Ephesians As a Model for 21st Century Ministry
Strategies in Leadership
If you desire a road-map for building the church the New Testament way, then look no further than the Epistle of Ephesians. Within the pages of this epistle, the Apostle Paul presents a
strategy of a unified body. Paul encourages individual members
to join together to become a unified body in Christ. Common themes include the Spiritual Privileges of the Church (1:3-3:21), the Blessings Believers Share (2:1-10), Unity in Christ (2:11-22), The Spiritual Responsibilities of the Church (4:1-6:20), Achieving Maturity (4:1-16), The Domestic Code (5:22-6:9) and Spiritual Warfare (6:10-20). This epistle was written as a circular letter, intended for instructions to not only Ephesus, but to the neighboring churches. I have pulled out a few nuggets by chapter of benefit to membership and discipleship:
Chapter 1
- A
believer should display “faithfulness in Christ”. A sinner is made holy by
his faith in Christ. This message should be preached (1:1)
- The
God of heaven has granted His people unlimited “Grace” (1:2)
- Every
believer is “blessed” with Spiritual Blessings (eternal) [1:3]:
–
- We are
chosen for salvation & adopted as His children
- We are
forgiven and given the power to do His will
- We are
given the hope of eternal life
- We are
given the gifts of the Spirit
- God is
the one who chooses who will be saved. But we still need to share the Good
News so people can respond to God’s call for those whom He chose. No one
can earn it, it is a gift of Grace. God shows favor and adopts us as His
children to accomplish His plan (1:4 - 5)
- God’s
master plan is to offer salvation to the entire world – His redemption
strategy outlined (1: 7-13)
- The
Gospel must be taught – People heard, trusted, believed, future ‘sealed”
with the gift of the Holy Spirit =Salvation (1: 13-14)
- Leaders
should not cease to pray for the members of the church. Church members
should also pray without ceasing for each other (1: 15-23)
- Believers
should pray for the spirit of wisdom and revelation, found in Christ
(1:17)
- Believers
should be taught that the knowledge of Christ changes their outlook on
life (1:17-19)
- The
unified church can be bold, knowing that everything is subject to God’s
control (1: 22)
- The church should model a “fullness” that comes from Christ “filling all” with spiritual gifts – Christ as the head, the church the body, all unified, accomplishing the Father’s will. We can change the world as a connected unit (1:23)
Chapter 2
- The
Gospel is the channel through which sinners are made alive through Christ
(2:1); saved by grace through faith (2: 8); brought into spiritual union
in Christ (2:13)
- The
Gospel is to be preached to those “a far off” – In our case,
those who know nothing about God, telling them that their good works
cannot save them, but they can come to God through Christ. Making them
citizens with the saints, members of God’s household (2: 17-19)
- The
church is built upon the foundation of the Apostles and the Prophets
(spiritual heritage given to us by them) [2: 20]
- Redeemed
saints are bestowed the same love God gives His Son (2:19 - 22); they
become a “new stone” in God’s temple being built up; becoming a permanent
home for Christ, a place “He takes up residence” (Mac, 1806)
Chapter 3
- The
Apostle Paul considered himself a “prisoner of Christ” – his mantra for
his mission to the unsaved. He was an actual prisoner of the state, but
viewed his spiritual position in Christ that way. As believers, we should
do the same – firmly attach ourselves to the cause, knowing God has
complete control of “every aspect of our lives” (3:1)
- God
revealed the mystery of His plan – The Jews and Gentiles are now one body
in Christ (In the Old Testament there was an awareness that Gentiles would
be saved [Isa. 49:6], but when Christ came they became
equal/one body when He broke down the dividing wall that
existed. Gentiles are now heirs, fellow members and partakers of the
promise in Christ via the Gospel. Paul makes this clear in Gal.3:28
(3:5-6)
- God
equips His servants with gifts to minister. He gives them Grace (ability,
courage, power) [3:7]
- The
Apostle Paul considered himself “the very least of the saints”, yet God
equipped him to be a most effective minister. God can use anyone to share
his rich message (3:8)
- “No
one can make themselves a minister”. God calls empowers and equips (3:7)
- Paul
endured persecution for the sake of the Gospel. His “tribulations” was for
their glory/benefit. Christ’s ministers should do the same. We “take up
our cross”, endure and follow Christ (3:13)
- Place
a focus on those who may isolate themselves from the body. This is why we
should pray for the weak and help them (3:14-15)
- Believers
should seek the “fullness of God” (3:17-19)
- God
will empower the church to do great things, more than we can imagine if we
are unified (3:20)
Chapter 4
- Each
believer should walk worthy of his/her calling. The strategy of living out
our lives in our daily world involves displaying spiritual fruit –
humility, peace, gentleness, patience, understanding. God has already gifted
the believer to “walk this way” (4:1-2)
- Believers
should “bear up each other in love” – “a continuous, unconditional
love” (Mac.) (4:2)
- Walking
worthy preserves unity (4:3)
- Unity
Strategy: Focus on what keeps us together * Our Hope – One Body and
Spirit, One Lord, One Faith, One Baptism, One God, One Father (4: 4-6)
- The
Holy Spirit is the one that unites (4:3)
- God
equips each believer with a measure of Grace (4:7)
- We
have power through Christ’s his death (conquering the grave/death)
and his resurrection (4:9-10)
- With
His power and authority, Christ gave spiritual gifts for the building up
of His church (4:11-13)
- Christ
strategy for winning the lost is through “equipped saints” (4:12-13)
- Saints
who are “built up” will not be easily moved by false doctrine or error
(4:14)
- Saints
“speak the truth in love” so that the body can be fitted together
(4:15-16)
- Through
the power of God, the believer does not walk like the un-believer. There
must be notable change. They do not walk in darkness (4:17-19)
- The
Believer is built up in truth, lays aside the old self, is renewed in the
spirit of the mind, puts on the new self, and walks in righteousness and
truth (4:20-24)
- True
believers speak the truth, may express righteous anger, and makes every
effort through a Christ empowered reliance not to grieve the Holy Spirit
with their manner of walk (4:25-30)
- Ways
to grieve the Holy Spirit –
- Lying
- Anger
that leads to sin
- Giving
place to the devil
- Stealing
(People should work and produce, give to those in need (not
take from them)
- Foul
and rotten language – corrupt communication
- Evil
speaking of others
God is grieved when the believer continues to live in the
way of the old man and refuse to put on the new self (4:25-32)
- Believers
practice kindness and forgiveness as Christ modeled (4:32)
Chapter 5
- Believers
imitate Christ (5:1)
- Believers
walk in love (5:2)
- Acts
Believers do not practice as they imitate Christ (5: 3-7):
- Immorality
and impurity
- Filthiness,
silly talk, coarse jesting
- Idolatry
and covetousness
- Paul
made it a matter of practice to teach the church how to be imitators of
Christ (5:5)
- The
church should not condone bad behavior – it can endanger, pollute and
destroy unity. “People will more likely be influenced by evil than good” [Nasb]
(5:5-7)
- Believers
live above reproach because they are children of light (5:8)
- Believers
should be taught “learning of what pleases God” (5:10)
- Believers
should avoid and expose “the deeds of darkness”. We stand up for what is
right and true (5:11)
- The
Church should pursue its mission with a sense of urgency as “evil is
pervasive. It should maintain high standards, act wisely and do good” (Nasb) (5:15-16)
- Believers
edify each other as they under the influence of the Spirit, build each
other up in psalms, hymns, spiritual songs, singing and rejoicing in
Christ (5:19)
- Believers
give thanks to God, always.
- The
healthy church practices the equality of all believers regardless of
gender, age or status through submission (5:22-25)
- Christ
death sanctifies and cleanse the church. The church is cleansed when they
participate in baptism (5:26-27)
- The
“Oneness in union” as a result of marriage means each spouse “cares
for the other as they would for themselves; they learn and anticipate each
other’s needs, help the other be all they can be, while neither losing
their personality” (Nasb) [5:31-33]
Chapter 6
- Children
are to obey parents and honor them for life (6:1-2)
- Parents
and children should submit to each other (6:1-4)
- Christians
honor their elders – “respect their wisdom, defer to their authority,
address their needs of comfort and happiness” (6:3)
- Discipline
must be administered as necessary in relationships (6:4)
- Christians
should display and practice integrity on the job (6:6-8)
- The
Christian will fight a spiritual battle – they combat this with the use of
the Armor of God (6:10-18)
- We should
lift up each other in prayer – constantly (praying in the Spirit and being
watchful) [6:18]
- One
way to take the message out is through “letters” as Paul did. In our
world, maybe a blog or website. We should declare our message with
boldness (6:20)
References:
NASB. Life Application Study Bible. Grand Rapids, MI:
Tyndale House Publishers (2000)
Macarthur, J. The Macarthur Study Bible. The United States
of America: Thomas Nelson (1997)
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Written by Pastor Kevin A. Hall
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