Ephesians 1:15-23 · Thanksgiving and Prayer
Power Sharing
Ephesians 1:15-23
Sermon
by David O. Bales
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Modern people are fascinated with power. We fiddle with a switch on the wall and it delivers the results from dynamos in dams and atomic reactors. We domesticate nature's powers in order to light the den, vacuum the carpet, and brew the coffee. Power is at our fingertips. Technology has opened endless possibilities, chugging along from wood and coal fired steam, converting to petroleum, accelerating to internal combustion engines, and expanding to jets and rockets.

We, this living generation, have most benefited from the knowledge of harnessed wind, water, fossil fuels, and atoms. Scientists now juggle subatomic particles, speed on to superconductors, and, in a half dozen nanoseconds, store all the knowledge of an encyclopedia in a fraction of a square inch of plastic.

Knowing how to control the world in this way — to take it apart and reassemble it, to shove it into different forms, to extract what we need from it, to force it to different functions, and to fabricate different products — is an expression of power. Power is the ability to cause or to prevent change.

Our text in Ephesians centers around power — the ability to cause or to prevent change. Paul says that God put heaven's power in Jesus Christ. Paul gazes across the centuries of human history and across the expanse of the universe and then he stops at Jesus, seeing all God's power and plans swirling as a funnel into him. Jesus on earth is the concentrated power of God. All God's plans before led to Jesus. All God's purposes after lead from Jesus.

Paul says that God "raised him from the dead and seated him at the right hand." So if you want to get things done, look to the exalted Jesus. God's might is portrayed in Jesus' resurrection, his ascension, and his current lordship over all of life.

Jesus affects lasting change, exhibiting possibilities that God has prepared in advance from all eternity. Where Jesus does his work today, lights aren't poking holes in the darkness, and there's no ground-shaking roar of machines. Jesus' power is currently seen, as Paul tells us in verses 15 and 19, in the faith, love, and hope of the Christian community. If we'd advise God about how to get things done on earth, we'd probably write a different script. We'd tell God how to display power: Erect a building ten miles square, twist continents like a snake, or throw a bridge across the Pacific. That would grab people's attention. Instead, God chose to endow the Christian church with all the power of Jesus Christ.

Few of us come to worship believing Jesus gives his power to the church, which he calls his body. God declares that believers are Jesus' living existence, his very body on earth. Jesus has ascended to heaven, but his influence hasn't disappeared. It's just changed form. We are Jesus' presence on this planet. We might not have known that or understood it when we first entered the faith, but that's the amazing news the scriptures tell us. Verses 18 and 19 promise "so that ... you may know what is the hope to which he has called you, what are the riches of his glorious inheritance among the saints, and what is the immeasurable greatness of his power for us who believe...." The immeasurable greatness of his power for us who believe: Jesus gives us his power, whether to bring people to faith or nurture them in faith, whether to feed the hungry or struggle for peace, whether to confront evil or reconcile enemies.

Paul writes first about faith and love and then he jabs us with hope right at the moment when he tells of Christ's gift of power to us. A few frenetic individuals, simply because they possess an excess of energy or talent, have an overwhelming sense of hope. Possibilities string out before them like an endless ticker tape parade. But that's not many of us. For most of us, the parade has ended, the bands have gone home, and the parade's floats take up space in someone's barn — banners fading and tires going flat.

Most of us have an abundance neither of talent nor of energy. What possibilities we envision are the ordinary kind. We expect to get older and more feeble, to experience frustration of further limitations, and then to die. Yet to be faithful to God, we trust Jesus' power within us and by our obedience, we turn on God's power in our lives.

I tell my wife that if, as a boy, I'd known I would grow up and marry her, I'd have been a lot more excited about the future. We know now what Jesus has done for us. We should become used to expecting great things from him; we should learn to anticipate tomorrow and to welcome the tasks that he sends our way. He won't overburden us. He gives us power. Power is the ability to cause or to prevent change. Jesus grants his power to us. Not to someone else, but to us. "The immeasurable greatness of his power for us who believe." Then do we settle for life as usual? Do we settle for a church as usual? Do we pray for a church as usual? What's wrong with us if we choose to continue a mundane, ho-hum life? What's happened to our faith if we dally in despair? Did we forget that Jesus gives his church all he has? Or did we never know, so we can't even forget it?

In many ways, power in the Christian life depends upon knowledge. If we don't have the power to live for Jesus, maybe we don't have the knowledge we need. Paul prays in verses 17 and 18 "that the God of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of glory, may give you a spirit of wisdom and revelation as you come to know him, so that, with the eyes of your heart enlightened, you may know what is the hope to which he has called you, what are the riches of his glorious inheritance among the saints."

Maybe the most exalting knowledge we need to learn, accept, and cherish is that all Christians are saints. In the New Testament, every believer was a "saint," even those Christians Paul disagreed with. "Saint" means: "One who is set apart for God's use." As Christianity evolved into the early Middle Ages, Christians began to define a saint as an extraordinary believer who could be identified as such only after death. Thus Christians abandoned the exciting New Testament reality that we're all saints. In the New Testament, "saint" seldom refers to the dead. It means those whom God uses in this world, those who live by God's power here and now.

Christians won't claim the gifts Jesus died to give if they think that living close with God and living wondrously for others is something for an elite few called saints — most of whom are dead. The Protestant Reformation was freeing and empowering for Christians because all believers were given back their rightful place as God's saints. Not someone else far away and long dead. You are a saint. God gives you great things to do and the power to do them.

In English, the words "power" and "possibility" both derive from the same Latin word that means "to be able." So, also, the Greek word that Paul repeats for power means basically "to be able." Jesus has granted you God's power to be useful in God's cause, to be able to bring about or to prevent change. Our ascended Lord makes you able to forge new possibilities in your personal life with God, in your relations with family and friends, and in your job and neighborhood. God bestows upon you power to live as Jesus did. Jesus created a new possibility out of the cross, which means Jesus showed what love is able to do with suffering. If our faith can't get us through suffering, we need to reconsider our faith.

When Martin Luther King Jr. was 27 years old in Montgomery, Alabama, one night at midnight the phone rang. The voice called him derogatory names and stated how tired they were of him and that if he wasn't out of town in three days, he'd have his brains blown out and his house bombed.

That night in his kitchen became a turning point for King because he realized he couldn't tell his parents. He needed a power to help him continue the cause of desegregation without his having to worry about himself or his family being harmed. He prayed and his faith became more real to him than ever before, and he received the strength from God to stand up for peace and for truth.

God makes you able to stand up for Jesus, with faith that trusts God even when friends flee, mobs turn against you, the sky turns black, and for your life, you can't figure out what God is doing. God makes you able to serve Jesus with love that wants the best for all, that lives for the benefit of others, and that doesn't worry when your interests come in last.

God makes you able to live as Jesus did, with hope that sees beyond today, that overlooks the disabilities you've always had, and that beholds the kingdom of God even now taking form among us. With faith, hope, and love the Holy Spirit empowers us to live as the saints of Jesus Christ in this world.

Think about the possibilities God wants to empower in our life and in this congregation. Who does God want to be the beneficiary of our faith, hope, and love? Where is God nudging us at the elbow to take the next steps of obedience in Christian discipleship? Where does God want us to use the power of the Holy Spirit to cause or prevent change in our lives, and in our congregation, and in our world?

Pray that the ascended Jesus will clearly reveal to you the work God wants to do through you. Pray that our congregation will catch a glimpse of where God empowers us to serve others. Because, whether at our Lord's table or our neighbor's table, the ascended Jesus places at our fingertips the power to be God's living, useful saints. Amen.

CSS Publishing, Inc., Sermons for Sundays in Lent and Easter: Toward Easter And Beyond, by David O. Bales