings these things to pass.

See, the idea is that this is not some distant working, but a present, active working in every aspect of your life. It is almighty power working outside of you by administration to work all things for your good, and His power, as Philippians 2:13 says, “God works in you to will and to do.” He is effectively, effectually, and energetically working to fulfill His predestination and get you to your inheritance. That is the reason He sent His Son, that is the reason He saved you and brought you to church, that is the reason you are sitting here today; He is teaching you all this, and He is working all things in your life.

The Father who has chosen you and predestined you to sonship is right now powerfully and energetically working all things in every realm—heaven and earth, men and devils and angels—to fulfill His eternal decree. That is what is called the providence of God. Those grand words, “predestination” and “God’s powerful working providence,” are given to you so you may have an infallible assurance, not a guess or an imagination, that you will attain your inheritance. Nothing in the universe will be able to stop that, because nothing can hinder His predestination and powerful providential working.

No wonder, even in jail, Paul is filled with joy and falls prostrate at the feet of this great, unfettered Sovereign of the universe, who has an all-embracing plan and who is actively accomplishing that plan on the earth. This is biblical worship, not the stupid, superficial, sentimental “God is love.” You cannot worship the God of the Bible without grasping His predestination. Oh, child of God, if you are wondering what God is doing in your life, God is taking you to enjoy this glorious inheritance.


Why Did We Get This Blessing?

So we have seen what the blessing is—an inheritance. And how did it come to us—through the predestination of the One who works all things according to His plan? Now for the third question: Why? Did we achieve something for this? Did we earn this? Do we even need this? Now, a great question: Why would this great sovereign God, at such a great cost to Himself, put forth such a plan? Think of it. It costed Him the greatest sacrifice. When we plan, we would plan things that are easy, that don’t involve big sacrifices, risks, and pains on our side. In fact, our plans are to avoid unexpected pains. Why would He make such a plan that gave Him such pain and such a sacrifice of His only Son on the cruel cross?

Why, Lord, would you do this for such wretched, useless sinners? We can never pay You back, even if we glorify You for all eternity. Why would You shower not only election, redemption, and administration but even a future glorious inheritance? To redeem these depraved beings, run a government to save them, safely bring them to You, and bless them with an eternal inheritance? Why do such worms need such a glorious inheritance? You could just forgive them and leave them to survive somewhere.

Why? What is the ultimate goal of God in conferring this blessing? The answer is in verse 12: “that we who first trusted in Christ should be to the praise of His glory.” Wow! All He has done in conceiving this blessing and in conferring this blessing in His own sovereign counsel has as its specific goal that we should be to the praise of His glory. This means that we should be the means of causing His divine excellencies to be praised. The glory of God is the sum of all of His attributes, or any one of those attributes shining forth to men. That’s the glory of God.

But He uses a very interesting term. He says that we should be to the praise, not that we should just praise Him. This shows the glorious state we achieve when we receive our inheritance. What we become at that time, in our total person, will be such a reflection of the glory of grace that just being what we are will be an occasion for praise being rendered to God. Just our very being will make the universe praise God.

Now we are experiencing a foretaste of that inheritance. Ephesians 3:10 says, “that now unto the principalities and powers in the heavenly places might be made known through the church the manifold wisdom of God.” You may only see this building, the roof, and the people around, but do you know that the spiritual world is watching us? We may not have hundreds of pictures of angels and demons in the windows and roof as in a Catholic church, but spiritually it is true. Ephesians 3 says unseen spiritual beings called “the principalities and powers” are in the heavenly places. And what do they see? We who were wallowing in idolatry and the false religions of our forefathers, living in sin, now heard the gospel and are growing in truth. Christ has saved us and put us in His church. No power of hell can touch us. We come to worship God this morning from the heart, singing “Hallelujah! Praise Jehovah!” By just being God’s saved people, as new creatures, we are being prepared to be the cause for the praise of the glory of His grace, and those principalities and powers in the heavenly places have had to take note of what God has done in us and is doing in our lives. Just by being here this morning as believers worshiping God, you have been to the praise of the glory of His grace.

So when your full inheritance comes to you, you, in your very person, will be a reflection of the height of the riches of God’s grace, and you will be the cause for the praise of the glory of His grace. Not because you do something, but just by being you. Just as a lily, just as some exotic flower in a place where no one ever sees it, just by being there is a display of the wisdom and beauty of God. In the same way, you are to be to the praise of the glory of His grace.

So then, the ultimate goal in God’s salvation—so planned and applied—is that there should be this manifestation of His attributes, particularly His attributes of grace and mercy. The entire universe, all creatures, angels, and every being, when they see the inheritance God has blessed us with—such undeserving creatures blessed with such an indescribably glorious inheritance—they will, for all eternity, praise the glorious attribute of God’s grace and mercy. Our inheritance will reveal the height, depth, and width of God’s grace. Can you imagine how glorious, how thrilling, then, our inheritance must be?

Imagine a severely neglected, abandoned child, ostracized by society and considered utterly worthless. This child has no family, no prospects, and every reason to expect a life of hardship and despair. Now, imagine a powerful, immensely wealthy, and incredibly benevolent royal King and Queen. For reasons beyond comprehension—not because of anything the child did or deserved—they decide to adopt this specific child. They don’t just provide a roof over their head; they lavish upon this child a full, legal inheritance. They raise the child as their own, bestowing upon them education, love, security, and eventually, a co-heirship to their vast kingdom and all its unimaginable riches—a position previously unthinkable for someone of such humble, undeserving origins.

When the day comes that this adopted child, once the outcast, is revealed as a co-heir, seated in glory, inheriting boundless wealth and honor, imagine the profound reaction of everyone witnessing it. The “whole universal heaven and earth” (in this case, all the other citizens, servants, and even visiting dignitaries of the kingdom) would not primarily praise the child’s worth, but rather the King and Queen’s incredible, unfathomable grace and mercy. They would declare: “Look at the astonishing love of our King and Queen! To bestow such an indescribably glorious inheritance on one so utterly undeserving! This reveals the true height, depth, and width of their benevolence! Their grace knows no bounds!” This adopted child’s inheritance becomes a living, eternal testament to the incredible, undeserved grace and mercy of the royal family. In the same way, our undeserved, glorious inheritance in God’s salvation will eternally showcase the boundless attributes of His grace and mercy to all creation.

You remember this is exactly what he said in verse 6. “Why did God elect and predestine us?” Verse 6 says, “to the praise of the glory of His grace.” Now, when that predestined ultimate goal of granting an inheritance is also for the praise of God’s glory, he also concludes this whole praise in verse 14 with the same goal, “unto the praise of His glory.” The final goal is not human salvation or safety; it is the manifestation of divine glory. So the goal of election, predestination, redemption, and inheritance is that the creature should fall at His feet and cry from the heart, “For of Him, and through Him, and to Him, are all things, to whom be glory forever and forever. Amen.”

So we have seen what the blessing is: Inheritance. How it came to us: predestination. And why: to the praise of His glory.


Application

How many marvelous applications there are!

  • First, how can we not bless this good God? Will this make us rise above our self-obsession and forget ourselves, our temporary difficulties, like Paul, and offer pure praise to God? He not only elected us, redeemed us, and runs an administration for our good, but He has also predestined a glorious future inheritance for us. Imagine, it was predestined from the foundation of the world. Matthew 25:34 says, “enter into that kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world.” If this is a God who can create such a marvelous and beautiful world in six days, and if He has been preparing something for us from the foundation of the world, how glorious it will be! Paul said it is indescribable. I think it is possible that the Lord doesn’t tell us a whole lot about what Heaven looks like because He knows we couldn’t handle it. He knows that if we knew exactly what it was going to be like, we couldn’t think of anything else! It is a joy that is beyond our human capacities to comprehend and enjoy.

Moreover, this is God who works all things according to His purpose. Again, you will not grasp this when you are self-absorbed and thinking, “How can I deserve this?” Turn your focus to the giver; it is all for the praise of His glory. Oh, when I kept thinking about it, it melted my heart. “Oh, bless this God, bless this God; may He be glorified.” We should bow before His throne, lost in wonder, love, and praise.

  • A true believer whose heart this melts should decide, “If God has made His glory the final goal in conceiving, providing, and applying such a salvation, then the goal of our short life on this earth should be, ‘whether you eat or drink, or whatsoever you do, do all to the glory of God.'” With all the difficult circumstances in my life, with all the temporary trials and pains, oh, may I determine with an iron will that I will not dishonor this blessed God for the small, light pains and difficulties of life, but glorify Him all my life. Every day I should praise.
  • If we can just believe and praise that God works all things according to His purpose, how much peace we will have in life. If you are always tense, grumbling, and worried, you dishonor God. Paul taught in Philippians, “do everything without grumbling and arguing so you can shine as lights in a dark world.” If you are still sinning by grumbling, you need to meditate on verse 11: “who works all things according to the counsel of His will.”

It would be a scary world we are living in indeed if things were not under God’s sovereign control! Imagine that the great purpose of Iran or most Islamic governments is to convert the world to their religion—always by force. So they are trying to get nuclear power so they can have world power. One button, somewhere 1,000 kilometers away… imagine that Iran can send missiles into Israel 2,000 kilometers away. Any movement and some missile can fall into our country. Our Lord said more wars are coming, more tsunamis, more famine, more plagues like Covid. Oh, how tense you would be! You would become mental if we don’t learn to believe in the sovereignty of God. We have a God who works all things; nothing is beyond His control. We will be like our Lord, sleeping on a boat in the midst of a storm. Not that we will be indifferent to realities, but we will not be distracted from the main things of our life—seeking the kingdom and preaching the gospel.

Psalm 46 says: “God is our refuge and strength, a very present help in trouble. Therefore we will not fear, Even though the earth be removed, and though the mountains be carried into the midst of the sea; though its waters roar and be troubled, though the mountains shake with its swelling.”

What does that mean in practical terms? Well, that means that you and I must not complain any longer about what life hands us. It is the Father who has made that choice. He has chosen to put us where we are and to put us into the situations where we find ourselves and to give us the problems that we have. Why? In order that, in the hurt and the heartache and the suffering, and in the joy and the blessing, whatever they may be, we are prepared for our eternal inheritance, making us more like Jesus. He is destroying the old man and renewing the new man in our home, our office, wherever we are. And as we respond with joy, praise, and acceptance of the situation we find ourselves in, God is glorified.

I don’t fully understand that, but I know it works. I know that is the way God is working. And therefore there is no escape from the heartache, hurt, and suffering. It is going to be there for us. But it is an opportunity, never an obstacle!

  • This verse is a great examination of whether we are true believers or false believers. Today the world is filled with false believers. Do you know one great sign of a false believer? John Bunyan differentiated them with two characters: Passion and Patience. Passion wants all blessings now. He thinks, “Heaven, a pie in the sky, who knows what will happen after death. I want heaven now, prosperity now.” That is what makes them deceived by false preachers who lie to them, “God will give blessings now.” Patience decided to wait for the best things that are yet to come. Are you Passion or Patience? Do you want everything now or are you willing to wait for the best things? That will decide your eternal destiny. Passion can be rich or poor. Rich Passion is someone who is fully absorbed in the delights of the world—money, food, even good ones like family, children, husband, and wife—and hates to leave all this. Poor Passion is yearning for good things in this life but cannot get them. They are always dissatisfied and may even want to die sometimes, hoping it will be better on the other side of death. For them, “Everything is delightful now and I don’t want to leave it,” or “Everything’s bad now and I want to leave.” But a true child of God, no matter how rich he is, and no matter how many smiling providences he’s enjoying now—bills all paid, wife sweet, children healthy, everything cheap and nice and kind—he knows that this is not his heaven. And in the midst of all these things, he’s homesick. And he has to say, with the Apostle Paul, “we that are in this tabernacle do groan; the best is yet to come.”

So examine yourself: Are you Passion or Patience? Can you get excited like Paul about the thought of an inheritance in the world to come? I have no doubt that if a lawyer comes and tells you that your old uncle has died and wrote a will that all his 3,500 crore wealth is yours, you would get excited about that. Frankly, I would. I’d pay off my loans and get a new car. That’s just being human. But let me ask you something: Can you get just as excited about thinking of that inheritance obtained through the redemption of Jesus Christ? Is your relationship to this life and all that it involves such that you know the best is yet to come, and you long for that which is to come? In the heart of every true Christian, the consciousness of our inheritance is a source of great delight.

Let us not be bullied by the mocking world of the rich. The truth of our inheritance is that there is glorious, unimaginable bliss waiting for us, and Peter says it is “reserved for us.” All the wonderful blessings we experience in this world—redemption—are all just a foretaste of what is coming. How glorious and joyful our inheritance must be!

Not only can this passage help us differentiate between false and true believers, but it can also help us differentiate between false and true religion. The test of all sound doctrine is that it gives all glory to God and none to man. We are so man-centered that we think salvation is all about us. See all the false religions where a priest or pastor can give salvation, or Arminianism, “I believed and I was saved.” But, we need to understand that it is primarily about His glory. He saves us by His sovereign grace so that we will be to the praise of His glory. MLJ said, “In every view of salvation, the place given in it to the glory of God provides the ultimate test of every teaching.”

Is this inheritance promised for everyone? Verse 12 gives a condition: “We who first trusted in Christ.” Again, there is a big debate as to what Paul means when he switches to “we” and then says in verse 13 “you.” I’ll not go into that, but this thing is clear. This inheritance is promised to only those who trust in Christ. You don’t have to break your head wondering whether God has predestined you or not. If you put your faith in Christ, leaning the whole weight of your soul on Christ’s blood and His righteousness as He’s revealed in the Gospel, you have this inheritance. Think about what your hope for your future is. All the inheritance in this life you desire so much—nothing will come with you. They are perishable and will fade. True riches are only found in Christ.

Because if you don’t come to Christ, the Bible promises a terrible inheritance. You are adding to that inheritance every day, every minute. Romans 2:4-5 says: “Or do you despise the riches of His goodness, forbearance, and longsuffering, not knowing that the goodness of God leads you to repentance? But in accordance with your hardness and your impenitent heart you are treasuring up for yourself wrath in the day of wrath and revelation of the righteous judgment of God.” Do you despise, or take lightly, God’s goodness? He is calling you to be saved, yet you are treasuring up wrath. Every day you live, as long as you are not obeying the gospel, you are only storing up wrath for your eternal inheritance. Oh, may God open your eyes to these divine realities and enable you to believe in Christ.

Vision of Christ’s Reign – Eph 1:10

In Him we have redemption through His blood, the forgiveness of sins, according to the riches of His grace, which He made to abound toward us in all wisdom and prudence. He made known to us the mystery of His will, according to His good pleasure which He purposed in Himself, that in the dispensation of the fullness of the times He might gather together in one all things in Christ, both which are in heaven and which are on earth—in Him.

When you get sad or discouraged, I don’t know what you do. Some people listen to songs, some go shopping, some eat nicely to deal with depression, some watch mobile/TV, or you may go on a vacation. People do something as a pick-me-up to encourage themselves. Ephesians 3:14 was Paul’s pick-me-up, and it is becoming my pick-me-up.

Remember Paul’s condition was worse than any of our conditions. He was like a horse, unable to stay in one place, running around the world preaching the gospel. Now, his legs are chained, his hands are chained, and he’s arrested with a Roman soldier always with him. How discouraged must his great mind be to be stuck in one place? But the man is filled with joy and a blazing zeal. He rises in praising God. How can a man in that situation praise God?

Because a mature Christian learns an important lesson through the years: no matter what his circumstances are, he finds his happiness in things that do not change. Those things that do not change are only found in two words: In Christ. So Paul, though in a sad situation, instead of grumbling, sees the panorama of his salvation. He goes before the foundation of the world, starting with election, and goes all the way to glorification. He lifts up the Ephesians and us with him in this praise: “Hey discouraged believer, lift up your eyes, behold all these blessings. In the world you may not be great, not have great value; in Christ, you are so valuable. You were chosen before the foundation of the world. The central plan of predestination is to adopt you as His child. All this was done not because of who you are or what you will do, you were accepted in the beloved. Come on man, if you know your heart…” As a Christian grows, he knows how bad his heart is, and that makes him wonder at God’s grace more and more. For a wretch like me, God has done this, and not because of me, but to the praise of the glory of His grace. Realizing this should pick you up from any hole.

If that is not enough to pick you up, look at history. He has executed His eternal plan by sending His Son and purchasing a perfect redemption on the cross, paying a ransom. This was bought with the very, very expensive, greatest price of the blood of the Son of God. Not only historically, but experientially, God’s grace in your own personal experience gave you the joy of the forgiveness of sins. This salvation was not only planned in eternity and accomplished in time, but an overflowing grace came to us, revealing this salvation.

How did this salvation reveal itself to us? Verse 8 says, “in all wisdom and prudence.” In which form did it come to us? Verse 9 says, “having made known to us the mystery of His will,” which indicates the gospel. Why was it revealed to us historically, geographically, and effectually, and not to so many other billions? Verse 9: “according to His good pleasure which He purposed in Himself.”

Paul is using all these truths to lift us higher and higher in worship. If we argue, “Oh, we teach too much theology,” how can you ever have such high, true biblical worship without explaining and understanding this theology? Oh yes, you can have empty, mindless, sentimental, repetitive chorus, musical concert manipulation and call that worship, but God hates such worship.

I agree these are very tough. I told you this is one of the most difficult passages. So what do most pastors do? “Why trouble and break our heads, labor in the Word for hours, and struggle to make people understand these difficult passages? No one will clap, crowds will not listen, we won’t get many likes.” Someone said from the 19th century onward, a big curse which led to the downgrade of Christianity is the disrespect it shows to Bible expositors. There is no market for them, because this generation is like Isaiah 30:10: “Do not prophesy to us the truth! Speak to us pleasant words.”

You watch most popular preachers; they are not Bible preachers, just motivational self-help speakers. They just use Bible stories and words to give success, prosperity, and motivational dialogues. A verse’s context will say something, but they just remove verses out of context. “I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me” is just used for landing dream jobs, achieving big things, or getting healing. It’s for self-confidence, motivation. “I can do all things, hallelujah.” Last week, our friend Johnson used “The Holy Spirit will flow as a river; a river brings fruitfulness on both sides.” What fruit? “A couple for 10 years had IVF and many treatments with no child. Last week, they got children, hallelujah. I said, ‘Don’t waste money with doctors anymore, put it in the offering bag.’ I tell you today, God’s river will bring healing.” What a horrible distortion of the Holy Scriptures! Blasphemy! And hundreds without any brain or discernment are sitting and clapping. It shows so many don’t even know the basics of theology, how to read and understand the Bible. So big crowds run to listen to this in the name of worship and Christianity. That is the trend and market today.

I could also be tempted to go with the market, but 2 Timothy 4:1 keeps ringing: “I charge you therefore before God and the Lord Jesus Christ, who will judge the living and the dead at His appearing and His kingdom: Preach the word! Be ready in season and out of season. Convince, rebuke, exhort, with all longsuffering and teaching. For the time will come when they will not endure sound doctrine, but according to their own desires, because they have itching ears, they will heap up for themselves teachers; and they will turn their ears away from the truth, and be turned aside to fables. But you be watchful in all things, endure afflictions, do the work of an evangelist, fulfill your ministry.” The time has come now.

This is what controls us. So even if I don’t get claps, whistles, or crowds, and maybe some of you even go to sleep when difficult Bible passages are explained, I have to fulfill the ministry God has given me. I have to preach the Word of God in season and out of season, because my claps will come in the end. So far, we have studied till verse 9. Now we come to verse 10.

Verse 10 answers: What is the ultimate purpose of the redemptive plan? “That in the dispensation of the fullness of the times He might gather together in one all things in Christ, both which are in heaven and which are on earth—in Him.” In this verse, Paul goes beyond our personal salvation and covers God’s great redemption plan for the whole universe. This, many agree, is the most difficult verse in the entire New Testament. Even translations make it difficult to grasp. You see, each commentator will give a different meaning. Reading many, doing my own study, seeing the context, and the analogy of scripture, I have come to a final conclusion of the meaning with the help of great commentators like Lenski and William Hendriksen. It will be theological trekking and climbing a tall New Testament mountain. Trekkers know that only when we sweat, trek, and go up, do we see the most beautiful scenes, which will be worth all the efforts that lazy people can never enjoy. So I am calling you to join me trekking. I promise you will see such a glorious perspective it will thrill your heart. So, ready for the morning trek!


Vision of Christ’s Government

The first word is dispensation or NASB administration. It is oikonomia, which means God’s divine arrangement, ordering, and working in the world. It is God’s management; the way God runs things. When a Prime Minister/President takes office, he puts his administration and cabinet members together to carry out his plan. He executes his plan through his administrators. Just as Pharaoh appointed Joseph as administrator of Egypt, he was in charge, he ordered, ruled, governed, and controlled. During those seven years of famine and prosperity, Egypt was under the administration of Joseph. Even today, our country does not use it much, but you will see America and other countries using this word. “This happened under the Biden administration,” but “this Donald Trump administration, we corrected that.” The idea is executing a plan through administrators.

In God’s administration, who is God’s administrator for this plan? Verse 7, “In Him we have redemption,” it is the same person. God has given this administration to Christ. So the word has the idea that Christ has been appointed as the administrator by God. All of God’s gospel purposes are under the administration of Jesus Christ. So we see the vision of Christ’s sovereign government.

The word also means “Law of the house; order of the house.” It is like an architect who draws a plan for a house. A good architect will plan where the electrical wires, water taps, pipes, cupboards, beds, and walls go. As the house is being built, it all looks so messy, dirty, ugly, and confusing. But once the whole house is completed, we stand in awe: “Wow, it has come out so nicely.” So God is the architect of the plan, and He appointed Christ as the administrator to execute the plan. Christ came, died, redeemed us, finished His earthly ministry, and ascended. Christ is doing ministry in heaven. God is still building the house, but it still seems so confusing, sometimes messy. The house is yet to be completed. When the full work is done, it will all look perfect.

The verse talks about the time of this government: “That in the dispensation/administration of the fullness of the times.” What does “fullness of times” mean? It’s like an old-fashioned hourglass. You would have seen it. “I give you one hour,” and you turn the glass. The top, full of sand, will slowly trickle down. When the last grain of sand falls, it is one hour. After all the sand fills one end, it is the fullness of time; the glass is full; time has arrived. That is how it is used.

The same word is used in Galatians 4:4: “But when the fullness of the time had come, God sent forth His Son.” The same period the Bible also calls the “last days.” Hebrews 1:1-2 says, “God, who at various times and in various ways spoke in time past to the fathers by the prophets, has in these last days spoken to us by His Son.” “Last days” doesn’t mean the end of history, but the last days began when Jesus came for the first time into the world. 1 Corinthians 10:11: “These things are written for our admonition, upon whom the ends of the ages have come.” So this phrase, the fullness of the time, is the time period which began with the first coming of Christ and will end with the second coming of Christ. The first words our Lord preached in Mark 1:15 were: “The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God is at hand. Repent, and believe in the gospel.”

Joining the two words, administration of fullness of times, is the rule of the time period between the first and second coming of Christ. Based on the context and other Bible passages, Christ is the administrator of this time. This is also called the gospel age. The reign of Christ is not just future, but now in this gospel age. When history records the administration of Donald Trump, it will have a time reference: “First presidency between 2017 to 2021 and second 2025 to 2030.” When Ephesians 1:10 speaks of the administration of the fullness of times, it speaks of the time between His first and second coming.

This understanding is consistent with the Bible and context. If you fail to grasp this, when explaining the next phrase, “summing up of all things in Christ,” you will go in 101 directions and into confusion, even to extreme universalism, “Oh, then the Bible teaches Christ will save everyone at the end.” So we see His sovereign government.


Final Purpose of This Government

Verse 10: “He might gather together in one all things in Christ, both which are in heaven and which are on earth—in Him.” The first phrase, “gathering together in one all things in Christ,” means to unite everything under one head. It means to “sum up all things.” You take many different numbers and add them up to one big number. That is the picture. So the final purpose of this sovereign government is to unite everything under Christ. What all things are to be united? The next phrase tells us: “all things in heaven and all things on earth.” This is a sweeping description of the totality of the universe. Every realm of the universe, visible and invisible creation. All in heaven and on earth are united under Christ, under His reign.

Look at Ephesians 1:20, where we have an expansion of this thought. He’s speaking of the greatness of God’s power, which He worked in Christ when He raised Him from the dead and seated Him at His right hand in the heavenly places, far above all principality and power and might and dominion, and every name that is named, not only in this age but also in that which is to come. And He put all things under His feet, and gave Him to be head over all things to the church, which is His body, the fullness of Him who fills all in all.

You have a parallel passage in Matthew 28, where Jesus said, “all authority has been given to me,” where? “In heaven and on earth.” “I have absolute authority.” So we see Christ’s sovereign government and the final purpose of His sovereign government.

Putting these things together, let us capture the big picture. This is God’s great, final, ultimate purpose. Human minds can never think of anything greater. This is the Mysterion, a mystery hidden for ages. People have been searching for where world history is going, what the purpose of all these different nations and civilizations is, but God invites us in this verse to see His glorious eternal purpose. God’s grand purpose is that “He might gather together in one all things in Christ.” There is a grand purpose of God, and all thousands of years of world history are moving toward this. This has a present personal aspect and a future universal aspect.

Present: Paul has said that God elected and predestined us in eternity and that His grace accomplished perfect redemption in time. How did redemption grace overflow to us? “In wisdom and prudence,” and in what form? By “revealing His mystery,” through the gospel. Why did the gospel come to us? It was God’s good pleasure. How was God’s good pleasure effectually worked in our lives? It worked because of the powerful administrator Jesus Christ and His mighty sovereign mediatorial government.

Ephesians, you were dead in sins, worshiping ugly Artemis, it was impossible to save you. You know why you are saved and now blessed with heavenly wisdom. You know why you have this now while millions are listening to these motivational, stupid preachers and being deceived for years. You know why God saved and opened your eyes? Because Christ is the powerful and efficient administrator of every purpose of God in this gospel age.

The Father plans, elects and predestines, and appoints Christ as the administrator to implement the plan. He first purchases a perfect redemption on earth and goes to heaven. Now with all authority in heaven and on earth, He reigns, intercedes, and effectually applies and implements every one of God’s redemption purposes. It is because of His mediatorial reign that you and I were snatched from the devil’s mouth and are sitting in God’s house today. This powerful administration will go on until He saves us to the utmost. No power in the universe will be able to resist this sovereign government.

This is grand beyond comprehension, but the thought is clear: anything in this life is not left to drift or operate for itself. They are all under the government of Christ. He, as the administrator of God, takes all things in heaven and on earth and makes all things work together for good for them that love God and for His church, and for every individual in it. Yes, it may all seem confusing today because the house is under construction, but when the final house is completed, you will be amazed at His work.

Future: There is a future universal aspect of this government. That is why it says everything in heaven and on earth. See, God has a huge, huge plan. We are so narrowed and small-minded. God is broad, large-minded, and His administration and plans are so beyond our imagination. God’s plan to manifest the riches of His grace to the eternal praise of the universe not only involved personally saving us but also to completely restore the universe, all in heaven and on earth, to a glorious and perfect state and give us new heavens and a new earth as our eternal inheritance.

The first step of that is to redeem us personally and forgive our sins. That is the first stage, but there are great universal implications of Christ’s work. His work will not just personally save us, but restore the whole universe from the power of evil. We need to realize the cross of Christ had a tremendous impact on the whole universe. It made Him the only eligible administrator to redeem the whole universe again and make everything new. He will restore new heavens and a new earth for His people as an inheritance. This is all part of the gospel. This is the amazing mystery of the gospel. Yes, we know the gospel a little bit, but so much of the glory of the gospel is still mysterious, so hard to grasp, and tremendously unbelievable.

All in heaven and on earth are summed up in Christ; everything becomes perfect. That is Utopia realized. Thomas More wrote a novel about an imaginary island where everything was perfect: politics, laws, people. The world has been trying to get to Utopia for thousands of years. Every politician who comes to power promises a Utopia. They all fail. Why? Because the Fall has affected not only mankind but even the world’s environment, animals, and land; the world is cursed, a sin-diseased world. The whole creation groans in childbirth for deliverance. This is a cursed, decaying world. You know why you and I get frustrated in life? We expect Utopia on this cursed world. Ladies, you expect perfection from a sinful husband. We expect perfection at home, at work, and we get upset.

Utopia comes when all is summed up in Jesus Christ. It is beyond our imagination, so glorious. Isaiah 11 talks about such marvelous things: the whole creation will be reconciled, not only man with God, and man with man, but man with the whole creation. Utopia! God’s administration is working out a definite and pre-purposed plan in our time. All the movements of history, governments, wars, and every small event in your life and mine are all moving toward this grand purpose: to be all summed up in Christ.


Applications

I titled this section “Vision of Christ’s Reign.” Our greatest need is to get a vision of Christ’s sovereign reign, just as Isaiah, whose life was so troubled with all the events, went to the temple and saw God on the throne, and that changed his life. So many things will change in our life if we get a glimpse of the powerful sovereign reign of Christ. Oh, may God open our eyes to get a vision of Christ’s reign! It will fill our life with praise, trust, and peace, whatever happens, and a new zeal for the gospel. Praise, trust, peace, and zeal for proper gospel work.

Praise: We need fuel to kindle the fire of praising God. This truth gives us several reasons to praise God. The central message of the Gospel is who Christ is and His work.

  • Behold who Christ is, His uniqueness and the glory of His person in this verse. If the government/administration of all that God is doing in the gospel age, from the first advent to the second advent, is committed to Him in such a way that He has absolute power in heaven and on earth to carry out the Father’s purpose, this truth reveals the uniqueness and glory of His person. He is not just someone who shamefully died on a cross, but now the sovereign government of God is in His hands. All kings, governments, and all authority are under Him, and He will redeem the whole universe by His work. No created being; no angel, not even an exalted archangel, can do such a universal, impossible task. No one is worthy of this. He alone is worthy to open the seals of God because He is God Himself.

Have you taken time to grasp the exalted view of Christ that Scripture gives, developed very high thoughts of Christ, looked at Him deeply, stood amazed at His glory, and fallen prostrate before Him and worshiped Christ? Oh, the vision of Christ’s reign is our greatest need. Think of everything on earth, the vast earth, heaven, all billions of galaxies, all reduced to one sum in Christ. Christ is above all. How mighty He must be? Colossians 1:17 says, “in Christ all things consist,” or they hold together. God has put all rule and all authority under His feet. Not that He “shall,” but He has already put. So as we come today, we need to worship Him from the perspective of Ephesians 1:10. We worship a Christ who is God; we should fall at His feet with fear and trembling. Even in His humiliation, demons trembled and fell at His feet. The apostles were blown away at times by His power, rebuking the mighty sea, creating food, and healing all diseases. “Who is this?” And finally when He conquered death and stood in front of them, they fell down saying, “My Lord and my God.” He is King of kings and Lord of lords, the Alpha and the Omega, the beginning and the end, the first and the last. Worship His majesty! All hail the power of Jesus’ name, let angels and the whole universe prostrate fall.

  • Behold the glorious work of Christ. We often focus on Christ’s work in the past, and we focus on the future that He will return, but His present work is so often obscured. We have no clear understanding. But Paul says to these Ephesian believers, if you view your salvation rightly, you will not only praise Christ’s work in the past, for complete redemption and forgiveness of sins (verse 7), and praise Him for eternal inheritance in the future (verse 13). But you will praise Him for your present experience of grace as the fruit of Christ’s present work as the administrator of the gospel age.

It is Christ’s government that rules now. His administration doesn’t work as we think. This government is a mysteriously sovereign government. God should open our spiritual eyes to see that. All things may seem to be working against it, but it is actually fulfilling His plan. The Bible from the beginning shows us a model of how that government works. Joseph realized this wisdom in a small picture of his life and Israel. He said, about all the wrong things that happened to him, “You did it for evil, but God was ruling all this for good.” This is how you should remember the cross of Christ triumphed.

When Israel was downtrodden by Rome as slaves, Christ was born as a poor baby, grew, started His ministry, many followed initially, but most left Him. Religious leaders caught Him and killed Him on the cross. The disciples were so confused. “Nothing makes sense. What is happening? Jesus has completely lost. Where is His sovereign government?” You’d say it doesn’t seem to make much sense. There seems to be so little order, so little plan. “What is all this?”

Our Lord explains what is happening behind the scene in His high priestly prayer. He is not a little bit frustrated about events; very calmly, John 17:1-2 says, “Jesus lifted up His eyes to heaven, and said: ‘Father, the hour has come. Glorify Your Son, that Your Son also may glorify You, as You have given Him authority over all flesh, that He should give eternal life to as many as You have given Him.'” It doesn’t say “shall give authority in the future,” but “You have already given.” What is the purpose? To bring peace among the nations? No, “that He may give eternal life to those you have given.” Wow! Do you see how His administration works? When all seems visibly against it, it is actually winning and triumphing.

Psalm 2 majestically talks about His government: “Why do the nations rage, And the people plot a vain thing? The kings of the earth set themselves, And the rulers take counsel together, Against the Lord and against His Anointed, saying, ‘Let us break Their bonds in pieces And cast away Their cords from us.’ He who sits in the heavens shall laugh; The Lord shall hold them in derision. ‘Yet I have set My King On My holy hill of Zion.’ ‘I will declare the decree: Ask of Me, and I will give You The nations for Your inheritance, And the ends of the earth for Your possession. You shall break them with a rod of iron; You shall dash them to pieces like a potter’s vessel.'”

God is saying, “I will establish my administrator upon the throne and nothing will frustrate His purposes in working out My eternal decree.” Psalm 110:1: “The Lord said unto my Lord, sit thou at my right hand, until I make thy enemies thy footstool.” Now notice this last phrase of verse 2: “Rule thou in the midst of thine enemies.” He reigns in the midst of His enemies and uses His enemies. All governments, men, angels, and demons, including Satan, are His slave dogs accomplishing His purpose now.

So worship Christ for who He is, and worship Him for His mysterious sovereign reign. We are so small-minded. Selfishness blinds us. God is large-minded. God has a glorious plan He is accomplishing. These are huge concepts: election, predestination, administration. We are part of that. Oh, He is a big God. Come on man, how glorious these things are! Not stories, but the infallible Word of God. When you start believing this, you will serve God even in prison.

  • Praise God by tracing your conversion to the government of Christ’s power. The great central purpose of this administration, according to John 17, is to give eternal life to those whom God chose. In Acts 5, Peter says, “Jesus whom you murdered by hanging on a tree. Him God has exalted to His right hand to be Prince and Savior, to give repentance and forgiveness of sins.” It requires all authority in heaven and on earth to save a soul. That should tell us what an impossible task it is to save any of us. Paul is full of praise because he was able to trace back his salvation. How did a Christ-hater, Saul, become the bond-servant of Christ, Paul? He never even dreamed of it. It was not by any accident, but because Christ is the mighty administrator of the gospel. How did the Ephesians, living such horrible paganism in the fortress of the devil, the Artemis temple, were able to come out into the gospel light? Think of yourself. How did you come to Christ? I was attending a relative’s marriage last week, remembering all my upbringing, our culture, our religion, which people have built for thousands of years. I wondered how I could leave such a strong religion, with its many attractions, the power of the devil, the attraction of the world, and flesh-pleasing ways holding us. How can anyone leave flesh-pleasing, proud ways and come humbly as a depraved sinner to Christ? Why didn’t we run into 1001 false teachings, but came to the true gospel?

Paul helps us to see the mighty spiritual power that happened in the conversion of the Ephesians and in our own conversion. You were brought into the blessings of the gospel because of the mighty Christ, who runs an administration with all power in heaven and on earth. Such an almighty government was needed to save you. That is the only reason you are in Christ. The devil, the world, and the flesh held you as an eternal captive and said, “I’ll not give them up.” And the world said, “We’ll not give them up, we will hold them captive.” And King Jesus said, “They are chosen by the Father, and I have redeemed them by My blood. I, with all My authority, will release them.” And He stretched out His mighty power, and all those 1001 enemies couldn’t do anything. We were released from 1001 chains and bound as captives. We were freed. Oh, praise God for this Christ’s sovereign government.

Join the apostle Paul and praise God for verse 10, as he traces his salvation and all that grace saving you and the grace continuing to come to you even today is a result of the all-powerful administration of Christ. It is a result of the success of His administration. Christ is the mighty administrator of the gospel.

  • Trust this government/administration all your life. You will live with divine peace and comfort. If Christ is on the throne, all is well. God has a determined plan. Nothing can change this plan. At a personal level, the great purpose of His administration is to grant eternal life to you—not like these false prophets who promise blessings, money, riches, and healing. He will bring every event in life for your sanctification. He will control everything to achieve that. Learn to see that is what He is doing in your life.

At a universal level, all world history, nations, wars, our government acts, political tensions, confusions, every confusion in your life, troubles, and trials, may all seem like a mess. All of it may seem meaningless, purpopseless, and chaotic, even in our own lives. Life seems so confusing. Great thinkers pull their hair out, asking “Why is this happening or that happening? What is the meaning of all this?” If you understand Ephesians 1:10, you understand something that has completely bypassed the great thinkers of our day: behind all this seeming confusion, an administration is working to sum up all things in Christ.

If Christ’s administration is true, then there is nothing really accidental, haphazard, or meaningless happening in this world and in our lives; not even the hopping of a sparrow or the loss of a hair on our head. Verse 11: “who works all things according to the counsel of His will.” All men are unconscious agents in His hands, even governments and politicians. Herod, Pilate. Pilate said to Jesus, “You don’t talk to me? I have the authority to release you.” Jesus said, “No, you are not in charge. You cannot do it unless it is given from above, unless my administration allows you to do it. My Father’s plan is that I should die on the cross. You with all Roman power cannot stop it.”

Think of all that God used for His plan. The envy of the Jewish leaders, the treachery of Judas, the timidity of Pilate, the cruelty of the Roman soldiers were all subservient to God’s designs and all fulfilled His inscrutable purposes. Who would suppose that these were successive steps to fulfill God’s plan, so that Christ dies, rises, and is exalted to the throne of heaven and the means ordained for the salvation of His chosen people? Yet that is what happened. By all these confusing events, many conflicting prophecies were fulfilled. That is how precisely His administration works in your life and the world now.

All confusing and innumerable events of every day seem to happen randomly and pass away without any particular effect. But He who sees all things from the beginning has ordained that a sleepless night, a traffic jam, forgetting a key, every sickness, every financial problem, every family problem, every disappointment, every trial in life, and even the sins of people will all accomplish His glorious plan.

In your life, it may all seem very confusing, even painful. But realize that the house is still under construction; we may see it as messy and confusing. On this side, we may say, like Jacob, that all these things in my life are happening against me. But a day will come when we will see from the other side, like Joseph, and say, “You did it for evil, but God used everything for the greatest good.” You will see how all this led to your sanctification and glorification. Let us strongly trust the promise of this great administrator: “All things work for our good.” Oh, what a different perspective a vision of Christ’s reign will give. It will fill us with praise, it will fill us with trust and peace in the midst of life’s different storms. Thirdly, this vision will give zeal to do gospel work properly.


This vision will give zeal to do gospel work properly. I say “proper gospel work” because there are thousands of wrong kinds of gospel work. The sadness of Christianity in our country is because of those wrong kinds of gospel work. This verse should teach us the right gospel work.

First, this truth shows us why the gospel triumphs in the hearts of men. Why does the gospel still triumph? It triumphs as the fruit of the administration of Christ. There is not one single gospel triumph that is not a monument to the mighty administration of Jesus Christ in this gospel age. We are all witnesses of Christ’s government’s success.

If we are to do proper gospel work, we must learn to base our expectation for the success of the gospel not upon our administration of the gospel, but upon Christ’s administration. All of your prayers, expectations, and efforts for the success of the gospel are not upon your cleverness or lack of it, your skill, or favorable circumstances for the gospel. No, the success of the gospel is rooted in the mighty government of Christ. That’s the core of its success.

Instead of making us lazy, what zeal and confidence this should give us to share the gospel in any circumstance with anyone. It is not purely based on how cleverly or nicely I said it, using the right words, at the right time and in the right place. No, if I faithfully share the gospel truth in the most simple way I know, the government of Christ will use it as a means and bring success.

That is what God taught Paul and made him a great missionary. He looked at Corinth. It had a grand pagan temple and was a city of uncleanness. He became scared, wondering if anyone would listen to him. The Lord comes to him at night and says, “Don’t be afraid, don’t stop preaching the gospel. I have many people in this city. I am the administrator of the gospel. Never forget it, Paul. You are just an instrument.” So he stayed for a year and a half teaching God’s word. A church started. How? Because of Paul’s wisdom? No, he says he came to them in weakness, fear, and trembling. It was the government of Christ.

This is the secret of the gospel: Keep looking at the government of Christ. When we look at ourselves and our situation, we will be scared, but when our focus is on Him, we see that He is reigning. He can even use a donkey’s speech to change people. He will give success. I just need to obey Him and share the gospel the best way I know. Then, souls will come, churches will be formed, and Christ will grow His kingdom through me.

Oh, a vision of Christ’s reign is the secret of all gospel success. Can I tell you this is the secret the Lord taught the apostles, which made them turn the world upside down? How does our Lord begin the great commission in Matthew 28? He didn’t begin with “go and preach.” Notice how He begins in Matthew 28:18: “And Jesus came and spoke to them, saying, ‘All authority has been given to Me in heaven and on earth.'” This is a clear explanation of Ephesians 1:10. These are His last words; they should ring in the apostles’ ears always as they go into all the world. The first words are not “go,” no, first you must realize, “All authority has been given to Me in heaven and on earth.” First, you need to get a vision of Christ’s reign.

“Therefore go,” under what canopy and perspective? The perspective that “I am the administrator of the gospel task.” The success and accomplishment of your mission rest not upon you, but upon My government and authority. I, as the Lord of heaven and earth, command you. You must obey. When I go and I find men’s minds blinded, not at all interested in the truth of the gospel, what shall I do? Shall I accommodate the gospel to make it a little more attractive? Shall I decorate it with false promises, “if you believe, He will give you money, healing, give you what you want”? Shall I become a conman or a clown because no one listens to the gospel? Should I become a motivational speaker and make the gospel palatable to unregenerate nature? Never. I will go out in the consciousness that He’s the administrator with all authority in heaven and on earth. Success is in His hands. My job is to obey.

What is gospel work? It’s not going and saying something with blind zeal and somehow getting decisions, and then making a person a “double child of heaven” with false assurance. No. Preach the gospel, make disciples, then don’t leave them as orphans. No, baptize them. That is a technical term to gather them as a community of believers/churches and plant churches, visible communities of believers. The Great Commission is not to just go around and preach the gospel, but you are to plant churches. “I’m the administrator, not you. Do it as I command.” You may think you can do the job better by going out, preaching minimal basic truth, manipulating people to make decisions, and then going to another person or town. No, no, I am telling you, make disciples, baptize them, and don’t stop there. Verse 20: “teaching them to observe all things that I have commanded you.” Establish a teaching ministry that builds them up into practical godliness. Not just teaching them theory, but teaching them to observe. Then comes the glorious promise of His presence and success in the work: “And lo, I am with you always, even to the end of the age. Amen.”

Do you see how this vision of Christ’s reign will fill us with zeal to do gospel work properly? Isn’t the lack of this the reason all the wrong gospels are rampant in our country? Paul says Christ has appointed us, the church, for the task of the administration of the gospel today. How should we do it? We just follow Him. Even in our work, we obey the boss. He tells us, “This is my company. You are the manager. This is how you should manage this, step 1, 2, 3, 4.” If we just do one step and tell him, “Boss, I thought other steps were not required, non-essential, impractical. I just carried out what is practical.” He would say, “Fool, your job is to follow the administrator’s orders, not to evaluate and pass a sentence upon what was essential and non-essential. I am the boss. You are fired.” The Lord Jesus, the great administrator appointed by the Father, speaks to us and gives us an administration. We should obey His orders and rule, not do what we like and call it ministry.

Our weakness as a church is that we are not active in gospel work. Oh, may God give us this vision of Christ’s reign, fill us with zeal and confidence and energy for praying for souls, and boldly sharing the gospel. When a church, like the New Testament church, gets this vision, that is when revival starts.


Practical Step

We planned this many years ago, but we didn’t continue. We need to revive a GRBC Gospel Sharing Experience. We share stories of how we shared the gospel. This is what many good churches do to encourage one another and train one another in gospel work. How do we share with a person from a traditional Christian background, or a person from a Muslim or Hindu background who has been saved?

Recently I have adopted a method with people from traditional Christian backgrounds. “Can I ask you a question? We all will leave this world. Do you believe that as soon as you die you will go to heaven and enjoy eternal life? John 3 says, ‘God loved the world that anyone who believes Christ will not perish but have eternal life.’ Do you have that assurance?” There are only three answers: “No,” “don’t know,” or “yes.”

If they say no or don’t know, then you can say, “You have not truly believed. See, you can hear about Christ your whole life and never truly believe.” You can share a story about looking at Christ in faith. A look of faith is about who Christ is and what He has done on the cross. That is what will save you.

If they say yes, I ask, “On what basis do you believe you will go to heaven?” Most times, they say, “Because I go to church, I am good.” “How good do you have to be to get to heaven? How many good works?” The Bible says you have to be perfect. We can explain the standard of the law, how lust is adultery, and how anger is murder. “Can you be so good?” As Spurgeon said, “Till men have faith in Christ, their best services are but glorious sins.”

When they are thinking, I mention the only way to go to heaven is by GFC, not KFC: by Grace, through Faith, and Christ alone. The only way you get to heaven is by trusting in God’s grace and believing in Jesus’ perfect work. He imputes His righteousness to me and takes my sin on Him. A transfer happens. One person who had been going to church for 40 years said, “I never heard that in my whole life.” I will tell you that is the sad condition of these traditional churches. They never teach the true gospel because once they hear the gospel and get saved, they cannot be kept under the bondage of their religion with its prayers, tithes, church attendance, and other religious practices. Most churches in our country teach that it is Christ plus this and that. No, it is GFC. It is all grace, it is only through faith, and you go to Christ alone. We have a great responsibility to preach this gospel of grace, because no one else is doing it. That is why our country is like this. Remember, the goal is to faithfully present the person and work of Jesus Christ in a clear, loving way, leaving the results to God.


A Few Words of Warning

You may be sitting here, thinking, “Okay, Christ is an administrator. What does that have to do with me? I don’t care.” My friend, you feel that way because the god of this world has blinded you. Just as a Christian rejoices that Christ is the administrator of the gospel age, so every unconverted person has to tremble that Christ rules, and you still have not submitted to His Lordship. His administration will bring terrible judgment and an eternal, unimaginable, unbearable punishment for you.

If God opens your eyes and makes you see one glimpse of Christ’s government, you will run to Christ. Because the CCTV camera of Christ’s government is watching you day and night under this administration, and it is continuously printing fine challans and punishments for every crime against this government. Imagine a big list. Nowadays, we can go to a website and see how many challans and notices from traffic police, or income tax demands, debts, defaults, and interest pending. We can even check our Cibil score. Traffic police don’t catch you immediately; they just update your record. A few years ago, I saw I had four traffic challans for 6,000 rupees and was shocked. I didn’t even know it was a no-parking zone, but I parked, so there was a challan. In the same way, if God opens His website of your challans, IT demands, debts, and interest, you will faint. Your Cibil score is bad because your sin debt has mounted to heaven, and in the gospel age, too.

You know the final work of Christ’s administration is to summon you into His presence, judge you for all your sin debt, and punish you until every last cent is paid back to His justice. You cannot, so He will eternally damn you into hell. Today you may be sitting here, and all this about Christ reigning and His government seems like a dream. But one day, Philippians 2 says everyone sitting here, this same knee, will bow, and this same tongue will confess, “Jesus Christ is Lord, He is the reigning king.” God will bring that confession out of your mouth. You will worship Him. He is worthy of all of this. God will wrench that confession from every being in heaven and on earth. If that confession doesn’t come from your heart now, in this gospel age, it will come out on the Day of Judgment. By then it will be too late. Christ’s administration will result in one of two things for every man, woman, boy, or girl. He will either be your Savior now or He will be your judge to send you to hell.

Can I beg you this morning not to just hear and go? In your mind’s eye, look to Christ, keep looking at Him until He opens your eyes to see who He is, and what He did for you. That look of faith will save you from all your sins. May God open your eyes to see His glory and submit to Him in faith and repentance.

Mystery of God revealed – Eph 1:9

In Him we have redemption through His blood, the forgiveness of sins, according to the riches of His grace, which He made to abound toward us in all wisdom and prudence, having made known to us the mystery of His will, according to His good pleasure which He purposed in Himself, that in the dispensation of the fullness of the times He might gather together in one all things in Christ, both which are in heaven and which are on earth—in Him.

We all love secrets. Someone says, “Let me tell you a secret,” and all our ears perk up. When we tell a secret to someone, it no longer remains a secret because they’re like all-India radio. Today, I’m going to tell you a unique secret—it is the secret of God. But you know what? God wants us to become the all-India radio of that secret because it’s the mystery of God revealed. Our tendency to blab is actually encouraged; our inability to keep a secret is a blessing here. So, prepare to become a divine all-India radio of this secret.

We’re looking at Ephesians 1:14, and in these verses, we see one of the most profound, staggering, and mind-stretching concepts to be found anywhere in all of human literature. It’s true, these are amazing verses. A whole panorama of salvation stretching back to past eternity talks about concepts of election, redemption, and the blessings of redemption, and it sweeps to a vision of future eternity—the summing up of all things in Christ. These are mind-staggering concepts for any great mind.

We might imagine Paul must be writing to the most brilliant, educated people, but if you go and see the Ephesian church, it will surprise you. It was made up of ordinary people, some uneducated slaves, working fathers, housewife mothers, and children—families who were previously worshipping in the temple of Artemis. Paul could write such great truths to ordinary people because our teacher is the great Holy Spirit. This teacher has a miraculous way of teaching the most difficult things even to the most ordinary believer. That is the confidence with which we are studying these difficult passages. So far, the Holy Spirit has staggered our minds, and we’ve been struck with awe as we’ve followed the thoughts of the great mind of the Apostle Paul.

He is praising God, listing salvation blessings and the grace that elected and predestined us, purchased redemption, and gave forgiveness of sins. It’s enough—what else do we need? That grace has overflowed in all wisdom and prudence. Last week, we saw in verse 8 that grace has abounded in wisdom, which is penetrating insight into divine realities, and prudence, the ability to apply those realities to life.

In the next verses, he tells us, “How did this wisdom and prudence come to us?” and “Why?” and “When?” and “What is the end goal of this?” Today, we will focus on verse 9, which answers two questions: “How did wisdom and prudence come to us?” and “Why did it come to us?” First, how? Verse 9 says, “having made known to us the mystery of His will.” We see the word “mystery” of His will was made known to us. It’s a very predominant word in the New Testament, used some 27 times, primarily by Paul. To be ignorant of its meaning is to be ignorant of one of the most precious concepts in the New Testament. Let’s understand the precise meaning of this word “mystery” and what it means in this context—the mystery of His will.

We use the word “mystery” in many ways for a secret or a puzzling thing that we can never understand. Some people eat a lot but never gain weight; it’s a mystery. Some kids don’t study but get 100/100—a mystery. In some houses, we buy a pair of socks, but one always goes away, leaving a cupboard full of single socks. In our house, knives always go missing. It is a mystery. You may have some mysteries in your house. We use the word “mystery” for something we cannot understand. Webster’s says a mystery is something that is difficult or impossible to understand or explain. We should be careful not to put our general contemporary meaning or dictionary meaning into scripture. We should always trace the biblical meaning in its context.

What does the Bible mean by “mystery”? I’ll state the definition and prove it from scripture: A mystery is a thing hidden in the mind of God, and we can never know it until God reveals it. Let me prove to you that this is the biblical definition. In the same book, Ephesians 3:9, “and to make all see what is the fellowship/dispensation of the mystery, which from the beginning of the ages has been hidden in God who created all things through Jesus Christ.” See? The mystery is something that has been hidden in God.

1 Corinthians 2:7, “But we speak God’s wisdom in a mystery, even the wisdom that hath been hidden.” So the concept of “hidden” is here. A thing hidden in the mind of God. Verse 8 says, “which none of the rulers of this age knew; for had they known, they would not have crucified the Lord of glory.” Verse 9 says, “But as it is written: ‘Eye has not seen, nor ear heard, Nor have entered into the heart of man The things which God has prepared for those who love Him.'” That’s the mystery. It’s hidden. No one can penetrate it. But in verse 10, “But God has revealed them to us through His Spirit.” See? It was hidden, and God has revealed it to us. So the concept of “mystery” and “manifestation” is tied together. It is hidden in God, but it is revealed by God. The same thing is found in Colossians 1:26, “Even the mystery which hath been hid,” there’s the concept of “hidden” again, “hid for ages and generations, but now hath it been manifested unto his saints.”

So, the dominant usage of the word “mystery” is the idea of a revealed secret of God. It was not known for ages but revealed to His people by His Spirit. The Apostle says in Ephesians 1, grace overflowed to us in all wisdom and prudence. What was revealed to us in all wisdom and prudence? The making known of the mystery of His will—the revealing of the secret of God that was hidden in God for ages and for generations.

In a way, all saving truths are a mystery. It’s concealed in God until revealed by God. In Ephesians 3, he said that it is a mystery that both Jew and Gentile would be called in the church and stand on absolutely the same footing—fellow heirs with the Jews. And he says this is something that could not be known unless God revealed it. It was hidden in His purposes for generations, but now He has revealed it.

All the truth that surrounds Christ is called a mystery. 1 Timothy 3:16 says, “Great is the mystery of godliness. God was manifested in the flesh, justified in the Spirit, seen by angels, preached among the Gentiles, believed on in the world, received up in glory.” These are things God purposed in His own mind and heart from all eternity, but they were hidden. Now they’re revealed, so they are called mysteries.

I am bringing all these passages so you know what the word “mystery” means according to the Bible. Since the gospel embodies all these truths, the gospel is equated with the mystery of God. Paul uses the word “mystery” as a synonym for “gospel.” For example, in Ephesians 6:19, he says, “Pray for me, that utterance may be given to me, that I may open my mouth boldly to make known the mystery of the gospel.” Since the gospel embodies all saving truth, it is the mystery of God. In 1 Corinthians 4:1, he says to us, “are committed the mysteries of God.”

A final classic passage for my definition is Romans 16:25-26, “Now to Him who is able to establish you according to my gospel and the preaching of Jesus Christ, according to the revelation of the mystery kept secret since the world began but now made manifest, and by the prophetic Scriptures made known to all nations, according to the commandment of the everlasting God, for obedience to the faith.” Now do you see how all these thoughts are present here? The mystery was something that was hidden and kept in silence. Now it is manifested. That mystery is the gospel. It is all proclaimed to us by prophetic scriptures. So we may say then a mystery is truth hidden in the mind of God, truth revealed by the Spirit of God, and truth proclaimed by the Word of God.

So when Paul in Ephesians says grace has overflowed with saving wisdom and prudence by making known the mystery of His will, we can understand that this wisdom and prudence came to us through the gospel. This is a mystery because for ages, it was hidden—how a holy God would save a sinner, whom He would save, when, and by what means He would save. Christ coming into the world through a virgin’s womb, living and dying for us, rising and ascending, sending the Holy Spirit, and effectually calling us—these are all mysteries locked up in God’s mind, but now revealed to us in all wisdom and prudence. How does God make people wise with heavenly wisdom? The answer is, by the gospel.

So we see how wisdom and prudence came to us: by God “having made known to us the mystery of His will.” Now, why? Why did it come to us? Why now, and not before? Why did it come to you individually, and not to so many of our relatives and friends? Why to us as the GRBC church, and not to so many other groups? Is it because we are wise and smart? Why was this mystery of ages revealed in all wisdom and prudence to me, to us? Verse 9 answers: “according to His good pleasure which He purposed in Himself.”

The word “good pleasure” we’ve seen before in verse 5. The Apostle Paul, in answer to why God elected and predestined us to sonship through Christ, said, “according to the good pleasure of his will.” It refers to God’s sovereign, delightful choice. If you ask the reason why this wisdom came to us and not to billions in the world, why God hid these things from the wise and prudent and revealed them to babes, it was His pleasure. It is His wish. It is a sovereign, gracious choice. The verse says, “This will he purposed in himself.” God didn’t look outside of Himself for any other thing. The cause of it lies in Himself.

When Paul said grace overflowed in wisdom and prudence to us, Paul was talking to specific people at a specific place at a specific point in time. If every believer in the Ephesian church were to ask, “Why should I be born in Ephesus at such a time that I’d be old enough to hear and understand? And why should Paul come to Ephesus on such and such a date? And why should I have happened to be where I heard about Him, there at the school of Tyrannus? And why, when I went and heard, did God open my eyes and cause me to see the wisdom of heaven in the message of Christ? Why do so many others not understand?” Paul says, “Look, you can scratch your head all your life, think of 101 secondary causes, assume it was chance or coincidence, but the only true answer is His good pleasure; His eternal sovereign will which predestined every small event in this world, orchestrated all this in this way so that in time His grace should overflow to you in all wisdom and prudence, making known the mystery of His will according to His good pleasure which He purposed in Himself.” This comes in a very specific, personal way.

As you sit here this morning, if grace has overflowed in wisdom and prudence in the opening up of the mystery of the gospel, the Holy Spirit wants you to trace back all your journey in life to God’s good pleasure. You will stand back in wonder and awe and praise God like Paul when you realize God predestined to bring this hidden mystery to you historically, geographically, and effectually.

Let me explain. Historically: we stand at a point in time when this mystery, hidden in God for ages and generations, has now been revealed. Think of all the nations that have risen and fallen in the history of the world into which not one ray of the mystery of the gospel ever came. Think of Egypt as a superpower when Israel was just slaves. Canaanites, Amorites, Amalekites, Moab, Ammon, Babylon, Assyria, all worshiping all kinds of animals, living in such dark superstition without light. They never knew God. Even in India, with the oldest Mauryan empire, Gupta empire, Pallavas, Chalukyas, and great Chola dynasty, you can go through millions of lands for thousands of years before Christ and you couldn’t find one person, man, woman, or child, who could say this basic truth: “Christ died for our sins.” Not one! Think of some of those great nations, different civilizations and cultures with all their literature and knowledge. Not one of all those mighty wise men could say, “Christ died for our sins.” The mystery of the gospel, which God purposed from eternity, was hidden in His own mind and heart.

Now Paul says, “historically at this time, God made known unto us the mystery of His will.” And you say, “Why, Lord?” “According to His good pleasure which He purposed in Him.” Why should you and I be born historically at such a point in time when the secrets of God’s heart have been unlocked and unfolded? The only answer is, “Even so, Father, for it seemed good in Your sight.” It was His time schedule, not ours, but His. When you think of millions who’ve gone before us with no slightest knowledge of the gospel, and are paying eternally for the penalty of their sins even now, and you wonder why they didn’t hear the gospel and had no choice of their own, never had the mystery unfolded to them, think of all our forefathers. Just like Jesus, we also had so and so who begot him. Our big family trees. None heard the gospel. Why were you not born then, but why were you and I born now, where you can hear this mystery fully? Then you begin to say with Paul, “Blessed be God, whose grace has overflowed, making known the mystery of his will according to his good pleasure which he purposed in him to me historically at this time.”

This is not only true historically with reference to the pagan nations, but even with reference to the people of God in the Old Testament. The Lord said in Matthew 13:16, “Blessed are your eyes, for they see, and your ears, for they hear. For verily I say unto you, that many prophets and righteous men desired to see the things which ye see, and saw them not. And to hear the things which ye hear and heard them not.” These are the most godly people in the Old Testament who wanted to hear this mystery fully, but God didn’t reveal it to them. He just gave them types, rituals, and dim shadows. Imagine the frustration. Someone says, “I want to tell you a big secret…” and then they don’t, but they give clues and symbols. They all knew God had a big secret, but they couldn’t understand it. They could just see shadows, like a beautifully draped, minutely sculpted doll statue; you could see the general form, though you could not appreciate all of the beauty of the detail. Oh, how often must some of those holy men of old have said, “Oh, God, what are you talking about?” It says they “desired.” They were not content to simply be the shadows through which God spoke.

Can you imagine what Isaiah must have gone through after he penned the 53rd chapter of Isaiah? “Bruised for our iniquities, wounded for our transgression, chastisement of our peace upon him.” How he must have cried out and said, “Oh, God, what are you saying in this? What is the full unfolding of that which I have written?” God says, “It is a secret; I will not reveal it now.” Prophets and righteous men longed to see them. God said, in essence, the mystery is locked up in my heart. But do you see what grace it is that it overflowed in wisdom and prudence so that we can read every word of Isaiah 53 and understand it fully now? Daniel and all the prophets didn’t understand what they wrote. Not one of them could say, as you can now say in commonplace talk, “Christ died for our sins, rose for justification.” The most fundamental, rudimentary element of the gospel, they could not say it with the clarity with which you can now say it. Oh, beloved, why should we historically stand at this point when our eyes see and our ears hear what men and women who are far holier and far more godly were never allowed to see? One answer: “Even so, Father, for it seemed good in Your sight.”

But not only is that true historically, it applies geographically. For not only was the time of the revealing of this mystery based on God’s gracious sovereignty, but the very places in which that mystery is to be unfolded are also determined by His gracious sovereignty. Matthew 11:20 says, “Then began Jesus to upbraid the cities wherein most of his mighty works were done, because they repented not. Woe unto thee, Chorazin! Woe unto thee, Bethsaida! For if the mighty works had been done in Tyre and Sidon, which were done in you, they would have repented long ago in sackcloth and ashes.”

But why didn’t the mystery come to Tyre and Sidon? Our Lord says, “Had it come to them, it would have been effectual to their salvation.” But it didn’t come to them. The Lord says, “many prophets and righteous men desired to see,” but God’s sovereignty didn’t allow them to see. But even geographically, Tyre and Sidon would have repented, but it did not go there, but the mystery came here. Why? The answer is, “according to his good pleasure which he purposed in himself.” When you read in Acts 16, Paul is going to different cities preaching the gospel; you hear the Holy Spirit stopped him from going to certain places. Why? Sovereignty even in the geographical places where the mystery goes. We see the good pleasure of God’s purpose in Christ unfolding itself, not only historically but geographically.

You look at some of the Islamic countries like Afghanistan under Taliban rule, where there’s severe punishment for Christians, or North Korea, Somalia, Iran, Yemen, Libya, and Sudan—terribly poor countries. Have you asked, “Why was I not born in that place, with a long beard, scarf, saying Assalamu Alaikum wa Rahmatullahi wa Barakatuh Subhanallah, Insha’Allah? Why am I not sitting in some desert with a gun training to be a terrorist?” Why should you be in a place, geographically, where the mystery has been unfolded?

Children, why should you have been born in a Christian home? Why, instead of a gun in your hand, did God put you in a home where from the time you can remember anything, you were told Bible stories, brought to church and Sunday schools, and heard that Christ died for sinners, Christ rose, Christ lives, and Christ is mighty to save, instead of being told to bow and roll before dead stones? Why? Think of it. Joseph, the wise dreamer, Daniel, the Prime Minister of Babylon, Solomon, with all his wisdom, Elijah, the holy man of old—they didn’t know what you know by the time you are five years old, some of you, in terms of the revelation of the mystery.

Why should that thing come to you historically? Why should you be born at this time? Why should it come to you geographically? I know no answer but the answer of verse 9: “Having made known unto us the mystery of His will according to His good pleasure which He purposed, in Him.”

Again, see the wonder of grace. This mystery comes historically today for billions of people. We live after Christ, geographically now, because of religious freedom, but it doesn’t come effectually. Instead of this mystery coming to them in all wisdom and prudence, it makes them eternal fools in their minds and animals in their lives without prudence because they reject the gospel and harden their hearts. God has historically and geographically revealed His hidden secret for generations. How many millions reject it today? Because the message must not only come to us historically and geographically, but effectually. And Paul says to the Ephesians, “blessed be God because overflowing grace not only came historically and geographically, but effectually came to you in wisdom and prudence, making known to us the mystery of His will.” It opened your blind eyes and gave you insight into divine realities when millions are blinded. Why? Blessed be God because of His good pleasure.

So to the question: we have seen how grace overflowed in all wisdom and prudence, making known to us the mystery of His will. And why did grace overflow to me historically, geographically, and effectually? Paul’s answer is, “it was according to His good pleasure which He purposed in Him.” It was His sovereign choice.

Applications

1. Stand Back and Be Amazed at the Panorama of Your Salvation and Bless God for This Great Salvation.

I was sitting and looking at the whole panorama—this glorious sovereign God, who in all past eternity lived, and out of billions of souls, He set His love all those years and elected me before the world was created. When He made the awesome plan of predestination, the central goal of that plan was to adopt me as His son. Why such great eternal purposes for a worm of time? To the praise of the glory of His grace! And then He accepted me in the beloved, and purchased redemption by paying the heavy ransom price of His blood and, according to the riches of His grace, forgave all my uncountable ocean of sins, the great sins that I committed. This itself is overwhelming, the fullness of grace.

But grace didn’t stop. It filled His cup and overflowed in all wisdom and prudence, making known to me the mystery of His will, which billions of people have no clue about, and billions who desired to know it could not. This grace came historically in the time of my birth in 1976 and grew to the exact age when I could understand the gospel. In 1993, when I was 17 years old, this grace came geographically to a location in Lingarajapuram and brought me to Campus Crusade. Not only historically and geographically, but that grace came effectually and opened my foolish eyes and gave me a penetrating insight into divine realities, when hundreds who attended didn’t realize anything.

I thought I just went to Campus Crusade, heard Jesus, and became a Christian. Paul tells me, “Oh, Murali, this grace started in eternity, electing, predestining, purchasing salvation, and orchestrated the whole history, timelines, and geography of your birth and life. Then it came looking historically, geographically, and effectually.” “Why did it come to you and not to hundreds of my friends and relatives?” “According to His good pleasure… His divine sovereign choice.” In the next verses, we will see where this grace will take me.

Oh, believer, stand back and be amazed at the panorama of your salvation and bless God for this great salvation. My heart was filled with joy. Blessed be God, the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. I feel blessed and understand why our Lord said in Matthew 13:16, “Blessed are your eyes for they see. Blessed are your ears for they hear. Because it has been given to you to know the mysteries of the kingdom of heaven, but to them it has not been given.” Oh, now I understand it is this wisdom that gave me prudence to not live like my friends and become drunkards, drug addicts, and AIDS patients now. This gospel mystery made us wise with heavenly wisdom. We know who we are, and we know how our sins are forgiven; we know why we were born on this earth, and we know what happens to us after death; we know how to live now. Live in a way pleasing to God. Live a life conformed to His Word.

What a wonder that this came to you! Oh, bless God, it is sovereign grace. No wonder, in Luke 10:21, the Lord Jesus rejoiced in the Spirit and said, “I thank You, Father, Lord of heaven and earth, that You have hidden these things from the wise and prudent and revealed them to babes. Even so, Father, for so it seemed good in Your sight.”


2. Magnify His Gospel.

We can do this in four steps: behold the glory of the gospel, have confidence in the gospel, feel indebted to the gospel, and pray to boldly proclaim the gospel.

  • Behold the Glory of the Gospel: The gospel is not a system of ideas that came from the puny minds of men, a man-made religion, or a group of churches. The gospel is a divine revelation of God’s eternal intention to save men by way of a mediator. This should excite us like Paul. The gospel is a mystery that was hidden in God for generations, but now revealed by God. Who could have ever conceived that a holy God would do anything but damn depraved sinners? He had said, “in the day you eat, you’ll die.” It takes no mystery to know that if I’ve sinned, I’ll die. But that the same God against whom we sinned planned a way of life that involves the mystery of the incarnation, the mystery of Calvary, the mystery of the resurrection, the mystery of the ascension, the mystery of union with Christ, and the mystery of the new birth. This is the glory of the gospel; it is a mystery hidden but now revealed to us by the overflow of grace.
  • Have Confidence in the Gospel: All men, whatever show they put outside, have deep questions. It is the gospel alone which God uses to answer the most profound philosophical questions that man has ever raised. It is not the world’s wise books or philosophy that answers man’s deepest questions. We saw how vain all those are. It is the unadorned gospel that answers all of the profound questions of life. Paul had that confidence in the gospel. That is why wherever he goes, whether to the Roman colony of Philippi, or to Ephesus full of idolatry, or Athens with all its education, he proclaims the gospel with confidence. Do you have confidence in the gospel? Don’t you hear all the questions the world is asking? Sometimes they all seem to be asking, but we don’t answer. Paul hears all the questions the world is asking and in a way tells them, “I have all the answers, but not from my mind, but by revelation from God.” That answer is found in who the Lord Jesus is and what He did. Paul had full confidence in the gospel. Only because of that was he able to form so many churches in impossible places, even in Ephesus. He went in spite of all the glory of the temple of Artemis, and he preached the gospel. For all their questions, he said, “Go to Christ, go to Christ.” Many went and found answers. All those churches thank him. “Thank you, Paul. You sent us to Christ. In Him we now find all wisdom and knowledge.”

But not only wisdom. We’re not only thinking right, but we know how to live right. Prudence on how to live now, solve family problems, and personal problems. When we had problems, we would go to ugly temples, use all kinds of witchcraft, get drunk, and go to temple prostitutes. We lived in the gutter. But now we know the meaning of life, we have light, living happily in our homes faithful to our wives. Our lives are full of light. There’s harmony and there’s love. “Thank you, Paul. You gave us the truth that not only imparted wisdom but prudence.” And my friend, it’s the gospel that does it. It’s the gospel that does it. It is the power of God unto salvation. Do we have a confidence in the gospel? Our meager efforts, or no efforts, for the gospel show we lack confidence. May God deliver us from that unbelief. A lot of things are happening today in Christianity. Why is it a mess, a laughingstock? All pop singers are famous preachers. Why are church services entertainment and a joke today? In the name of Christianity, so many strange things are happening. The root cause of all that in our day is simply unbelief in the power of the gospel. People don’t believe that the simple, unadorned gospel is God’s means of imparting the grace of wisdom and prudence. Oh, may God make Christians believe the gospel.


3. Feel Indebtedness to the Gospel: Imagine without the gospel how dark our lives would be. No wisdom of divine realities, who I am, how can I know God, what happens after death, or no prudence to live our lives. How horrible like animals we would live. Running after money, money, and covetousness. Once we achieve it, we’re still empty. We take drugs, do some yoga, and become mentally unstable.

That will be our picture—a man in an empty world, standing on top of the world, having achieved everything. His head is blown. He’s very educated. His body is big, with a royal dress and gold, standing on top of big buildings with a car and money, with an open mouth and a shriek of despair. “Who am I?” That will be our picture without the overflowing grace that caused this wisdom and prudence to be conveyed by this mystery of His will. Oh, how we should feel a sense of indebtedness. The gospel taught us who I am, who He is, and how I may know Him, so that instead of a blown head and the open mouth and the shriek of despair, we can say with Paul, “Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, for grace that is abounded unto us in all wisdom and prudence, having made known to us the mystery of His will.” I know who I am. I know how my sins may be forgiven. I know what lies beyond the grave. I can live with purpose and die with confidence. It is the gospel.

Paul felt that indebtedness. In Romans 1:14-15, he said, “I am obligated both to Greeks and non-Greeks, both to the wise and the foolish. That is why I am so eager to preach the gospel also to you who are in Rome.” In 1 Corinthians 9:16, “I am compelled to preach. Woe to me if I do not preach the gospel!” And in Acts 20:24, “However, I consider my life worth nothing to me; my only aim is to finish the race and complete the task the Lord Jesus has given me—the task of testifying to the good news of God’s grace.” Wasn’t it the same gospel that saved us? Oh, what ungratefulness if we don’t feel that indebtedness to the gospel. Do you feel your indebtedness to the gospel? Oh, may God help you to feel your indebtedness to God. Not only did this mystery come to you historically and geographically, but it came effectually by the illuminating work of the Spirit.


4. Pray: Beyond just seeing the glory of the gospel, having confidence in it, and feeling indebted to it, we must also pray. Pray for zeal in communicating the gospel, just as Paul did. He even asked others to pray for him, as seen in Ephesians 6:19, “and for me, that utterance may be given to me, that I may open my mouth boldly to make known the mystery of the gospel.”

We should all pray this prayer. We have in our hands this mystery, hidden for generations and now revealed. All we need to do is open our mouths and tell them. Yet, we lack boldness. We feel self-conscious, tense, and ashamed. We feel like others are too wise and educated and may think we are crazy. Oh, may God open our eyes to see that they have questions; they struggle with sin in their marriages, families, and work. Life seems meaningless. The gospel is the answer for all of that.

Look at them: they’re frustrated, disappointed, and always restless, filled with inner turmoil, drowning themselves in alcohol, TV, and illicit sex. Their lives are a mess. Why? They don’t have this wisdom and prudence. But if you know the gospel, you have more wisdom than all the psychiatrists under heaven put together.

May God enable us to praise Him, to magnify the gospel, and to be like Paul, who, out of a sense of overwhelming gratitude, said, “I want to proclaim this mystery to all.” God never applies it effectually unless we proclaim it verbally. Oh, may we bless God out of gratitude and proclaim this mystery to all. May God grant us that boldness and confidence.


For those of you who claim the mystery is revealed to you, who say, “I know Christ died for my sins,” and have become believers and church members—who say you have wisdom and penetrating insight into divine realities—let me ask you, if you have wisdom, where is the evidence of prudence in your life? Wisdom will never come alone; it always brings prudence. Grace overflows, enriching us with both wisdom and prudence. The evidence of grace overflowing with wisdom is prudence in our lives. Is your life governed by God’s word? Do you commit yourself to the church and the gospel as the most important things in your life? Are you seeking God’s kingdom first? Are you living wisely with prudence in your family, at work, and in society, not running after covetousness? If there is no prudence in your life, it reveals that wisdom has not come to you.

I say this with trembling and sadness in my heart. The mystery of the gospel, which billions yearned for, did not go to so many, but it came to you historically and even geographically, yet it still has not come to you effectually and saved you. Have you asked why? You hear so many sermons, the greatest truths that billions in the world have not heard even one of. You know more than Isaiah, Jeremiah, and even Daniel. Still, it has not effectually given you wisdom and prudence, revealing the mystery of His will.

I shudder to say that if you don’t soon repent and come to Christ, this mystery is revealed to you to make you fill the cup of your sin in your life and give you the worst punishment in hell, so God can glorify His justice to the utmost through you. It is a frightening aspect of my ministry; for some, it is the aroma of life, and for some, it is the aroma of death. I see some of you, and I want to warn you that all my ministry will do for some of you is to make hell a worse place to be in forever. It would have been better for you to have been in Tyre and Sidon and never had the mystery of the gospel opened up to you. It will be better for Sodom and Gomorrah on the day of judgment than for you because you know more than they did. Because after hearing the gospel repeatedly, you do not repent, the worst punishment in hell awaits you.

Some new people come with so much joy and say, “Pastor, that message was so clear; it opened my eyes and filled my heart with joy and peace. Thank you.” Some of you sit there and hear so many sermons and say, “I don’t understand what he is saying.” You understand every mystery of lust stories, thrillers, movies, and Instagram reels, but you sit here woolly-headed, fuzzy-headed, seeing left, right, and down. What is the difference? They are not smarter than you. The difference is that the mystery came to them effectually, opening up their minds to see all wisdom and prudence, and it transformed their very soul. But for you, it’s just a bunch of words.

Romans 1:28-29 warns, “And even as they did not like to retain God in their knowledge, God gave them over to a debased mind, to do those things which are not fitting; being filled with all unrighteousness, sexual immorality…”

If you don’t understand how much effort good students put in to learn, you will not understand this either. If you don’t understand this, it will not only affect this life but all of eternity. Shouldn’t you cry out to God, “Oh God, open my eyes”? Pastor has been teaching for years, and I am sitting here like a stone. Your word says the natural man does not receive the things of the Spirit of God. They are foolishness to him. Lord, that’s true. It’s all foolishness to me. I don’t understand it. I don’t grasp it.

Let that realization humble you. Bring yourself down to the dust before God and cry out with that poor blind beggar, “Son of David, have mercy upon me.” The Lord Jesus has come, the prophet says, to open the eyes of the blind. That’s why He has come. You call upon Him to open your eyes and give you the grace to see and to understand the mystery of the gospel. Otherwise, again, I shudder to say, what you heard today will increase your punishment in hell even more.

All Wisdom and Prudence – Eph 1:8

We are still in an emotional praise of Paul. He started with “Blessed be God who blessed us with every spiritual blessing,” and then he enumerates some of the spiritual blessings, starting with election, predestination, and redemption.

We have seen verses 1-7, and so far the Holy Spirit has helped us understand glorious truths, but the challenge starts from verse 8 onwards. Let me read verses 7 to 10: “In Him we have redemption through His blood, the forgiveness of sins, according to the riches of His grace which He made to abound toward us in all wisdom and prudence, having made known to us the mystery of His will, according to His good pleasure which He purposed in Himself, that in the dispensation of the fullness of the times He might gather together in one all things in Christ, both which are in heaven and which are on earth—in Him.”

What does it mean? What commentaries can help us grasp this? The apparent reading seems like a mere jumble of words without a logical order. Many commentaries superficially explain and some even skip these verses. Many preachers conveniently give brief, vague explanations and skip these verses. We could also do that quickly and finish verses 8-10. But we have found that when we prayerfully dig, labor, and meditate and wait for the Holy Spirit’s help, He reveals marvelous truths in such passages. So that is what we will try to do as we look at each word and verse in this passage.

Let us grasp the connection and structure of verses 8-10 first. Paul, after blessing God for election and redemption, and the central blessing of redemption as the forgiveness of sins, and the measure of that forgiveness—according to the riches of his grace—now from verse 8 onwards, takes off in another amplification of this salvation. This grace has not only forgiven our sins but has overflowed to us in all wisdom and prudence.

Wisdom and prudence are key to understanding the remaining verses. The riches of grace not only granted redemption through the blood of Christ, but that same grace has overflowed to impart wisdom and prudence.

You can see a beautiful progression showing the full scope of our salvation. Like a botanist who studies a plant—the root, stem, plant, vine, leaves, flower, and fruit—so Paul takes the full plant of salvation, looks at each part at a time, and praises God, starting with the root. When did our salvation begin? The root of salvation, verses 4 and 5, began in eternity in election by the Father’s predestination. How was the plan accomplished? It was accomplished through redemption purchased by the blood of Christ. How does it come to us? How does it touch us? You see, however glorious the predestination the Father has done in eternity, whatever price Christ paid to purchase it, we will never know or enjoy the fruits of it until it is revealed to us. And so the same grace that predestined it, the same grace that purchased it, is now the grace that reveals it to us. How does it reveal the eternal plan of salvation? Verse 8 says in all wisdom and prudence. And that is the beautiful order of salvation in Paul’s mind.

This is not a jumble of words, but a logical development of thought. Our salvation is not only predestined in eternity and fully purchased in time, but it is also a revealed salvation. Verse 8 opens up the revelation. Let me help you understand verses 8-10 in 5 headings. It should give you a structure in your mind.

  1. How is this salvation revealed? Verse 8 says, “in all wisdom and prudence.”
  2. In which form did it come to us? Verse 9 says, “having made known to us the mystery of His will,” which indicates the gospel.
  3. Why has he revealed it to us and now? Verse 9 says, “according to His good pleasure which He purposed in Himself.”
  4. When was it revealed? Verse 10 says, “in the dispensation of the fullness of the times,” meaning the gospel age.
  5. What is the ultimate purpose of salvation? To sum up all things in Christ. Verse 10 says, “He might gather together in one all things in Christ, both which are in heaven and which are on earth—in Him.”

So, verses 8-10 tell us that salvation is revealed—how, in what form, why, when, and what is its final goal. These five questions will unlock one of the most mysterious and difficult passages in the entire New Testament. So, we will carefully look at each of these aspects of our great salvation. We could rush and finish all of it in one sermon, but I want us to see each of them in a way so that the Holy Spirit fills us with wonder, gratitude, and joy, and we join Paul in blessing God for such a great salvation.

First today, we will look at verse 8. How is the eternal plan of salvation revealed to us? “in all wisdom and prudence.” Verse 8 says, “the riches of His grace which He made to abound toward us in all wisdom and prudence.”

There are three things to consider: the meaning of wisdom and prudence, why this excited Paul, and five applications.

The Meaning of Wisdom and Prudence

Now, what is wisdom? The Greek word for wisdom is sophia, which was the passion of all wise men and philosophers. They searched for this wisdom their entire lives. This is the wisdom Solomon spoke so much about in Proverbs; it is the greatest thing in life, and he commands us to seek wisdom like hidden treasures. Paul says grace has overflowed to us in all wisdom.

In the biblical sense, wisdom is knowledge plus perception. One author gives one of the best explanations: wisdom is penetrating insight into divine realities. God is a reality. Christ is a reality. Sin is a reality. Forgiveness is a reality. Salvation is a reality. Heaven is a reality. Hell is a reality. These are heavenly, divine realities. When a person has penetrating insight into those realities, they have wisdom.

No fallen person can naturally have that wisdom. A person, by their natural faculties and through intense searching, even for their whole life, cannot penetrate these realities. They must be divinely revealed. In verse 8, Paul says that if you and I have that wisdom, it is because the riches of God’s grace abounded or overflowed. This wisdom is the result of the overflow of grace.

This wisdom, as we will see in the next verses, reveals to us God’s amazing eternal secret plan for the past, present, and future. This wisdom helps us see God’s eternal plan for the ages. What happened in the past, why, what is happening today, and what will happen in the end? How everything of the past, present, and future will be summed up in Christ. Where is all this going? Paul drops a great thought on us. We will be able to see the purpose and meaning not only of every event in our lives but also, as we read or watch the news, we can see how all these current events fit into the eternal plan of God.

The next word is prudence. Prudence or discernment is the practical ability to apply the piercing insights of the divine realities of wisdom to the daily situations of life. It’s one thing to see divine realities. It’s another thing to see how those divine realities fit my human circumstances in all their reality. Prudence is a practical ability that helps us apply our wisdom to daily life situations and live wisely.

Wisdom refers to understanding the true nature of things, whereas prudence refers to the practical discernment that results in right action in daily life. The idea is that grace has not only given us the wisdom of divine realities to apprehend His eternal plan of salvation but also prudence—the practical outworking of it in our daily lives, the practical application of these realities to the problems of life and how to resolve them. William Barclay put it: “Christ gives to men the ability to see the great ultimate truths of eternity and to solve the problems of each moment of time in their lives in that light.” God gives us the wisdom to understand his whole plan for the universe—how it started, what is going on, and where all this will lead—and then gives us prudence to walk in the world daily in the light of that wisdom. Isn’t that super?

In fact, the whole book of Ephesians can be summarized in these two words: wisdom and prudence. Chapters 1-3 are wisdom—penetrating insight into divine realities, great sweeping doctrinal concepts. Chapters 4-6 are prudence—how to apply those realities in the real nitty-gritty details where we live, how to solve problems in our family, marriage, children, job, inside the church, and in society. So, we have seen the meaning of the words.


Why Paul Was So Excited

Why did this excite Paul so much that he was thrilled and blessed God, saying this wisdom and prudence is a result of the abounding riches of God’s grace? Why should he get excited about it? Some of you don’t look excited. You’re half asleep. If you stand where I am standing and see all your faces, I can read these words, and they don’t get you excited at all. In Kerala, they forced us to buy a lottery ticket. You know, the amount is 12 crores at the end of the month. If you won that lottery today, how excited you would be—you’d get goosebumps all over your body. But Paul’s whole body and even his soul are full of goosebumps and excited as if he got a thousand crores. “Blessed be God the riches of grace abounded in all wisdom and prudence.” You don’t get tingles. You’re not thrilled. If we are to bless God like Paul, we have to understand why he got so excited. Get into his great mind and think like him. How do we do it? Can I suggest two ways? Two reasons why Paul gets excited, and unless you look at things as he did, you won’t get excited as he did. And here are the two things: 1. He knew the empty futility of all the world’s wisdom. 2. He knew the fountainhead of all heavenly wisdom.

  1. He knew the futility of the world’s wisdom.

Now, suppose this morning it were possible to gather the most brilliant minds in the world in this hall: the best minds of the past and present—Isaac Newton, Aryabhatta, Einstein, Thomas Alva Edison, Stephen Hawking, all experts in computers, artificial intelligence, the best philosophers, the best doctors, neurosurgeons, psychiatrists, astronomers, all with many PhD or doctorate degrees in their field. Let’s even get film and sports pop stars who have achieved big things, and we gather all the brain power from all over the world. Imagine that august group.

They are discussing great concepts, using big words, jargon, and equations. We are standing in a corner, our heads spinning, and we may faint. Nothing goes inside our heads. We feel dizzy, understanding nothing in the world.

Suddenly, someone like Rouel, little Elkanah, or Rayshaun comes inside the hall with a book and a pencil, and he looks at them all. They all watch him with delight and say, “Hello, little man, how are you? What are you doing?” He says, “I am thinking. I need help. I have some random catechism questions from my Sunday school teacher. She wants me to think and come up with answers. Can you help me?” They smile with arrogance and say, “Okay, what are the questions?”

The first question: “Is there a God?” There is pin-drop silence over this great group of august, brilliant men. The second question: “If there is, what is God like? How can I know him? How can I have a relationship with him? What is wrong? What is right? How can I get rid of my wrongs? What is the purpose of my life on this earth? What will happen to me after death? Why is the newspaper filled with so many crimes in the world, so much suffering, wars, and plagues? What is happening in this world now? Where will all this end?”

All the top brains start sweating, and their faces turn a little red. They either don’t have an answer to these basic questions, or each one has a different answer, and they all know that not all of them can be correct. They cannot answer one of these questions. Not a single one. If the little boy comes in and says, “What is a light-year? How many light-years are there between Earth and Mars?” they can answer it in a simple way. They can answer, “What is AI? Advanced machine learning, neural networks.” But when he says, “Is there a God?”—silence. “How can I know God?”—silence. “What is the purpose of my life on this earth?”—silence. “What will happen to me after death?”—silence. “What is right?”—silence. “What is wrong?”—silence. “Why? Where did all this end?”—silence. None of them know. And you know, they have these questions deep inside them, and they are still searching for answers to them.

Ah, my brothers, this is why Paul got excited. Even the top brains are breaking their heads to understand these realities for ages, but the riches of God’s grace have overflowed in wisdom and in prudence. He knew the empty futility of the world’s wisdom, and he expressed this in 1 Corinthians 1:21: “the world through its wisdom knew not God.” That’s it. Whatever the world knows, it knows this and that, but the world through its wisdom did not know God. It cannot bring us to the knowledge of God.

Do we realize that all the world, with all the great people in the world, does not know the most important thing to know? This most essential and foundational knowledge for everything—the world doesn’t know. The knowledge for which humans were created—humans were made to know God and to function in the light of that knowledge of God. And a person is never truly a human until they know God.

Whatever the world may know, what is the use of all that knowledge if it doesn’t know God? It didn’t know God in history, it doesn’t know him presently, and it won’t know him in all the future. Do we see such hopeless confusion and emptiness in the world? A great French philosopher said, “The universe is indifferent and meaningless. Who created it? Why are we on this puny mud heap spinning in infinite space? I have not the slightest idea, and I’m convinced that nobody else does either.” Well, we may not have an IQ like him, but we can tell him: “I know the truth.” Socrates, a great worldly wise man, said, “I know that I know nothing that I truly should know.” Do you see that all these people are groping in darkness like drunkards without divine wisdom?

Because they do not have this piercing insight into divine realities, they do not have the prudence to live their lives in that light. They don’t know for sure if there is a God, how to know him, why they were born, why they are living, what the purpose of life is, or what happens after death. Without that wisdom, they don’t have prudence, so they live their lives like animals, only for fleeting pleasures and lusts, eating and drinking, thinking “tomorrow we die” because we don’t know what happens after that.

I just came across a short clip of three big superstars sitting together. The anchor asks, “What is love?” Each one is blabbering: “Love is something you should give as soon as you receive it. You should give even if you don’t receive it.” What nonsense. Another one says, “Without any reason, we like someone without any expectations. That is love.” I felt like saying, “Fools! This is why you had two divorces and now live meaningless lives. You have never had the divine wisdom that love is patient, love is kind, not envious, not boasting, not proud, and not easily angered.” They don’t know. Oh, the futility of the world’s wisdom is so useless.

Just see the billions of contents, stories, web series, and movies, all based on empty, useless futility and philosophy. All horror movies are based on the foolishness of not knowing what happens to a soul after death. All love stories are based on not knowing what true love is. All revenge stories are based on the thought that revenge is the final divine satisfaction, not knowing that forgiveness is divine satisfaction. Fiction and fantasy are all futility. Yes, for some time, we may watch, but do we realize that all those are useless, empty, and not worth a single cent?

Oh, Paul knew that all the knowledge of the world is so futile. Paul could see all mankind before him, groping in darkness and blindness like drunkards. And he was also like that, blind, but one day, overflowing grace came to him. How? In all wisdom and knowledge, it gave him penetrating insight. The only reason any person has this wisdom and prudence is because the grace of God chose them in past eternity, predestined them for sonship, and Christ purchased a salvation. The fruit and evidence of that is that grace overflowing personally to that person, opening their mind and heart, enlightening it, and revealing these realities to them in their experience now.

Let me ask an application question to everyone’s conscience here this morning. Has this grace overflowed to you and shown you the absolute futility of the world’s wisdom? Have you? With all its knowledge, activities, parties, and busy life, it cannot give you the most essential thing in life, the purpose for which you were created: the knowledge of God. Have you felt its futility? Have you seen that futility? And having seen that futility, has God’s grace overflowed in giving you penetrating insight into divine realities and the ability to apply those realities to your own life?

Words like sin, forgiveness, and grace—has God given you penetrating insight into them? These are realities. They are not just a preacher’s words. They are divine realities. The blood of Christ applied to your conscience, forgiveness—this is a reality as real as your eyes seeing me and this pulpit, and as real as the nose on your face. Oh, if you know these realities, you will be filled with ecstasy, jumping like Paul. While the whole world is sinking in blindness and futility, I was also sinking in it. Blessed be God for the grace that not only elected and predestined me in eternity and redeemed me and brought the forgiveness of sins, but it overflowed and opened up divine realities to us. Blessed be God for such overflowing grace. And that’s why Paul got excited—because he knew the futility of the world’s wisdom.

  1. He knew the fountainhead of all heavenly wisdom.

A lot of people know the futility of the world’s wisdom, but they’re literally blowing their brains out. Buddha, who left all the world’s pursuits, said, “The root of increasing suffering is increasing knowledge of this world.” Ecclesiastes 1:18 says, “For in much wisdom of the world is much vexation, and he who increases knowledge increases sorrow.” More knowledge of the world and its lusts not only makes us more empty and fed up but also causes vexation and intensifies our sorrow. Some of the most thoughtful, perceptive people realize it is all useless and empty, and they are destroying themselves. Why? They’ve seen the futility of the world’s wisdom.

And in the age that has had the most advances in human knowledge known to any age—we live in the information age, the digital age. Take a mobile phone; we have answers for everything. Small children learn everything in five to eight years that took us 20 to 30 years. In this sea of knowledge, my most basic, fundamental questions—”Who am I? Where did I come from? Is there a God? How can I know him? What is my purpose on Earth? How can I have true peace? What happens after death?”—all the astronomers, sociologists, and scientists, not a single one can answer. If you feel the futility of the world’s wisdom and emptiness in the world and do not know the fountainhead of heavenly wisdom, it will fill you with despair and that will destroy you. Or in that despair, you’ll destroy yourself.

Do you know why some of the richest, most educated, smart, and successful people all take drugs? There is a deep philosophical reason. They have seen success, seen all the knowledge and education the world can give. The world in its wisdom has not answered their basic questions. Maybe, just maybe, if they can penetrate deeper into themselves by dropping acid, forgetting all knowledge, they’ll get some insight and get some answers—some peace, some joy. And there are serious drug users who are being driven by this hope that maybe some answers will come there.

Why are great computer experts, scientists, and rich people in Western countries turning to old, Eastern, oriental Hindu mind cults of meditation, yoga, and practices? It is again a person’s effort to find answers that they haven’t found in education, money, materialism, tech, or success—in all the wisdom of the world. So much worldly wisdom is filling them with anxiety, restlessness, and tension—all meaningless. So they want to empty their minds of all the garbage with yoga so they can find answers to their deep questions. They are trying to find it in a way without repenting of their sins, so they turn to these methods.

All these and many others are evidence that mankind is groping in darkness, admitting that the answers are not here in the material, educational, money, tech, or scientific realm of success. It is a sad sight to see all of mankind groping like drunkards.

But Paul rejoices instead of despairing. Why? Because he not only knew the futility of the world’s wisdom, but he also knew the fountainhead of heavenly wisdom. And who is that fountainhead? The one through whom all these blessings come to us. Verse 3: “Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who hath blessed us with all spiritual blessings in Christ.”

This wisdom and prudence is a spiritual blessing, and like all blessings, it comes to us in Christ. He is the fountainhead of this heavenly wisdom. 1 Corinthians 1:30: “But of him are ye in Christ Jesus, who was made unto us…” And what’s the first thing he mentions? “…wisdom from God.” Jesus Christ, that unique God-man, and in his work, is made to us wisdom from God.

Colossians 2:3: “For in him are hidden all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge.” Not that they are hidden so no one can see them. No, no. They are stored up in him so that all who are in him have the full display of them. It is all exclusively in him. Outside of him, everywhere in the world is futility and emptiness.

The child’s questions that the world’s greatest wise men were not able to answer are all fully and satisfactorily answered in Jesus. The little child comes into the presence of the Lord Jesus as he’s found in the Scriptures, and he says, “Sir, can you tell me, is there a God?” Jesus says, “Yes, there is a God, and he has sent me. I am the greatest evidence that there is a God.” And the little child says, “Well, how can I know what he’s like?” And Jesus says, “He that has seen me has seen the Father.” And then he says, “But how can I come to know that God?” And Jesus says, “I am the way, the truth, and the life. No man comes to the Father but by me.” “Study me and believe me, and you will know without a doubt that there is a God; you will grow in his relationship.” “Why do I do what I do, sir?” And Jesus says, “For from within, out of the heart of man, proceed all sins… Child, you do what you do because you’re part of Adam’s fallen race, born in sin.” “Sir, how can all this be changed?” And Jesus says, “Believe in me and my work, and repent. He who believes in him will be saved. You will become a new creature. Old things will pass away, and all things will become new. You will have eternal life.” “Why am I on this earth?” “To know and glorify God. That is eternal life.” “What happens after death?” “You will be with me in heaven if you believe in me or in eternal hell suffering for your sins.” “How can I get peace and rest?” “Come to me, I will give you rest.” “Why is the newspaper filled with so much crime in the world, suffering, wars, and plagues?” “All this I prophesied and it is part of my plan to redeem them when I come again and judge it. Behold, I will make a new earth and a new heaven without any of this suffering, sin, and pain.”

Questions that baffled philosophers, psychiatrists, and sociologists, and all the world’s great men, are answered in the Lord Jesus. The Apostle Paul rejoices that grace has overflowed to impart wisdom and prudence, not only because he knew the futility of the world’s wisdom, but he also knew the fountainhead of heavenly wisdom, Jesus Christ. In him, all the deepest questions of mankind are answered.

Paul blesses God because while the whole world doesn’t even have a drop of this wisdom, not even the ABCs, it is not given to everyone in the world, not to the wise and great, but to us—babes. What do we know? But exclusively to us. It was revealed to us because he chose us in eternity to the praise of the glory of His grace.

God’s grace made this wisdom to abound to us. How much wisdom and prudence has God given? Not tiny, small tidbits, but it says abounding, overflowing. Whatever God does in grace is always abounding; the word is super-abound, super-abundantly. And so the apostle says the grace of God, which is the richness of grace, that great storehouse of grace has spilled over, and when it spilled over, it imparted wisdom and prudence—penetrating insight into divine realities and then prudence, the ability to see the relationship of those realities to my own circumstances. Next week, we will see the revelation of his glorious wisdom, what form it came to us in, why it came to us, when, and what its final goal is.


Applications

  1. Let me ask you two questions: Have you personally been brought to see and to feel the absolute futility of the world’s wisdom? When you hear the world talk, go to relatives’ houses, and listen to them talking and struggling, do you see how futile all this is? How much they are struggling? Secondly, has God’s grace overflowed in Jesus Christ to give you all wisdom, piercing insights into divine realities? Are words like sin, forgiveness, and grace more than just words for you? Are they realities you have felt and tasted in your experience?If not, you are one among the blind who are wallowing in the world with not only futile but anxiety-causing knowledge. The more you know the world, the more suffering and anxiety, as Solomon said. Without this wisdom, you can never live a prudent life in your family, at work, or in society. You will not have the wisdom to resolve your family’s marriage problems, your children’s problems, your financial problems, or your psychological problems. In the future, without the light of these piercing realities, all your decisions, desires, time, and efforts will be wasted on useless things, and your lifespan will be spent uselessly. You will wonder why your life is so filled with worries and sorrows.Oh, even as you hear God’s word preached to you, may God open your eyes to see and feel the futility of the world’s wisdom and make overflowing grace abound to you in all wisdom and prudence. Come to the Lord Jesus Christ; he is the wisdom of God, and all treasures of wisdom are hidden in him. If all the treasures are stored up in Christ, unless you get into Him, you can never know the ABCs of true wisdom. You will only know the foolishness of the world’s wisdom. In a very real sense, a person does not know anything in its truest sense unless this grace of God reveals it to them. Until then, they walk in their own foolish, blind, dark world, thinking they are wise, but they are mad.
  2. As people of God, may we add this grace to our praise list. Oh, how grateful we should be when the whole world doesn’t have a single clue, but God has overflowed with not just some, but all wisdom, so we can answer all the greatest questions. This grace has chosen to hide this wisdom from the wise and the prudent of the world, and He has chosen to reveal it to babes like us. Remember, Jesus himself praised God for this. Imagine, God has taken us into His confidence. He has revealed his entire plan of salvation from end to beginning. We will see in the next verses that we know the whole plan for the ages. We have the mind of an infinite God. We are the wisest people on the earth by grace. Our neighbors don’t know, our relatives don’t know, politicians and scientists don’t know, but we know. We are wise. Shouldn’t we bless God for this amazing grace?
  3. Not only should we bless God for this wisdom, but we should also display this wisdom through prudence in our lives, families, and at work. This wisdom in the form of prudence should overflow to the world through our mouths, hands, and feet, and in the principles of spiritual living—how we live our lives. Ephesians 4:17 says, “This I say, therefore, and testify in the Lord, that you should no longer walk as the rest of the Gentiles walk, in the futility of their mind.” Ephesians 5:15 says, “See then that you walk circumspectly, not as fools but as wise, redeeming the time, because the days are evil.” We have to learn to walk wisely as a witness to the wisdom God has revealed to us.
  4. This foolish, blind world always bullies the people of God as fools. They think we are fools to believe the Bible, fools to believe Jesus Christ, fools to avoid sin and miss all the fun, fools to believe in the resurrection, judgment, heaven, and hell. They give us many names—”Saddus,” “fathers,” “saints,” “hallelujah groups”—and bully us. Sometimes we feel ashamed and cringe before this perverted generation, having no boldness to stand before them. May this truth give us all the boldness to stand and tell them that they are the foolish ones, the blind ones, who do not understand wisdom. But God’s grace has abounded in all wisdom. We have insight into divine realities. We can teach them the truths. Never allow the foolish world to bully you or threaten you. We are the wisest on Earth by God’s grace. Meditate deeply on this until God’s grace grips you and thrills you, that overflowing grace has given all wisdom and prudence to us. I believe that conviction will give you all boldness in the world. No training or arts of elocution can do that. It is a conviction produced by the Holy Spirit through verses like this—that we have all wisdom and prudence. That conviction made the apostles stand before the old world of Rome, Greece, and other parts and announce that they are fools and that we announce divine wisdom. If the same grace grips you, you can come before a confused and blind world that reels and flies like a drunken man, and you can say, “I know, and I know… I know the answers to the deepest questions.”I was telling about God, and a man was trying to bully me. “You are a pastor, which college did you get a doctorate degree from?” I said, “I got my degree in the college of grace. That college taught me to see my own total depravity, my blindness, to see the glory of God in the face of Christ. That college made me hate my sin and the lusts of the world, and made the words of the Bible the sweetest thing in my life. I spend most of my time reading and understanding that and teaching the Bible. That college transformed and changed me into a new person.” Can any theological college in the world do that?” He was staring at me for some time and then went away. “This guy’s mad,” they might think. Their conscience will speak to them later, though. Don’t let them intimidate you with their foolishness. Worldly wise people, thinking they are wise, have become fools. We are the wisest on Earth by God’s grace.

A Final Exhortation

Young people, small children, listen to me carefully. We teach you that God’s Word is the only answer. Last week, many of you shared the absolute authority and sufficiency of Holy Scripture in our youth meeting. But the devil, through the world and your friends, your stars whom you admire, will bring up questions about the Bible. It will start in a small way: “Maybe there’s a point in the Bible we can’t believe… oh, this doubt… oh, that doubt… We can’t believe everything in the Bible.” See, you either believe the whole Bible or you don’t believe the Bible at all, because the Scriptures cannot be broken. If you start not believing one point, those points will keep increasing.

If you ever choose to reject the wisdom of the Bible, let me show you what road you are choosing. It is the road of the wisdom of the world. The end of that road is futility, vanity, and it will always lead to despair. Mark my words. Whatever you achieve in the world, that road will one day take you to a state of complete despair and emptiness. So before you deviate from the wisdom of the Bible, see the end of the road. All kinds of lusts, envy, cutthroat competition, fighting… you climb up and achieve something. What do you get at the top? Nothing… despair, discouragement, frustrations, psychological problems. The end of that road of the world’s wisdom is futility and vanity.

I am not talking in theory, but from experience. I have seen some of my friends go down that road. Some stand today as drug addicts, with broken homes, divorced wives, suffering children. Some have AIDS and have spread it to their families. Some are very successful, with fame, a name, a good job in the US, and enough money, but they are porn addicts, impotent, and not fit for family life. They can’t even enjoy the beautiful sex God created. Some have sold their souls to the devil and have been given fame, a name, and enough money, but their life is so empty and meaningless now, filled with day and night drinking and drugs. This is where the world’s wisdom will lead. They say the only thing they know is that they know nothing. Where did it start? With a few little question marks about the Bible, a little deviation from God’s wisdom, and running after the world’s wisdom.

You must choose today. Are you going to follow God’s wisdom or the wisdom of the world? God’s wisdom will be fruitful, giving you a meaningful life. His grace will slowly transform you, sanctifying you and making you a citizen of heaven, filling your life with increasing peace and joy. Your life will be so full of meaning and purpose.

Oh, dear young children, it is God’s wisdom alone that makes your life beautiful and meaningful. The wisdom of the world will destroy you. Beware. Seek heavenly wisdom. Get a piercing insight into who God is, know that your sins are forgiven and you are saved, and grow in the knowledge of God.

Psalm 37:4 is God’s promise: “Delight yourself also in the Lord, and He shall give you the desires of your heart.” I have always found that to be true. I seek God and delight myself in him, and even though, just like all of you, I had desires in my youth to do and achieve things, I see that he has always fulfilled them.

Forgiveness of sins. – Eph 1:7

As you’re coming to church, imagine someone on the street comes up and says, “We’re doing an on-the-street survey for a TV show, and I’ll give you 30 seconds to answer: What is the greatest need you have? Or what is the most precious thing you should possess?”

Many will have different answers based on their situation. If you’re sick, you may think, “My greatest need is to be healed of this illness.” If you’re poor and in debt, your greatest need is money. If you’re unemployed, you may think, “My greatest need is to get a good job to provide for my needs.” If you have a job, your great need is a promotion. If you’re single, you may think, “My greatest need is for a good partner.” If you’re already married, “My greatest need is for my wife or husband to help us live harmoniously.” If you have a rebellious child, your greatest need is for the child to be set right.

While all of these are important needs, none of them are your greatest need. These are just symptoms of a deeper need. If you ask any truly wise people, like all saints, all prophets, all kings who have lived, and great men like Paul, they will answer, not in 30 seconds, but in 1 second: The greatest thing a person needs is forgiveness of his sins. The greatest wealth a person can possess is forgiveness of sins. In the Gospels, we read that they brought a man paralyzed from neck to toe; nothing worked. Everyone thought his great need was someone to care for his daily needs, or to provide some financial help, or to simply heal him. You know what Jesus saw as the greatest need for this pathetic man? The first thing he said was, “Son, your sins are forgiven.” How did Jesus decide that was his great need?

You know, if you go to the doctor, we don’t say, “I have a pain in my chest, so it is a heart attack; give me an aspirin.” The doctor will say, “Why did you come to me? You decided you have a heart attack and you think you know the medicine.” Most of us are like this, and we go to Jesus not to tell him our deep problems, but we tell him what we think our problem is and how he should resolve it. Most of the time, what we think and feel is not our great need. Just as in the paralyzed man’s case, Dr. Jesus knows that today the greatest need of everyone in this room is the forgiveness of sins. If you receive it, believe it, and experience it, it has the power to cure most of the symptoms of financial, health, marriage, and children problems. Good health, adequate money, and a happy family are good blessings in this life, but without the sweet sense of your sins being forgiven, your conscience mixes bitterness into everything good in this life, and when you leave this world without God’s forgiveness, these blessings actually become big curses. So, your greatest need is to know that God has forgiven your sins and that you are reconciled to the holy Judge of the universe.

Both the Old and New Testaments set this as the crown of all blessings. In Psalm 32, David says, “Blessed is the man whose sins are forgiven.” In the great Psalm 103, before talking about health or wealth, he puts forgiveness of sins at the top. In the New Testament, when the Lord Jesus Christ gave the great commission to preach the gospel, he set forgiveness of sins as the central blessing of the gospel. Until your eyes are opened to see that forgiveness of sins is your greatest possession, you have not understood the gospel properly. The grasp of this blessing is what transformed many into great saints of God. What was it that brought light and peace and life to the soul of the great German Reformer Martin Luther, who was wallowing in his own guilt, doubts, and fears? It was the power of conscience that felt the forgiveness of sins through faith that made him stand like a lion, even before big monarchs and great religious leaders of the world, and go forth rejoicing and achieving wonders and changing history. This is a great blessing exclusively experienced by sinners like you and me. Whatever joy angels in heaven may have, they will never have this joy of forgiveness.

So this great worship of Paul in Ephesians 1:1-14, he brings us next to meditate on the blessing of forgiveness of sins. After talking about God’s great election plan, Paul shows us how the Son accomplishes the Father’s eternal plan through redemption. So verse 7 says, “In Him we have redemption through His blood, the forgiveness of sins, according to the riches of His grace.”

We saw the meaning of redemption, the conditions, and the price of redemption. Now, the central blessing of redemption is the forgiveness of sins. Let us understand this blessing in four parts: the need for forgiveness, the nature of forgiveness, the basis of forgiveness, and the measure of forgiveness.


The Need for Forgiveness

To appreciate the forgiveness of sins, one must feel the need for forgiveness of sins. This is where all true salvation starts, so it’s important to feel that need. But the enemy of our souls has done everything to confuse people and works overtime to ensure people in their lifespan never realize their greatest need is the forgiveness of sins. It’s easy in the outside world: to suppress the truth in unrighteousness with false religions, gods, rituals, worldly pleasures, and a busy life. He has taught them to deny sin and suppress the voice of conscience and guilt. I saw a guy with ear-tattoos and earphones with loud music, wearing a tie and a shirt—it was “screw guilt.” “Do whatever you want, don’t feel guilty.” So, by keeping them busy and suppressing their conscience, they don’t realize the need for forgiveness.

Okay, what about Christianity? The central message of Christianity is forgiveness of sins, right? Oh, he is deceiving millions today within Christianity. One way is that he has used these cursed prosperity Pentecostal churches to do the greatest harm to the gospel by emphasizing healing and prosperity as the big blessings of the gospel, making this central blessing of the gospel nothing. Second, he has used traditional religious churches to boost self-righteousness and never allow them to see their depraved heart and need for forgiveness through religious acts of fasting, lent penance, festivals, tithing, faithful church attendance, and some good works. Third, he has invented a modern Christian God who is very loving and tolerant of sin, not perfectly just and holy.

So the result is that people mention forgiveness of sins, but just as a nominal confession. The problem is many don’t believe or realize how real sin is. It is mostly fiction or a myth for them. They haven’t felt its bitterness. How can a person who does not believe in the existence of sin believe in the forgiveness of it? Those who have never felt that they are sinful can never know the joy of forgiveness.

Most of us are affected by that. That is why when I talk about the forgiveness of sins, some of you will fall asleep, but you see Paul here so thrilled, jumping about this concept of forgiveness of sins that makes him bless God. Why does the concept of forgiveness get all the joy bells ringing in his heart and for some of you it puts you to sleep? Why? Because the apostle understood the need, nature, basis, and measure of forgiveness. Only when the depth of the sickness is understood is the value of the remedy grasped. If the Holy Spirit illuminates our minds and our hearts, then we will be so thrilled and bless God like Paul.

So how does one realize the need for the forgiveness of sins? When a person takes two facts seriously: 1. Who is God, and what does sin do to God? 2. Who is man, and what has sin done to man?

First, who is God? Yes, he is loving. He is your creator, who formed you in your mother’s womb, and from the day you were born, he has cared for you. You did not dissolve or die in your mother’s womb because he protected you. You should have died when your baby got that fever or infection; it was He who healed you. He protected and gave you life, breath, and all things. You owe everything to him. He is closer to you than anyone in the world. We live and move and have our being in him. We have breath for another minute because he gives that breath to us. All the food we eat, every tasty food, every good feeling we felt, our possessions, jobs, and relationships; every day with no pain, every moment of good health, smile, and laughter, God gave you that. He knows everything about you; he always watches you. He knows when you get up, sit down, and sleep. Even before a word proceeds from your mouth, he knows it all. He surrounds you with unlimited love, so much so that he numbers the very hairs on your head. Each of you knows in your conscience that he is a good God.

But he is a God of burning holiness. All the heavens praise him not once, but thrice: “Holy, Holy, Holy.” He gave his law as a reflection of his nature, and the breaking of his law is the breaking of his heart. Oh, if we could grasp what sin does to this good God! This is what our sinful hearts refuse to realize. Our sin shames, mocks, and utterly insults all his perfect attributes. So this God never takes any disobedience of his law lightly. He sees each of your hearts now like a glass. You can hide from people, but he sees your heart now. He discerns every angry thought you had this morning, every lustful and covetous thought and feeling you had last week. He sees how carelessly you have come to worship him with no prepared heart, how your minds are wandering in prayer and singing. He records every thought, word, and deed that was displeasing to him, and this God will one day judge you and punish you for all your sins of thought, word, and deed.

What does sin do to God? The greatest insult any creature can do to God is sinning against him. It is like slapping the loving God who formed us in our mother’s womb, kicking the breasts that feed us our whole lives, spitting on that God’s face, and throwing dirt on his face. Stephen Charnock wrote, “When we sin, we do, as it were, spit in the face of God’s authority and trample underfoot his love.” Sin dares and shames every attribute: “Oh, he is omniscient and omnipresent? Let him know, let him be here; I don’t care. Omnipotent? Let him see what he can do.” Thomas Watson wrote, “Sin is the dare of God’s justice, the rape of his mercy, the jeer of his patience, the slight of his power, and the contempt of his love.” That is what sin does to God; it is so abhorrent and obnoxious to him, he cannot even bear to see it.

Who is man? If God is holy, holy, holy, only holy, man is a sinner, a sinner, a sinner, only a sinner. Originally, man is a creature of God, created in his image, created perfectly and righteously. Whether you like it or not, you are his perfect creatures, and you are accountable to him. God will judge us righteously based on the standard with which he created us. But what has sin done to man? Two kinds of effects: effects of original sin and actual sins.

First, from original sin: We fell in Adam, born as his children. Sin is our birth defect or infection; it infects our entire personality from birth. There is no vaccination. From head to toe, the Bible uses the picture of a whole body with leprosy. The infection intensifies as we grow; that is why our small angel kids soon become like little demons. It infects the way we think, feel, and do things. We cannot think, feel, or do anything without a mixture of sin. From the cradle to the graveyard, it infects us. It is a lifelong plague. Apparently, we all look nice, but like the Greek beautiful character Hydra, with long hair, when she gets angry, each of her hairs will become a snake and bite everyone around her. Sin has made us like that. A person looks normal, but oh, they have many serpents running in their mind and heart.

These bitter snakes show their faces primarily in a person’s relationship with the good God. The greatest evil of sin is not what it does to me and the people around me, but what it does to God, who is our creator, provider, and loving Father. He is the most attractive being in the universe, the source of all beauty. All of heaven is eternally mesmerized and charmed by him. This infected creature… You can talk about anything useless and unrelated, and they are very interested, and their heart loves the subject, but as soon as you talk to them about God, they get bored, yawning. They hate the subject. If they come to church by force, they cannot bear to talk for long and get impatient after some time. Why? This sin has infected a person’s mind and makes them hate to think about the most mesmerizing, wonderful being in the universe. A person’s heart has feelings for everything—emotions, gratitude, even to their pet dogs—but never feels for their creator. The carnal mind is enmity against God. You see how we treat God! This is the infection of original sin!

Think of the effects of sin in a person’s life: Life is filled with miseries. Internally, sin fills a person’s conscience with guilt and shame. Have you experienced the terrors of conscience? That is a sample of hell on earth. It removes peace and adds bitterness to every good thing in life. It has killed a person spiritually; we are dead in sins, made slaves to Satan to fulfill his lusts. Sin has destroyed a person’s family, filling it with marital conflicts and disobedient children. It puts a curse of pressure and sweat on a person’s job. It curses a person’s body, and it becomes old, sick, and finally dies.

Think about actual sins: with a mind and heart hating God, everything a person thinks, feels, speaks, and does is against God. A person’s heart is full of pride, always murmuring, “that is not there, this is not right,” trampling God’s law, mocking at the thunder-bolts of threatened wrath. “Who is the Lord? Why should I fear him? What can he do for me?” Not only does a person rob God of due worship and obedience, but they dishonor God and break all his 10 commands. Every disobedience to a command is sin.

Think: In terms of its quantity, who can count their own sins? If God opens the book, all sins committed against his law—every thought, word, and act—are recorded. Sins of commission are so many. Every lust, anger, and covetousness in the heart are recorded as sins. Disobedience to parents, insulting them by making them tell you 10 times to do something, are all sins. What about sins of omission? Failing to keep his law. Every second we did not love God with all our heart, we have sinned. Every day you didn’t pray, read the Bible, or worship God, every time you ate and didn’t glorify God, that is sin. Can you think of how many sins there are in total? Count all the sands, not just on the shore but even on the ocean’s bed, of all the oceans; the multitude of our sins will outnumber them.

Not only are they uncountable, but each sin is so great. If the greatest command is to love God with all your heart, the greatest sin is not loving God with all our heart. These are sins committed against the great God, so they are great sins. Oh, sinners, may the Holy Spirit open our eyes to carefully view the debt of your sin! Mountains and mountains are accumulating. Justice cries every day for the punishment of every sin. The wrath of God is storing up wrath to be poured on the sinner.

A life beginning with a cry, filled with miseries, dissatisfaction, and disappointments in between, ends with a cry. Think of the millions of graveyards and cemeteries with billions upon billions of tombs. What was it that killed all these people and dug all these graves? The Bible states, “the wages of sin is death.” Does the punishment of sin end with death? Oh, then we could say, “let us face it.”

How can I describe the eternal punishment of sin? All the pain we go through in this life is like a mosquito bite for a little time. All the pain in this life is only a small dripping from a big dam of God’s wrath. One day the dam will break and wrath will be poured on bodies and souls. When you see a big tsunami on YouTube, oh, how scary it is. We are so little before tall, vast waves. How will it be when the tsunami of God’s wrath, stored for all sins, comes over us? It is an ocean of eternity, with no shore, no bottom. Scripture abounds in warnings—in plain language—to create awe, make us shudder and get goosebumps, but their terrors are all faithfulness and truth. Who can gaze with a firm eye on the pictures of the Apocalypse! Unquenchable fire, weeping and gnashing, outer darkness, eternal torment with fire and sulfur, the bottomless pit—all this without intermission and for all eternity!

But I think the worst thing in hell, you know what it is? Just as the best thing in heaven is to see God’s face, the worst thing in hell will be to see the face of an angry God. Edwards wrote “Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God.” The picture is all sinners, ripe for harvest, full of juice and fattened. God with his almighty power will tread them in anger. Oh, I am a finite creature, how can I bear infinite wrath? That is why you have to bear it eternally, forever and ever. Oh, why does God punish poor finite worms of time for sins done in a short life for all eternity? Because sin is not measured by who committed it, but against whom it was committed. Those sins are committed against the eternal God, so they deserve eternal punishment. Every sin is spitting, insulting every attribute of God, and throwing dirt on his face. We are sinners who have committed not one sin, but innumerable sins, not only for one day or one year, but for years, all our lifespan. The way God punishes us for eternity for our sins, scripture says he will glorify his justice and wrath. The whole universe will shudder in awe, saying, “Oh, how just and wrathful God is.” Oh, do you see the need for the forgiveness of sins as the greatest need?

Brothers, I hope you can see that if this is what sin does to God and does to man, then can you begin to see how glorious it is? The awful, majestic king of the universe says, after suffering all this infinite insult to all his attributes from our birth in innumerable ways. Thomas Brooks wrote, “Doth not every sin crucify the Lord afresh, and put him to an open shame? Doth it not pierce him to the heart more deeply than the soldier’s spear?” We slapped his face, kicked him, insulted all his attributes, and dragged him so low by our sins, yet He himself says, “I will forgive all your sins and remember them no more.” Oh, that is bliss.

One writer says the reason the forgiveness of sins filled the first-century church, the reformers, the Puritans, and saints of the past with so much joy, and today it is such a dry topic, is primarily in the way we see God and how they saw God. In our attempts to make God more accommodating to the world, we have shown him as a God of love with whom everybody can get along. We have robbed the foundation of the sense of the sweetness of forgiveness. It’s only when we see him as the God of burning holiness, with inflexible justice, the high and the lofty one, who is of purer eyes to behold iniquity, before whom sinless seraphim veil their faces and feet and cry, “Holy, holy,” when I see that God who charges his angels with folly, in whose sight the heavens are not clean, who eternally punishes sin; with one eye we see that and with another eye we see that God takes the sins of the likes of me and says, “I will forgive not one or two, but all.” That fills the heart with wonder, joy, and songs, and constrains the heart to a life of obedience. It makes them lifelong bondslaves of God.


The Nature of Forgiveness

See what made Paul burst into praise is not only the need, but the nature of God’s forgiveness. When we think of how we have treated God, who is not only creator and provider but the majestic king of the universe, we see that the heavens behold the depravity of mankind, created to worship and enjoy God, but now for them God is a boring thing. The worship of the Most High is a hated, irksome thing. Serving him is the most useless and intolerable burden. We have shown so much ingratitude, contempt, and insult to the infinite majesty of God. We have kicked him, spit on him, and thrown dirt on him. No angel can forgive us. If we get an idea of what we have done to God, we ourselves will not forgive one sin.

We all should justly expect God to pour out his wrath on these abhorrent worms. Who are we? And who is God? Can a poor worm of dust venture to scorn Jehovah, to insult him, and trample his law and divine attributes under feet? The whole holy universe rises and says, “Condemn them without mercy! Let the earth open immediately and swallow them in hell! Sweep them away with a plague!” There is no excuse for them. While we expected plagues from God:

Here is the most amazing gospel good news of heaven. Instead of wrath, see our text verse says, “according to the riches of His grace.” Ephesians 7 says, “In Him we have redemption through His blood, the forgiveness of sins.” Isaiah 43:25 says, “I, even I, am He that blots out your transgressions for My own sake, and will not remember your sins.”

What exquisite pathos, what melting tenderness, what marvelous grace! “I, even I,” who has been so horribly insulted and shamed, just thinking of what you did makes me shed tears of blood; but I will forgive. How godlike, how unlike what man expected. Can a person behold what their sin has done to God, the greatest harm to God, and realize that God comes with such rich grace to forgive them? Can an eye behold and not overflow with tears? Can a heart hear and not melt? How glorious it is! The majestic king of the universe, who suffered all this infinite insult from our birth, says, “I will forgive all that and remember them no more.”

This is the melting grace of God. This is what melts a hardened, ungrateful sinner’s heart. Such is our God, such is our gospel. Can we marvel that it triumphs and wins souls! Thus the Gospel is the proclamation of free, complete forgiveness, and thus it goes forth, conquering and to conquer. God forgives sinners. This is the most wonderful and amazing news if you understand that.

He says, “I will remember your sins no more.” He’s not like so many of us who, when we forgive, all we do is temporarily suspend our hate or animosity. But you let that person offend us a little more, and we remind them of all the things they did in the past 20 years. Not so with God. He says, “When I forgive, I forget.” Almighty God says, and I say it reverently, “I’ll have no lapse of memory with reference to your sins. I will remember no more.” So that if you’ve received divine forgiveness and you come into the presence of God and say, “but oh God, what about this or that?” In the imagery of scripture, God says, “I am sorry, I don’t remember anything you are saying; their sins will I remember no more. No more.”

The nature of forgiveness is expressed in many beautiful pictures in the Bible. The word forgiveness means sending our sins far away. In the Old Testament, on the Day of Atonement, Yom Kippur, two goats were used by the high priest. The blood of one goat was sprinkled on the altar. The other goat? The priest went up to that goat, put his hands on that goat’s head, and as it were, he laid all the people’s sins on the head of that goat. That goat was then taken out and sent into the wilderness, where it could never find its way back again. It symbolized the taking of sin and sending it away, where it would never, ever be seen again. Beloved, that is exactly the word used here for forgiveness. It is the Greek word aphíēmi, which means to send away, never to return. Our sins, then, have been sent away, never to return. Isn’t that incredible?

Another shade of forgiveness means loosing or letting someone go from what binds them. The language nuance indicates individual acts of sin, not sin in general. Paul wants us to know that our specific, shameful, embarrassing sins that loom up in our memories to condemn us are all forgiven through the blood of Jesus Christ. Psalm 103:12 says, “As far as the east is from the west, so far has he removed our transgressions from us.” Where do east and west meet? Nowhere. Unlike north and south, which eventually meet at the poles, east and west are perpetually moving away from each other as you circle the globe. This infinite separation symbolizes the absolute and limitless nature of God’s removal of sin. Forever removed from one another.

Isaiah 38:17 says, “Behold; For You have cast all my sins behind Your back.” When something’s behind your back, you don’t see it, right? “I will take all your sins, every one I know and I see, all those recorded. Every one of those sins that cries to me, ‘Damn that sinner! Judge him! Push him to hell!’ I’ll cast them behind my back so that I see them no more.” That’s divine forgiveness.

Micah 7:18 says, “Who is a God like You, Pardoning iniquity and passing over the transgression?” “Will anyone forgive like you?” Just like all other attributes, even your forgiveness is infinite. Verse 9 says, “You will cast all our sins into the depths of the sea.” And so the nature of God’s forgiveness is a complete forgiveness and it is an irreversible forgiveness. God is forgetting our sins, putting them behind his back, putting them as far as the east is from the west. “I will cast them into the depths of the sea.”

Oh, this melts my heart; it makes me rise up with Paul and say, “Blessed be God, who granted in Christ redemption and forgiveness of sins.” That’s something to get excited about. To Paul, if you mention forgiveness, he is ready to jump out of his skin and dance in joy. Not only the need and nature.


The Basis of Forgiveness

How can God forgive these sins, so innumerable and so great? Although he is gracious and loving, God is just. Grace cannot trample upon righteousness; holiness cannot be ignored. How can a just God be a forgiving God without dishonor to his character? This is the greatest theological question. If God is just, he should punish sin; he cannot be forgiving. If he is forgiving, he should forgive at the expense of his justice. How can God be just and forgiving without dishonor to his character? The cross of Christ is the answer. Nothing else but the cross of Christ can answer that question. See, our text says, “In Him, we have forgiveness of sins.” What is the basis of forgiveness? What do you see between redemption and forgiveness? The blood of Christ.

Because in the cross of Christ, God, as a just God, imputing our sins on his Son, brings down the rod of his justice and wrath upon his son as he made him to be sin, who knew no sin for us. And the Father’s justice is fully satisfied in the crushing of his son, so that because the Lord Jesus paid the penalty of sin, God can now be just and the justifier of sinners. So that is the basis of that forgiveness.

This is again a great wonder of God’s grace. The only way God can forgive such great sins and so many sins is through the infinite value of the blood. The death of Christ is so infinite because it was the death of an infinite person. Behold the grace of God in the basis of our forgiveness. Instead of crushing us, he not only forgives such wretches, but oh, he had to buy that forgiveness with such the greatest price, even for great Jehovah. He has never paid this price and will never pay this price through all eternity.

Forgiveness thus comes not only most graciously, but most righteously. No holy requirement is relaxed. God is inflexibly and unchangeably just, while He freely justifies the ungodly. Thus, all obstacles are removed. The gates are wide open. Heaven is opened for every sinner now who truly repents and believes. God has made it ready by this great work through his son. This news is pronounced as good news to all nations in all generations. Forgiveness can enter every heart, blotting out all sins and bringing back the sons of faith to the bosom of a reconciled Father.

Paul can rejoice and bless God for the basis of forgiveness, because he doesn’t have to doubt forgiveness. If God forgives simply by an emotion of pity, without any other basis, how do I know that sometime in the future God may not change or have second thoughts and say, “Wait a minute, I forgave Saul of Tarsus that time, pitying him, but angels are reminding me I am a holy and just God. Tomorrow the devil also may question my justice. So the only way to correct this is to drag Paul and cast him into hell.” Ah, but Paul understood that his forgiveness was rooted in something far more solid than the vague pity of God. “I am forgiven today because the Father poured out his judgment upon the Son, and having once punished my sins in the substitute, Paul knew that through all eternity, Almighty God could never punish me for my sins because those sins were removed forever irreversibly on the basis of the work that Jesus Christ accomplished on his behalf.” So, blessed be God! For the forgiveness of sins.


The Measure of Forgiveness

Oh, we can preach a sermon on this, it’s such a wonderful thing to praise God for. So verse 7 says, “In Him we have redemption through His blood, the forgiveness of sins, according to the riches of His grace.”

The measure of his forgiveness is “according to the riches of his grace.” Paul does not say, “out of the riches of His grace,” but “according to the riches of His grace.” If you go to a multi-millionaire and ask for a donation and he gives you $100, he has given “out of” his riches. But if he hands you a blank check and says, “Fill in what you need,” he has given “according to” his riches. The amount has to be equal to his riches. So the measure of our forgiveness is not out of, but according to the overflowing abundance. The measure of divine forgiveness is the infinite ocean of God’s grace. If you know the height, depth, and width of that measure, then you can wonder whether or not you’ve exhausted his forgiving grace.

“According to his riches” says at least four things about his forgiveness:

  1. Forgiveness of sins is an undoubted fullness. Forgiveness of sins is not half-forgiven, but altogether absolved, for all big and small sins, covering all my sins of commission, omission, past, present, and future.
  2. Forgiveness of sins is an irreversible certainty. Once God forgives, he never condemns. If he did, that forgiveness would not be according to the riches of his grace. That is why “there is now no condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus.”
  3. Forgiveness of sins is unlimited forgiveness here. You and I help someone, and show generosity, and you have to check how much is there in your pocket, but God’s riches are infinite and unlimited. So if forgiveness of sins is according to his riches of his grace, it is unlimited.
  4. Forgiveness of sins is unfailing renewal. The next verse says that “he lavished on us.” The word is like ocean waves. They just keep coming and coming and coming. They never stop. God’s forgiveness is like that. He has decided to show extravagant, lavish, undeserved favor of God in forgiving all of your sins for all your life.

“Oh, then can we keep sinning?” As Paul says, “can we go on sinning so grace may abound?” Never. A true born-again child of God will never abuse this grace. When you know that the Beloved Redeemer shed His own blood to secure your forgiveness, it binds your heart in love to Him. It makes you hate your sin and strive against it all the more.

Oh, see, I have not told you about the sweetest word in the phrase. It is not according to his justice, sovereignty, or even love, mercy, or goodness, but according to grace. Oh, what a sweet word that makes the phrase so richer! Sweetest word; it’s all grace, infinite grace. All given freely, to the undeserving, for nothing. I am tired of explaining this verse; no more description makes sense.

Simply said: the measure of God’s forgiveness is as rich as He is, as much grace as he has, that is how much he will forgive. Oh, the splendor of God’s riches! Real pardon for real sin, an abiding pardon, an everlasting pardon, a pardon which restores all our loss and adds a charm which unfallen spirits cannot know.

Do you see why Paul got all excited? Need for forgiveness, nature of forgiveness, basis of forgiveness, and measure of forgiveness.


Application

Forgiveness of sins demands the greatest gratitude to the Lord Jesus Christ. What infinite gratitude we should have for the forgiveness of sins? In the same epistle, Paul will describe our condition as sinners. Think of the descriptions: “dead in trespasses and sins”; walking “according to the course of this world, according to the prince of the power of the air, the spirit that works in the children of disobedience”; guided “by the lust of the flesh, the desires of the mind and are by nature the children of wrath.” We walk “in the vanity of our minds,” having our understanding darkened, alienated from the life of God by the blindness of our hearts. Having lost all feeling, we give ourselves over to lewdness, to work all uncleanness with greediness. We have no hope, are without God, and are slaves to sin and Satan, cursed by the law. In that state, we are helpless.

I explained the horrors of a guilty conscience in a class once. Shakespeare said, “My conscience hath a thousand several tongues, / And every tongue brings in its several tale, / And every tale condemns me.”

If I have to represent our spiritual state, it is much worse than that of the demon-possessed man, Legion, in the Gospels. He was dwelling among the tombs; always, night and day, he was in the mountains and in the tombs, crying out and cutting himself with stones. No one could bind him, not even with chains. That was our natural condition in sin. But one day, Jesus came to our gutter in the Gadarenes and healed us. Oh, what gratitude that man had! He didn’t want to immediately go see his wife or child, but begged Jesus to always let him follow him. For him, from then on, his whole world was Jesus. Jesus said, “Go home to your friends, and tell them what great things the Lord has done for you, and how He has had compassion on you.” And he departed and began to proclaim in the 10 cities of the Decapolis all that Jesus had done for him, and all marveled.

Brothers and sisters, Christ has shown a thousand times greater mercy to you and me. He just had to command those innumerable legions of demons to leave and go into swine, and the pigs all fell from a steep place and died in the sea. But he took the innumerable legion of sins from us and put them on himself, and he fell from the great height of being the Father’s beloved Son to be forsaken. He tasted our hell and died. Oh, how much more gratitude should well up in our hearts for him! In Him, we already have full remission of sins. The burden of sin is no longer on your back; it has all been lifted. All your sins are forgiven.

If we have any sense of our sins, doesn’t that cause us to fall down in shame, with the kind of gratitude the woman had when she took a perfume box and poured it on his head and wiped it with her hair, while we sit like Pharisees? How we should thank Christ, melt in gratitude, and weep at his feet with love. From now on, my world is Jesus. Nothing is more important. Shouldn’t we be like that man, telling everyone what Jesus has done for us? In the kingdom of God, the greatest workers have been men and women who have realized their pardon, like Paul, calling himself the chief of sinners. There are no better worshippers, no better givers, no better lovers, and no better singers than pardoned men and women.


Always Remember and Praise God for This Gift: Forgiveness of Sins

It is crucial for your Christian life that you understand and experience on a daily basis this liberating truth: that God forgives all of your sins through the blood of Jesus Christ. 2 Peter says one reason we don’t bear fruit is because we forget the forgiveness of our sins. This is so true. Yesterday, I thought bitter, angry thoughts, which is wrong, and then I went to pray before preparing my sermon. I asked God to forgive me, and there was a third voice that was reminding me of those thoughts again and again. “See, you are a Christian. Oh, you are a pastor and you are going to prepare a sermon.” It kept accusing me. I was not able to feel God’s presence, peace, or joy. The voice kept saying, “You’re guilty and you know it. Forget all of this nonsense of being saved by grace! You sinned.” For a long time, it kept accusing me. Whose voice was that? Satan’s.

The Holy Spirit helped me in my prayer to say, “You’re right, Satan, I did sin. But in Him I have redemption through His blood, the forgiveness of sins, according to the riches of His grace.” After I said that verse, the voice stopped in a split second. I don’t know where that voice went. It has not come back yet.


As a Church

Forgiveness of sins is the central blessing of the gospel. A good way to test a church or a pastor to see if he is preaching the true gospel is to see how central the forgiveness of sins is in his preaching. With thousands of voices telling the church that it should stop this old message of forgiveness, if it wants to get crowds, it should become modern, address people’s felt needs, talk about the prosperity gospel, contemporary issues, get involved in social works, and preach a social gospel. Otherwise, no one will come and listen in your church. May God help us to stand against this terrible pressure and preach only the true gospel. The central issue of the gospel is the proclamation of the forgiveness of sins through the blood of Jesus Christ, the Lamb of God. If we ever move from that, let us close our shop and close this building. Either bring a bulldozer and tear this building down or rent it and put up a sign for a social club, not deceive people into thinking this is a Christian church.


Unbelievers

For those who do not believe in the Lord: Do you have the greatest thing a person can possess in this life? Do you have the forgiveness of sins this morning? Have you seen your need for forgiveness, the nature of forgiveness, the basis of forgiveness, and the measure of forgiveness? If you have felt the horror of a guilty conscience, ask, it has a million tongues, and each has a million stories. If you have felt a terrified conscience that has the thunder of God’s coming wrath and guilt, oh, there is no sweeter, more joyful, or more peaceful sound than that phrase: forgiveness of sins. The very sound will fill you with joy. That sound comes to you today in the form of the gospel, in free grace and dying love, and a pardon bought with blood from heaven to you. Will you reject it and live on with a guilty conscience?

May I say to all of you, children, teenagers, parents, whoever you may be, the reality of who God is and what you are as a sinner does not change based on whether or not you agree or realize them. God is your creator, whether you acknowledge it or not. You have broken his law, and His wrath is coming on you, whether you agree or not.

Imagine the police go to a mall full of people and say there is a bomb inside the mall, and a clock is ticking, and in 30 minutes it will blow up, and the whole mall will collapse, and all will die. Some people may believe and leave. Some may say, “Oh, we always hear these rumors,” and keep shopping and even go into a movie. Their indifference will not change the facts of reality or diffuse the bomb. In 30 minutes, they will burn and suffer, and for a few seconds before death, they will realize how stupid they were to ignore the warning. In the same way, you may sit here this morning and say, “God is the holy creator, and I am a sinner, and he will judge me… that’s not for me, Pastor; oh, it is always religious talk. I am not going to take it seriously.” That is your freedom. But you will face the consequences of those realities and your indifference, not for a few seconds, but for all eternity.

Your greatest need is the forgiveness of sins, and our verse says that in all the universe, it is found in Him, in Christ Jesus alone. Paul adds, “according to the riches of His grace which He lavished on us,” to show that there are no sins too great for God to forgive through the blood of Christ.

“According to the riches of his grace.” This sound of the gospel has delivered many burdened, self-condemned souls from doubts. The measure of God’s forgiveness is not according to how big or small the sins we commit are, or how much we beat ourselves or mourn. Rather, the measure of God’s forgiveness is according to the riches of His grace. Who can tell the height, depth, and width of God’s grace? The forgiveness of sins is not based on the character of the sinner, no matter how big a sinner he is, but on the character of the offended but forgiving God. Forgiveness is not to be measured by what you are or what you have done, but by God and what He is. Since the measure of forgiveness lies in the riches of grace, it should encourage the big and chief of sinners to expect the forgiveness of sins. Is there not great encouragement to come to God and say, “Father, forgive me, for I have sinned”? Look into the face of God and see if He is not ready to forgive.

The only two conditions for the forgiveness of sins are to repent and believe. Turn from your sin with sorrow and hatred and believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, casting yourself upon him as your only hope of acceptance before God.


Blessings of Forgiveness

  1. When faith grasps this blessing, the soul is filled with unspeakable joy and blessing. In the midst of all the problems of life, peace that surpasses all knowledge enters a person’s heart. Nothing can disturb the peace of a person who fully knows that all their sins are forgiven, God is reconciled, and heaven is purchased, and glory is won! Can temporal mercies be named in comparison? All worldly blessings, multiplied and magnified to excess, are dim before this treasure.
  2. Negatively, it delivers us from every fear that terrifies human hearts: (1) the wrath of God, (2) the curse of the Law, (3) an accusing conscience, (4) the fear of death, and (5) the dreadfulness of eternity.
  3. Positively, it is the mother of all heavenly blessings. Everything needed for a close, affectionate relationship with God: regeneration, justification, adoption, sanctification, bright views of providence, assurance that everything is for my greatest good, alleviation in sickness. Forgiveness is a gentle bed, a downy couch for hours of declining health. It brings boldness and comfort in death. It is a great deliverance at the judgment bar and glory throughout eternity.

Many people know what Christ did for them on the cross, yet have no joy of forgiveness. The only problem is unbelief. You don’t believe what God is saying to you on the cross. The basis of forgiveness is nothing in you, but Jesus’s work. God says, “I’ve cast your sins behind my back, I have forgotten all sins,” but you say you don’t believe, and you keep doubting. It is a terrible sin of unbelief. Oh, let me urge some of you to stop doubting when there are no grounds for that doubt, when God has said in his Son and in his Word, “He that believes is forgiven.”

Let me quote from a touching story by Spurgeon. He says, “There’s a young girl in heaven now, once a member of this church. I went once with one of my beloved deacons to see her when she was very near her departure. She was in the last stage of consumption. Fair and sweetly beautiful she looked, and I think I never heard such syllables as those which fell from that girl’s lips. As a young girl, she had had disappointments and trials and troubles, but all these never became the occasion of complaint. She blessed God for them, for they had brought her nearer to the Savior.

And when we asked her whether she was not afraid of dying, “No,” she said, “The only thing I fear is this: I’m afraid of living, lest my patience should wear out. I have not said an impatient word to the Lord yet, sir, and I hope I shall not. It’s very painful to suffer all this at a young age, but it’s a thousand times better than the hell I deserved. I know that my Redeemer lives, and I’m waiting for the moment when he shall send his chariot of fire to take me up to him.”

I put the question to her, Spurgeon says, “Have you not any doubts?” “None, sir. Why should I? I clasp my arms around the neck of Christ.” “Have you not any fear about your sins?” “No, sir, they are all forgiven. I trust the Savior’s precious blood.” “Do you think you will be as brave as this when you actually come to die?” Her answer was, “Not if he leaves me, sir, but he will never leave me, for he has said, ‘I will never leave you nor forsake you.'” There is faith, dear brothers and sisters. May we all have it and receive the forgiveness of sins according to the riches of his grace. Have you any doubts? “No, sir. How can I when I cling to the neck of Christ?”

Redemption through His Blood – Eph 1:7

We all have come to church today to worship God. That is why it is called a worship service. It is our primary duty as saved people. The more we know God and what he has done, the more fervent our praise will be. Apostle Paul encourages us in worship by showing us the length and breadth of God’s salvation in Christ. Ephesians 1, like a New Testament psalm, shows us what God has done for us in the past, what he is doing in the present, and what he will do in the future.

This is a work of the Triune God. The Father elected us in the past. The Son redeems us. In the future, the Holy Spirit will bless us with an eternal inheritance. In verses 3-6, we saw the Father’s eternal election and predestination. Now, we come to the Son’s work in verses 7-12, and then the Holy Spirit’s work in verse 13. We should not think that these acts are solely independent, with each person of the Trinity acting on their own. We saw that election and predestination, though primarily done by the Father, were all done in Christ. We need to understand that all three are fully involved in our entire salvation, but each one takes up a primary work at different stages. It is as if all three are on the stage of our salvation. In election, the floodlight was on the Father, and now it moves to the Son, then to the Spirit.

The great question is, “Okay, God elected, predestined, and made great plans to make us holy and blameless before him, predestined us to adoption to the praise of the glory of his grace, and accepted us in the beloved. How did God plan to work that out? What was going to be His method to bring those elect people into the reality of all these blessings?” The method is called redemption.

Redemption is primarily the work of the Son. So in verse 7, there is this basic transition; the focus moves from the Father to the Son. After saying he accepted us in the Beloved, verse 7 states, “In Him we have redemption through His blood, the forgiveness of sins, according to the riches of His grace.” This is such a rich verse. There are six thoughts in this verse, and the key word is “redemption.” We’ll cover three this week and three next week: the meaning of redemption, the conditions of redemption, and the means of redemption.


The Meaning of Redemption

As soon as you hear the word “redeem,” you might think of redeeming gold you’ve pledged in a loan or redeeming credit card reward points or phone coupons. If you are to offer heavenly praise like Paul, you must understand what the apostle had in mind when he used the word “redemption.” The apostle had a very lofty concept in his mind.

“Oh, the pastor is explaining words again, let us sleep.” I hope that as people of God standing for truth, none of us will be tired of understanding these wonderful Bible words. The terrible condition of Christianity in our generation is because of theological indifference, laziness, and carelessness with biblical words. The truth of God comes to us in words such as election, regeneration, justification, reconciliation, adoption, and sanctification. In 1 Corinthians 2:13, Paul says, “we speak…not in words which man’s wisdom teaches, but in words which the Holy Ghost teaches.” We must be careful with how we treat the words of the Holy Ghost. All these words have a specific meaning. These distinct meanings reveal our spiritual condition.

You cannot give just any meaning to them. Someone said, “Words that can mean anything will soon mean nothing.” That’s why Paul told Timothy, “hold fast to the pattern of sound words.” Timothy, do not play fast and loose with the words of God, giving them irresponsible, uncontrolled, or imaginative meanings to suit your experience. God has spoken in words that convey distinct meanings. A lot of false teaching is caused by carelessly using God’s word and not carefully guarding the meaning of divine words. That is what we see today. In modern songs, the words “redemption,” “salvation,” and all these things are jumbled up in a meaningless way. So, if you want to guard your soul and help it grow in faith, take the time to learn the meaning of divine words and hold fast to those sound words. So, listen carefully as I explain the word “redemption,” and hold fast.

What is the meaning of the word “redemption”? If we have to understand it, we should not go to Webster’s or Oxford dictionary, but to the Bible. In the Old Testament, the Lord repeatedly said to the Israelites, “I redeemed you from the 400 years of Egyptian bondage by mighty works.” So, the first idea of redemption is releasing someone from terrible bondage. There is always a concept of redeeming by paying a price, purchasing something to make it yours. To highlight redemption by blood, he also made them put the blood of the Passover lamb on the lintel and doorposts of their homes.

In Exodus 12, the Lord says, “Because I redeemed you as my people, everything that opens the womb is mine, animal or child. Now, if you want it back, you must redeem it by the payment of a price.” That payment is called a ransom. So, to redeem means to free something from an obligation by paying a ransom. You cannot redeem anything without a ransom. First-century people living in the Roman Empire, as soon as they heard “redemption,” it brought to mind the common picture of a pathetic slave in the market. Someone comes, pays a price, purchases him, and then sets him free. Redemption meant release from bondage by the payment of a price.


The Conditions of Redemption

If you say, “in Him we have redemption,” people may say, “Who wants redemption? Go and tell some slaves. I am already free.” That is what the blind Pharisees told Jesus, who had never seen their hearts and realized their condition. We have to understand our condition by nature for us to understand redemption. If Paul praises God for a freedom obtained by the payment of a price, he clearly thinks of the condition of bondage he and the Ephesians were in by nature from which they were released. Unless you and I painfully, personally, and inwardly understand our bondage, you will never get thrilled over the truth of redemption. Only when we realize our slavery will you appreciate freedom.

What language can I use to explain our spiritual bondage? What examples can we use? British rule is nothing. The worst bondage in history is Egyptian bondage. Our spiritual bondage is a billion times worse than the bondage of Egypt. Like I showed in a sermon poster, we were bound by chains upon chains and made the worst slaves.

The first set of chains to which we become slaves is the bondage of the curse of the law. As God’s creatures created in his image, God wrote his law in our hearts. We were promised life in the covenant of works only if we kept the law personally, perfectly, and perpetually. “This do, and you shall live.” We failed to keep it from Adam, and the curse of the law fell upon all of us. It is that curse that not only brought all miseries in this life but also brings death and eternal hell. It intensifies more and more in our lifespan. All our thoughts, words, and conduct throughout our lives are carefully observed and measured by God according to his law. Not only every deviation or transgression from the law, but every failure to conform to the law, brings a curse upon us. So the first bondage is to the curse of the law. You and I, by nature, are in a state of bondage to the curse of the law.

This is a law that will never change and will never leave us until it punishes us for all our sins. What a terrible state to be in, in bondage to a law that cannot change. There is no way that we can say, “God, can you just relax your law?” No, “like me, my law is unchangeable. I, as a righteous God, will by no means clear the guilty.” The law demands perfect obedience or an eternal curse.

Let me ask each of you a question this morning: Have you ever seen yourself personally, inwardly, and genuinely before the demands of God’s law? “You shall not covet your wife or things, facilities, dress, or house.” “You shall not lie.” “Do not take a rupee of another person’s property.” “Do your work carefully in a way that you have enough to take care of your needs and help others.” “Lusting after another woman or man is adultery.” “Anger is murder.” “Children, honor your father and mother.” Every time you do not honor them, they have to tell you ten times to do something, insulting them, you break God’s law. Breaking the Sabbath, taking God’s name in vain, giving importance to other things than God as idols. Have you realized that God sees every thought, every motive, and every attitude of every moment of every day continually against his law? It is all recorded in two unerasable memory drives: one, your own conscience, and two, God’s heaven book.

Have you felt the haunting pressure of breaking God’s law in your conscience? Knowing that God will not relax one millimeter of its demands, he will punish you for breaking his law. Have you felt the curse of the law, the sense of God’s anger on your head? Have you ever felt yourself gripped and held with chains on one side by covetousness, on another side by lust, and on another by anger, feeling slavery to the curse of the law? You feel all these chains are dragging you into hell, making your life here itself into more and more hell. You are becoming worse and worse; your lust and anger in the coming years will make you like a monster.

Unless you have felt that, you have no understanding of the salvation experience, because that is the beginning of salvation. For anyone who has felt that bondage of chains gripping them, the word “redemption” is the most precious word. “I am redeemed! I am redeemed! Hallelujah! I am free! Oh, what a glorious liberty!”

If you are still thinking, “I am so good compared to so many bad people; everything will turn out all right,” my friend, you’re living in a state of absolute spiritual ignorance and self-deception. You don’t even realize the curse of that law is hanging upon your head. Okay, the first set of chains is the curse of the law.

Our second set of chains of bondage is sin, both its guilt and its power. The Bible says that you and I are in a state of genuine guilt, not just guilt feelings. Romans 3:19 states that all the world is guilty, not before its own conscience, but before God. It’s one thing to have guilt feelings, which may be purely psychological pain. It’s another thing to recognize that there’s a living, true God and judge to whom I am accountable, and he declares me guilty in the court of God. Like a prisoner waiting to be executed, I am waiting for his time to be executed. Very soon I will stand before him and audibly, publicly, and loudly hear the eternal sentence. Sin has brought me under eternal guilt before the eternal God.

If that is so, can I leave the sin? No, I cannot. I am not only a slave to its guilt, but I am a slave to the power of sin. Jesus said in John 8:34, “Whosoever commits sin is the bond slave of sin.” Romans 6:17, “we were the slaves of sin.” You and I know what it is to be under the power of sin. It is the worst bondage; 24 hours a day our life is nothing but obeying sin. Sin dictates, and we obey. Sin demands, and we run in its ways. It’s the picture of a master who snaps his fingers, and the servant comes and bows down and says, “Master, what do you have me to do?” Oh, it will not allow us rest, day and night—one sin or another lust, covetousness, anger, worries of the world. Oh, how many people have written about the bondage of our will to sin; totally depraved. No peace in the mind with 101 fearful thoughts, no peace in the heart with 101 emotions, no fixed will, but drawn in 101 directions.

We are not only slaves to the curse of the law and sin, but the third chain is that scripture teaches we’re in bondage to the devil. There is a personal spiritual being into whose hands men have sold themselves and whose captives they are. In chapter 2, Paul will state how he drives his slaves; “he works in the sons of disobedience.” The same word used for God working is used for Satan, too, as he works to will and to do of his good pleasure, inclining their wills, minds, and affections, and using our body organs to fulfill his lusts and bring shame and guilt to us. 2 Timothy 2:26 states it very graphically, where the apostle Paul says that they may “recover themselves out of the snare of the devil who are taken captive by him unto his will.”

Oh, the horror of the unconverted state. Captive to the curse of the law, captive to sin, its guilt, its power, and captives of the devil. And what makes it triply worse? The scripture says that in that condition, in Romans 5, we are without strength.

What can we do to release ourselves from the captivating power of the law? Can we argue with God that we don’t like his law and he should change it? Can we somehow sweep away the curses? No. What can we do with the problem of our sin? Can we blot out the record that is against us? And in the place where the sentence is written “guilty,” can we put “not guilty”? We can’t do it. There’s no juggling the record books of heaven. There’s no hiding the evidences. What can we do with its power? The scripture asks the question, “Can the leopard change its spots?” “Neither then can we who are accustomed to do evil do that which is good.” We’re in captivity to sin, its guilt, its power, and we’re in captivity to the devil.

What worldly example can describe our condition by nature? Can I give a faint example? Imagine a poor person, under the sentence of death for terrible crimes, awaiting execution. Upon investigation, we find the fellow is not only in a prison awaiting execution, but he is blind. Upon further investigation, we find he does not have a penny to his name; he is a pauper. Upon further investigation, we find the poor fellow’s body is shot through with ten different kinds of uncurable diseases. And upon further investigation, we find the poor fellow is ignorant and illiterate. Wow, that is the height of suffering. You think you have problems? Look at this poor fellow. He is under the sentence of death, blind, ignorant, illiterate, poor, and diseased.

Now, think of all that needs to be done to make this fellow normal, to free him from capital punishment, blindness, ignorance, diseases, poverty, and illiteracy, and make him so honorable that he becomes the president of the country. Think of what all needs to be done. He needs a merciful pardoning judge who will release him from capital punishment. He needs the best doctor to deal with all his diseases. He needs a teacher to remove illiteracy and educate him. He needs a philanthropist to donate some money to his account. In the same way, God finds you and me bound in the prison house of law, sin, and Satan. And we are not only guilty but blind and poor and diseased and illiterate about holy things. And by a wonder of grace, this God has elected and predestined us to adoption as his own sons and heirs, to become presidents of his kingdom. The first work he does in redemption is releasing us from our bondage chains by paying a ransom.

To such people comes the glorious redemption of God. It exactly frees us from each of our bondages. Are we slaves to the curse of the law? See what redemption does. Galatians 3:13 says, “Christ has redeemed us from the curse of the law, having become a curse for us.” Christ redeemed us. He released us from this horrible eternal curse of the law by the payment of a price. The whole of that curse, in its unrelieved intensity, was poured on him when He paid the price. He not only redeemed us from our transgression of the law but also from the lack of conformity to the law. By his perfect active obedience, he met all the demands of the law. We are released, and we are free from the curse of the law by his life and atoning, curse-removing sacrificial death. And when He hung upon that cross, He swallowed up its curse into Himself and fully met its demands so that I might be released from the curse of the law. And so we are redeemed from bondage to the law.

Secondly, He redeemed us from our bondage to sin. Listen as Paul describes what he did in redeeming us from the guilt of our sin. Titus 2:14, “who gave himself for us that he might redeem us from all iniquity.” Romans 3:24 says, “we are justified freely by His grace…through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus.”

Not only the curse of the law and sin, but thirdly, even from Satan. Hebrews 2:14-15 says, “Inasmuch then as the children have partaken of flesh and blood, He Himself likewise shared in the same, that through death He might destroy him who had the power of death, that is, the devil, and release those who through fear of death were all their lifetime subject to bondage.” Deliverance from the devil finds its expression in being delivered from the fear of death.

When we are seeing the condition of redemption, we were slaves to the curse of the law, sin, and the devil. Redemption delivered us from that. We know and enjoy redemption now. He doesn’t say, “some day we will be redeemed” or “being redeemed.” “In Him, we have redemption.” It is our current possession and experience. Knowing that should fill us with joy and gratitude and love for Christ.


The Means of Redemption

Redeeming means to secure release by the payment of a ransom. We said redemption can only happen by payment of a ransom price. What was the payment that was paid to redeem you and me? Notice the verse. Paul says, “In Him we have redemption through His blood.” Again, words are so important. There’s a lot of careless use of the phrase “blood of Christ” and “victory in the blood of Christ” on scooters and lorries. What does this term mean? It’s the blood of the beloved one, and the blood means nothing less than the life poured out as a willing sacrifice to God on behalf of sin. When you read “the blood of Christ,” it’s not simply speaking as a synonym for the life of Christ, but it’s the life poured out willingly, without the slightest hesitation, joyfully as a sacrifice to God. That is the nerve of the true gospel. The ransom price is nothing less than the blood of the beloved one.

Paul here uses the word “blood” to point us back to the Old Testament sacrificial system. Those animal sacrifices pointed ahead to Jesus, the Lamb of God, who by His death redeemed all God’s people whom he elected. Do we have any idea of the value of that blood? It is the blood of the beloved. This is the most expensive price even the eternal God can ever give. That precious payment was made to redeem us.

Hebrews 9:11 says, “Christ having come a high priest of good things to come, through the greater and more perfect tabernacle not made with hands, that is to say, not of this creation, nor yet through the blood of goats and calves, but through his own blood, his life poured forth as a sacrifice to God, entered in once for all into the holy place, having obtained eternal redemption.”

See how the eternal plan was executed in redemption: The Father elected and predestined and accepted us in the Beloved and united us eternally to him. That beloved came with his people on his heart. As he walked upon earth, his obedience was reckoned as their obedience for their justification, and when he suffered and poured himself out as a sacrifice, he offered it as a complete atonement for the sins of those who were in him. He obtained eternal redemption for them by his life and death. He went back into the presence of the Father. After sending his Spirit, he now, through his Spirit and unceasing intercession, applies his redemption to his people by effectually calling them, regenerating, converting, giving them the grace of faith and repentance, justifying, adopting, sanctifying, persevering all their lives, and then finally glorifying them. All of those blessings are blessings of redemption. They are the blessings that flow out of his work of purchasing our freedom and release by the payment of a ransom price.

So, we have seen the meaning of redemption, the conditions of redemption, and the means of redemption. Next week, we will see the central blessing of redemption, the measure of redemption, and the sphere of this redemption experience.


Application

Oh, dear person sitting here this morning who is not in Christ, you have no redemption outside of him. The text begins with the words, “in whom we have redemption.” And if you’re not in Christ, you have no redemption. Today morning, you are a slave to the curse of the law, and that curse is slowly breaking on your head, more and more as you get older. You can live in a dream world saying, “there is no God, no law.” Your conscience will bear witness to what I am saying. You are a slave to sin, guilt, and power, and it will increase more and more. Sin has an unstoppable hardening effect. The more you go on in a sinful way, the more you will be hardened and unable to turn. “Oh, what sin? I am so decent.” You know what the greatest sin the Bible says is? The sin of unbelief. Daily, you are committing the greatest sin. If you go on in that sin, that sin hardens you, and you will never be able to believe in Christ and be saved.

You are a slave to Satan. You will only do what he tells you. You will never come to God. “Ah, I don’t believe in the devil.” That very confession is evidence that you’re a slave to the devil. That is the first thing he makes people believe. The best way to keep you in his clutches is to convince you he doesn’t exist. The best way to keep a people in political slavery is to try to convince them they have freedom. That’s what goes on in many totalitarian countries. They don’t know what freedom is. And if they don’t know what freedom is, they’ll never seek it. In the same way, you don’t know what freedom from the curse of the law, sin, and the devil is. And the devil’s convinced you that you have so-called freedom. The God of this world blinds your mind to the glory of Christ. That’s why week after week we preach the glory of Christ, his love, his work for you on the cross, and his salvation. Nothing touches your heart; your heart doesn’t run out in love and affection for him. This same devil will harden and harden, and his final plan is to drag you into eternal hell with him. May God open your eyes today. Believe in Jesus Christ. In him, you have redemption by his blood. You have freedom from all of this.

As believers: There are biblical implications to the truth of redemption. In this passage itself, we are called to bless God for redemption. May we pause and meditate and drink in the biblical concept of what it means to be redeemed until we cry out with the Apostle Paul, “Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who accepted us in the beloved in whom we have redemption through his blood.” May we meditate on this term “redemption,” and may our hearts be so filled with a sense of the grandeur and the magnitude of that freedom and release by the payment of that price that we will not only be filled with praise but also filled with confidence that if he obtained eternal redemption through his blood, that redemption covers the totality of my deliverance from all the effects of the fall and sin.

This beloved, He ever lives to intercede and apply all that he purchased by his blood, that full redemption in the life, heart, body, soul, and every atom of my being, and to save me to the utmost, until I become like him. As a guarantee of that, in Ephesians 4, we have been “sealed by the Holy Spirit unto the day of redemption.” There is a day of redemption coming when my heart, soul, body, and mind, every atom of my being, will be redeemed. That is why Paul could say, “we wait for the redemption of our bodies.” Even when I hear about the sufferings of Deepa, Vasudevan, or Pastor Bala’s shoulder surgery—how painful it is that we cannot do anything—sometimes we are in a dilemma: “Go to the hospital? Their procedures increase the pain. Stay home? It’s getting worse. What do we do?” But what comfort that he will redeem this body of sin and make it a glorious body like his. May God give us a great appreciation for this aspect of redemption and move us to praise and obedience to him and cause us to live as the purchased property of the Son of God. Understanding the immense cost of our redemption should fill our hearts with deep gratitude and inspire us to worship God with our whole lives.

Secondly, when we realize how extremely valuable we are to Christ and God, individually and as the church of God, purchased by the most precious price, there are three main implications of being purchased with a costly price.

1. We have to live our life in fear and responsibly. 1 Peter 1:17-19 says, “And if you call on the Father, who without partiality judges according to each one’s work, conduct yourselves throughout the time of your stay here in fear; knowing that you were not redeemed with corruptible things, like silver or gold, from your aimless conduct received by tradition from your fathers, but with the precious blood of Christ, as of a lamb without blemish and without spot.” “I am free, redeemed. I can do anything.” No! Living in fear means not taking God for granted, not having casualness or presumption, and not treating our salvation lightly. The same Father who redeemed us, as an impartial judge, will evaluate our lives to see if we are showing the fruits of salvation. We were not bought back from our “aimless conduct” (the futile, empty way of life inherited from tradition). We should consciously turn away from the empty pursuits and traditions of the world that lack eternal significance. Our lives should be marked by a higher purpose to glorify God. Our lives should reflect the preciousness of the blood that bought us. This means striving for holiness and living in a way that honors Christ’s sacrifice. We shouldn’t cheapen His death by living carelessly or returning to our former aimless ways. Your time is a temporary stay; we should live with an eternal perspective. Our priorities should be focused on things that have lasting value in God’s kingdom, not on being overly attached to its fleeting pleasures and values.

2. We have to live to glorify God in our body and soul. 1 Corinthians 7:23 says, “For you were bought at a price; therefore glorify God in your body and in your spirit, which are God’s.” 1 Corinthians 6:19 says, “Do you not know that your bodies are temples of the Holy Spirit, who is in you, whom you have received from God? You are not your own; you were bought at a price. Therefore honor God with your bodies.” Writing to the Corinthians, who were involved in sexual sins and living as they wanted, Paul rebukes them with these words. Our lives are not our own to live as we please. Our bodies are not our own to do what we please. God has purchased us at the highest possible price—the precious blood of His Son. Live with a sense of accountability to God in all we do. We should seek His will and live to please Him, not ourselves or the world. This impacts our choices about time, resources, talents, and priorities. This freedom calls us to live differently. We should actively resist sin and its temptations, knowing that a very expensive price has been paid for our freedom. Don’t abuse that freedom. We should seek holiness, not out of obligation but out of gratitude for our liberation. This requires a conscious effort to grow in Christ-likeness. We should strive to live lives that honor God and are distinct from the patterns of the world.

3. As a church, we need to learn to see the church as God sees it. The church was purchased by his blood. In Acts, the same Paul told the same Ephesian elders, encouraging them to jealously care for the church, feed the church, and guard the purity of doctrine. He uses this concept that is most precious to him, and he speaks of the church of God, “which was purchased by his blood.” You see what an effect this would have on true elders? How can they be careless in the work of Christ’s church? The church is God’s great treasure possession, purchased with the payment of a most precious ransom price even to God. This shows the supreme value God places on His Church, and the depth of His love and commitment to His people. The Church is not a human institution or the possession of any individual or group within it. It is divinely owned by God Himself. We should treat the Church and its members with the utmost respect and care. We ought to invest our time, talents, and resources generously in its well-being and growth. Disregarding or mistreating the Church is akin to devaluing the blood of Christ.