Tuesday, October 15, 2024

Ephesians 1:15-23: A Thanksgiving Prayer

A THANKSGIVING PRAYER

 

Happy Thanksgiving! I trust that you will have your fill of tryptophan and enjoy the nap that comes with it. For those of you who don’t know, turkey contains tryptophan, an amino acid that helps you relax and make you sleepy. So, eat up.

            Stories of American thanksgiving celebrations go back to the Mayflower, Plymouth Rock, and the first pilgrims who feasted with Native American friends. What’s true and what’s legend is hard to cipher in this story. But where do Canadians get our thanksgiving story? It actually predates the American story, the first thanksgiving dinner by Europeans in North America being held by Martin Frobisher and his crew in the Eastern Arctic in 1578. They ate a meal of salt beef, biscuits and mushy peas to celebrate and give thanks for their safe arrival in what is now Nunavut. Makes you thankful for turkey and stuffing…

            I’ve always balked at the insistence that churches celebrate Thanksgiving weekend with a special service. I contend that the follower of Jesus should make every day a day of thanks to our God. But I recognize that as humans we need these special days to remind us to be thankful and to verbally declare in this assembly that God is good. And it just so happens that our series on Ephesians today focuses on the theme of thanksgiving. 

            Last Sunday we studied verses 3-14, a single long sentence in the Greek. That’s right – no breaks. Paul got carried away explaining the blessings of God poured out on us. He follows that up with another long single sentence beginning with “For this reason…” Paul looks back at the blessings and thinking of the Ephesian believers says, “I’m so glad you get this…For this reason…” And Paul gives thanks for this church. 

            In our study of verses 15-23 of chapter one, I want to apply Paul’s thanksgiving prayer to our church and pray his prayer for you.


A Pastor Thanks God for the Church (1:15-16)

 

Paul was a missionary with a pastoral heart. God had called him to travel through Europe planting churches as he went. But he did not forget the churches after he left; he heard of their progress, their troubles, and their joys, and wrote to them to encourage them and to challenge them. 

            Take a look at the beginning of the letter to the Philippians, “I thank my God every time I remember you…”(1:3-4). And to the Colossians, “We always thank God, the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, when we pray for you…” (1:3-4). The same is true of his letters to the Thessalonians, Romans, Corinthians, and to his friend Philemon. In each letter, Paul gives God thanks for the faith that has taken root and expressed itself in love and fellowship among the congregants.

            It is entirely appropriate for a pastor to give thanks for the people of his congregation and to praise God for the faith we share. So, I am going to turn the tables on this “Pastor Appreciation” month and in the spirit of Paul, give thanks to God for you.

            Rosenort Fellowship Chapel has been an incredible blessing to Sharon and me these last three years. It is hard to know where to begin. I am afraid that if I start to get specific that you may feel left out of the categories I mention, and I don’t want that. We are thankful for each of you. I thank God, the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ…

For the healing experience it has been to be your pastor…

For the unique community that is Rosenort and the way you come together to help each other…

For the friendships we have built with so many of you…

For the generosity you show for missions and other needs…

For the joy we have when we come together to eat and to share an activity…

For the way I have been welcomed at the coffee places in town… (where do I end? I am not deserving of this grace)


A Pastor’s Prayer for the Church (1:17-21)

 

Paul the pastor does not end his prayer with thanksgiving; he continues to pray that the church may build on these good things. He is not content to leave the church as it is but prays that they would experience more of what God has for them. Paul prays, “I keep asking…” What does he ask? So much…

That you may know God better (17) – This is my prayer for you too. I sincerely pray this over every one of you. “I keep asking that the God of our Lord Jesus Christ, the glorious Father, may give you the Spirit of revelation and wisdom, so that you may know him better.”

            Knowing God is an endless journey. If you think you have God figured out, you have the wrong god. That’s not a discouraging statement because it means our God is awesome that we will never finish getting to know his love and mercy. This is why Paul prays that God would give the Ephesians the Spirit of revelation and wisdom. 

            In Greek it’s hard to know when to capitalize a word. Most scholars agree though that the Spirit here is not the human spirit but the Holy Spirit. We know from Jesus’ teaching in John 14-16 that the Holy Spirit’s main task is to make Jesus known. In the process of coming to know Jesus, you are coming to know God the Father (John 14:8-9). 

            AW Tozer in his book The Knowledge of the Holy Spirit, begins saying, “What comes into our minds when we think about God is the most important thing about us.” I have also heard it said that how we pray reveals what we think about God. Knowing God is so important to our life journey.

            Jesus prayed for his disciples, “Now this is eternal life: that they may know you, the only true God, and Jesus Christ, whom you have sent,” (Jn. 17:3). The Ephesians knew God, but Paul wanted them to know him better. I know you know God, but I pray that you and I would know him better.

            Knowing God is never just intellectual understanding. It is also deeply personal, relational, and experienced together in community. We cannot know God in isolation because he has given us the church that we may know him through each other. 

            My son, and many young adults today, don’t have an experience of God they can look back to. He said that as far back as he can remember, he has never felt God. Feelings are important to the human psyche and experience, but we don’t begin there. Many of you know the “Faith Train” illustration – some may not. The Faith Train is driven by the power of “Facts” – Jesus died and rose again; this is followed by “Faith” – what do I do with this reality? Only then do we experience feelings about what we believe. And some days, we feel nothing. That’s okay, because the facts don’t change.


Foundational Framework 66 - The F-Train Part 1 — Grace Bible Church -  Portage Wisconsin WI


That you may know hope (18) – You may reflect that you have had the facts and the faith for a long time, but no feelings. Why do we not feel the gracious, omnipotent power of God that is now at work in us? Paul prays that believers would know the hope of God, but to know that hope he prays that “the eyes of your heart may be enlightened” – to see the spiritual realities around you. The eyes of our hearts tend to grow dull with the disappointments of life. It’s so difficult to hope when life gives you lemons.

            John Piper gives three more reasons why we don’t “feel” the hope: 1) We are not aware of the blinding, deadening power of sin at work in our lives. God has conquered sin through Jesus for us and we are forgiven. But if we allow sin to control us, we can’t see God. 2) We are not aware of the power of Satan that is always coming at us to try and steal our joy, our victory. You need to claim God’s victory over Satan and sin (“Resist the devil and he will flee”). 3) We may not consider fully what happened to Jesus and his present role in the universe. He was raised from the grave to life and enthroned at the right hand of God. He rules!

            One thing Piper did not say was that we belong to God. “The hope to which he has called you” speaks of the riches of his glorious inheritance. The text is a bit mysterious; it does not speak of the inheritance we receive, but of the inheritance God receives – you and me. In other words, we belong to God.

That you may know God’s power (19-21) – Paul concludes his three-part request for the Ephesians to grow in knowledge by asking that somehow, they would perceive how powerful God is. In these verses, he calls it “his incomparable great power for us who believe,” then describes it by pointing to the resurrection. 

            Is there anything that compares to the power to give life to someone who was undeniably dead? We may imagine the power to lift a rocket off the launchpad, or the devastating destruction of a nuclear war. I had never heard of hypernovas before this week. It’s a type of stellar explosion with a luminosity 10 times greater than a supernova. When stars 150 times the size of our sun explodes, they produce the brightest light in the universe and produce energy to last 10 billion years. But the power of God to raise the dead…how do you compare anything to that? 

            Paul prays that the Ephesians would know three things: To know God better, to know the hope to which he has called you, and the immeasurable power of God toward us who believe. He’s not praying that we get the hope to which we were called or to get the power of God at work in you. God is yours to know. You have the calling to hope. You have the power of God at work in you. And Paul says, you don’t know them as you should know them and could know them. I want you to know them. I am praying that you know God better, know his hope better, and know his power in Christ Jesus better and better. Paul is praying that we would be spiritually experientially conscious of God’s power toward us as believers now.

 

And God placed all things under his feet and appointed him to be head over everything, for the church, which is his body, the fullness of him who fills everything in every way (22-23).  

            One of the pleasures I have in the College course I am teaching this semester is revealing the missing element in today’s gospel. Much of evangelicalism focuses on the cross of Christ and the blood of his sacrifice. Our message of the gospel tends to rest there and not move on. What’s next? The resurrection of Jesus. This is so important to the vindication of who Jesus said he was and who he is now. But that’s not the missing piece. 

            Notice when Paul talks about the resurrection in v. 20, he goes on to say it is the same power that seated Jesus in the heavenly realms, far above all rule, authority, power and dominion and every name that is named. The part we miss in our gospel is that Jesus is King! He sits on the throne and rules (present tense). 

            Astonishingly, Paul concludes his prayer saying that this King is most experienced in the entire universe in his church, in his people. As Eugene Peterson puts it, “The Church is Christ’s body, in which he speaks and acts, by which he fills everything with his presence,” (The Message). 

            This is why I am thankful for the church. I am thankful that the King of the universe chooses to reveal himself most fully in the church. I am thankful for you, for the faith you have in the Lord Jesus. And I continue to pray that the God of our Lord Jesus will give you the Spirit of revelation to know God even better.

 

                                                            AMEN

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Ephesians 1:15-23: A Thanksgiving Prayer

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