Would you turn with me to Ephesians
Chapter 2 as we continue in our study on "The
marvelous grace of our loving Lord." Verse 8 is one of
the key verses of all of Chapter 2. If you will look
there again, let’s read that and understand afresh a
little what he is saying: "For by grace you have been
saved through faith; and that not of yourselves, it
is the gift of God."
It’s wonderful to me to see how God
has worked salvation. If a man goes to hell, he can
never blame God, but if a man goes to heaven and is
saved, he can never pat himself on the back. God has
orchestrated it in such a way that it is just
absolutely magnificent. "It is by grace that we are
saved through faith, not of works, lest any man should
boast." Grace is what only God can do to a man, for a
man, in a man and through a man that a man could never
deserve on this earth, and certainly could never do
himself.
Let’s go back and read verses 1, 2 and
3: "And you were dead in your trespasses and sins, in
which you formerly walked according to the course of
this world, according to the prince of the power of
air, of the spirit that is now working in the sons of
disobedience. Among them we too all formerly lived in
the lusts of our flesh, indulging the desires of the
flesh and of the mind, and were by nature children of
wrath, even as the rest." That’s the backdrop. The
apostle Paul is showing the Ephesian believers where
they had come from. He shows that awful, awful mire of
sin.
Verses 4-10 gives us the most
beautiful picture of the grace of God. It’s always up
against the backdrop of the blackness of man’s sin. We
looked at the giver of grace in our last study. We
discovered some wonderful things about Him. It says in
Verse 4, "But God, being rich in mercy, because of His
great love with which He loved us,..." He’s full of
love, and because He’s full of love, He’s full of
mercy. Now remember, grace and mercy are two sides of
the same coin. Grace deals with the sin. Mercy deals
with the consequences of our sin. It says He is rich
in mercy. Mercy always is that wonderful thing that we
are so desperate for. Yes, we can be forgiven, but oh,
the consequences to what we have chosen.
We used to have a sign in front of the
church that read, "You are free to choose whatever you
want to choose, but you are not free to choose it’s
consequences." Those consequences are what are so
difficult. The main consequence of verses 1, 2 and 3
is that we were separated from God. God, being rich in
mercy, sent Jesus to this earth to die for our sins,
to help us to bear up under and to bring us out of the
mire of that consequence. God cares about you and
about me. He is full of mercy. He is rich in mercy.
Why is He? Because He loves us, He died on a cross to
prove His love for all of us.
So much then for the giver of grace.
Let’s look at the quickening of grace. Look at verse
5: "...even when we were dead in our transgressions,
made us alive together with Christ (by grace you have
been saved)." Now think about the quickening power of
that grace. Grace, being what God alone can do to a
man, in a man, for a man and through a man, made us
alive together with Christ. Paul says we were in a
state of deadness when God’s grace intervened. He
says, "we were dead in our transgressions." The tense
there when it says "we were dead" is present active.
Literally it would be, "we were existing as dead
people." We looked at that in verses 1, 2 and 3, and
now we see it again in verse 5.
Now to make sure you understand that,
let’s go over it again. Man’s spiritual life was lost
when Adam sinned. A man without Christ has no
spiritual life whatsoever. Yes, he has a spirit, but
God’s Spirit is no longer in his spirit. He cannot
know God, communicate with God, or understand anything
about God. His spiritual life was lost when Adam
sinned. Man’s soul, at the same time, was immediately
disengaged from the wisdom and the knowledge of God
when Adam sinned. Man could no longer understand God,
comprehend God or know God’s will. Man’s body began to
decay when Adam sinned. Now this is the state of
deadness that men were in. While we were existing as
dead people, in the state of being dead, through His
grace, God did what no one else could ever do: He made
us alive together with Christ.
When a person receives Jesus Christ,
at the very moment of receiving Christ, he is
immediately made alive in Christ. That spiritual life
comes back within him. Let’s look at the text a
minute. The Greek word for "made alive" is
suzoopoieo. It comes from two Greek words, sun,
which means "together with" and zoopoieo, which
"means to make alive or to quicken." It’s an aorist
indicative active which means at a certain point in
time. In other words, the very moment I bowed down and
received Jesus into my life, immediately I was made
alive with Christ. You see, God has given me back that
spiritual life.
What does it mean to be made alive
together with Christ? Jesus rose from the dead,
completely and wholly arose from the dead. Jesus now
has given us as complete a resurrection from a life of
sin to a life of righteousness as His body had being
raised from the dead.
When we believe, immediately the first
thing that had disappeared in the garden is regained:
spiritual life comes back within. That’s part of that
resurrection. That’s part of that newness of life that
we are talking about. I John 5:12 says that he who has
the Son has the life. The life comes back in. If you
have never received Christ, you don’t understand God,
you can’t communicate with God, your prayers go
unanswered. When you do receive Christ, then the Holy
Spirit, the Spirit of Christ, comes in and that life
returns. You are raised to walk in newness of life.
It’s a brand new day when a person becomes a believer.
It’s a resurrection of spiritual life.
Immediately something else happens.
Somehow we now can understand the things of God. Why?
Because the Spirit who is that life, now brings with
Him the ability that we need to understand spiritual
truth. It doesn’t happen overnight. There is a
progression. This is what sanctification is all about.
I’ve got to make some choices. I’ve got to get in the
Book. I’ve got to know Him by obeying Him. All of this
progressively begins to happen, but there’s been a
resurrection. There’s been a newness of life. Now I
can understand the deep things of God.
I Corinthians 2 says we didn’t receive
the spirit of the world, but the spirit is from God
who teaches us the deep things and searches the deep
things of God. That’s why Romans 12:2 says that we
ought to renew our minds. Rip out the old way of
thinking and put in the new way of thinking. There has
been a resurrection not only to spiritual life, but
now the ability to comprehend His wisdom, His will,
and His Word.
One day, the third thing that was
effected in the garden when Adam sinned will be
restored: our bodies will resurrect one day. When we
die, we put our bodies in the ground. Why do we do
that? Well, it’s like planting a body. When you plant
it, what do you expect it to do? You expect it to come
up one of these days. We know what is going to happen
to that body. When we are saved, a newness of life
comes in, and one day everything that was lost in the
garden will be restored. It’s a resurrection of a
brand new life that God has given to us.
I Corinthians 15 documents that it
will take place. I Thessalonians 4:13-18 tell us when
it is going to take place, at the Rapture of the
Church. That final thing that needs to be restored is
going to be given back to us, a glorified body. In the
same progression that it was lost, it will come back.
We have been raised up with Christ Jesus. We have been
made alive with Him. Oh, the quickening power of the
grace of God. He’s not just the giver of grace but
He’s also the quickener of grace.
Look at that little last phrase there
in verse 5: "by grace you have [already] been saved."
It was God’s grace that reached down and saved us. It
was what He could do, not what man could do. The word
"saved" means "delivered out of, to be rescued." It
comes from the word sozo. The perfect tense is
used there. When the perfect tense is used it
describes the state that something now is permanently
in. We were in a permanent state of what? Being dead
in our trespasses and in our sins. Because of the
grace of God we have been rescued out and made alive
with Christ Jesus. What God makes alive, He keeps
alive. It is in the passive voice. It is not up to us.
It’s up to Him.
If you’ve been saved, you’ve been born
from above, made alive in Christ and made inseparable
from the mysterious union that man now has with Him.
That’s the quickening of grace. Oh, the marvelous
grace of our loving Lord. He’s the giver of grace.
He’s full of compassion. He’s full of mercy. How do we
know that? Jesus came and died. Why? To effect a brand
new way of living for you and me. I once was dead, but
now I am alive with Christ Jesus. We are not the same
anymore.
You know caterpillars are not really
fun to look at, are they? That caterpillar secretes a
little fluid inside of its own body and makes a cocoon
that he wraps around himself. He loses all of his
identity. You wouldn’t know it was a caterpillar with
that cocoon wrapped around him. Then one day,
something happens. That cocoon begins to break open,
and you wouldn’t recognize that little caterpillar. He
is a brand new creature. We call that metamorphosis.
That’s the word "transform" in Romans
12:2 when it says, "Be ye transformed," that means "be
ye metamorphosized." "Be ye being changed and
transformed in your life." That’s what happens to us.
When you are a believer, you are no longer the same.
You’ve been made alive with Christ. Just as the order
in the garden was lost, now it is going to be
regained. The final thing will be the glorification of
our body.
First of all we saw the giver of
grace. Then we saw the quickening of grace. Now
thirdly the identification of grace. Verse 6 is the
toughest verse I’ve dealt with in a long time. What do
I mean by the identification of grace? Well, there are
two words that stress identification. One is the word
"with," and the other one is "in."
Look in Verse 6: "and raised us up
with Him, and seated us with Him in the heavenly
places, in Christ Jesus." The word, "with" and the
word "in" are identification words. I’m in Him.
Somehow, we are identified mysteriously together. We
are one together. Not only did God make us alive with
Christ, but He raised us up and seated us with Christ
in the heavenlies.
We’ve been raised up and seated with
Christ Jesus in the heavenly places. I think in order
to believe it, we’ve got to better understand it. Look
back in 1:20. Look where Jesus is seated: "which He
brought about in Christ, when He raised Him from the
dead, and seated Him at His right hand in the heavenly
places." He is seated by the Father in the
heavenlies. Now I am in Him so, therefore, I am seated
with Him in the heavenlies at the right hand of the
Father.
Maybe somehow this is what was on
Paul’s mind when he wrote Romans 8:37. Here’s Paul,
talking about always being a conqueror: "But in all
these things [speaking of persecution] we
overwhelmingly conquer through Him who loved us." He
is saying we are always conquerors in Jesus Christ.
Now wait a minute. We know that Christians are
martyred, we know that Christians die; what does he
mean, "we are always conquerors in Christ Jesus"?
Could he have on his mind that positionally we are
seated in the heavenlies with Christ Jesus?
Look in II Corinthians 2:14. He says,
"But thanks be to God, who always lead us in His
triumph in Christ, and manifests through us the sweet
aroma of the knowledge of Him in every place."
We saw in Ephesians 1 that Christ is
far above all rule and dominion and powers and every
name that’s ever been named. He’s seated at the right
hand of the Father, and mysteriously, we are seated
with Him in the heavenly places. We are identified in
Him and with Him. Those are identification words. Paul
was in a Roman prison when he wrote Ephesians, and yet
there’s no smell of a prison in Ephesians. There is no
clank of prison chains to be heard. Why? Because Paul
is not bound in his spirit. He is only bound in his
body. Where is his spirit? Well, technically and
positionally, it is seated in Christ in the heavenly
places. He is identified completely and wholly in
Jesus. He claims not to be a prisoner of Rome in
Ephesians. He says, "I am a prisoner of our Lord Jesus
Christ." Paul knows that he is in Christ and seated
with Christ. Therefore, he can go through anything
down here on this earth. His spirit is free, though
his body is imprisoned.
This is positional truth. Yes, we are
down here, but we are seated in the heavenlies with
Christ Jesus. It’s finished. It’s done. It’s over as
far as God sees it. We are victorious in Christ, and
we are always led in His triumph.
The key to understanding this is in
the word "heavenlies." He is saying to those people at
Ephesus, "You are at Ephesus but you are in Christ."
We are in Chattanooga, but we are in Christ. Yes, we
are here, but we are there! That’s hard to grab hold
of. The word "heavenlies" there refers to the things
that pertain to or that are in heaven. Now we’ve got
to realize that we are not of this world. Paul has
already shown us this in the same book. Ephesians 1:3
says, "Blessed be the God and Father of our
Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us with every
spiritual blessing in the heavenly places in
Christ." In other words, they are not material
blessings. This is something much greater than that.
They are the spiritual blessings of God.
So another way of saying we are seated
in the heavenlies is to say we are no longer of this
world. We are in it, but we are not of it. We are of a
different world. We do not live as if we are still
dead in our trespasses and our sins. We don’t walk
according to the course of this world any more. Our
position is now in Christ. What did it used to be? It
used to be that we belonged to the world. If you know
somebody that is lost that doesn’t know Jesus, they
totally belong to the world and the devil until they
come to receive Christ in their life. That is the only
moment they will know freedom from the domination of
their flesh and from the domination of Satan using
their lives.
I want you to see one more thing. In
2:6 it says, "...and seated us with Him in the
heavenly places." He seated us. You know, that
depicts rest. We can rest, folks, because we are in
Him and we are with Him. In Him we find and have our
victory. We triumph in Him. Whatever happens to us
down here can’t affect what’s going on in that inner
man and in that position that we have spiritually with
the Lord Jesus Christ.
Have you learned to rest in the
conqueror who is far above all principalities and
powers. I thought I had, but something will pop up,
and immediately I get under it, and I forget. All I
have to do is listen to Him. He is the One who has
already conquered. If I’ll just surrender to Him, I
can rest in the fact that He’s far above all
principalities and all power. Nothing can come against
you or against me that He cannot handle. He is far
above. We are seated with Him. Don’t ever get the idea
you can do anything. It is what He does in accordance
to our willingness to surrender to Him.
That’s why it says in Ephesians 5, "Be
filled with the Spirit." If that wasn’t in there, then
we could be arrogant. But no, it says you have to be
up under the control of the Holy Spirit of God. As you
are, then you walk in victory, and you are always
caused to triumph. He has seated us with Him in the
heavenlies.