CLM 589 Marks of a Healthy Church (11)

From: Rowland Croucher

Wed, 18 Mar 1998

Clergy/Leaders' Mail-list No. 589 

This continues the series on The Marks of a Healthy Church. 

We have looked at the meaning of 'Church' and 'Renewal'. Now we are
studying the Renewal of the Church, based on Paul's letter to the
Ephesians.

Then we will study one church - Antioch - and discover 34 marks of a
church that is alive.

The Bibliography will be posted at the end of the series.
______________________________

Part C   Biblical Prescriptions for Renewal  

     [...continued from CLM 583 Marks of a Healthy Church (10)

------------------------------

CHURCH & MINISTRY IN EPHESIANS

------------------------------

Ephesians is the epistle par excellence  concerning the church.(1)

'What we read here is truth that sings, doctrine set to music ...
the most contemporary book in the Bible' since it promises community
in a world of disunity, reconciliation in place of alienation and
peace instead of war. (2) The first three chapters unfold Paul's
conception of 'unity in Christ'. The last three chapters deal with
the church's role in bringing about that unity. 

First, who we are, then what we do;  doctrine and ethics; belief and
behaviour; grace and action. Our response to the truths of chapters
1-3 has to be one of ' giving thanks to God' (1:160; and to those of
chapters 4-6: 'Be imitators of God' (5:1).

 1.  RENEWAL OF THE COSMOS - EPH. 1:3-14

Paul's 'Big Idea' is that a divided world will be united in Christ.
Every person is a walking civil war - with tensions between good and
evil, passion and reason, instinct and will.   Jesus came to gather
all into one.  Indeed history has been moving to this climax.  This
planning (oikonomia household management under the supervision of a
steward) is the working out of God's purpose for the world, an idea
not grasped until Christ came.  'As Paul sees it, it is the great
task of the church to work out that purpose of unity, which is the
purpose of God, revealed in Jesus Christ'. (3)  

'The kingdom of God is coming, and to the extent that this coming
occurs in history before the return of Christ, God's plan is to be
accomplished through the church .... What God is doing in Jesus 
Christ and what he is doing in and through the church are part of one 
whole'. (4) 

Paul begins his letter (1:1,2) with the only two claims to fame he
possessed: (i) he was an apostle of Christ (he belonged to Christ,
was commissioned by Christ, any power he possessed was delegated by
Christ), and (ii) he was an apostle through the will of God  (not a
matter of pride, but rather of amazement). Paul addresses his letter
to people who lived both in Ephesus and in Christ: 'every Christian
has a human address and a divine address'. (5)  

In the Greek, 1: 3-14 is a single sentence.  It is not so much a
reasoned statement as a lyrical song of praise:  'gift after gift and
wonder after wonder from God' enter Paul's mind. (6) How does the
church as the Body of Christ embrace the whole of the new universe,
'the fullness of him who is filled, all in all' 1:23?  Paul's answer:
by understanding seven spiritual blessings, benefits spiritual
(pneumatikos) in nature because they are communicated to us through
the Holy Spirit. (7) 

1. Election (1:4) the call of God's chosen ones, is a source of
wonder for Paul (cf John 15:16).  God has taken the initiative here,
not us. David Watson addresses a common problem in our churches at
this point: 'The Christian church today suffers because so many of
its members feel that they have "made a decision for Christ", or that
they have chosen to join a certain church..... We (should) see
ourselves as chosen, called, and commissioned by Christ...' (8) Why
are we chosen?  To be blessed, and to be a blessing.   We are chosen
to be holy and blameless.  'Holy (hagios) carries the idea of
'difference', 'separation'.   'It is the simple fact of the matter
that if enough Christians became hagios, different, answerable solely
to Christ, they would revolutionize society.'  

(9) The word 'blameless' (amomos)  is a Jewish sacrificial word:  a
sacrificial victim was inspected, and if any blemish was found it was
rejected. So a Christian should aim to make his or her life an
unblemished offering to God;  we should not be content with second
best;  our aim is to satisfy the scrutiny of God . The picture of the
church as the bride of Christ  (5:25-27) carries the idea that no
ugly spots or lines of age disfigure the appearance of the bride.   
The church becomes what it was intended to be - holy and blameless 
(1:4).   All this is possible only because Christ is the Saviour of 
his body (5:23). (10) 

2.  Adoption (1:5-6)  In the Roman world, patria potestas (the
father's power) gave a father absolute power over his living
children:  he could sell them as slaves, or even kill them. 'When the
adoption was complete it was complete indeed.  The person who had
been adopted had all the rights of a legitimate son in his new
family, and comp letely lost all rights in his old family.  In the
eyes of the law he was a new person.   So new was he that even all
debts and obligations connected with his previous family were
cancelled out and abolished as if they had never existed. This is
what Paul says God has done for us .... we have passed from the
family of the world and of evil into the family of God.' (11) 

3. Forgiveness (1:7-8): our redemption by an event in time - i.e.
the death of Jesus.   The word Paul uses (aphesis) is the most common
NT word for forgiveness, and carries the idea of 'sending away',
'letting go'.   The Judeo-Christian religion is the only one to
describe a God who takes the initiative to forgive his creatures'
sins (eg Hosea 14:4, Ephesians 4:32, 2 Corinthians 12:13, Colossians
2:13).  The story of the prodigal son (or, better, 'The Waiting
Father') is an illustration par excellence of our Father's ready
willingness to for give. Our redemption and forgiveness are constant
reminders of the grace of God . Further, there ought to be a
concomitant desire to forgive others - without limit (Luke 17:4,
Matthew 18:22). 

4. Revelation (1:9-10; cf 1:23, 4:10, Romans 16:25). History is
moving to wards a God-appointed climax.  'At present there is still
discord in the universe, but in the fullness of time the discord will
cease, and that unity for which we long will come into being under
the headship of Jesus Christ ... Paul seem s to be referring ... to
that cosmic renewal, that regeneration of the universe , that
liberation of the groaning creation, of which he has already written
to the Romans (8:18 ff; cf Matthew 19:28; 2 Peter 3:10-13) ... In the
fullness of time, God's two creations, his whole universe and his
whole church, will be unified under the cosmic Christ who is the
supreme head of both'. (12)  A 'mystery' in Pauline usage is not
something hard to understand as such, but a 'riddle' which the
uninitiated find incomprehensible.   The 'mystery' is that the gospel
is open to Gentiles as well as Jews (Ephesians 3:6). 

5. Salvation (1:11-13a): the choice of Israel to be God's own, a
witness in the world of the messianic hope.  Paul, being a Jew, here
uses 'we'.  The church is now God's 'inheritance' just as Israel was
in the past. But - an example of the unity Christ brings -non-Jews
are called to share the salvation that had, until then, been reserved
for Jews. There are three stages - receiving the word, being sealed
by the Spirit, and ultimately inheriting complete redemption.  The
'Word' is truth, and 'good news'. 

6.  The Holy Spirit (1:13b-14a). That the Gentiles will be saved is
proved by the fact that they receive the Spirit as was promised.  
With the Holy Spirit we are 'sealed':  a seal indicates to whom a
product belongs: the gift of th e Spirit guarantees that we belong to
God: the Holy Spirit both showing us God 's will and enabling us to
do it. (13) The Spirit is the arrabon  - the foretaste of the joys of
heaven;  the guarantee that we will inherit that possession fully.
God has whet our appetites for more. Paul completes his trinitarian
account of God's plan with the Spirit, since the giving of the Spirit
shows the plan has reached its final stage.  Nevertheless, though
this gift has already begun, it is given only in a hidden way while
the unspiritual world lasts, and will be given fully only when the
kingdom of God is complete and Christ comes in glory (cf Luke 24:49;
John 1:33; 14:26). (1 4) 

7.  Freedom (1:14b).  This is one of the occasions Paul widens an OT
concept 'the chosen people' (;like 'blessing', 'saint', 'choice',
'adoption', 'share ', 'promise') buy applying it to the Church as the
new Israel and the body of t he saved. (15) Jesus came to proclaim
liberty to the captives, to set free the oppressed. Freedom is not
licence or anarchy, doing one's own thing. (Wasn't it Aldous Huxley
who said our worst difficulties begin when we are able to do as we
like?) Rather it is the antithesis of legalism. Victor Frankl has
pointed out that when we are faced with choices we often don't know
how to respond.  So, we resort to conformism, doing what others do,
or totalitarianism, doing what others wish us to do. Neither is
randomness - the tyranny of unfulfilment - freedom.  The notion of
freedom has to be counterpointed with the idea of submission. As
Luther's well-known dictum puts it: 'A Christian is the most free
lord of all, and subject to no one;  a Christian is the most dutiful
servant of all, and subject to everyone'.   Paul was both free and a
slave of Christ; so are we.

-----------------------

'A Church That Is Alive' is available as a book - e-mail
rowlandc@mira.net.  The full text of this study-series may be found on
the JMM website. See under 'Your Church Can Come Alive.' 

Videos comprising four and a half hours of Rowland Croucher's 
teaching on this subject are available from John Mark Ministries for
$40 aus. - write to 7 Bangor Court, Heathmont, Victoria, Australia
3135 enclosing a cheque in Australian Currency; or include details of
MC/Visa plus return address.  

     Shalom!  Rowland Croucher

     Director, John Mark Ministries - resources for pastors/leaders.
       (Bookroom, library, and worldwide F.W.Boreham Trading Post)
     Website at http://www.pastornet.net.au/jmm (1000 articles now)
____________________________

Clergy/Leaders' Mailing List                        (Moderated)

This mailing list is open to all Christians via Internet e-mail 
and most fax destinations.

Submissions welcome: clergy@pastornet.net.au 

To unsubscribe, e-mail to: clergy-request@pastornet.net.au 
                               with SUBJECT reading UNSUBSCRIBE

   Copyright: Postings may be re-sent ONLY with all copyright
                     notifications intact.

        A PastorNET ministry: manager@pastornet.net.au



Clergy Mailing List Index | Mailing List Index | PastorNET Home Page | John Mark Ministries Home Page