Ephesians 3:1-13 · Paul the Preacher to the Gentiles
Showing Up
Ephesians 3:1-12
Sermon
by John N. Brittain
Loading...

We lived in Florida for a while in the 1980s and it was then that we learned about Tarpon Springs. Not a large city, it has the highest percentage of Greek Americans of any place in the US. This dates back to the 1880s, when Greek immigrants moving into the area were hired as sponge divers, a trade they had plied back in the old country. Today Tarpon Springs' main claim to fame is the Greek Orthodox Church's Epiphany celebration, which is held every January 6, with the blessing of the waters and the boats. Because of the history of sponge diving, the celebration focuses on requesting divine protection for this highly risky line of work.

The celebration attracts Greek Americans as well as curious tourists from across the country, and the city's population triples in size for that day. The Greek Orthodox Metropolitan of Atlanta usually presides over the blessing of the boats, sometimes joined by the Archbishop of America. The blessings conclude with the ceremonial throwing of a "golden" cross into the city's Spring Bayou, and young men dive in to retrieve it: Whoever recovers the cross is said to be blessed for a full year. Following the blessings, the celebration moves to the Sponge Docks where food and music are part of the festivities. In 2006, for the 100th anniversary of the Epiphany services in Tarpon Springs, his all-holiness Bartholomew I, the Patriarch of Constantinople, who is considered "first among equals" of all hierarchs of the Orthodox church, presided over the services. Bartholomew's visit to Tarpon Springs was one of the few visits to America by an ecumenical patriarch in history and says something about the scale of this event, drawing people from far and wide. I hope no one will be too disappointed that I don't intend to throw a gold cross anywhere today. It is interesting how this day has come to be a celebration of Greek Christians showing up in Florida, because it is a festival all about "showing up." Christ's "showing up," that is.

Epiphany is one of the oldest festivals in the Christian church and was first celebrated in the Eastern church to commemorate the coming of Christ to the world. The word "epiphany" means "appearing" or "manifestation" in Greek. The day originally celebrated a threefold "appearing" of Christ: The "appearing" of Jesus as a baby at his birth, the manifestation of his divinity at his baptism in the Jordan by John when the voice from heaven proclaimed him to be God's Son, and his first miracle at Cana in Galilee when his divinity was shown to a gathering. The focus, then, was on the manifestation of the Divinity of Christ, an issue that was hotly contested for the first several centuries of Christian history. As this important celebration migrated west, it came to focus on a different kind of appearing: the manifestation of Christ to the Gentiles as portrayed in Matthew's gospel in the story of the visit of the Magi from the East to the infant Jesus. Over the centuries, many Christian artists have underscored the diversity of the Magi by varying their dress or portraying them as different ethnicities. It has become traditional to portray one of them as Ethiopian. By the fourth century, Epiphany was celebrated on January 6 to emphasize that it took the wise men a while to get to where Jesus was: Obviously they were not there on Christmas Eve if they were following a star that appeared when Jesus was born. Indeed, the "twelve days of Christmas" between December 25 and January 6 remind us that it took some travel time for the Magi to "show up" and give honor to Jesus who had "shown up" in the flesh.

Some of you may be thinking of the saying attributed to Woody Allen that 90% of life is showing up. That assumes, of course, that the showing up is at the right time and in the appropriate manner. I once served a university with a beautiful neo-gothic chapel that hosted many weddings most Saturdays. One summer, we began to hear rumblings of a mysterious uninvited guest at many of the ceremonies, so the chief of security came by the next Saturday afternoon and discovered the intruder, a mild-mannered little fellow who explained that he often took the bus from a town thirty miles away to spend the afternoon at weddings. He just enjoyed seeing all the pretty young women in their beautiful gowns. While the chief judged the uninvited guest to be harmless enough, he explained that such behavior was inappropriate and should be stopped. And it was. In today's lesson, Paul is reminding us that Jesus' showing up was at the right time in the right place for the right reasons, even though not everyone saw it that way.

"This is the reason," he begins, "that I ... am a prisoner." He is here alluding to verses just before today's reading where he speaks of the incorporation of Gentiles into the body of Christ. While we don't know the exact circumstances surrounding Paul's imprisonment, we know from the book of Acts how Paul often ran afoul of both religious and government authorities on his missionary journeys. Paul assumes that his readers are familiar with his former life, no doubt because he had told them in sermons like those contained in the Acts or in messages like that summarized in Galatians 1 how Saul of Tarsus, a Pharisee of the Pharisee, a person of Jewish faith firmly dedicated to a most rigorous form of that faith, had heard about Jesus showing up in the flesh. But, naturally enough, his understanding was that Jesus had shown up as one more in the string of messianic pretenders leading gullibly hopeful Jews astray with talk of a new world, another kingdom, or the political overthrow of the Romans. But this Jesus was worse than most, because his followers claimed not just that he was a charismatic messianic figure, but that he was God's Son! Any Jew worth their salt, not to mention any devoted Pharisee, knew that this violated the basic dictum of the faith, recited every time one joined in synagogue prayers, the Shema:

Hear, O Israel: The Lord is our God, the Lord alone. You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your might.Hear, O Israel: The Lord is our God, the Lord alone. You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your might. — Deuteronomy 6:4-5

While it is not clear how much Saul knew about the life and ministry of Jesus (remember that his writings preceded that of the gospels), he may well have known the tradition that Jesus even presumed to quote this law in a context that supported his ministry. As far as he was concerned, Jesus was more out of place in his religious community than that wedding crasher at the chapel. And he certainly was not as harmless. But something dramatic happened: "For surely you have already heard of the commission of God's grace that was given to me for you, and how the mystery was made known to me by revelation, as I wrote above in a few words" (Ephesians 3:2-3). Paul assumed that they knew the story of his visionary experience as he was on the way to Damascus to drag blasphemous believers in Jesus back to Jerusalem for trial and punishment (Acts 9). We often tend to call that event his conversion, but there are good reasons to avoid that word. First, because for many of us "conversion" connotes a change from a stance of unbelief to one of belief often including a change from immoral behavior to moral, Christian behavior. Many can think of examples of this meaning of conversion — John Newton, the slave-trading sea captain who became a Christian clergyman and author of the hymn, "Amazing Grace," would suffice. That is not what happened to Saul/Paul, at least not in his understanding. He had been a zealously devout believer and remained one, it is just that the focus of his belief changed.

Second, and perhaps the more compelling reason not to call this Paul's "conversion" experience, is that he didn't call it that. Here he refers to it as his "commission" of God's grace in the NRSV, or his "administration" of God's grace in the NIV. The term Paul uses is oikonomia, economy, that we encountered last week when it was applied to God. We recalled then that because we tend to use the word "economy" almost exclusively with regard to money, we have to remind ourselves that it refers to everything we control, our time, our talent, and all our resources and relationships including, of course, our money. An oikonomos was the person given supervision of an oikonomia, often a high-ranking slave, who had oversight of the affairs of a house, organization, or town. He was in charge of income and expenses, as well as overseeing whatever farming or cottage industries existed, and the general well-being of the house or town by assigning servants and employees to their various duties. So, Paul says, he had been made oikonomos of God's grace for these people. It seems to me that the older RSV translation is the best for our understanding: "assuming that you have heard of the stewardship of God's grace that was given to me for you...." In his revelatory experience, Paul had been given a charge (a commission) to share God's grace with others, even Gentiles at Ephesus.

Paul tells us that the true nature of Christ had remained mysterious, unknown to him until it was revealed, uncovered, made known. The term "revelation" (the same term from which the last book of the Bible takes its name), here indicates knowledge that lies beyond the realm of human reason: It can only be made known by God. Once again he assumes his audience remembers the events on the Damascus Road, how Jesus said to him in a vision, "Saul, Saul, why do you persecute me?" He asked, "Who are you, Lord?" The reply came, "I am Jesus, whom you are persecuting" (Acts 9:4-5). This revealing showed Paul at least two things, one of which everyone always notices, the other perhaps not. First, that he, Saul, had got it wrong and had been on the wrong side. Rather than the believers in Jesus being deluded by one more charlatan, Jesus really had been raised from the dead and was now in heaven — however mysteriously — as part of the Godhead. But perhaps more importantly, that Jesus was somehow in those believers who were being persecuted by Saul.

Generations of readers have pointed out that on the surface, Jesus' remark is wrong: "I am Jesus, whom you are persecuting." Well, they have said, Paul was persecuting ordinary believers, not Jesus. That, of course, is the point. As Jesus himself had taught during his earthly ministry (and again, there is no reason to think that Paul was familiar with this teaching), "Truly I tell you," speaking of the hungry and thirsty, the naked and the prisoner, "Just as you did or did not do it to one of the least of these, you did or did not do it to me" (Matthew 25). Suddenly, Saul realized that there was something going on here far deeper than even the most devout following of the law could accomplish; something much more than being in covenant with God. It was having the covenant written on human hearts, as Jeremiah 31 had promised, so that God through Christ really was indwelling those individuals. It was not "as if" he was in them, he was.

"... as I wrote above in a few words, a reading of which will enable you to perceive my understanding of the mystery of Christ" (Ephesians 3:3b-4). While we cannot know with 100% certainly which few words Paul had it mind, my bet goes with part of last week's reading from Ephesians:

In him we have redemption through his blood, the forgiveness of our trespasses, according to the riches of his grace that he lavished on us. With all wisdom and insight he has made known to us the mystery of his will, according to his good pleasure that he set forth in Christ, as a plan for the fullness of time, to gather up all things in him, things in heaven and things on earth.In him we have redemption through his blood, the forgiveness of our trespasses, according to the riches of his grace that he lavished on us. With all wisdom and insight he has made known to us the mystery of his will, according to his good pleasure that he set forth in Christ, as a plan for the fullness of time, to gather up all things in him, things in heaven and things on earth. — Ephesians 1:7-10

Jesus had shown up, the incarnation had happened, at exactly the proper time for this message of God's unbelievably lavish grace to be made known to humankind. The resurrected Jesus then showed up at just the right time not just to show Paul the error of his ways, but to commission him to set out in the ancient world proclaiming the gospel. And in verse 10, Paul says that now the church has shown up to make this incredible message known to everyone.

Paul says that in "former generations this mystery was not made known to humankind" (Ephesians 3:5), obviously referring to the birth of Jesus. But let's think about the subtext just a little, the message of God's universal love for all. This is, in fact, a message that we find throughout the Hebrew Bible when we look, and not just in obvious passages like Isaiah 42:6: "I have given you as a covenant to the people, a light to the nations...." Long before Jesus, rabbis had pondered the meaning of the prologue to the Ten Commandments where God spoke to the people telling them that they were to be a "priestly kingdom and a holy nation." Does not a priest intercede for others and not just himself before God? Is not a priestly nation called to minister to other nations on behalf of God?

The Hebrews had always remembered Joshua's invitation (ch. 24) made to Israelites and Canaanites alike to, "Now therefore revere the Lord, and serve him in sincerity and in faithfulness; put away the gods that your ancestors served ... but as for me and my household, we will serve the Lord." You could become an Israelite by affirmation as well as by birth. And was not this how Ruth, grandmother of David, had become an Israelite, by affirmation when she said to her mother-in-law, Naomi, "Your people shall be my people, and your God my God"? (Ruth 1:16b). One commentator has put it this way: "The Old Testament saints had an understanding of the mercy of God, but they had no insight into the extent of God's grace in and through the person and work of Christ. Only the apostles and New Testament prophets possessed this insight."1 I would go him one further by reminding us that in many cases, readers of the Old Testament didn't even have the insight to see the wide-ranging grace and mercy of God that is there.

This brings us back to today, Epiphany, and how we respond when God shows up in our midst, through scripture, through the Holy Spirit, or in the person of Jesus. Are we following adequately in the footsteps of Paul as stewards of this mystery, which God has revealed to us? Is the church today — the worldwide church, our denomination, our congregation — a church that embodies the inclusion of the kind of diversity Paul envisioned? Again, we don't know how much of the "Jesus story" Paul knew, but we cannot help but think of our Lord's time with the marginalized, the poor, the diseased, the outcast, sinners, and the despised tax collectors. Jesus challenged those "rulers and authorities in the heavenly places" who sought to diminish the abundance and exuberance of human life, and so should we, the church, Paul says.

Paul concludes with what I find to be one of the most amazing, challenging, and encouraging phrases in all his writings. He says that through the revelation of Jesus Christ, "we have access to God in boldness and confidence through faith in him." Paul says this is the way we approach God, standing on our own two feet, tall and upright, bold, confident, and empowered. This is not the false confidence of those who have never examined themselves and seen their own sin, but it is the confidence of the renewed and transformed person in Christ. When we show up in our society as that kind of person, turning away from selfish and self-serving misunderstandings of the gospel and embodying the unbelievably open grace of God, we will be effective agents for drawing all persons to Christ (cf John 21:31-33). The nations will make their way to the cross of Christ, not because of some program or gimmick. The nations will show up because of the expansive love of God made known in Christ Jesus. A love that crosses every human barrier. Amen.


1. http://www.lectionarystudies.com/epiphanye.html.

CSS Publishing, Inc., Sermons for Sundays in Advent, Christmas, and Epiphany: With Our Own Eyes, by John N. Brittain