A Reading from Ephesians
I bow my knees before the Father, from whom every family in heaven and on earth takes its name. I pray that, according to the riches of his glory, he may grant that you may be strengthened in your inner being with power through his Spirit, and that Christ may dwell in your hearts through faith, as you are being rooted and grounded in love. I pray that you may have the power to comprehend, with all the saints, what is the breadth and length and height and depth, and to know the love of Christ that surpasses knowledge, so that you may be filled with all the fullness of God.
Now to him who by the power at work within us is able to accomplish abundantly far more than all we can ask or imagine, to him be glory in the church and in Christ Jesus to all generations, forever and ever. Amen. (Ephesians 3:14-21)
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Paul’s letter to the church in Ephesus, is thought to have been written while Paul was in a Roman prison, about the year 62, and seems to have been written for no special reason except to say how much he loved and wanted to encourage that church.
What is written is really Paul’s prayer for the saints – the believers – in that city.
You will have noticed that he doesn’t pray for their physical well-being, or their freedom from oppression, or for their prosperity. Rather he prays for their spiritual well-being and for their continued spiritual growth.
We believe that Christ is in every true believer, but Paul prays that Christ’s indwelling in the saints in Ephesus, and by extension in us, must grow, and be strengthened.
It is Paul’s prayer that in such growth, God would each day be more evident in their, and by extension, in our, lives. That we would sense His presence more nearly, and become ever more devoted to Him.
You know, we might say, ‘I was baptised, I was confirmed, I grew up in the church, and I attend and support my church as well as any other.’ Isn’t that enough?
But that is just the point, isn’t it?
If I don’t work at being a better Christian, then I may very well slip back into being a not-so-good-Christian.
Coca Cola is the most recognised brand in the world. They advertise constantly. When you see television news footage of a demonstration, or riot, against the Americans by people halfway across the world, often, in the background you will see a Coca Cola sign.
Coke is ubiquitous.
So why does the company bother advertising? Everybody knows about it. Just about everyone drinks it. Who is there left to tell about it?
Perhaps some lost Japanese soldier still hiding out because he doesn’t know the war is over?
Maybe he hasn’t heard about Coke.
But the executives of Coca Cola know that if they cease their efforts to grow, to garner an even bigger percentage of the soft drink market, they will fall back. Others who are striving to get ahead of them will succeed.
It’s the same with being a Christian. You have to try and keep growing in your faith. Or risk falling back.
There are many, many, distractions in this world working against being a Christian. People will laugh at you, say you are a fool to believe such stuff.
There are distractions against holding onto your values.
I see a little ad in Scientific American every month with someone debunking religious beliefs in favour of science. And I know we can’t prove what we believe as Christians, but there are weird things that are cropping in Quantum Physics that scientists have a hard time believing let alone explaining.
They can tell you the whole universe was once a tiny speck, which erupted in The Big Bang thirteen billion years ago, and became all you can see, and much more you can’t see, in the night sky.
The more they learn the more they realise how much they have to learn. In my lifetime, the smallest known unit of mass has gone from being an atom, to being a tiny, tiny, tiny speck called a quark, among others. And then further, that it isn’t even a ‘speck’ but a small force.
Today’s physicist knows much more than most people will ever know, but if you were on your death bed, would you ask for someone to bring a physicist to your bedside? Or a fellow Christian?
Like I said, there are many distractions that call us away from our faith. And if we take our faith for granted, these distractions can jump in and weaken our faith. And our faithfulness.
Verse 2 in today’s psalm ( Psalm 14) has it: The Lord looks down from heaven, upon the children of men, to see if there are any that act wisely, that seek after God.
We should never cease to seek after God.
One evening, Albert Einstein was having dinner at a neighbour’s, when the young daughter of the host asked the white-haired scientist, “What are you actually by profession?”
Einstein said, “I devote myself to the study of physics.”
The girl looked at him in astonishment. “You mean to say you study physics at your age? I finished mine a year ago.” [1]
Being a Christian these days is harder than being a physicist in some ways, at least a physicist can confound people by talking scientific gobble-de-gook.
When we have to explain to someone what it is exactly we do, we have to talk in plain language.
And what is it that we do, do ?
Well, some television evangelists promise prosperity to their followers and flaunt their own extravagance as proof of their message. I heard one such television personality defending his use of a private plane by saying that he had it because God obviously wanted him to have it.
So do we work to get rich by being a Christian?
Paul, writing to his friends from prison, uses his chains as proof of his calling. He tells us that the Gospel doesn’t promise earthly wealth, but rather assures us of an eternal blessing.
Today’s Showtime preachers may have learned the secret to material wealth, but they are very different from the apostle Paul, who learned the secret to eternal life through suffering.
So what do we do?
Or, why are we here?
A minister visiting a mental health hospital to do a service, began by asking that very question: ” Why are we here?”
And a voice came back :”Because we are not all there.”
What the minister meant of course, is ‘why did God put us here?’ Why are we here on earth?
Sometimes when people come to me and say, “Could I ask you a question, I say, “I hope it isn’t ‘what is the meaning of life?’ ”
Well, here it is. The meaning of life according to Paul.
Paul says, the ultimate goal of the church and every Christian is to bring glory to God. That’s why we are here.
That’s it!
Not to make a million dollars. Not to get a gold medal. It is to bring glory to God – by how we live. Just that.
And that’s why we need to continue growing in our faith..
I was in the medical book business, medical and college books. And the buyer of our professional books was the physician who needed – indeed was required – to take continuing education.
I remember one of my salesman telling me that a doctor stopped by his display stand in a hospital corridor once, and after flicking through a couple of books, walked away, saying, “I haven’t read a book since I left medical school.”
The salesman called out after him, “Then I am glad I am not one of your patients.”
I don’t know what that doctor’s problem was, but I think a lot of Christians are afraid to pick up a bible at home, or to talk about their beliefs because they feel inadequate, afraid of betraying their lack of knowledge.
It may be that people from some of the other churches who are encouraged to read their bibles, and to engage in discussion, tend to hit you over the head with their memorized quotations.
I read the bible through a long time ago. So if the bishop asks if I read my bible, I can say, “I already read it.” ”
I need my Bible every week when I prepare my sermon.
But that’s for work.
We need to refresh ourselves in the Word. Daily wouldn’t
hurt.
Sometime we choose not to do anything about growth as a Christian because we are scared what it may lead to.
You might finish up as a priest. Imagine that!
Or you might be called some time, to stand up somewhere and say something about your faith. And you don’t. And afterward you wished you had?
Because you might be embarrassed?
Growing in faith may not be safe. Nero had the Apostle Paul killed.
But there is danger everywhere.
Some children had been taking swimming lessons. The instructor had always had a line slung across the pool separating the deep from the shallow until her students were familiar with the pool.
After a week of lessons and the children were swimming, she knew they were ready for the deeper level. To acclimatize them to this, she would take down the line separating the two levels. And this would make the students very nervous.
To give you an idea, once when she did this, one little boy remarked, “Miss Tahnee, please put the line back up…the deep water is getting into the shallow water!.”
We might laugh at this, but are we no different? Our Father may challenge us to a newer level of growth by urging us out of our comfort zone. And we cry, “But Father, the deep water is getting into the shallow water!”
Or, “Lord, the storm is blowing and the boat is about to sink. Don’t you care if we drown?”
And he will reply. “Where is your faith?”
Where is our faith? Is it so weak and insipid that it’s hard to find? A little tiny faith?
That’s alright. He wants to make it bigger. And stronger.
When the disciple’s faith grew stronger, they did indeed venture into deeper water, risking their lives to bring the Gospel to the world.
Maybe if we answered His call to grow in our faith, we too could venture into a little deeper water.
I heard the other day about a lady of over seventy who has started taking swimming lessons.
It is never too late. .
Ideas for this sermon came from “Paul’s Imprisonment, His Prayers, and His Praise,” By: Bob Deffinbaugh , Th.M.
[1] Today in the Word, September 25, 1992