Ephesians 4:17--5:21 · Living as Children of Light
Look Carefully How You Walk
Ephesians 4:17--5:21
Sermon
by Maxie Dunnam
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The El Cortez is a well-known hotel in San Diego, California. The charm of it is comparable to the more famous hotels around the world. There is an intriguing story connected with it.

"Years ago, the elevator in the hotel couldn't handle the expanding traffic of people. It was just not adequate for all of the people who were going and coming, and who needed to get up to or down from their rooms. And so the management called in some experts to solve the problem. They assembled together a high-powered team of architects and structural engineers, and told them to find a way to construct a new elevator. And after much deliberation, the architects and the engineers concluded that they could indeed cut a hole in each of the floors and install the motor for the elevator down in the basement. But it was going to be very messy, and it was going to take a lot of time and it meant that the hotel would have to shut down for some time until the project could be completed. This concerned the management, of course, because they would lose a lot of revenue. One day they were all talking about this problem down in the lobby when the janitor who was mopping nearby overheard them. "Gentlemen," he said, "I don't mean to intrude, but I think I know a way you could do it without shutting down the hotel."

The architects and the engineers and the hotel management people turned and looked at this ragged fellow with the mop in his hand. "You what?" said one of the managers rather arrogantly and indignantly. And the janitor simply repeated his words: "I think I know a way how you can do it without shutting down the hotel." "Oh you do, eh?" said the manager very condescendingly, "Well tell us, then, what's your solution?" And the old janitor said, "Why don't you build the elevator on the outside of the building. You could build it with glass if you wanted to, and the people could look out over the bay and over the city as they went up to their floors. It could even be a big selling point." And you know, those high powered architects and engineers and managers just stood there in disbelief, (not knowing) what to say. Here was a simple janitor who had solved their complex problem in just two or three sentences! ...They built that elevator on the outside of the building just as the old janitor had suggested, and it became the very first of its kind anywhere in the world!" (Dr. Norman Neaves, "All Things Are Possible With God", April 23, 1989, -- Church of the Servant, Oklahoma City, OK)

Isn't it true that we make things more complicated than they are? And isn't it true that answers to many of our most troubling questions are available if we can back away, unbind ourselves from preconceptions, and free our minds to see in a fresh way.

We need to be doing that over and over again in our reflection upon the Christian faith. More often than not is it less complicated than we make. I did not say less difficult. I said less complicated.

The image of the Christian life as a walk is simple -- difficult but simple. That's the dominant image of this sermon series: The Christian Walk. Paul used it over and over again: walk in love; walk in the light; walk in the Spirit; walk in newness of life; walk worthy of your vocation; walk honestly, as in the day

We could go on and on -- and we'll be coming back to some of these texts in the weeks ahead. But the image is there -- one of the clearest images in the New Testament -- the Christian Walk. I like the image. It suggests something dynamic. There is movement to it, growth, energy, vitality.

I.

Maybe that's the point at which we should begin. There is nothing static about the Christian life. Write that down if you're taking notes -- there's nothing static about the Christian life.

I came across a shocking word in John Wesley's Journal recently. Listen to it, "My friends affirm I'm mad, because I said I was not a Christian a year ago. I affirm that I'm not a Christian now...For a Christian is one who has...love, peace, joy. But these I do not have...though I have given, and do give, all my goods to feed the poor, I'm not a Christian. Though I've endured hardships, though I have in all things denied myself and taken up the Cross, I'm not a Christian. My works are nothing; I have not the fruits of Christ. Though I have constantly used all the means of grace for 20 years, I'm not a Christian."

Do you know when John Wesley wrote that? It was eight months after Aldersgate. And you know what happened at Aldersgate. It was there, after years of endless struggle, that John Wesley came to that point of what we would call justification by Grace through Faith -- or the assurance of Salvation. And you remember his testimony. "I felt my heart strangely warmed. I felt I did trust Christ, Christ alone for my Salvation, and an assurance was given me that He had taken away my sins, even mine, and saved me from the law of sin and death.

So what is going on here? Eight months after that experience that moved him to his very core, and brought forth that lilting testimony. What's going on here? Wesley is emphatic. I'm not a Christian! How do we read that? -- the extreme way Mr. Wesley makes the case, and the way he uses the word "Christian"? The big issue we must not miss is the point of his turmoil. He's wrestling with himself, and agonizing as Paul did in Romans. You remember that word in Romans 7:18: "I know that nothing good dwells within me, that is, in my flesh. I can will what is right, but I cannot do it. (7:18)

There's no question about it -- Wesley was a Christian, yet he was not a Christian.

Hold on Preacher, I can hear you say. Stop the double talk. How can you say Wesley was a Christian and he was not a Christian. What sort of talk is that?

Have you heard the story of the young man who began his work in a grocery store? About the second day that he was there, a rather elderly woman, very proper, and very insistent on her own way, came into the store and went to the produce department where this young man was working. She told the young man she wanted a half head of lettuce. This was the young man's second day at work but he knew enough already to know that that was a strange request -- a half head of lettuce -- how could the store sell a half head of lettuce -- what would it do with the other half? He talked with the woman for a bit but she was so insistent that he said that he would go and inquire of the manager. He didn't know but she was walking right behind him. When he got to the manager he said, "There's a very cantankerous old woman up front who is insisting that we sell her a half head of lettuce. The manager's facial expression caused the young man to know something was going on, so he looked around and there was the lady standing at this shoulder. Quick as a flash he said, "And this precious lady here, would like to purchase the other half."

When the lady had gone and the sale had been completed, the manager called the young clerk back and said to him, "I'm amazed at your quickness; you're very bright. The response you made to that woman was absolutely brilliant. I think you have a great future. By the way, where are you from?

The fellow said, "I'm from Minneapolis, the home of the ugliest women and the best hockey players in the world." A frown came on the store owner's face, "You know, my wife is from Minneapolis." The young man smiled and said "and which hockey team did she play for?"

Yes, some folks are good at double talk. I'm not, and I'm not trying to double talk you. And I know why your question would be insistent. Can Wesley be a Christian and not a Christian at the same time?

Well, it's not double talk. In his Journal, Wesley was pouring out his soul. He was anguishing in his relationship to God. Of course he had been laid hold of by Christ as Paul would say. You remember Paul's testimony in Phil. 3: 12-14.

"Not as though I had already attained, either were already perfect; but I follow after, if that I may apprehend that for which also I am apprehended of Christ Jesus. Brethren, I count not myself to have apprehended, but this one thing I do; forgetting those things which are behind, and reaching forth unto those things which are before, I press toward the mark for the prize of the high calling of God in Jesus Christ."

So, like Paul, Wesley knew that he'd been laid hold of by Christ, but he would make no claim to have attained the fullness of what he knew was his by gift and promise. And that must be our stance -- that's the Christian stance. To be aware of what is yet lacking in our being perfected and to press on to "lay hold of that for which I was laid hold of by Christ." The Christian's life is never static.

I think we need to learn a lesson from shrimp. You know they wear their skeletons on the outside of their bodies. They've been known to discard their shells as many as 26 times during a lifetime. They shed their shells to accommodate their growing bodies.

We need to be like that -- confessing with Paul that we know we have not arrived -- we know we've not attained -- but we press on. We continue to grow. For the Christian, life is never static.

II.

Move then to a second word. If the Christian life is never static, we must be careful how we walk. That was Paul's specific word in Ephesians 5: 15 -- our text for today -- "look carefully, then, how you walk."

Look carefully how you walk. Let me ask you. If you get to where you're going, will you be where you want to be? You can chew on that one all week, friends, and I hope you will. If you get to where you're going, will you be where you want to be?

Frederick Buechner, one of my favorite writers described the plight of too many of us. He wais, "There are people who use up their entire lives making money so that they can enjoy the lives they have entirely used up." And Doug Larson put it this way: "What some people mistake for the high cost of living is really the cost of high living." (United Features Syndicate)

We need to be careful how we walk before we may get to where we're going and discover it's not the place we wanted to be.

The big truth we must reckon with as we consider our walk is athat there is a spiritual thirst in our life that will never be satisfied apart from a growing relationship with God. The psalmist spoke for us all "As a hart longs for flowing streams, so longs my soul for Thee, O God." (42:1)

The King James version translates it "as the hart panteth for the water brook ..." (42:1)

Now we may not know it. We may think we're driven by something other than a thirst for God -- the need for success, for achievement, or sex, or recognition, or money. We may not even think that we're particularly religious -- not in comparison with those around us who weem to really be preoccupied with the faith. We may think that we are always concerning ourselves with mundane things and not even thinking much about God. But that's not the way it is at all. Even though you may not recognize it -- there is a spiritual thirst in your life that will never be satisfied apart from a growing relationship with God.

Do you remember Paul's encounter with the Athenians? Athens was one of the world's intellectual centers -- the site of a great university. Innumerable religious cults seemed to be attracted to that city. Paul was preaching in the Synagogues and he aroused a lot of attention -- especially the attention of the philosophers on Mars HIll. So they invited Paul to the Areopagus to address them.

Paul was brilliant in his word -- illustrating the fact that we who would proclaim the message of the Gospel must proclaim it in the context of those whom we're seeking to influence -- understand their culture, and speak to them where they are. Paul had observed thousands of statues and idols that dominated that ancient city. So he began his sermon with the word, "Men of Athens I perceive that in every way you are very religious."

Listen to him as he continues in Acts 17: 23- 25.

"For as I passed along, and observed the objects of your worship, I found also an altar with this inscription, 'To an unknown god.' What therefore you worship as unknown, this I proclaim to you. The God who made the world and everything in it, being Lord of heaven and earth, does not live in shrines made by man, nor is he served by human hands, as though he needed anything, since he himself gives to all men life and breath and everything" (Acts 17: 23-25 RSV).

Paul was right. God created us all in such a way that we would always seek Him. An Augustine captured the truth of it: "For thee were we made, O God, and our hearts are restless till they rest in Thee." We seek to satisfy that thirst in a lot of different ways. Most of us believe that it's a matter of finding the right style. Doing the right thing at the right time in the right manner -- living in the right place and knowing the right people -- belonging to the right clubs and buying the right wine and going to the right restaurants, choosing the right job or profession -- sometimes we even include going to the right church.

Isn't that the appeal of the whole advertising industry? The ad world preaches a gospel that life is found by acquiring style. They would make style the religion that satisfies. Notice the sacrifices that people are willing to make in order to acquire style. And have you ever thought that that really is the test of religion -- in fact that determines what your religion is -- what you are willing to sacrifice for.

That's what Buechner was saying, "There are people who use up their entire lives making money so that they can enjoy the lives they've entirely used up."

It simply doesn't work. So we need to keep on asking ourselves the question. If we get to where we're going, will we be where we want to be? And we need to remember the admonition -- look carefully how you walk.

Let me tie it all together. I have here a letter from a prisoner written to George and Ann Gaines, directors of Life Row Ministries, a ministry connected with Chuck Colson's Prison Fellowship. The prisoner's name is Von Davis -- a death row inmate. In fact, let me take some content from two letters.

"For the record, I arrived here on death row in absolute confusion, insanely bitter over the obvious injustice, full of hate, lonely and abandoned by friends and most family. If there was a "bottom of the barrel", I was under that. Needless to say, I vehemently questioned the existence of God and all human fairness and morals. Execution would have been a relief. "To avoid a long story, allow me to sum the truth up. Today, twenty months after arriving here, I stand guilty of one fact; that is accepting Jesus Christ as my personal Lord and Savior!"

That's his background -- now the other letter: "Greetings again in Jesus' Precious name. My phrase for today "What a Friend we have in Jesus!" "Who else will lift us up when we are below down? Who else will forgive us when we know we've been wrong all our lives? Who else will love us when we didn't love ourselves? Who else has a mansion for all of us to live? Only our Lord Jesus!"I'll tell you right out. He is stirring in my soul like a rumbling volcano, and my love is ready to spill. I'm ready to burn up the ears of the lost and discouraged. Ready to manifest the Jesus in me, and let it be known that Jesus is alive!"

Rather clear, isn't it -- not complex. Simple though not easy. The Christian Walk. If a death row inmate can walk that way, why can't we?

Maxie Dunnam, by Maxie Dunnam