Ephesians 4:17--5:21 · Living as Children of Light
Aroma of Christ Church
Ephesians 4:17--5:21
Sermon
by Leonard Sweet
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Have you ever been assaulted by a smell?

Walking down the street, creeping out of a vent in the sidewalk; strolling along the mid-way of a carnival or fair, wafting its way from a kiosk — sometimes an odor will “hit you” and almost send you reeling. Sometimes that odor will even thrust your psyche back into another time and place.

Maybe it’s the sweet smell of caramel apples.
Maybe it’s the pungent punch of garlic and onion.
Maybe it’s moldy and murky smell of a basement.
Maybe it’s the seaweedy smell of the beach.

Whatever the odor, it is officious — meaning, it is “large and in charge.” It teleports you back to a particular place and a particular time. Each of us has memory smells.

Our sense of smell is the physical sense most associated with memory. Smells, more than sounds, more than sights, more than touches, transport our minds and bodies back in time to an imprinted memory. Garlic brings you back to your grandmother’s kitchen. A wet woolen smell brings you back to the locker room — or to the terror of the day you fell in a frozen pond and almost drowned. Rising yeast smells like every Sunday dinner. Gasoline chokes you with memories of a car crash. Nothing evokes strong emotions, strong memories, strong longings, like the sense of smell. It is a powerful communicator to our inner being.

In the days of the Jewish Temple in Jerusalem, burnt offerings were the norm — small birds, little lambs, muurrring calves, great grains — all were sacrificed and burned. Burnt sacrifice was offered to appease God’s righteous anger over the sins and transgressions the people of Israel had committed.

As the smoke rose in the Temple it was a delightful barbecue aroma. Roasted meats, roasted grains, aromatic oils, sweet smoke. No wonder all those sacrifices were referred to by the priests as “fragrant.” The aroma around the Temple in Jerusalem must have been like being a Grill-Masters cook-off in Memphis. The sweet smell of roasted richness coupled with the belief in its aromatic road to redemption, made for a heady atmosphere.

Daily sacrifices, quarterly commitments, yearly sacrifices — all were offered to stay on the “good side” of God. Can you imagine expensive and exhaustive the tradition of temple sacrifices had become? Jesus’ sacrifice shut down the slaughterhouse. Jesus sacrifice — his “once-for-all,” “divine-life-for-human-sin” offering put an end to that around-the-clock barbeque. Jesus’ sacrifice was the “fragrant offering” that rendered all the bits of toasted lamb and roasted wheat to smell over done and worthless.

Jesus changed everything.

The community of faith that came into being after Calvary was not based upon plant and animal sacrifices. Jesus paid the ultimate sacrifice, which made all those daily tributes unnecessary. With Jesus’ death the powers of death itself were forever banished. And so was the perpetual need for seeking divine appeasement. In the theology of Temple Judaism, Jesus’ sacrifice was so perfect and complete that nothing more was required.

Except our faith in his person and presence. Except our commitment to continuing to incarnate his presence in this world through the community of faith which is the Church, the aroma of Christ in the world.

In this week’s Ephesians’ text the author describes what a community of faith, a true Aroma of Christ Church, might look and smell like. No lies, no evilness, no bitterness, no wrath or anger or wrangling. No lies, only truth. No hate, only love. No condemnation, only forgiveness and love. An Aroma of Christ Church is a reflection of God — “imitators” of God — forgiving, loving, open to all sinners and seekers.

Those who embrace and embody these actions and attributes emit a special smell. It is the “fragrance” of Christ, the Eau de Jesus.

How much do we spend every year trying to drown out our own body odors or deluge ourselves in some new “sexy” fragrance? There is only one odor Christians are called to carry — that is the “fragrance” of Christ — the beautiful, life-affirming, God-forgiving essential essence of divine love and forgiveness that wafted its way on the world from the hill called Calvary.

The most attractive scent ever conceived was the fragrance of Jesus’ own sacrifice — the smell of complete, self-sacrificing love. Sniff the peach-fuzzy hair on top of a newborn baby’s head and increase it ten thousand times. That is the sweetness of Jesus’ sacrificial “fragrance.”

But today’s text is not just about the sweet smell of Christ’s forgiving fragrance. It is also about how the community of faith takes that smell into the world. The smell goes by another name too: good behavior. Good behavior should never be undervalued — especially in these “Jersey Shore,” “Real Housewives” days where “bad behavior” gains so many so much.

In fact, one of the worst “bad behavior” movies of the past year, 21 Jump Street, is named after an undercover police post in an old dilapidated church called “The Aroma of Christ Church.” The title of the church is no doubt intended to be satirical, even mocking. But isn’t that what Paul says the church is to be? “For we are to God a sweet smell of Christ” (2 Corinthians 2:15).

In fact, is there any higher compliment to a person than this one: “I smell Jesus in you.” Is there any higher compliment to a church body than this one: “the bouquet of Jesus is all over your church.” Or how about this compliment: “the bouquet of Jesus just gets stronger and stronger in your church.”

In today’s epistle lesson, some of the ingredients of the aroma of Christ are spelled out. You know what’s so surprising about them? They’re not exotic. They’re not extravagant.

First, they’re not exotic. We might even read the advice in today’s Ephesians’ text as nothing more than “be loving and forgiving” or “don’t be mean.” But the repercussions of love and forgiveness are life-changing and world-changing.

Second, they’re not extravagant. Some people like to douse themselves in perfume or cologne. In fact, the older you get the more likely you are to do this because your decaying sense of smell needs more stimulation to register its presence. But the truth is that just a little aroma of Christ has transformative properties.

In meteorological circles there is a technical term called “near calm.” “Near calm” is when there is only one mile per hour of wind recorded. “Near calm” describes a breeze that is just enough to bend a blade of grass. One mile per hour is about what you generate at a slow walk. It appears to be a pretty insignificant amount of pneuma, or wind.

But wait a minute: a one mile per hour wind changes the trajectory of a bullet by 15 inches. If you are a soldier standing in the middle of a sniper’s scope, “near calm” can save your life. Just a tiny amount of “near calm,” just a tiny dab of love and forgiveness in someone’s life, can create huge changes. The aromas of Christ offered by small community of faith can have massive consequences. The world can be changed by a one mile an hour wind of love and compassion and forgiveness. An Aroma of Christ Church has the power to bend the trajectory of history.

We have only to breathe deep of the fragrance of Christ, and exhale that sweet smell upon the world.

The author of Pilgrim’s Progress, John Bunyan once said that “For Christians to commune savourly of God’s matters one with another, it is as if they opened to each other’s nostrils boxes of perfume.” As you leave this morning, I want you to go to one person who has blessed you in some way, look them in the eye, and say “I smell Jesus all over you.”


COMMENTARY

All across the US there are signs popping up in windows and outside homes: “99%.”

It’s one of the oddest slogans to “catch on,” this proud proclamation that one is among the “99%.” What was meant as an isolation of the uber-wealthy, the “1%,” essentially has everyone else claiming “we’re all alike.” For a culture that has spent the last twenty years ultra-personalizing and customizing every facet of life (ring tones, web-sites, school curriculums, insurance plans), the boast to be “just like everyone else” sounds decidedly off-key.

The Pauline author of Ephesians was definitely NOT about being like everyone else. Throughout Ephesians the contrast between the beliefs and behaviors of those inside the community of faith and those outside the community of faith is dramatically depicted. Just prior to today’s text the author itemized the attitudes and attributes of the Gentiles (the “99%”) which served to make their lives “futile” and “alienated” from God. Against all those negative behaviors — e.g. licentiousness, greed, impurity — the author next describes the qualities that should be promoted and practiced among those who are joined together through faith in Christ. Throughout the positives and negatives spelled out in this exhortation, there runs the faith community.

Lists of virtues and vices are found throughout ancient literature. Both Gentiles and Jews lift up many of the same behaviors that are itemized here in Ephesians (and in the very similar list in Colossians 3:8-14). But in the context of this epistle the author’s eye is not on improving individual behavior so much as it is on building up the cohesiveness and unity of the community. It is the Christbody community that enables individuals to stand against the prevailing culture.

Just as he had already reminded his readers that they have “put off” or “put away” their “former way of life” (4:22), the author now urges them to put away (“apothesthai”) falsehood. Falsehood and deceitfulness are to be replaced by a positive action — “speaking the truth.” This directive seems to echo Zechariah 8:16-19, where the prophet describes the promises of the new Jerusalem, which is known as the “City of Truth.” The community of disciples Ephesians addresses are inhabitants of a new reality, not an eschatological “new Jerusalem” but an incarnational body of Christ. As such their relationships are characterized by the abiding presence of truth.

While the Ephesians’ author seems to recognize the occasional legitimacy of anger (“be angry”), he also pairs that emotion with another imperative: “Do not sin.” He further curtails that anger by placing a time limit on its existence with the proverbial “Do not let the sun go down on your anger.” Carefully nursed anger, anger that stays the night, anger that takes up residence in the heart, offers a potential place (“topos”) for the devil to take up residence. The sacred space that is the community of faith must avoid offering the powers of darkness any foothold within their midst.

The next directive sounds perfectly Pauline. It is an admonition to thieves: turn from stealing to working “with their own hands” in order to be able to share the fruit of their labors “with the needy.” Paul, the disciple who never gave up his craft of sewing leather and day job of manufacturing tents, never tired of exhorting Christians to use their hands to serve their faith (1 Thessalonians 4:11; 12:2; 2 Thessalonians 3:6-12).

But the power of works is never elevated over the power of words. In v.29 the author returns to focusing on the impact words can have on the wholeness and health of the community. This admonition rejects talk that is “evil.” Like useful hands, it directs the community to utter only those words that ware “useful for building up.” Stewarding words, speaking no evil, is the means by which “words may give grace,” that is, make God’s redemptive work, heard and felt within the community. A good word becomes a gracious word — a conveyor of God’s grace to the world.

The speech to avoid is detailed in v.31. The speech to share is offered in v.32. “Trash talking” — bitterness, wrath, anger, wrangling, slander, malice — are actions and attitudes which would “grieve the Holy Spirit,” activities that would disrupt and disassemble the cohesive community the Holy Spirit has made possible. The words and witness called for from this community is “kind,” “tender-hearted,” and “forgiving.” The template the faith community is to use is nothing less than the ultimate act of redemption all the faithful have experienced — forgiving others “as God in Christ has forgiven you”(v.32).

Finally, in a most remarkable statement, the Ephesians author urges his readers to be “imitators of God.” This is the only use of this phrase in all of the Bible. It is truly intimidating to the reader: “Imitate God.” But within the context of this discussion it seems evident that it is God’s forgiving, accepting nature that the epistle writer is urging the faith community to emulate. The faith community cannot itself exonerate sin, but it can embrace the sinner and offer a place in the community. In that way we become “imitators of God.”

The sacrificial act that makes it possible for the community of faith to act as “imitators of God,” is the act that has transformed sinners into saints, into “beloved children” in God’s eyes. That act, of course, was Christ’s dedication to “live in love” and to give “himself up for us.” Using First Testament temple sacrifice language, Ephesians describe Christ’s ultimate sacrificial act as a “fragrant offering” to God on our behalf.

The burnt offerings of roasted meats and roasted grains perfumed the air around the Temple. To the Levite priests that sweet smell meant God had been honored and appeased. Jesus was a “fragrant offering” because his sacrifice, the love and forgiveness he offered the world, brought the scent of a finally redeemed humanity to God. All people became “beloved children” through Christ’s sacrifice. The stink of sin was washed away, forever banished by the fragrance of forgiveness.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Leonard Sweet Sermons, by Leonard Sweet