Ephesians 1:1-14 · Spiritual Blessings in Christ
A New Look for a New Year
Ephesians 1:1-14
Sermon
by Fredrick R. Harm
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Just a few days ago we greeted loved ones and friends with a cheery, "Happy New Year." And we sincerely hoped it would be a year of joy and happiness for all. A New Year's card put it beautifully: "I am the New Year -- all that I have I give with love unspoken. All that I ask -- you keep the faith unbroken!" 

Newspapers and magazines covered the fascinating story of Admiral Richard Byrd's second trip to the South Pole. The 180th meridian is an imaginary but important marker. It is the International Date Line. When a traveler crosses it, he either adds a day or subtracts a day, depending on his direction. Admiral Byrd spoke of his experience of flying southward to the pole: "All the time we continued flying as closely as possible along the 180th meridian. Even without wind drift -- for which adequate correction can be made -- it is obvious that no navigator can fly exactly along a mathematical straight line. Consequently, we were zigzagging constantly from today into tomorrow, and back again into yesterday." 

At this season of the year our minds are crowded with recollections of the past year, some cheering and some sobering. But before long we find our minds occupied with anticipations of the coming year, some hopeful and some fearful. At this time the past and the future wrestle for dominance in our thinking. During this season there is a strange mingling of memory and hope. None of us are strangers to this experience. 

As we begin to reflect on this morning's text, we see it bidding each of us to wear a "New Look for the New Year." And as we probe more closely, we find that this newness is the result of three important looks that are being urged upon us: the backward look, the inward look, and the upward look. Let's think about them for a few moments and see if they do not, in fact, open up fresh opportunities for newness in the New Year. 

First, we note the Backward Look: "In him [Christ] we have redemption through his blood" (v. 7). 

As we glance backward we are confronted immediately with a lonely cross erected on a hill centuries ago. Calvary is the solemn place at which man's redemption was accomplished. The New Testament Word "redemption" refers to the act of ransoming a person who is a prisoner of war or a slave. Whenever it is used, the word describes the delivering or setting free of a person from a situation from which he was powerless to liberate himself, or from a penalty or debt which he could never have paid. This backward look reminds us that our Savior has delivered us from a situation from which we could never have delivered ourselves. And this has always been so. Every honest person is conscious of his own inadequacy and sin. Seneca, the Roman philosopher who tutored Nero, wrote prolifically. His writings are replete with a feeling of sheer helpless frustration. He said of himself that he was a homo nontolerabilis, "an intolerable man." He said, despairingly, that men love their vices and hate them at the same time. In an oft-quoted statement, he said that mankind needed a hand reaching down from heaven to lift them up. It is exactly that need that Jesus Christ has fulfilled. In his life, death, and resurrection a power is released that can liberate humankind from its helpless slavery to those things which attract and disgust them at one and the same time. To put it in simplest terms, Jesus Christ can still make bad men good. Dear people, that is redemption! As we remember this, and embrace it by faith, we begin to experience newness. 

Our second look is the Look Inward: "the forgiveness of our trespasses according to the riches of his grace" (v. 7). 

Having seen the redeeming love of God expressed at the cross, we look within and see that forgiveness is ours, forgiveness even for things we thought unforgivable. Recall some of God's promises. "Though your sins be as scarlet they shall be as wool, though they be red like crimson, they shall be as white as snow" (Isaiah 1:18). "As far as the east is from the west, so far he removes our transgressions from us" (Psalm 103:12). That, dear people, is forgiveness; and that assurance begets newness. 

Other biblical words are used to express this same newness. Propitiation is one. Justification is another. Someone has defined justification or justified: "just -- as -- if -- I'd -- never -- sinned." That takes care of your sins and mine, yes, even the worst of them. C. B. Macartney tells of a cemetery on Long Island located behind a quaint colonial church. Many headstones bear the name of the deceased, dates of birth and death, and occasionally an expression of Christian hope. One headstone stands out from the others. It bears no name, no date of birth or death. The stone is unembellished by the sculptor's art. There is no epitaph, no fulsome eulogy. Just one word is inscribed upon it -- "Forgiven." But that is sufficient. The greatest thing that can be said of any person, or written upon his grave, is that simple, yet all inclusive word, forgiven. Embrace that forgiveness as your own and be certain that Christ purchased it for you personally, with no strings attached! 

One of the happy results that emerge from the assurance of forgiveness is the fact that now it becomes quite natural for us to express this forgiveness to others as well. It is a concomitant of our newness. Later in this epistle, Saint Paul reminds us that we most resemble the God we worship when we extend forgiveness to those who have wronged us. He writes, "And, be kind to one another, tenderhearted, forgiving one another, as God in Christ has forgiven you. Therefore be imitators of God, as beloved children" (Ephesians 5:1). Be certain of this, there is nothing in his terribly needy world that bears the gracious impress of the Son of God so surely as forgiveness. James Hilton, in Time and Time Again, demonstrates wholesome insight when he says, "If you forgive people enough you belong to them, and they to you, whether or not either person knows or likes it -- squatter's rights of the heart." Almost 200 years ago, Francis Quarles also stated it with Christ-honoring clarity: "Hath any one wronged Thee? -- Seek revenge as a Christian -- slight it, and the work is begun: forgive and it is finished. He is below himself that is not above injury." 

Let's take John Oxenham's advice to heart:

Love ever gives
Forgives -- outlives,
And ever stands
With open hands.
And, while it lives,
It gives.
For this is love's prerogative,
To give -- forgive -- and give.1 

We turn now to the final direction our text suggests: the Upward Look. "To the praise of God's glorious grace that he freely bestowed on us in the Beloved" (v. 6). The words we underscore here are "God's glorious grace" and "in the Beloved." All that has come to us in the past, all that we have in the present, all that we ever hope to have in the future are gifts of grace from our loving Father through the merits of his Son, Jesus Christ. That is why, whenever we hear the blessed Words of Absolution, our eyes drift heavenward in gratitude for so great a love. 

Greg Albrecht tells his favorite story of how vital Jesus is to the lives of his people. A wealthy Englishman loved fine art and shared that love with his son. Together they gathered a priceless collection that became known to many collectors throughout the world as one of the finest. As World War II began in Europe, the son was one of the first to join the armed forces to serve his country. The son had only been gone a few months when the father received a telegram notifying him that his son had been killed in battle while rescuing a fellow soldier. The father started a long period of grief and pain, mourning the loss of his son. One cold day in the midst of winter he answered his front door to be greeted by a young soldier who was carrying a package. The young man explained that he was the one the rich man's son had rescued, and that earlier he had painted a portrait of his comrade. The young soldier apologized, as he knew he was an unskilled artist, but he thought the father might like the portrait. They talked all afternoon, and after the soldier left, the father sat for a long time admiring the painting of his son. It would never be considered a masterpiece, but it did capture his son's character. The old man decided to hang the painting of his son over the fireplace, moving several priceless pieces of art to make room. 

After a few years the old man became ill and eventually died. His will called for all his works of art to be auctioned. News of the auction caused art collectors around the world to make travel plans for London to be present for this once-in-a-lifetime auction. When the auction started, priceless pieces of art filled the room and the stage, but the first painting to be offered for sale was the simple portrait of the old man's son. The auctioneer asked for an opening bid. The room of experts and collectors was silent. Everyone could tell that this painting had little or no value. Someone in the back of the room yelled, "Who cares about that worthless thing? It's just a picture of the old man's son. Let's forget about it and move on to the treasures of his collection." The auctioneer responded, "No, we have to sell this one first." After a long silence, a trusted long-time household servant of the old man who was attending the auction out of respect to the family he had loved and served said, "All I have is ten pounds. I'll offer that. I knew the young man, and I would like to have the painting." No one else offered another bid, and the auctioneer's gavel came crashing down. The painting was sold to the household servant for ten pounds (about $18). 

Anticipation filled the room, as everyone looked forward to the real business of bidding for the art treasures from the estate. But the auctioneer's gavel came down once again, and to the amazement of everyone the auctioneer declared that the auction was over. Stunned disbelief filled the room. One person yelled, "What do you mean it's over? We have come from all over the world. We didn't come to bid for a second-rate portrait. What about all these priceless treasures?" 

The auctioneer explained, "It's really very simple. According to the will of the father, whoever takes the son -- takes all." 

It's a lesson we can take to heart and live by. If we have Christ, we have everything. Without him, we have nothing. When we have him, our priority in life is to worship him, celebrate him, and obey him in everything we do, and share him and his message with the world. 

Dear friends, on this first Sunday in January, as we have been reminded of God's gracious provisions for newness, permit me to ask each of us, including myself: "How about a New You for the New Year?" Amen.


1.  Selected Poems of John Oxenham, edited by Charles L. Wallis (New York: Harper and Brothers, 1948), p. 84.

CSS Publishing, Sermons for Sundays in Advent, by Fredrick R. Harm