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The Glorious Grace of God's Purpose and Will

When we think about the Gospel we often reduce it down too much, whittling it away to a story of sin and redemption. But Paul shows us that there is so much more to see: like God’s glorious grace in Christ Jesus, and how he is more than just a redeemer. Jesus is the usher that leads us into the fullness of who God created us to be. He breaks down all barriers, even sacrificing himself, so we may come into our rightful intimacy with our Father and our created destiny. The Father’s grace doesn’t just fix the sin problem by restoring us to something Adam and Eve possessed and lost. Rather his grace takes us into a level of intimacy, honor and inheritance that Adam and Eve only had as a destiny. And it doesn’t even stop there. We have yet greater riches; to come together as nations and rule as co-heirs. Every ethnic group has a destiny in the kingdom of God. All nations, beginning with Israel, have now been brought into this great inheritance with the Spirit. He is a deposit on it, and our “guarantee” of God’s accepting us as full-fledged, adult sons and daughters. – Liza Ryan (Canada/USA)

SCRIPTURE PASSAGE

Grace to YOU and peace from God our Father[i]… (Ephesians 1:2 PH)

Blessed God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ! He has blessed us with every spiritual blessing among the celestial ones in Christ, ¡just as he chose us in him before the foundation of the world that we should be holy and flawless in his presence:

  • In love ¡he pre-destined us towards placement as sons [Gr. huiothesia] to himself—through Jesus Christ, according to the good pleasure of his will—·to the praise of his glorious grace, in which he has favored us in the One he loved. (Eph. 1:3-6 PH)
  • ¡In him we have redemption through his blood, the forgiveness of offences—according to the riches of his grace ¡which he has lavished upon us; 
  • In all wisdom and understanding, ¡he has made known to us the mystery of his will—according to his good pleasure, which he purposed in himself ¡towards an administration [Gr. oikonomian] in the fullness of the seasons—to gather together all things in the Messiah, those in the heavens and those on the earth . (Eph. 1:7-10 PH)

In him we also obtained an inheritance—having been pre-destined according to the purpose of him who works all things according to the counsel of his own will— ·so that we, to the praise of his glory, should be the first to trust in the Messiah. ·In him, YOU did so too, after hearing…the good news of YOUR salvation; and believing in him YOU  were sealed with the promised Holy Spirit—·the deposit of guarantee on our inheritance towards redemption of the possession, to the praise of his glory. (Eph.1:11-14 PH)

The gift of the grace of God… ·was given to me...to proclaim the good news of the unsearchable riches of the Messiah to the nations [Gr. ethne] ·and to enlighten all concerning the administration [Gr. oikonomia] of the Mystery, which for the ages was kept hidden in God who created all things. (Eph.3:7-9 PH)

MEDITATION

Paul's revelation of the Gospel (the Good News) begins with powerful words of praise. He wants those reading or listening to experience the joy and power of the blessings now available in Christ. Though writing to believers, Paul is concerned that a lot of them still need a revelation of the full grace and peace that has come to them from their Father. How about you? Are you living by confident faith in all three themes of the Gospel of grace?

Both the brief greeting and the opening long sentence are about the grace coming to us from our ‘Father’, who is also ‘the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ’ (Med.#9). Yet Paul is not initially talking about forgiveness of sin and redemption; for God's grace and favor is first and foremost about our receiving the ‘placement as sons’ [Gr. huiothesia]’—the coming of age in the Father's family. This ‘blessing’, that has now been fulfilled through Jesus (‘the One he loved’), has always been his ‘will’ and destiny for us. Before the foundation of the world our Father, in Christ, ‘chose us’—human beings and not any other creatures—to be his sons and daughters. And his will for us involved a two-stage process: of living ‘for a little while lower than the angels’, then one day being ‘crowned with glory and honor’ (Med.#7). First living under ‘guardians’ until ‘the planned-in-advance placing by the Father’—a ‘placement as (adult) sons’ within the family (Med.#4 & #5). This coming-of-age, and not redemption, is the first theme of the Gospel. And Paul repeats this first reason for praising ‘his glory’ when he goes on to write about us receiving the Spirit, as ‘the deposit of guarantee on our inheritance’.

In his second expression of praise, Paul turns finally to the way the Father's grace came to us in the redemption we have through Christ. Because of our sin, ‘we all’—both Jews (‘we’) and people of other nations (‘YOU’)—were in a place of death and dishonor in relationship to our Father (Med.#44). And we were all in the dark—to one degree or another—concerning the Father's mysterious purposes (Med.#6)—until Jesus came. Thus the second theme of the Gospel is how the Father's grace was ‘lavished on us’ through the reconciling death of our Eldest Brother (family-Redeemer) on the cross. Redemption and reconciliation, though not the primary demonstration of God's grace to us, nevertheless came to us ‘according to the riches of his grace’—by which in the first place he chose us out of all his creatures to grow up as his sons and daughters.

Though Adam and Eve were created good and had a childlike level of intimacy with their Father, they were not yet ‘spiritual adults’. At creation Adam and Eve became ‘living beings’ by the breath (Spirit) of God, but their destiny and ours was always to receive something more ('placement as sons')—through Jesus as our Eldest Brother becoming a ‘life giving Spirit’ after he received the ‘Spirit without limit’ (Med.#58). Also, the mortal bodies they were given were vulnerable to sin and death. These would still need to undergo a transformation before they could ‘inherit’ the pre-destined ‘kingdom’ (Med.#94).

Finally, Paul introduces the third theme of the Gospel. In Christ we all can now know the Father's mysterious purpose. The reason he created all kinds of diversity—including the diversity of nations in their separate territories—was so that in the ‘fullness of the times’ he could ‘gather together as one, all things’ under Christ as Head. This coming together of all the nations [Gr. ethne] ‘in Christ—as fellow-citizens (Med.#44) and co-heirs—was not obvious, even to the Jews who had intensively studied the Scriptures; for God had kept it hidden (Med.#6).

Yes, Paul says, Israel (‘we’) was the ‘first to hope’ in the destiny that was to come in the Messiah. They were indeed set apart as a ‘holy nation’ of ‘priests’ to other nations (Med.#C). But, in Christ, believers of all nations—including those of Israel—have equal access to the Father. The Law was given to Israel only as a righteous ‘tutor until Christ came’ (Med.#4); no one could be ‘made fully mature’ by it.[ii] Only the Spirit could do that. And though circumcision was a kind of ‘seal’ of belonging for Jews (Rom.4:11), believers of other nations ('YOU') now only need to be ‘sealed' by the Spirit—without having to submit to Jewish laws and customs (Med.#28). In Christ and by the Spirit, all nations now have equal access to the Father. And all dominance, hostility and ethnic separation has been destroyed, by the cross (Med.#44).

When you can honestly praise your Dad first for the intimacy and inheritance you enjoy with him and with people of all nations in the Spirit, then you've truly experienced Paul's revelation of the Mystery of the Gospel, in all its three themes.

PRAYING THE WORD

Our Father, Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, we praise you for your glorious grace freely given us in the One you loved—for blessing us with every spiritual blessing in the Messiah:

  1. For choosing us in him before the creation of the world to be holy in your presence, and pre-destining us in love to be placed as your sons (& daughters)... according to your pleasure and will;
  2. for giving us redemption through his blood, the forgiveness of sins according to the riches of your grace;
  3. for making known the Mystery of your will as it began to be administered in the fullness of the seasons. (Eph.1:2-10)

 -After first choosing and pre-destining Israel according to this same plan and purpose;  (Eph.1:11-12)  

-Now all nations you have made can gather together to know and worship you as co-heirs in the Spirit,  (Ps.86:9; Jn.4:21; Eph.3:6)

-Who is the deposit of guarantee toward the redemption of our bodies and all that is yet to come. (Eph.1:14; Rom.8:23; 2 Cor.5:4-5)

NOTES

[i] As in most of the opening sentences of the New Testament letters (that follow the Gospels and Acts), the first reference to the Father in this letter is not to God as ‘the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ’, but rather to him as either ‘our Father’ or as ‘Father God (see Med.#9).

[ii] Heb.7:19. The same Greek verb form [e-teleiosen], translated in the NIV as 'made... perfect' is also used in Heb.2:10 and 5:9 and can be translated as 'made fully mature' (see Med.#7).