Day 1: The Objective Reality of God's Mercy and Love
God's mercy and love are not contingent upon our actions or feelings; they are objective truths that exist independently of us. Even when we were spiritually dead, God made us alive with Christ, demonstrating His decisive work in our salvation. This underscores that our salvation is not based on our efforts but on God's grace. Our spiritual awakening and transformation are entirely the result of God's initiative and power, not our own merit or ability. This truth invites us to rest in the assurance that God's love and mercy are steadfast and unchanging, providing a solid foundation for our faith. [01:23]
"But God, being rich in mercy, because of the great love with which he loved us, even when we were dead in our trespasses, made us alive together with Christ—by grace you have been saved." (Ephesians 2:4-5, ESV)
Reflection: In what ways can you rest in the assurance of God's unchanging love and mercy today, especially in areas where you feel spiritually inadequate?
Day 2: Union with Christ: A Supernatural Grafting
Our union with Christ is a supernatural act by God, grafting us into Christ like branches to a vine. This union is not initially a conscious experience but becomes real through faith, which allows us to embrace and enjoy God's grace. This divine connection is the essence of our salvation, as it transforms our identity and aligns us with the life and purposes of Christ. Through faith, we begin to perceive and experience the reality of this union, allowing us to draw strength and nourishment from Christ, much like a branch draws life from the vine. [04:00]
"I am the vine; you are the branches. Whoever abides in me and I in him, he it is that bears much fruit, for apart from me you can do nothing." (John 15:5, ESV)
Reflection: How can you cultivate a deeper awareness of your union with Christ today, and what practical steps can you take to abide in Him more fully?
Day 3: Faith: The Key to Grace
Faith is essential because it allows grace to remain grace. If salvation depended on our works, grace would no longer be grace. Faith ensures that the promise of God rests on grace, making it accessible to all. This means that our role is not to earn or achieve salvation but to receive it through faith, acknowledging and accepting God's work in us. Faith is the means by which we perceive and receive the objective reality of being made alive in Christ, allowing us to experience the fullness of God's grace in our lives. [08:43]
"For by grace you have been saved through faith. And this is not your own doing; it is the gift of God, not a result of works, so that no one may boast." (Ephesians 2:8-9, ESV)
Reflection: What is one area of your life where you struggle to rely on faith rather than your own efforts? How can you intentionally choose to trust in God's grace today?
Day 4: Experiencing Death and Resurrection with Christ
Paul's writings in Galatians and Colossians illustrate the concept of being crucified and raised with Christ, experienced through faith. Baptism symbolizes this death and resurrection, showing how faith apprehends and embraces God's work. This spiritual reality is not just a theological concept but a transformative experience that reshapes our identity and purpose. Through faith, we participate in Christ's death and resurrection, allowing us to live a new life empowered by His Spirit. This experience calls us to continually put off the old self and embrace the new self, created in Christ. [11:30]
"Having been buried with him in baptism, in which you were also raised with him through faith in the powerful working of God, who raised him from the dead." (Colossians 2:12, ESV)
Reflection: How can you actively participate in the process of putting off the old self and embracing the new self in Christ today?
Day 5: Embracing the New Self by Faith
Our subjective experience of salvation involves putting off the old self and putting on the new self, created in Christ. This act of faith is about embracing, receiving, and resting in the objective reality of God's work in us. It requires a conscious decision to align our thoughts, actions, and identity with the truth of who we are in Christ. By faith, we are empowered to live out this new identity, reflecting the character and love of Christ in our daily lives. This transformation is not a one-time event but an ongoing journey of faith and growth. [13:39]
"To put off your old self, which belongs to your former manner of life and is corrupt through deceitful desires, and to be renewed in the spirit of your minds, and to put on the new self, created after the likeness of God in true righteousness and holiness." (Ephesians 4:22-24, ESV)
Reflection: What specific steps can you take today to put on the new self and live out your identity in Christ in practical ways?
Sermon Summary
In Ephesians 2:4-7, we explore the profound nature of God's work in our salvation, emphasizing the objective reality of His actions and our subjective experience of them. God's rich mercy and great love are objective truths that exist independently of us. Even when we were spiritually dead, God made us alive, raised us up, and seated us with Christ in the heavenly realms. This is the decisive work of God, not something we could achieve on our own. We are His workmanship, created in Christ Jesus, highlighting that our salvation is a divine creation, not a human effort.
The essence of salvation is our union with Christ, a supernatural act by God that grafts us into Christ, much like branches to a vine. This union is not something we consciously experience at first, but it becomes real to us through faith. Faith is the subjective experience that allows us to embrace and enjoy the grace of God. It is the means by which we perceive and receive the objective reality of being made alive in Christ.
Faith is crucial because it allows grace to remain grace. If salvation depended on our works, grace would no longer be grace. Instead, faith ensures that the promise of God rests on grace, making it accessible to all. This is why salvation is by grace through faith, as faith is the human response that acknowledges and accepts God's work in us.
Paul's writings in Galatians and Colossians further illustrate this concept. In Galatians 2:20, Paul speaks of being crucified with Christ, an objective reality that he experiences through faith. Similarly, in Colossians 2:12, baptism symbolizes our death and resurrection with Christ, experienced through faith in God's powerful work. Ephesians 4 emphasizes putting off the old self and putting on the new self, created in Christ, which is an act of faith.
Ultimately, our subjective experience of salvation is about embracing, receiving, and resting in the objective reality of God's work. Faith is the key that unlocks the fullness of God's grace in our lives.
Key Takeaways
1. God's mercy and love are objective realities that exist independently of us. Even when we were spiritually dead, God made us alive with Christ, highlighting the decisive work of God in our salvation. This underscores that our salvation is not based on our efforts but on God's grace. [01:23]
2. Our union with Christ is a supernatural act by God, grafting us into Christ like branches to a vine. This union is not initially a conscious experience but becomes real through faith, which allows us to embrace and enjoy God's grace. [04:00]
3. Faith is essential because it allows grace to remain grace. If salvation depended on our works, grace would no longer be grace. Faith ensures that the promise of God rests on grace, making it accessible to all. [08:43]
4. Paul's writings in Galatians and Colossians illustrate the concept of being crucified and raised with Christ, experienced through faith. Baptism symbolizes this death and resurrection, showing how faith apprehends and embraces God's work. [11:30]
5. Our subjective experience of salvation involves putting off the old self and putting on the new self, created in Christ. This act of faith is about embracing, receiving, and resting in the objective reality of God's work in us. [13:39] ** [13:39]
In Ephesians 2:4-7, what are the objective realities of God's work in our salvation as described in the sermon? [01:23]
How does the sermon describe our union with Christ, and what metaphor is used to illustrate this relationship? [04:00]
According to the sermon, what role does faith play in experiencing the grace of God? [08:43]
How does Paul’s writing in Galatians 2:20 and Colossians 2:12 illustrate the concept of being crucified and raised with Christ? [11:30]
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Interpretation Questions:
What does it mean for God's mercy and love to be objective realities that exist independently of us, and how does this impact our understanding of salvation? [01:23]
How does the metaphor of being grafted into Christ like branches to a vine help us understand our union with Him? What implications does this have for our daily lives? [04:00]
Why is it important that faith allows grace to remain grace, and how does this understanding affect our view of works and salvation? [08:43]
In what ways do the concepts of being crucified with Christ and experiencing resurrection through faith challenge or affirm your current understanding of baptism and its significance? [11:30]
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Application Questions:
Reflect on a time when you felt spiritually dead. How did you experience God's mercy and love during that period, and how can you remind yourself of these objective truths in your current life? [01:23]
Consider your personal relationship with Christ. How can you consciously experience and nurture your union with Him, much like branches connected to a vine? [04:00]
Identify an area in your life where you might be relying on your own efforts rather than embracing God's grace through faith. What steps can you take to shift your focus back to faith? [08:43]
How can you practically "put off the old self and put on the new self" in your daily routine? What specific actions or habits might need to change to align with your new identity in Christ? [13:39]
Think of a situation where you struggled to see God's work in your life. How can you use faith to perceive and embrace His grace in similar situations moving forward? [14:33]
Reflect on your baptism or the concept of baptism. How does understanding it as a symbol of death and resurrection with Christ influence your spiritual journey today? [11:30]
How can you actively rest in the objective reality of God's work in your life this week, and what practical steps can you take to embrace and enjoy His grace more fully? [14:33]
Sermon Clips
But God, being rich in mercy, that's objective quite apart from us. He's that way because of the great love that's objective outside of us, quite apart from us, with which He loved us. That's objective. He did that. He is that way no matter what we are. He is that way. [00:39:40]
We are His workmanship. We didn't write our own poem, and we didn't sculpt our own statue. We didn't paint our portrait. He did, and we didn't create ourselves. That's what I mean by the objective decisive work of God. [01:43:44]
The essence of that salvation is God undertook in a supernatural way that's beyond our comprehension to unite us to Christ, to graft us into Christ. Vine and branches, He is the vine, we are the branches. We're grafted into Christ. There's a union with Christ, and God did that. [03:48:48]
For by grace you have been saved through faith. Now that is a subjective experience in our consciousness. Faith is the one human affection or condition of the mind or heart or soul that lets grace be grace. That's what I'm going to argue. [06:38:00]
God has ordained, planned from the foundation of the world, that His objective grace that raises us from the dead, seats us in the heavenly places with Christ, is experienced, embraced, received, enjoyed by faith because faith is the one human experience that lets grace be grace. [08:00:48]
I have been crucified with Christ. That objective reality, God united Paul to Christ in such a way that Paul experiences death to his old man. I have been crucified with Christ. It is no longer I who live, but Christ who lives in me. [09:54:56]
Baptism then is a picture of the death we're talking about. I have been crucified with Christ. There I go down into the grave of baptismal waters, and I come out raised with Christ. Two pictures: death, resurrection. And how is it happening? In subjective reality through faith. [11:07:44]
Faith apprehends it, embraces it, enjoys it. That's our subjective side to God's objective work. One more, and this one comes from Ephesians, and it's most remarkable. Paul, you know, is turning in chapter four from the description of God's work in us to our experience. [11:50:16]
To put off your old self, which belongs to your former manner of life and is corrupt through deceitful desires. That's Ephesians two, one through three, all that deadness. That's what you put off, and to be renewed, it's the second infinitive, to be renewed in the spirit of your minds. [12:40:16]
God did this. God made them alive, and now this is put it on, put it on. Now I'm arguing that's faith. That's a paraphrase of faith. He could say, embrace by faith your new self. That's what he's saying when he says the metaphor of put on a garment. [13:32:56]
Faith is the embracing, receiving, enjoying, resting in all of this objective reality that God has worked in us. And we will look in coming sessions at this statement: this is not your own doing; it is the gift of God. [14:33:44]
I just want to stress right now the nature of faith is the sort of thing that lets grace be grace. [15:00:16]