Day 1: Spiritual Deadness as Inability to Perceive God
Spiritual deadness is not about physical incapacity but a profound inability to perceive and value the beauty of God and His law. This deadness is characterized by darkness, ignorance, and a hardness of heart, which prevents us from submitting to God with joy. Despite our physical, intellectual, and emotional capabilities, we are unable to perceive the beauty and glory of God. This state of spiritual deadness is a sobering reality that underscores our desperate need for divine intervention. It is only through God's grace that we can be awakened to the truth and beauty of His presence. [03:45]
Ephesians 4:18-19 (ESV): "They are darkened in their understanding, alienated from the life of God because of the ignorance that is in them, due to their hardness of heart. They have become callous and have given themselves up to sensuality, greedy to practice every kind of impurity."
Reflection: Think of a time when you felt distant from God. What steps can you take today to seek His presence and open your heart to His beauty?
Day 2: Universal Need for God's Grace
Our natural state as children of wrath is shared by all humanity, highlighting the universal need for God's grace. This condition is marked by a mindset that is hostile to God and unable to please Him, underscoring our desperate need for divine intervention. We are all born into this state of spiritual deadness, unable to see anything attractive in God's law, and incapable of submitting to it with joy. This universal condition calls for a deep understanding of our need for God's grace to transform our hearts and minds. [07:59]
Romans 3:10-12 (ESV): "As it is written: 'None is righteous, no, not one; no one understands; no one seeks for God. All have turned aside; together they have become worthless; no one does good, not even one.'"
Reflection: Reflect on your own life and identify areas where you have resisted God's grace. How can you invite His transformative power into those areas today?
Day 3: Transformation as a Work of God
The transformation from death to life is a work of God, not something we can achieve on our own. It is by God's grace that we are made alive with Christ, and this should fill us with gratitude and a desire to lead others to this life-giving experience. This transformation is a testament to God's mercy and love, as He intervenes in our lives to bring us from spiritual deadness to life in Christ. As we reflect on this miraculous change, we are called to share this experience with others, guiding them towards the same life-giving transformation. [10:28]
Colossians 2:13-14 (ESV): "And you, who were dead in your trespasses and the uncircumcision of your flesh, God made alive together with him, having forgiven us all our trespasses, by canceling the record of debt that stood against us with its legal demands. This he set aside, nailing it to the cross."
Reflection: Consider someone in your life who has not experienced the transformative power of God's grace. How can you be an instrument in God's hands to help them encounter His love?
Day 4: Spiritual Blindness Without God's Intervention
Despite our physical, intellectual, and emotional capabilities, without God's intervention, we remain spiritually blind and unable to understand the things of the Spirit. This highlights the importance of being born of the Spirit to truly perceive and appreciate the glory of the gospel. Our natural state is one of spiritual blindness, where we are unable to comprehend the depth and richness of God's truth. It is only through the work of the Holy Spirit that our eyes are opened, allowing us to see and embrace the gospel's transformative power. [09:52]
1 Corinthians 2:14 (ESV): "The natural person does not accept the things of the Spirit of God, for they are folly to him, and he is not able to understand them because they are spiritually discerned."
Reflection: Identify an area in your life where you feel spiritually blind. Pray for the Holy Spirit to open your eyes and guide you to a deeper understanding of God's truth.
Day 5: Participating in God's Work of Awakening
Our journey of faith does not end with our own salvation; we are called to participate in God's work of bringing others to life. As we reflect on our past condition and the grace that has transformed us, we are inspired to help others experience the life that only God can give. This calling is an invitation to be active participants in God's redemptive work, sharing the message of hope and transformation with those around us. By doing so, we become instruments of His grace, leading others to the abundant life found in Christ. [10:44]
2 Corinthians 5:18-20 (ESV): "All this is from God, who through Christ reconciled us to himself and gave us the ministry of reconciliation; that is, in Christ God was reconciling the world to himself, not counting their trespasses against them, and entrusting to us the message of reconciliation. Therefore, we are ambassadors for Christ, God making his appeal through us."
Reflection: Think of someone who is struggling in their faith journey. How can you support and encourage them to experience the life-giving transformation that comes from knowing Christ?
Sermon Summary
In our exploration of Ephesians 2:1-3, we delve into the profound concept of spiritual deadness and its implications for our lives. This passage starkly reminds us of our former state before experiencing the transformative power of God's grace. We were dead in our trespasses and sins, living in accordance with the world and under the influence of the prince of the power of the air. This deadness is not a physical incapacity but a spiritual one, characterized by darkness, ignorance, and a hardness of heart. It is a state where, despite our physical, intellectual, and emotional capabilities, we are unable to perceive the beauty and glory of God.
The deadness we experience is a result of our nature as children of wrath, a condition shared by all humanity. This spiritual deadness manifests in our inability to see anything attractive in God's law, rendering us incapable of submitting to it with joy. Our minds are darkened, and our hearts are hardened, making us spiritually blind and unable to understand the things of the Spirit. This is a sobering reality that underscores our desperate need for divine intervention.
However, the good news is that God, in His mercy, has made us alive together with Christ. This transformation is not something we can achieve on our own; it is a work of God. As we reflect on our past condition and the grace that has brought us to life, we are filled with gratitude and a renewed passion to lead others to this life-giving experience. Our journey does not end with our own salvation; we are called to participate in God's work of bringing others to life. In the coming discussions, we will explore how we can be instruments in God's hands to help others experience the life that only He can give.
Key Takeaways
1. Spiritual deadness is not about physical incapacity but a profound inability to perceive and value the beauty of God and His law. This deadness is characterized by darkness, ignorance, and a hardness of heart, which prevents us from submitting to God with joy. [03:45]
2. Our natural state as children of wrath is shared by all humanity, highlighting the universal need for God's grace. This condition is marked by a mindset that is hostile to God and unable to please Him, underscoring our desperate need for divine intervention. [07:59]
3. The transformation from death to life is a work of God, not something we can achieve on our own. It is by God's grace that we are made alive with Christ, and this should fill us with gratitude and a desire to lead others to this life-giving experience. [10:28]
4. Despite our physical, intellectual, and emotional capabilities, without God's intervention, we remain spiritually blind and unable to understand the things of the Spirit. This highlights the importance of being born of the Spirit to truly perceive and appreciate the glory of the gospel. [09:52]
5. Our journey of faith does not end with our own salvation; we are called to participate in God's work of bringing others to life. As we reflect on our past condition and the grace that has transformed us, we are inspired to help others experience the life that only God can give. [10:44] ** [10:44]
According to Ephesians 2:1-3, what does it mean to be "dead in trespasses and sins"? How does this deadness manifest in our lives? [00:29]
In Romans 8:5-9, Paul describes two kinds of people. What distinguishes those who are "in the flesh" from those who are "in the Spirit"? [06:20]
How does 1 Corinthians 2:14 describe the natural person's ability to understand spiritual things? What does this imply about spiritual deadness? [08:34]
The sermon mentions that spiritual deadness is characterized by darkness, ignorance, and hardness of heart. How are these traits evident in the lives of those who are spiritually dead? [03:45]
---
Interpretation Questions:
What does it mean to be "children of wrath" as described in Ephesians 2:3? How does this concept relate to the universal need for God's grace? [00:55]
In Romans 8:7-8, Paul states that those in the flesh cannot please God. How does this inability highlight the necessity of divine intervention for salvation? [07:59]
The sermon emphasizes that spiritual deadness is not a physical incapacity. How does this understanding affect our view of those who are not yet in Christ? [02:28]
How does the promise of a new heart in Ezekiel 36:26 relate to the transformation described in the sermon? What does this promise mean for believers today? [05:03]
---
Application Questions:
Reflect on your own life before experiencing God's grace. How did spiritual deadness manifest in your thoughts and actions? How has your perspective changed since then? [01:08]
The sermon calls us to participate in God's work of bringing others to life. Identify one person in your life who is spiritually dead. What steps can you take to share the gospel with them this week? [10:44]
Consider the areas in your life where you might still experience spiritual blindness or hardness of heart. What practical steps can you take to seek God's intervention in these areas? [09:52]
How can you cultivate a mindset of gratitude for the transformation God has brought about in your life? What specific practices can help you maintain this attitude daily? [10:28]
The sermon highlights the importance of being born of the Spirit to truly perceive the glory of the gospel. How can you ensure that you are continually growing in your spiritual understanding and appreciation of God's grace? [09:52]
In what ways can you support and encourage others in your small group to engage in God's work of bringing others to life? How can you work together to reach out to those who are spiritually dead? [10:44]
Reflect on the concept of being "children of wrath" and the transformation to being alive in Christ. How does this transformation impact your identity and purpose as a believer? [00:55]
Sermon Clips
And you were dead before this happened by grace you've been saved. He made us alive together with Christ down in verses five and six before that happened. We were dead in the trespasses and sins which in which once walked according to the age of this world according to the prince of the power of the air. [00:21:02]
So, Father, as we tackle one more time the deadness of dead and what it really implies about our former condition from which we desperately needed to be made alive saved, show us what we were like, what other people who are not yet in Christ are like, and so fill us with gratitude and passion to lead others into this experience that we've enjoyed. [01:05:28]
How are we dead? And we said last time that it isn't just that we are physically unable to walk around. We are. It isn't that we are volitionally unable to make decisions. We do. It isn't that we are intellectually unable to use our minds. We do. Or that we are emotionally incapacitated and can't feel. [02:25:36]
It means as we saw last time that in all of those things, in our bodies, in our minds, in our wills, in our emotions, there is a deadness. And the deadness we saw, for example, in chapter 5, has to do with darkness. Let no one deceive you with empty words or because of these things the wrath of God comes upon the sons of disobedience. [03:34:00]
So, if you look at this new covenant promise that has to happen for any of us to be saved, Jesus came to buy the new covenant promises for us. I will give you a new heart and a new spirit I will put within you. I will remove the heart of stone hard, dead from your flesh and give you a heart of flesh. [05:03:44]
The mindset of the flesh is hostile to God. It does not submit to God, God's law. So, there's the does not, and then it becomes cannot. Indeed, it cannot. And those who are in the flesh cannot please God. You, however, are not in the flesh, Paul could add, like the rest of mankind, but you are in the spirit. [07:11:44]
The mindset of the flesh, which is what everybody is in who has not been made alive and brought into the sphere and control of the spirit, the mindset of the flesh not only does not submit to God's law, it cannot, and those who are in the flesh cannot please God. In other words, our deadness and our blindness and our hardness is a spiritual inability. [07:38:19]
The natural person does not submit to the things of the spirit of God, does not, for they are folly to him. That's what it means to be dead. You open your good eyes, you open your good mind, you open your good evolution, and what you see is foolishness in the cross. And when you see only foolishness and nothing that is compellingly attractive and beautiful and glorious, you are locked into darkness. [08:31:14]
So, I come back and I say that this dead here does not mean that we're physically unable to do things. It does not mean that we are volitionally unable to decide things. It does not mean that we are emotionally unable to feel things. It means that in all of our physical motion, all of our intellectual thinking, all of our volitional deciding, all of our affectional feeling, there is a deadness. [09:19:20]
And the deadness means you can't see, you can't feel, you can't value, you can't assess properly the beauty of Christ, the glory of the gospel, the great weight of the riches of grace, and therefore they will always look foolish, shall always be a stumbling block, and we will always be locked in to our inability to believe. We must be made alive. [09:49:12]
Nobody you love has any hope of salvation unless God makes them alive, which leads me to think next time we will tackle the question, all right, if that's the way we were and God made us alive, how might we participate in other people becoming alive? Is there any help in Ephesians? There is for what we should do to help other people experience life. [10:26:08]
The transformation from death to life is a work of God, not something we can achieve on our own. It is by God's grace that we are made alive with Christ, and this should fill us with gratitude and a desire to lead others to this life-giving experience. [00:25:52]