Ephesians 2:11-22 · One in Christ
Zombie Zone or Beulah Land?
Ephesians 2:11-22
Sermon
by Leonard Sweet
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There is nothing like escaping to a cool movie theater on a hot summer night. If you are a high school or college kid on break from school, there is no better stuffy, hot night escape than a scary movie that makes your blood run cold.

Ever since the dawn of movies there have been “fright films.” Frankenstein, Dracula, and the Wolfman were first on the silver screen. Later on mythical monsters were replaced by urban monsters, and the “teenage slasher” movie was born — where lonely baby-sitters and popular football players were the special focus of crazed creatures with hockey masks or with really long fingernails. But the most popular “scare-bearer” these days seems to be a creature you can’t even wish were dead because it already is . . . zombies!

Wait a minute, you say. I didn’t come to church to hear about zombies. Well, you not only need to hear about them if you are to understand the mission field God has put us in. But you need to hear about them if you are to understand our text for this morning, a text about “aliens and strangers.”

In case you didn’t know, zombies are re-animated dead people. When I was a kid the first zombies came about through voodoo spells. But now it’s usually some sort of mutant virus or alien invasion that spawns great crops of these crusty creatures.

Oddly, while the fact that they are now walking-around in dead bodies doesn’t seem to concern zombies all that much, the fact that they are quite literally “brain dead” does seem to perturb the corpse creatures. According to Hollywood, what all zombies yearn for is to munch down on nice, living brains. For the zombie, it seems, eating brains is like us consuming an entire pint of chocolate cookie dough ice cream. It doesn’t change anything, but it does make them feel better for a brief time.

The zombie has become the ultimate popular “bad guy” in movies, video games, on-line blogs and clubs. And yet while zombies are ghoulish and just plain gross, in typical teenage horror flick tradition there is a definite “tongue-in-cheek” tweak that underlies the gore and the guts. Killing zombies doesn’t present any big moral dilemma because — hey, zombies are by definition already dead. One popular “shoot-‘em-up” video game offers the perfect guilty-free target: you are fighting off hordes of “Nazi-zombies.”

Zombies are easily expendable because they have no place in our world. They are the ultimate outsiders. The “aliens and strangers” Paul highlights in today’s epistle text weren’t much different. Gentiles who lived within Jewish communities had no place in that world. They were the outsiders. They were “unclean.” They were deemed to be forever cut off from any vital relationship with the living God of Israel.

In other words, those outside of the covenant, outside the community established by Mosaic Law, were “zombies,” stumbling around without access to any real life, cut off from any genuine spiritual connection to real life, cut off from any hope of a connection to God.

The aliens and strangers who existed in the midst of Israel consumed a diet of false gods and earth-bound idols to fill the spiritual emptiness in their own souls. In pagan culture there were gods to appease and approach for every fact of one’s life. Psalm 115 describes this desolate condition:

Our God in the heavens:
He does whatever he pleases.
Their idols are silver and gold,
the work of human hands.
They have mouths, but do not speak;
Eyes, but do not see.
They have ears, but do not hear;
Noses, but do not smell.
They have hands, but do not feel;
Feet, but do not walk;
They make no sound in their throats.
Those who make them are like them;
So are all who trust in them.
(Psalm 115:3-8)

Does that describe zombies, or doesn’t it?

The “aliens and strangers,” those who worshiped idols made by human hands and fashioned to fulfill human wishes, led a “zombie-land” existence of animated bodies that were brainless and soul-less. And those same “zombies” still walk among us today.

“Idol worship” has never gone away. There are millions of “zombies” living among us, those who let their idols live through them and animate all that they do. They are the dead-at-heart who cannot make a move unless it is directed by a manmade god. These idols are such brain-eating, soul-sucking invaders as . . .

1) the idol of money — the conviction that cold, hard cash should be the only motivation behind every action taken, every decision made.

2) the idol of celebrity — which creates a constant craving for center-stage and ceaseless need for attention and acceptance.

3) the idol of power — which rejects all limitations and pretends to wield complete control.

4) the idol of fashion — did you know we in the US buy 20 billion garments annually; that’s an average of 64 items per person per year. Is this "fast fashion" or disposable clothes?

Or the idol of beauty — or youth — or muscular ability — or musical talent — or any other facet of human life which is natural and fine until it is elevated to “idol status,” until it becomes a repository for all our hopes and dreams, all our love and trust. Then these human attributes become zombie-making idols, as we single-mindedly worship and pursue them.

God did not make us zombies. And Zombie-land is not where God intends men and women to live. Escaping a zombie-land of endless idol worship is the reason Jesus became incarnate, which is another word for becoming fragile and then fractured. Christ’s death on the cross changed everything. All that had separated Jew and Gentile, the covenant community and the pagan world, was wiped out in a single act by a single sacrifice. And as Paul makes clear in today’s Scripture reading, that single act by a single person of a single sacrifice created a single world — a world where all people could stand reconciled and redeemed before God as believers, as members who were “in Christ.”

In current real estate lingo there is yet another infiltration of “zombie” existence. Numerous communities are now dealing with suburban “zombies,” half-completed sub-divisions abandoned by bankrupt developers and foreclosed home-owners. You’ve all seen these “zombie zones” — homes half built, some already returning to the earth, all a blight on the landscape and the budgets of the communities they have infected. These “living dead” neighborhoods, never completed, never lived in, are abandoned standing idols to the gods of greed and get-more.

Instead of producing those kind of desolate “zombie lands” Christ’s crucifixion and resurrection offers us an existence in “Beulah land.” The gospel hymn “Beulah Land,” by Edgar Page Stites is based on the text from Isaiah 62:4: “You shall no more be termed Forsaken; neither shall your land any more be termed Desolate; but you shall be called “Hephzibah” and your land “Beulah;” for your God delights in you, and your land shall be married.” The Isaiah text refers to the return of the Israelites from exile in Babylon, a moment that will transform the Jewish people from being “forsaken” to being “Hephzibah” (Hebrew, “my delight is in her”). Jerusalem, the center city for Jewish life and faith shall no longer be “desolate.” Rather, it shall be “Beulah,” that is “married,” married to the Lord in true faith.

Dwelling in “Beulah land” versus dwelling in “zombie-land.” That is the choice we all must make. That is the choice you must make every day of your life.

Are we to be “married” to a singular relationship with Christ that creates a singular community of redemption. Or are we to dwell in a zombie-land of idols, living for the moment, and dying adrift from any sense of connection to or community with God, each other, ourselves, the earth itself?

David Meece is a classically trained musician (Peabody Conservatory) who made it big in the Christian music world and was inducted into the Christian Music Hall of Fame in 2008. He composed much of the soundtrack for the Christian world in the 80s and 90s. “We are the Reason,” the song he’s most famous for, has been recorded over 200 times by other artists. At a summer camp in the mountains of Pennsylvania, where he was the headliner, he showed up unexpectedly at Teen Talent Night. This is when kids are pushed and pulled on stage to showcase their talents. Not only was Meece present for Teen Talent Night, but at the end he asked if he could say a few words to encourage them.

Here is a summary of what he said: After 36 years in the music industry, where he has rubbed shoulders with the “greatest” musicians of our time, he has learned one thing. And it’s a big thing. It’s not about who’s got a great voice, who’s a great singer. It’s not about who’s great at singing in front of a big crowd. It is about who’s got a great song. It’s all about the song, and having the right song to sing.

Do you have the right song to sing? Are you signing the song of Jesus? Right in the middle of our text today there is a fragment of an early love song to Jesus. Are you singing the right song? Has the right song taken hold of you? Do you have the Jesus song in you?

With the Song of Jesus in you, “all things are possible.”

With the Song of Jesus in you, all your zombie-zones and zombie-lands can be “Beulah Land,” even heaven’s border-land, “Sweet Beulah Land.”

[Note: You might close your sermon by having the congregation sing the original Stite’s version of “Beulah Land” (1876) or the more contemporary song, often sung as a memorial song, “Sweet Beulah Land.” Whichever version you use, be sure to make it clear that “Beulah Land” is not just something we have to wait for. That we are bring heaven to earth now, and that the “Sweet Beulah Land” we long for need not be only on the other side. We can begin “Sweet Beulah Land” now, in heaven’s borderlands, even in the world of “zombie-land” and “zombie-zones.” John Bunyan’s Pilgrim’s Progress (1678) was the first to use “Beulah Land” as a metaphor for the borderlands between heaven and earth.]



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COMMENTARY

Among all Paul’s writings, his letter to the Ephesians stands out as perhaps his most soaring and yet succinct presentation of God’s purpose for the world as fulfilled by Jesus Christ. It also lifts the veil to reveal the place of Paul’s own mission to the Gentiles in that reborn, redeemed reality. In today’s reading from this letter, Paul eloquently describes the transformation that Christ’s reconciling work has accomplished. A world that seemed hopelessly divided between those who stood in a special relationship with God and those who stood outside the divine presence now is able to join together in the unity offered by Christ. Jew and Gentile are no longer. In their place, in the place of two separate identities, there is only one “household of God” (v.19).

Paul begins by reminding his Gentile readers just how starkly the divisions in the world had been previous to the work of Christ. For Gentiles, or all those who could be called “the uncircumcision,” the unique relationship long established between God and Israel was forever out of reach. The “uncircumcision” existed in a state of permanent estrangement from God. They were “aliens” and “strangers” (“xenoi”) both in relationship to Israel and to the covenant that bound all the “circumcision” to God. Unless they became proselytes to Judaism, Gentiles were doomed to live “without God in the world” (“atheoi”).

This was the state of the world “without Christ” (v.12). With Christ a tremendous transformation has taken place. For those Gentiles and Jews alike who are “in Christ,” Paul’s two-word shorthand for those who submit to the lordship of a crucified, resurrected and returning Christ, there is a new reality. Through nothing less than “the blood of Christ,” those who were “far off” are now “brought near.”

This language echoes Isaiah 57:19, and elsewhere in the First Testament. To “bring near” one who was outside the community of Israel meant making that person a proselyte. In becoming a full member of the covenant, the former Gentile “came near” to God, even as Israel forever stood “near” to God’s heart. But now, Paul insists, it is by being “in Christ” that Gentiles and Jews are united into one. All enjoy without discrimination or preference the “nearness” of God’s presence because of this relationship.

Many scholars, noting the tight unity of vss. 14-18, conclude that here Paul may be citing an early church hymn fragment. The focus of this hymn is the reconciling work of Christ, how “he himself” is the single uniting force in this new reality. What Christ brings is “peace” (vvs. 14,15,17) or “shalom,” a term that includes salvation, wholeness, and harmony. Later in this epistle Paul encapsulates the content of the Christian message as “the gospel of peace” (6:15). In today’s text Paul declares that Christ can bring about this state of peace because he himself IS peace. Jesus himself is Shalom, the saving presence of God.

The first act of this “peace” Paul describes is that of breaking down “the dividing wall” (“Mesotoichon”), and of erasing the “hostility” that existed between Jew and Gentile. While some hear in this description a reference to the literal “wall” that separated the court of the Gentiles from the other inner courts in the Temple, others suggest this “wall” refers to the Law itself. We need only look at the terrible fruits of “Jim Crow” laws and the legacy of apartheid to understand how “dividing walls” breed “hostility” between the groups that are separated. Everyone knows there is always a “right” side and a “wrong” side to every such barrier.

By the time Ephesians was written both the literal and the figurative walls that divided Jew and Gentile had been broken down. The Temple had been destroyed, its careful divisions nothing but a mass of rubble. Most importantly, the other “wall,” the detailed ordinances and statutes of the Mosaic Law, had been just as completely dismantled by the work of Christ. While elsewhere Paul writes that he is “not free from God’s law” (1 Corinthians 9:21), at this point in Ephesians the apostle is anxious to demonstrate the completeness of the break between the old way of the Law and the new reality made possible only by Christ’s reconciling sacrifice. The world that had been based upon the precision of the Torah has been dismantled by Christ and replaced with a new creation, a “new humanity” that stands united by Christ “in himself.”

This new humanity has not been created just so that all people might “get along” with each other. The creation of one humanity “in Christ” is for a larger purpose—-so that all might be “reconciled” to God as “one body.” The single body of Christ on the cross redeemed the suddenly unified body of all peoples of the world. There is no need for multiple sacrifices for multiple populations. The community of faith is truly a “one for all and all for one” new world. Whether members began life as “far off” or as “near,” Gentile or Jew, the reconciling work of Christ on the cross brings equal access to the Father through the “one Spirit.”

Today’s text concludes with Paul’s architectural description of this new structure, the remodeled “household of God.” Those who may once have been strangers and aliens (“paroikoi”) are no longer homeless in the homeland. Instead they are “fellow citizens” (“sympolites”) with all “the saints,” that is with any and all who stand together “in Christ.” Those who previously had been deemed outsiders and “without God” (literally “atheists”) are now welcomed into the community of faith that has nothing less than Christ as its cornerstone (“akrogoniaios”) and Christ’s own apostles and prophets as its fellow residents.

Paul continues with his architectural imagery, but joins it to a body metaphor, describing the unity Christ’s redeeming sacrifice has brought about as making possible a living structure, a home that is “built together spiritually” (v.22). Together all those unified in Christ create, not a new stone temple, but a vital dwelling place for the living God.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Leonard Sweet Sermons, by Leonard Sweet