Ephesians 1:1-14 · Spiritual Blessings in Christ
Chosen by God
Ephesians 1:1-14
Sermon
by Maxie Dunnam
Loading...

My dad is 75 years old and lives with my 76 year old Mom in Perry County, Mississippi. Now if you have not been to Perry County, you haven’t really missed anything n the way of exciting life or beautiful geography. But you’ve missed a unique culture. More than that, you’ve missed knowing two great people.

My dad didn’t even go to high school, yet I’ve moved among the high and mighty of the land, and have hobnobbed with some of the brilliant people of the country, but I’ve met few people whose wisdom compared to Dad’s, he is a simple man of very few words. But when he speaks about important things, even more so than E. F. Hutton, when he speaks, people listen.

My dad is proud of me. I’m his youngest son. He is proud of who I am far more than what I have accomplished. His model for a preacher, I’m sure, is his own dad who was an uneducated Free Will Baptist, tennis hoed, walking country preacher. Dad knows about the books I have written. I think he has reed them all. He knows to some degree the world wide impact my ministry at The Upper Room has had. But he is not overly impressed with all that.

Now I share all this to tell you that when Jerry called my Mom and Dad to tell them of our decision to accept this call to Christ church, his response was spontaneous: “Well, I’m glad he is getting back to his original call.” No questions! No discussion about what this meant to my career, or what it meant economically, or what the children thought about it, just his expression of the heart of it all, the call of God in my life. IN

I’ve gotten dozens of telephone calls from all over the nation since the news broke I was leaving The Upper Room. Calls from bishops and persons from all areas of the church’s life, but none of them was as focused as Dad. None of them as perceptive of the heart of the matter and the kind of decision I was making a decision of vocation, of call.

I want you to know that that is the reason I’m here. In the core of my being I feel called, and that will determine the content and style of my ministry with you.

Now I am not naïve and I know we can mistake God’s call. It is not always easy - in fact most of the time it is very difficult to discern clearly and precisely how God wants us to express ourselves vocationally.

For that reason, as we begin our ministry together here I want to share what I believe is the climate in which we all live as Christians and the convictions out of which we should order our lives.

Paul has a great word for us in our Scripture lesson, Ephesians 1:1-14. He identifies himself out of the depths of his most vivid self-consciousness and sense of call, an Apostle of Jesus Christ by the will of God. Paul knew who he was. He was an Apostle, and for Paul, that did not signify a class or an office. It was a calling, a vocation.

And it was this matter of centering upon my calling that enabled me to make the decision that I have made to come and be your Senior Minister.

Paul was convinced that God had a plan for his life. He was like Jeremiah who heard God say, “Before I formed you in the womb, I knew you, and therefore before you were born I consecrated you; I appointed you a prophet to the nations.” (Jeremiah 1:5)

Now that sort of staunch conviction of call may not be burning in our bones. As a lay person in the church, you may not have given too much thought to call. But it is precisely at that point, our failure to see that every Christian is called, this failure is cause for failure of the church to be the dynamic, transforming agent of God that she is called to be.

I want to lodge one word in your mind as we probe the meaning of our identity as Christians, and as we begin our ministry together. That word is chosen. Paul says, “We are chosen by God.”

I

Is there anything quite like it? The feeling that comes when we are chosen; I remember how it was growing up in rural Mississippi. Vivid in my memory are those long Sunday afternoons when neighbor children came together - many walking two or three miles to play the afternoon away. We had to manufacture our toys out of tin cans, broom sticks, barrel hoops, corn cobs and the like. And we had to invent our games, and/or adapt those which had been passed down to us from who knows where - except that they came to us through our older brothers and sisters. Whether playing “stealing sticks” or slow pitch with a “string” ball, there was nothing quite like the feeling that came when you were chosen f or a team. Your status in the community seemed to be linked with how many other people were chosen before they finally got around to calling your name. But when your name was called when you were chose, you stood a foot taller.

Can any married person ever forget the joy that came when it was settled, your mate had accepted your propoa1 of marriage, or your mate had finally gotten the courage to ask, and you could respond, In human relationships, this is the ultimate in being chosen. Someone selects you as the one person with whom he or she wishes to spend their life. Chosen!

II

But there’s something more here, we are chosen by God. At a much deeper level, but the same kind of feelings that were mine when I was chosen for a team on Sunday afternoon in Mississippi came when I was baptized, when I finally made a commitment to preach, and after years of study and being “on trial” I had hands of ordination laid upon me. Chosen by God! Paul never thought of himself as having chosen God. It was the other way: God had chosen him. This was Jesus’ moving word to the disciples “You have not chosen me but I have chosen you” (John 15:16). What bracing power! What motivating inspiration - chosen by God.

Every time I read this passage of Paul and hear him talk about God having chosen us before the foundation of the word, I can’t help but remember psalm 1:39. You recall that moving Psalm. The psalmist talks about how God knows him how he can’t escape God never being able to get away from God’s presence. If he goes up to heaven, god is there; if he lays down in the world of the dead, God is there; if he flew away to the east or lived in the farthest places in the west, God would still be there. If he asked the darkness to hide him or the light around him to turn into night the darkness would not be dark, but God would be there; and the night would be as bright as the day. Then he mounts to a great crescendo and he probes his identity and affirms it in exalting words.

“You created every part of me;
You put me together in my mother’s womb.
I praise you because you are to be feared;
All you do is strange and wonderful
I now it with all my heart.
When my bones were being formed,
Carefully put together in my mother‘s womb,
When I was growing there in secret,
You knew that I was there — —
You saw me before I was born”

Thomas Merton asked, “What am I?” and answered, “I am myself a word spoken by God.” I-low we perceive ourselves, who we think ourselves to be, determines the direction of our lives and shapes our relationships. To accept at the depth our being that we are chosen by god is the antidote for our insecurity, our neurotic fears, our striving to be accepted, our self depreciation. It is the answer to our questions of identity, and our being intimidated by the mind boggling advances in science and technology. We’re not cogs in the machine wheels of an impersonal universe. We’re not grains of sand on the ocean beach of time. Lift pour head, stand up, stand tall, you are somebody. The hairs on your head are numbered. You are loved by God, and nothing - absolutely nothing - can separate you from that love.

III

The theme builds. Not only are we chosen, we’re chosen by God and we’re chosen for a purpose. Paul is talking to all Christians, not just to those who are “Apostles”, not just to those who are ordained. He’s talking to you. You’re called for a purpose, and in verse 4, Paul says that the purpose is that we should be “holy and blameless before (God) in love”. One translation has that “holy and full of love”.

Now don’t let that word holy throw you. I know the word has had a hard time in the past 30 or 40 years. When was the last time you heard a sermon on holiness? When was the last time you had a serious thought about being called to be holy? Your answer, in truth, may be like those Christians Paul asked, “Have you received the Holy Spirit since you believed?” They responded in the vernacular, “We ain’t so much as heard of the Holy Spirit”.

But don’t let the word holy throw you. It is a cord word in the Christian vocabulary. In Greek, the word always had in it the idea of difference and separation. (Peter referred to us when he talked about our being a holy priesthood, as “God’s own people”. The phrase literally means “a people of God’s possession” The King James’ version translates it “a peculiar people”. (Joke: woman with the kitchen trash and the garbage truck.)

That’s not the kind of peculiar people we are to be as people called to holiness. The word peculiar comes from the Latin meaning “a slave is private property”. Our relationship to God is unique. We are his people, his possession. God says in Isaiah 43:21, “This people have I formed for myself, they will show forth my praise.” That’s what it means to be holy.

So the Christian is to be distinctly different, set apart by God for a purpose. The church as often mistook the meaning of this. Did you hear of the fellow who was described as being “so heavenly minded that he was no earthly good”?

The call to be holy is not the call to separate ourselves from the world, but to make a difference in the world.

Let me lodge two pictures in your mind. I can’t paint the pictures in all their, fullness and color. You’ll have to do that. But at least let their image being growing in your mind. Translated into our own setting, to be holy means that you are to be a sign of contradiction and a sign of hope to be holy means that we are to be a sign of contradiction and a sign of hope. Look briefly at what that means.

First, a sign of contradiction. How else can we perceive the beatitudes of Jesus than to realize that everything for which the Christian is to stand turns upside down most of the values and the commitments and the standards by which we normally order our lives. Hear some beatitudes in modern English as Phillips translates them:

1) How happy are the humble minded, for the Kingdom of Heaven is theirs! What does this say about the arrogance of so many of us?

2) How happy are those who know what sorrow means, for they will be given courage and comfort! What does this say about our efforts to isolate ourselves from pain and suffering, especially the pain and suffering of the poor and dispossessed?

3) How Happy are those who claim nothing, for the whole earth will belong to them! What does this say about our insatiable desire and preoccupation with things.

4) How Happy are those who make peace, for they will be known as children of God: What does this say about our trust in military might and our support of She continuous nuclear buildup the most blatant sound evil of our time that threatens all of civilization?

5) How happy are the utterly sincere, sincere, for they will see God! What does this say about the masks we wear and the games we play in order to be accepted?

To be Christian is to be distinctly different. To be holy is to be a sign of contradiction in a world gone mad for power, a world drowning in a sea of clashing contrarieties, the rich getting richer, the poor getting poorer; Madison Avenue turning us into gluttonous consumers;

Pop psychology riveting our attention on self-realization and self-fulfillment, in perverting our normal drive mar meaning into self indulgence and self-centered preoccupation; the need for play and diversion turned into a neurotic drive to seeking entertainment. To be holy is to be distinctly different, to be a sign of contradiction which does not allow the world around us to squeeze us into its mold. It is to be open to the ongoing process of renewal that makes us parables of a New Creation, persons being brought to wholeness and maturity after the image and into the stature of the fullness of Christ. And that brings forth the next picture: the holy person, the Christian, is to be a sign of hope.

IV

One of the very poignant thoughts that Paul has in this introduction to the Ephesian Christians was “God put his stamp of ownership on you by giving you the Holy Spirit he had promised” (verse 13). That’s where I’d like to close. That’s what it means to be holy, that’s what it means to be called; that’s what it means to be full of love. That’s what it means to be a sign of contradiction and a sign of hope God has put his stamp of ownership upon us.

In October, 1979, Pope John Paul II visited the United States. It was the media event of the decade. The details and intricacies of the preparation were mind boggling. The planning required precision and thoroughness. Under the detailed preparation and accompanying excitement, there were elements of humor. The Los Angeles times reported one such humorous turn of events.

In Chicago, the nation’s largest Roman Catholic archdiocese, officials preparing for the Pope’s arrival discovered to their dismay that the local Papal Throne Room was missing. It is customary in the Roman Catholic Church for each archdiocese to maintain a “Throne Room” in case of a visit by a Pope. But since a Pope had never visited Chicago, and hope of one ever coming abandoned, the “Throne Room” in Cardinal John Cody’s residence was turned into a committee room. (Isn’t that a commentary on the church?) The week before the Pope’s arriva1, workman were busy installing a platform for the throne. But officials panicked when no one could remember what happened to the throne. They were panic stricken. The throne was eventually found, with other discards, in a storage room in a nearby Catholic college.

Now that’s a parable. No one could remember what had happened to the throne.- The personal tragedy of many is that we have no throne room in our own lives, Or, we sit upon the of our own lives. Or, as Christians, we proclaim Jesus as Lord but refuse to reckon with who he really is, and what he requires of us. Paul said, “You are chose, you are chosen by God, you are chosen for a purpose, you are chosen to be holy and full of love.” To be holy is to be a sign of contradiction and a sign of hope. That’s who we are and I want us to keep that at the top of our consciousness as we begin our ministry together. “God has put his stamp of ownership upon us. By giving us the Holy Spirit he promises.”

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Collected Sermons, by Maxie Dunnam