Ephesians 1:1-14 · Spiritual Blessings in Christ
Hope For A New Year
Ephesians 1:1-14
Sermon
by King Duncan
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We live in a crazy world. There was an article sometime back in The Smithsonian magazine about Barbie Dolls. How many of you have ever owned a

Barbie Doll? What? None of our men?

Ever since Barbie made her debut on toy store shelves, she has been accused of creating self-esteem problems in teenage girls. You might remember one cynic's estimate that if Barbie were a real woman, she'd have to walk on all fours due to her proportions.

The male equivalent of the Barbie Doll, according to some people, is the gun-toting G.I. Joe action figure. Notice that it is an "action figure" and not a doll. Boys don't play with dolls, do they? Now for the craziness.

In 1993, a mischievous group called the Barbie Liberation Organization decided to take revenge on these influential dolls. They bought hundreds of talking Barbie Dolls and hundreds of talking G.I. Joes. Then, the group extracted the voice chips the things that make them talk from all of the Barbie Dolls and they placed them in the G.I. Joes, and vice versa. Then they repackaged the figures, and replaced them in stores.

Can you imagine the chaos that resulted. Can you see young girls' reactions when their Barbie Dolls announced in a rough voice, "Eat lead, Cobra!" Or when young boys heard their G.I. Joes squeal, "Ken is such a dream." (1)

This is a crazy world. It's also a very stressful world.

Astronaut Susan J. Helms spent almost six months on the International Space Station, where she became acclimated to a different way of living. In an interview after her return to earth, Helms claimed that she missed the peacefulness of living in space. There were no phones, no Internet connections, no televisions on the International Space Station. There were no problems with information overload. The lack of stress helped her to sleep "like a baby," she says. (2)

Well, Susan, welcome back to the real world the world of 24 hour news and unceasing stress. Whether it is war in the Middle East, terrorism, corporate malfeasance, little girls abducted from their homes, snipers, West Nile virus, or whatever it may be, there is plenty in this world to keep you awake.

If you lost money in your pension fund last year in the slump of the stock market, you were probably furious at the actions of many corporate CEOs. It was bad enough that our economy took so many hits with the collapse of more banks than we would like to count.  Why is all this so grievous? It is because of what careless or overconfident executives did to their employees and stockholders. Do the people at the top of great corporations care at all about people at the bottom?

A new term entered our vocabulary a few years back downsizing. It means "trimming back" primarily at the expense of employees. In a long article in the Wall Street Journal, Susan Faludi recounted the toll just one downsizing exacted from 63,000 employees when Safeway supermarkets decided to get lean and mean.

Faludi recounts suicides, attempted suicides, divorces, broken families, whole towns devastated economically, children who had to drop out of college, and thousands of people left without jobs, or the hope of finding another one. On the other hand, the few executives at the top of the company shared a personal gain of $800 million after four years. (3)

No wonder some of us have trouble sleeping at night. There's a lot going on in this world to keep you awake. There's a lot to both sadden us and infuriate us. And then, just when we think there is no hope for this world . . . into this world comes God. That's the good news for this first Sunday in a new year. Just when humanity was on the verge of giving up and giving in, here comes God.

"In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. He was in the beginning with God. All things came into being through him, and without him not one thing came into being. What has come into being in him was life, and the life was the light of all people. The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness did not overcome it . . . The true light, which enlightens everyone, was coming into the world. He was in the world, and the world came into being through him; yet the world did not know him. He came to what was his own, and his own people did not accept him. But to all who received him, who believed in his name, he gave power to become children of God . . . the Word became flesh and lived among us, and we have seen his glory, the glory as of a Father's only Son, full of grace and truth." (NRSV)

An Upbeat Word for a Downbeat World. That's our theme for the months of January and February. If you and I want to wallow in despair and gloom we will have to do it somewhere else. In C. S. Lewis' words, we live in a God-invaded world. And where God is, there is hope.

This is not to ignore the realities of our world. This is not a perfect world. Far from it. For example, there is a moral and ethical crisis in our land that cannot be glossed over. It permeates our society from the corporate boardroom all the way down to the community grade school.

In December 2001, teacher Christine Pelton of Piper High School in Kansas discovered that almost one-fourth of her students in a sophomore biology class cheated on a major biology project. Armed with proof of the widespread cheating, Pelton flunked all the participating students.

Within days, the parents of the cheating students had protested, and the school board ordered Christine Pelton to change the students' failing grades. It was as if the teacher were guilty and not the cheating students. An isolated case? Hardly.

A Rutgers University study found that over 75% of college students cheat. And studies of college faculty show that the professors are often aware of the cheating and do nothing about it. In fact, faculty at Columbia University and Syracuse University two of our finest schools have published essays suggesting that students shouldn't be held accountable for their cheating because it would hurt the student-professor relationship. (4)

Hello! Where do these schools find professors like these. There has never been a better time to crack down on student cheating. Not because we wish these students any ill will, but because these young people need to understand what it means to be responsible members of society. There is a moral and ethical crisis in our land. We would never deny such an obvious reality. But be careful of wringing your hands and declaring that the world is going to the dogs.

Consider another perspective on today's young people. Did you know that according to a survey in Time magazine compared to teens twenty years ago, today's young people are less likely to get pregnant, less likely to get an abortion, less likely to drink alcohol, less likely to commit a violent crime, and more likely to do volunteer work. (5)

I know I'm proud of the young people in our church. We live in a God-invaded world. We should never give in to despair and feelings of doom. "The Word has become flesh and dwelt among us . . ." This does not mean we live in a perfect world, but it does mean that our world is never beyond hope. Where God is, there is the possibility of renewal. But where is hope to be found? Why, it is to be found right here in this faith community.

Hope is found in the body of Christ. The Word became flesh and dwelt among us. Why? In order to bring into being a new community of people the people of the Way the people of the cross.

St. Paul writes in our lesson from Ephesians: "Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us in Christ with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places, just as he chose us in Christ before the foundation of the world to be holy and blameless before him in love . . ."

In other words, the reason Christ came into the world was to form us into his people, his bride, his body that we might do his work in the world. Where there are people who bow at the name of Jesus, there is hope for the world.

This is not to say that church people are always aware of their calling, of course. Some churches operate more like social clubs than organizations devoted to changing the world.

Author Leonard Sweet was looking for a good place to have lunch in the community of Cannon Beach, Oregon. He approached a quaint cafe and pulled on the door. It was locked. On the door was a sign: "Out to lunch. Be back at 1:30." During the noon hour, the owner of the cafe had gone out to lunch. Somehow, he didn't get the fact that it was important for his business, a cafe, to also be serving lunch. So it was no surprise that under the "Out to lunch" sign was another sign reading "Store for sale." (6)

There are many churches today that are "out to lunch" when it comes to reaching out to change the world. But fortunately, there are many other churches and many church members who are seeking the best they are able, to make a difference in the world. Let me give you one example of a follower of Christ who gives us a reason to believe in the future.

His name is Burl Cain and he is the warden at The Louisiana State Penitentiary, commonly known as Angola. This institution used to be one of the nation's bloodiest and most brutal prisons. Then, in the early '80s, Burl Cain became the new warden at Angola. Cain is a devout Christian; he put his beliefs into action in reforming the prison. He established literacy classes throughout the prison, even on Death Row. He increased the number of prison chaplains. He also allowed a local seminary to teach Bible studies at Angola. He also insisted that the guards treat inmates with respect. Consequently, incidents of violence have plummeted, and more prisoners are enrolling in education courses.

Warden Cain was particularly instrumental in the life of one inmate, Antonio James. James was a convicted killer who spent about sixteen years on Death Row. The night before his execution, Antonio James asked Cain to eat his last meal with him. Cain had counseled James in the past and introduced him to Christ. Now James wanted to know what it would be like to die. Cain assured him that angels would come to take him to heaven. As Antonio James prepared for his lethal injection, Burl Cain held his hand and spoke to him about God. James' last words to Cain were, "Bless you." (7)

As long as there are disciples of Christ like Burl Cain, there is hope for the world. The question you and I need to ask ourselves is, are we doing our part? This is a crazy world, but it is also a God-invaded world. "The Word has become flesh and dwelt among us . . ." Christ has redeemed us that we might work in his behalf to redeem the world.

An upbeat Word for a downbeat world.


1. "Macho in Miniature" by Ed Liebowitz, Smithsonian, August 2002, p. 28.

2. Interview with astronaut Susan J. Helms by Michelle Burford, O, The Oprah Magazine, July 2002, p. 157. 

3. 16 May 1990, pp. A1, A8, A9. Cited in The New Doublespeak by William Lutz (HarperCollins Publishers). 

4. "That's Outrageous!" by Tucker Carlson, Reader's Digest, July 2002, pp. 39-42.

5. "Who's In Charge Here?" by Nancy Gibbs, Time, Aug. 6, 2001.

6. "Out to Lunch" by Leonard Sweet, Rev. magazine, Jul./ Aug. 2002 p. 17. 

7. Martin Fletcher, Almost Heaven (London: Little, Brown and Company, 1998), pp. 133-142.

Dynamic Preaching, Collected Sermons, by King Duncan