Your church is on the plan

(contact to change plans)

Current Plan
$0/month
Free
Get Started
Pastor
$30per month
Team
$100per month
Sermons per month 4 5 20
Admins that can edit sermon pages and sermon clips 1 5
Sermons automatically pulled from Youtube on Sun
Sermon clips translated into any language (example)
What your AI Church Assistant can answer Basic questions about your church and selected sermons Broader questions about your
church and recent sermons
Any question answerable from
your website or sermons
Max length of videos 1.5 hours 2.5 hours 4 hours
Customer support Email Chat + Zoom calls

Caption Text

Phone Frame Preview

Clip Settings

Select a Preset

Genesis

John 3:16

Psalm 23

Philippians 4:13

Proverbs 3:5

Romans 8:28

Matthew 5:16

Luke 6:31

Mark 12:30

Montserrat
Oswald
Poppins
Red Hat Display
Roboto
Sora
#FFFFFF
#FFFFFF
#FFFFFF
Music volume
Enable Fade Out
End Screen
Click to upload

Contact one of your church admins to make changes or to become an admin

Cancellation
We’re sorry to see you end your subscription

Could you let us know why so that we can improve our ministry?

Please specify the reason.

Create a new chatbot from a video of your church service

 
 
 
 
Generic placeholder image

Transformed by Grace: Understanding Salvation in Christ

by MLJ Trust
on Feb 14, 2025

If you are an admin of MLJ Trust, log in to make edits below, and your changes will appear on this shareable page
Channel Logo

Transformed by Grace: Understanding Salvation in Christ

Devotional

Day 1: Recognizing Our Past to Appreciate Grace

Understanding our past condition of being spiritually dead in trespasses and sins is essential to fully grasp the magnitude of God's grace. This awareness is not meant to induce guilt but to highlight the transformative power of God's intervention in our lives. By acknowledging where we once were, we can better appreciate the depth of our salvation and the power of God at work in us. This understanding should lead us to a life of gratitude and praise, recognizing that our new life is a gift from God, not a result of our own efforts. [28:38]

Ephesians 2:1-2 (ESV): "And you were dead in the trespasses and sins in which you once walked, following the course of this world, following the prince of the power of the air, the spirit that is now at work in the sons of disobedience."

Reflection: Think about a time when you felt spiritually distant from God. How can reflecting on that experience help you appreciate the grace you have received today?


Day 2: Christ as the Source of All Blessings

The centrality of Christ in our faith cannot be overstated. All blessings and salvation come through Him, and without Him, there is no redemption or reconciliation. Our relationship with God is mediated through Christ, emphasizing His indispensable role in our spiritual journey. This truth calls us to deepen our relationship with Christ, recognizing that He is the source of all spiritual blessings and the foundation of our faith. [10:04]

Colossians 1:16-17 (ESV): "For by him all things were created, in heaven and on earth, visible and invisible, whether thrones or dominions or rulers or authorities—all things were created through him and for him. And he is before all things, and in him all things hold together."

Reflection: In what ways can you make Christ more central in your daily life, ensuring that He is the source of your decisions and actions?


Day 3: Experiencing the Transformative Power of God

The power that raised Christ from the dead is the same power at work in believers, transforming them from spiritual death to life. This power is not just about moral improvement but a profound resurrection to new life in Christ. Understanding this power is crucial for living a dynamic and transformative Christian life. It reminds us that our faith is not static but an ongoing journey of growth and renewal through God's power. [16:33]

Ephesians 3:20-21 (ESV): "Now to him who is able to do far more abundantly than all that we ask or think, according to the power at work within us, to him be glory in the church and in Christ Jesus throughout all generations, forever and ever. Amen."

Reflection: Identify an area in your life where you need God's transformative power. How can you invite Him to work in that area today?


Day 4: Embracing the Gift of Grace

Salvation is entirely due to God's grace, not human effort. This understanding should lead to a life of gratitude, praise, and a deeper love for God. Recognizing that our salvation is a gift, not a reward, shifts our perspective from striving to resting in God's love and mercy. It encourages us to live in a way that reflects the glory of God's grace, knowing that we are recipients of His unmerited favor. [32:04]

Titus 3:4-5 (ESV): "But when the goodness and loving kindness of God our Savior appeared, he saved us, not because of works done by us in righteousness, but according to his own mercy, by the washing of regeneration and renewal of the Holy Spirit."

Reflection: How can you express gratitude for God's grace in your life today, and what specific actions can you take to reflect His grace to others?


Day 5: Unity in Christ as a Testament to God's Power

The reconciliation of Jews and Gentiles in Christ demonstrates God's power to unite disparate elements. This unity is a reflection of God's ultimate plan to gather all things in Christ, emphasizing the importance of community and fellowship in the faith. As believers, we are called to live in a way that reflects this unity, breaking down barriers and fostering a spirit of love and acceptance within the body of Christ. [21:02]

Galatians 3:28 (ESV): "There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither slave nor free, there is no male and female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus."

Reflection: Consider a relationship or situation where division exists. How can you be an agent of unity and reconciliation in that context, reflecting the unity we have in Christ?

Sermon Summary

In the Epistle to the Ephesians, Paul addresses the profound transformation that occurs through God's grace. The second chapter begins with a reminder of our previous state: dead in trespasses and sins. This stark reality sets the stage for understanding the magnitude of God's intervention. Paul emphasizes that the division of the letter into chapters is for clarity, but the message is a continuous argument. The first chapter outlines God's grand plan to unite all things in Christ, a theme that continues into the second chapter. This divine plan is not contingent on human actions but is rooted in God's eternal purpose, established before the foundation of the world.

Paul stresses that our salvation is entirely due to God's grace, love, and mercy. It is not a result of human effort or merit. The Apostle underscores the centrality of Christ in this salvation process, asserting that all blessings come through Him. The power that raised Christ from the dead is the same power at work in believers, transforming them from spiritual death to life. This transformation is not merely a moral improvement but a profound resurrection to new life in Christ.

The Apostle's prayer for the Ephesians is that they may have spiritual wisdom and understanding to grasp the hope and riches of their calling. This understanding is crucial for living a vibrant Christian life and for appreciating the depth of God's love and power. Paul challenges believers to recognize their previous state of sin to fully appreciate the salvation they have received. This awareness should lead to a life of praise, wonder, and a burden for the lost.

The chapter also addresses the reconciliation of Jews and Gentiles, highlighting the removal of barriers through Christ's sacrifice. This unity in Christ is a testament to God's power and purpose. Paul calls believers to a deeper understanding of these truths, urging them to live in a way that reflects the glory of God's grace.


Key Takeaways
  • 1. Understanding Our Past Condition: Recognizing our former state of being dead in trespasses and sins is crucial to appreciating the magnitude of God's grace. This awareness helps us understand the depth of our salvation and the power of God at work in us. [28:38]
  • 2. The Centrality of Christ: All blessings and salvation come through Christ. Without Him, there is no redemption or reconciliation. Our relationship with God is mediated through Christ, emphasizing His central role in our faith. [10:04]
  • 3. The Power of God in Salvation: The same power that raised Christ from the dead is at work in believers, transforming them from death to life. This power is essential for understanding the Christian life as a dynamic and transformative experience. [16:33]
  • 4. The Role of Grace: Salvation is entirely due to God's grace, not human effort. This understanding should lead to a life of gratitude, praise, and a deeper love for God. It is a reminder that our salvation is a gift, not a reward. [32:04]
  • 5. Unity in Christ: The reconciliation of Jews and Gentiles in Christ demonstrates God's power to unite disparate elements. This unity is a reflection of God's ultimate plan to gather all things in Christ, emphasizing the importance of community and fellowship in the faith. [21:02]
    ** [21:02]
Youtube Chapters
  • [00:00] - Welcome
  • [00:13] - Introduction to Ephesians Chapter 2
  • [00:38] - Relationship Between Chapters
  • [01:16] - Importance of Chapter Divisions
  • [02:09] - Understanding the Argument
  • [04:05] - Recap of Chapter 1
  • [05:18] - God's Plan and Activity
  • [06:46] - The Unseen History
  • [07:48] - God's Grace and Love
  • [09:45] - Centrality of Christ
  • [12:29] - Spiritual Blessings in Christ
  • [13:35] - Importance of Understanding
  • [15:12] - The Exceeding Greatness of His Power
  • [18:12] - The Power of God in Us
  • [21:02] - Reconciliation of Jews and Gentiles
  • [23:44] - Overcoming Obstacles in Christ
  • [26:29] - Realizing Our Salvation
  • [29:45] - Depth of Sin and God's Power
  • [32:21] - The Gift of Grace
  • [36:05] - Burden for Souls
  • [39:35] - Impact on Christian Life

Bible Study Guide

Observation Questions
  1. What does Paul mean when he says we were "dead in trespasses and sins" in Ephesians 2:1? How does this set the stage for understanding God's grace? [00:13]
  2. How does Paul describe the power of God in Ephesians 1:19-20, and how is this power relevant to believers according to the sermon? [16:33]
  3. In Ephesians 1:10, Paul speaks of God's plan to "gather together in one all things in Christ." How does this theme continue into the second chapter? [04:35]
Interpretation Questions
  1. How does understanding our past condition of being "dead in trespasses and sins" enhance our appreciation of God's grace and salvation? [28:38]
  2. What is the significance of Christ's central role in our salvation, as emphasized in the sermon? How does this affect our relationship with God? [10:04]
  3. How does the reconciliation of Jews and Gentiles in Christ serve as a testament to God's power and purpose? What implications does this have for the church today? [21:02]
Application Questions
  1. Reflect on your own life before knowing Christ. How does recognizing your past condition help you appreciate the magnitude of God's grace? [28:38]
  2. In what ways can you ensure that Christ remains central in your daily life and faith journey? Are there specific practices or habits you can adopt to keep Him at the center? [10:04]
  3. How can you actively participate in the unity of the church, reflecting the reconciliation of Jews and Gentiles in Christ? Are there barriers you need to overcome in your own community? [21:02]
  4. The sermon emphasizes the power of God at work in believers. How have you experienced this transformative power in your life, and how can you remain open to it? [16:33]
  5. Considering the role of grace in salvation, how can you cultivate a life of gratitude and praise? What specific actions can you take to express your thankfulness to God? [32:04]
  6. How can you develop a deeper burden for the lost, as Paul challenges believers to do? Are there specific people or groups you feel called to reach out to with the message of Christ? [36:05]
  7. Reflect on the sermon’s call to live in a way that reflects the glory of God's grace. What changes can you make in your life to better align with this calling? [41:29]

Sermon Clips


The great point which the Apostle makes in this epistle its central theme innocence is the theme that the Apostle announces in the tenth verse of the first chapter that in the dispensation of the fullness of times he might gather together in one all things in Christ both which are in heaven and which are on earth even in him. [00:04:28]

The tragic thing that is being forgotten by the vast majority of people is that the really important thing in the world this morning is God's activity what God is doing not what men are doing of course men are doing things and it's right that they should do them I'm not trying to detract from the importance of statesmanship and all these things. [00:06:53]

The Apostle reminds us that it is something that God has planned before the foundation of the world you see here we have our very fundamentals of our faith there's nothing contingent about this what God is doing is not dependent upon men and not even dependent upon the response of men it's all planned out by God. [00:07:41]

I remind you of these things again because as we come to work through this second chapter we will find that the Apostle goes under beating it we've seen it already in the reading this morning everything is to the praise of the glory of His grace he's told us that in verse 6 he stood as it in verse 7 that we should be to the praise of his glory who first trusted in Christ. [00:08:46]

There is no such thing as a salvation without Christ at the center we mustn't listen to people who tell us about how God is blessing them unless Jesus Christ is central they may think their prayers are being answered that they're being guided and various other things but God according to this argument it does not deal with us at all except in Jesus Christ. [00:09:54]

The Apostle has told us in a memorable phrase what it is that God has done for us and the office to us in our Lord and Savior it is worth blessed us with all spiritual blessings in heavenly places in Christ let us remind ourselves of these things this morning we are here to thank God and to praise God. [00:11:23]

He prays that the eyes of their understanding may be enlightened that they may come to know certain things now all that has been done for them they have been brought into this realm he tells them yes but if they're really to enjoy the Christian life if they're to live it fully if they're really out of function as God's people here upon earth. [00:14:17]

The same power that raised the Lord Jesus Christ from the dead and set him in the heavenly places at the right hand of God far above all principality and power and might and Dominion and every name that is named not only in this world but also in that which is to come that's the power that is working in us. [00:16:30]

The Apostle is anxious that they may know that nothing therefore can frustrate this purpose of God and nothing can withstand these things have absolutes and they are certain and the thing that you and I you have to realize is that it is that very power that is working in us and that if we are Christians at all this morning it is because that power is already worked in us. [00:17:59]

The Apostle tells us that there were two main difficulties the first was the state of the condition of these people by nature that is what the Apostle deals with inverse is 1 to 10 in this second chapter the condition the state of these Ephesians the further conversion in sin and before they could be made fellow heirs with the Jews in the kingdom with the Christian views in the kingdom. [00:21:24]

The Apostle here describes if we only saw it our hearts would go out to them we'd see them as our Lord saw them and the other great heart of compassion for them the failure in our missionary and evangelistic zeal is entirely due to this we haven't seen it as it is what they are what they might be and what Christ has done for them. [00:37:39]

We must contemplate men in sin until we are horrified until we are alarmed until we are desperate about them until we're praying for them and until having seen that we've been brought out of it we are ourselves lost in a sense of wonder love and praise very well that is the introduction to the second chapter of Paul's epistle to the Ephesians. [00:40:13]

Only admins of of MLJ Trust can edit their clips


The great point which the Apostle makes in this epistle its central theme innocence is the theme that the Apostle announces in the tenth verse of the first chapter that in the dispensation of the fullness of times he might gather together in one all things in Christ both which are in heaven and which are on earth even in him. [00:04:28]



The tragic thing that is being forgotten by the vast majority of people is that the really important thing in the world this morning is God's activity what God is doing not what men are doing of course men are doing things and it's right that they should do them I'm not trying to detract from the importance of statesmanship and all these things. [00:06:53]



The Apostle reminds us that it is something that God has planned before the foundation of the world you see here we have our very fundamentals of our faith there's nothing contingent about this what God is doing is not dependent upon men and not even dependent upon the response of men it's all planned out by God. [00:07:41]



I remind you of these things again because as we come to work through this second chapter we will find that the Apostle goes under beating it we've seen it already in the reading this morning everything is to the praise of the glory of His grace he's told us that in verse 6 he stood as it in verse 7 that we should be to the praise of his glory who first trusted in Christ. [00:08:46]



There is no such thing as a salvation without Christ at the center we mustn't listen to people who tell us about how God is blessing them unless Jesus Christ is central they may think their prayers are being answered that they're being guided and various other things but God according to this argument it does not deal with us at all except in Jesus Christ. [00:09:54]



The Apostle has told us in a memorable phrase what it is that God has done for us and the office to us in our Lord and Savior it is worth blessed us with all spiritual blessings in heavenly places in Christ let us remind ourselves of these things this morning we are here to thank God and to praise God. [00:11:23]



He prays that the eyes of their understanding may be enlightened that they may come to know certain things now all that has been done for them they have been brought into this realm he tells them yes but if they're really to enjoy the Christian life if they're to live it fully if they're really out of function as God's people here upon earth. [00:14:17]



The same power that raised the Lord Jesus Christ from the dead and set him in the heavenly places at the right hand of God far above all principality and power and might and Dominion and every name that is named not only in this world but also in that which is to come that's the power that is working in us. [00:16:30]



The Apostle is anxious that they may know that nothing therefore can frustrate this purpose of God and nothing can withstand these things have absolutes and they are certain and the thing that you and I you have to realize is that it is that very power that is working in us and that if we are Christians at all this morning it is because that power is already worked in us. [00:17:59]



The Apostle tells us that there were two main difficulties the first was the state of the condition of these people by nature that is what the Apostle deals with inverse is 1 to 10 in this second chapter the condition the state of these Ephesians the further conversion in sin and before they could be made fellow heirs with the Jews in the kingdom with the Christian views in the kingdom. [00:21:24]



The Apostle here describes if we only saw it our hearts would go out to them we'd see them as our Lord saw them and the other great heart of compassion for them the failure in our missionary and evangelistic zeal is entirely due to this we haven't seen it as it is what they are what they might be and what Christ has done for them. [00:37:39]



We must contemplate men in sin until we are horrified until we are alarmed until we are desperate about them until we're praying for them and until having seen that we've been brought out of it we are ourselves lost in a sense of wonder love and praise very well that is the introduction to the second chapter of Paul's epistle to the Ephesians. [00:40:13]


I should like to call your attention this morning to the words of the Apostle Paul in the Epistle to the Ephesians, in the second chapter and the first verse.

In Paul's epistle to the Ephesians, the second chapter, reading the first verse: "And you hath he quickened, who were dead in trespasses and sins."

In other words, we are resuming this morning our studies in this great and mighty epistle of the Apostle Paul to the church at Ephesus, and probably to certain other churches also in the same locality.

We've already been dealing with the first chapter, and now we begin to study this second chapter. But obviously, if we are to do so in an intelligent and therefore in a profitable manner, there are certain things of which we should remind ourselves.

For instance, there arises at once the question of the relationship of this chapter to the previous chapter. Originally, when this letter was written, it wasn't divided into chapters. But for the convenience of Christian people, and to enable them to understand its message more clearly, these chapter divisions were introduced and have been adopted. They are undoubtedly of very great value, and there is no doubt that the division was made at the right point.

We come, as it were, to the end of the statement in the last verse of the first chapter, and here the Apostle quite clearly is taking up a different aspect of the question. But clearly, there is a connection between the two because we start off with the words, "And you hath he quickened." Clearly, the Apostle is referring back to something that he has already said; he is going to continue.

In other words, if we are to understand this great chapter correctly, we must remind ourselves of its setting and of its background. These epistles always have an argument in them, and especially the first half, roughly, of every epistle is generally an argument. You can divide all your epistles more or less in that way: the first part is the doctrinal, and then the second part is more practical.

Now, in the doctrinal section, there is always an argument which is worked out. It's sometimes a sustained argument, so that as we come to study the scripture, it is very important that we should do two things: one, that we should have a general grasp of the argument, and having got that, we can proceed to the particulars.

Now, both those things are important, and these are the pitfalls that always confront any expositor or any expander of the scripture. There are those who forget the generalities altogether and are concerned only with a particular, and therefore tend to get lost. And there are those who are simply concerned with the general and rarely come down to the particular.

There are people who think that you can deal with the Epistle to the Ephesians in one lecture or one address. Clearly, they have no interest in the details, and there are others who might do it in six or seven or something like that.

Well now, these two things, I say, are of great importance. We must have a firm grasp in our minds of the general argument, but we must also follow the Apostle as he works it out in all its details.

Well now, clearly here, I say we are driven to a reminder of what he has been telling us in the first chapter. We cannot possibly understand the argument of the second chapter if we are not clear about the argument of the first chapter.

Really, let me remind you of it very hurriedly. The great point which the Apostle makes in this epistle, its central theme, is the theme that the Apostle announces in the tenth verse of the first chapter: "That in the dispensation of the fullness of times he might gather together in one all things in Christ, both which are in heaven and which are on earth, even in him."

Now that is, beyond any Christian, the theme of the Epistle. That is the ultimate matter which the Apostle was anxious to make clear to these Ephesians and others. But of course, he doesn't stop at merely stating that; he now goes on to show us how God is doing that.

Therefore, let me remind you hardly of the great principles which we've already been discovering together. The first thing that he keeps on reminding us is obvious: that it is God's plan and that it is God's activity.

He starts, you see, by saying, "Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who hath blessed us," etc. That's the starting point. Therefore, we are concerned about something that God has done. We're not interested here in human activity; we are looking at something that the Lord God Almighty has brought to pass.

This is His plan: to bring in, to reunite, to head up again once more in Christ all things. Now you remember that we saw that that at once throws us back to the doctrine of the fall. Where is the division come in? Why have things gone wrong? Well, there it is. Now God's plan and purpose is to bring them all together again in Christ.

It's His plan, and it is God who is active in this. It is something that God is bringing to pass. Now, I do not pause at each point to stop to emphasize the extreme relevance of all this to our present position, not only as Christians but as citizens in this world.

The tragic thing that is being forgotten by the vast majority of people is that the really important thing in the world this morning is God's activity—what God is doing, not what men are doing. Of course, men are doing things, and it's right that they should do them. I'm not trying to detract from the importance of statesmanship and all these things, but according to the Apostle, the thing to understand above everything else is as to what God is doing.

There is this unseen history which is at the back of the visible history and is much more important. There is this spiritual history which, as it were, underlies all your secular history, and in the light of which secular history becomes comparatively unimportant.

Well now, this is all a part of God's plan, and it is the result of His activity. The Apostle reminds us that it is something that God has planned before the foundation of the world. You see, here we have our very fundamentals of our faith. There's nothing contingent about this.

What God is doing is not dependent upon men and not even dependent upon the response of men. It's all planned out by God. If God's plan were dependent upon us and our response, well then I would be without any hope whatsoever.

You've got to read the history of the church to see that the Christian Church would not have lost it essentially, probably. But these things do not depend upon men; they depend upon God Himself. He has planned it all before the foundation of the world, and therefore it is absolutely certain.

The next thing he reminds us of is that it is entirely due to God's grace and love and mercy and compassion—entirely of grace. I remind you of these things again because as we come to work through this second chapter, we will find that the Apostle goes on repeating it.

We've seen it already in the reading this morning: everything is to the praise of the glory of His grace. He's told us that in verse 6. He stated it in verse 7 that we should be to the praise of His glory, who first trusted in Christ. And at verse 14, he said, "Which is the earnest of our inheritance until the redemption of the purchased possession unto the praise of His glory."

It is all, I say, the result of the grace of God that we are meeting in a Christian church this morning, that we are going to commemorate the death of Christ, that we are going to consider this great salvation. It's all the result of God's exceeding abundant grace, the riches of His grace.

We must hold on to these themes and keep them in our minds, and then that leads us to the next, which I have just mentioned: that it is all in and through the Lord Jesus Christ. There is no such thing as a salvation without Christ at the center.

We mustn't listen to people who tell us about how God is blessing them unless Jesus Christ is central. They may think their prayers are being answered, that they're being guided, and various other things, but God, according to this argument, does not deal with us at all except in Jesus Christ.

All blessings come in Him, through Him, from Him, by Him. I reminded you that the Apostle in the first fourteen verses refers to the Lord Jesus Christ fifteen times. He knows how ready we are to forget Him, and already we ought to think that we can have some direct dealings with God.

It's the tragedy, I say, of mankind that the God has plucked the cross before us. We seem to turn our backs upon it and to think that God can bless us without it, but He cannot.

"In whom we have redemption through His blood, the forgiveness of sins." His purpose is that in the dispensation of the fullness of times He might gather together in one all things in Christ, and it all must center upon Him. If He isn't absolutely central to us, we have no right whatsoever to the name Christian.

How vital it is that we should care about these things! And then, of course, the Apostle has told us in a memorable phrase what it is that God has done for us and the office to us in our Lord and Savior.

It is worth, "Blessed us with all spiritual blessings in heavenly places in Christ." Let us remind ourselves of these things this morning. We are here to thank God and to praise God.

Well, the Apostle has told us something about it. We've got pardon—the forgiveness of sins. That's the first thing we all need. Without that, we are hopeless. We have received it—pardon and forgiveness. Not only that, but adoption, sonship, heirship, a wonderful inheritance, joint heirs with Christ.

Yes, and God has sealed all this to us by giving us the Holy Spirit. He wants us to be sure of all of this, and He wants us to be certain of it, and He wants us to know that we are in union with Christ, that He's made us one with Christ.

We are in Christ. Such are the blessings: "Worth blessed us with all spiritual blessings in heavenly places in Christ Jesus." We are here on earth; we are sitting in Westminster Chapel, yes, but we're in the heavenly places also, as we shall see Him working out in this second chapter.

But all the blessings that we are enjoying are spiritual blessings. The lot of the Christian in this world is sometimes a difficult one and a hard one. He may have problems and trials and tribulations, yes, but he's blessed with all spiritual blessings in the heavenly places.

And if he but realizes that and sets his affection on things above, not on things on the earth, he will rejoice with the giants, peekaboo, and be full of glory.

Well now, there is this great statement of the Apostle in the first ten verses of that first chapter. But then, you remember that towards the end of the chapter, he turns unto something else, and this is what brings us to the second chapter.

He emphasizes the importance of our understanding these things and of our being clear about them. He says to these Ephesians, "Wherefore, after I heard of your faith in the Lord Jesus and love to all the saints," he's heard all that about them, and he rejoices in it.

He sees it is not to give thanks for them, but he doesn't stop at thanking God for them. He makes mention of them in their prayers, and this is what he prays for them: that they may have the spirit of wisdom and of revelation in the knowledge of Him.

He prays that the eyes of their understanding may be enlightened, that they may come to know certain things. Now all that has been done for them—they have been brought into this realm, he tells them.

Yes, but if they're really to enjoy the Christian life, if they're to live it fully, if they're really to function as God's people here upon earth, they must have this spiritual understanding of certain things.

Well, what of it? Well, you remember they're worthy is the greatness of their salvation and the glory of it—that he may know what is the hope of his calling. But then he goes on to say that he wants them to know also the certainty of it, the riches of the glory of His inheritance in the saints.

You see, the Apostle isn't merely writing a theological treatise. His aim all along is very practical; it's very festival. He wants to help these.

He wants them to rejoice in all this. Very many said that's the way to do it: don't start by looking at yourself, but look away at these great glorious things—the hope of His calling, the riches of the glory of His inheritance in the saints.

And then this other thing: the exceeding greatness of His power toward us who believe. We are conscious of feebleness; we are conscious of difficulties; we see the opposition against us—the world organized in sin, the malignity of men, the devil, hell, everything that is set against us.

I know, says Paul, therefore the one thing you must know is this: the exceeding greatness of His power toward us who believe. If only they knew that, they must have their eyes indistinct, the eyes of their understanding enlightened to do that.

So he prays that this may happen to them, and of course, he not only prays for that, but he partly answers his own prayer at once by giving them a certain amount of instruction concerning it.

And you remember how we considered together Paul's illustration of this power. It is the same power that raised the Lord Jesus Christ from the dead and set Him in the heavenly places at the right hand of God, far above all principality and power and might and dominion and every name that is named, not only in this world but also in that which is to come.

That's the power that is working in us. We wouldn't be believers were it not for it.

What is the exceeding greatness of His power to us who believe? We believe according to the working of His mighty power—in virtue of, as the result of, the working of His mighty power.

And then, you remember, we saw how He worked it out in terms of the church. Now we are members of the body of Christ. The power of the head spreads through the whole body. We are not isolated individuals loosely attached to a church; we are very clearly related to Christ.

Now we are members of His body, of His flesh, and of His bones. It's an organic unity. So the power of Christ is in us, and we belong to Him. We are in Him, and He is in us.

Now that the Apostle is anxious that they may know that nothing, therefore, can frustrate this purpose of God, and nothing can withstand these things. They are absolutes, and they are certain.

The thing that you and I have to realize is that it is that very power that is working in us, and that if we are Christians at all this morning, it is because that power has already worked in us.

Now then, says Paul, he's already reminded these Ephesians that this has happened to them. You see, he is working two themes together at the same time: this great idea of everything being reunited in Christ and the power of God which brings that to pass.

He's got the two themes, and he works them out together. You see, he did it in the first chapter in this way: he says, "In whom also we have obtained an inheritance."

Then in verse 13, "In whom also you trusted." You've also got an inheritance. He's already stated his theme.

Then this great purpose of God is already being put into action. There was nothing that ever surprised this man so much as the fact that he, of all men, should be the apostle to the Gentiles.

Here he is writing an epistle to Ephesians—what Gentiles! He who was a Hebrew of the Hebrews, of the tribe of Benjamin, a Pharisee trained at the feet of Gamaliel, one of the most intense nationalists that the world has ever known.

Here he is, this intensive Jew, actually writing to some pagan people and addressing them as equals, rejoicing with them that they're sharing the same thing. And he says, "How has this come to pass?" There's only one answer: it is the power of God.

Now then, he has already stated his theme there in that way in verses 1 to 14 in the first chapter, but now, you see, in chapter 2, he comes to work all this out in detail.

The purpose of chapter 1 was to make a grand general statement of it all, but he never stops at that. He now says, "Let's go on and see in actual practice what in reality God has done."

"You have become fellow heirs in whom ye also trusted after we heard the word of truth, the gospel of your salvation, and you have been sealed with the Holy Spirit of promise, which is the earnest of our inheritance."

Our inheritance altogether until the redemption of the purchased possession. Yes, but I say this is so staggering that we must realize how it's come to pass.

Now then, says the Apostle, let us look together at it. So that in this second chapter, he tells us in detail how the Jews and the Gentiles have been made one—how God has succeeded in reuniting in Christ these disparate and utterly opposed elements.

And his way of doing it is to put it like this: what were the obstacles to this union in Christ? What were the things that separated the Jews and Gentiles? What was the task, if I may so phrase it, that God was confronted with in His desire to bring together again?

Well, the Apostle tells us that there were two main difficulties. The first was the state of the condition of these people by nature. That is what the Apostle deals with in verses 1 to 10 in this second chapter—the condition, the state of these Ephesians, the further conversion in sin.

And before they could be made fellow heirs with the Jews in the kingdom, this condition and state of sin has to be dealt with. "Herewith he quickened who were dead in trespasses and sins," and he elaborates it. That's got to be dealt with.

But there was another matter, and it was a very serious obstacle, and that was the relationship of the Gentiles to the law of God. The law of God had only been given to the Jews; it was never given to the Gentiles. It was something that God gave to His own people and to nobody else.

And of course, it raised up a great middle wall of partition at once. Here were the Jews under the law; there were the Gentiles, the dogs, outside the law, strangers to the Commonwealth of Israel, without hope, without God in the world. Yes, and outside the law in that sense.

Now this was a tremendous problem, so that in the second half of the chapter, from verse 11 to the end of the chapter, the Apostle proceeds to show us how God has dealt with that second difficulty of overcoming this obstacle of the law, which was there as it were prohibiting the Gentile.

But God, says Paul, has done this. He has overcome both these obstacles. He has made of twain one. He has overcome every difficulty.

Always being dealt with, but you notice that at once he reminds us how it has been done. And here, you see, he goes back again to his great themes and his great principles in the first chapter.

You notice he starts by saying, "And you hath he quickened." It's God, you see, all the time. From beginning to end, it is God who has overcome the obstacles. It is God who has brought us together.

And again, he reminds us at once—he doesn't delay for a second—that it is in Christ that God has done it. Yes, and by the blood of His cross.

It all comes back again. How these apostles repeat themselves and go on saying the same thing. Why? Well, because it's salvation, and there's no salvation without it.

And we are, as I say, so constantly prone to forget it. We will bring in our own righteousness and our own deserts, and we keep on asking, "But is there nothing for me to do?" We are so anxious to do something and to justify ourselves.

No, no, sister, it is all in Christ and all by the blood of His cross. It necessitated that nothing else could do it. He would never have come on earth; He would never have died if there were another way.

It is all in Christ, and again you will find that he keeps on emphasizing that it is all of grace. You've noticed he even puts it in brackets: "Even when we were dead in sins hath quickened us together with Christ"—in brackets—"by grace ye are saved."

You shan't get away from this, sister. I will not allow you to get away with your constant assertion of yourself and your merit and your powers. Get rid of it all! You never glory in this until you see that it's all of grace.

"By grace ye are saved," and he goes on elaborating it and repeating it. But of course, the thing that he wants to emphasize above everything in the immediate context is this: that nothing less than the mighty power of God could have done it.

See, that's where he links up immediately with the end of the previous chapter, where he has been telling us about this great power of God manifested in Christ in raising Him from the dead and putting Him there at His own right hand in that place of supreme exaltation.

It's that: "And you hath he quickened." He's done it to you in Christ because you belong to Him. You are in Him; you are members of His body, and nothing but the power of God could have done it.

So, as it were, as I understand it, here the Apostle seems to ask a question: Are we clear about this? Are we quite happy about this? We've spent a long time in working through that first chapter.

Yes, but now the big principles are clear. Have we got them established in our minds? Are we clear to summarize it about this: that nothing but this almighty power of God that was manifested in the resurrection and exaltation of our Lord—nothing but that, nothing less than that, could make us Christian?

Do we understand these matters to this extent that we see not only that God has done something, but that God had to—that our condition was such that nothing less than this could suffice for us?

Very well, the Epistle seems to be asking those questions. Do we know this? Do we realize this? Or if you like, we can put it like this: Do we realize what our salvation means?

If we dance, as the Apostle considers these things, first consider what we were before God began to act in us. Consider the condition of men before God visits him graciously in salvation.

Now, if we are not clear about that, we will never realize why the power of God was essential. And ultimately, there is no question about this: the real trouble with people who are in difficulty about salvation is that they've never understood the biblical doctrine of sin.

The greatest trouble always is an inadequate conception of sin. People who say that if you only put yourself together, if you only live a good life, and so on, that you'll satisfy God and be well-pleased—the real trouble with those people is that they don't understand the meaning of the word sin.

You see, they think they can do it. They've never seen the necessity of this almighty power of God. That's entirely due to the fact that they've never seen themselves as they really are.

Well, the Apostle starts with that. That's the theme of verses 1 to 3 of this second chapter: "You hath he quickened who were dead in trespasses and sins; wherein in time past ye walked according to the course of this world, according to the prince of the power of the air, the spirit that now worketh in the children of disobedience; among whom also we all had our conversation in time past in the lusts of our flesh and of the mind, fulfilling the desires of the flesh and of the mind; and were by nature the children of wrath, even as others."

That's men in sin. That's what we all are. If God left us to ourselves, that's a war on. We'll not be Christians this morning.

And the Apostle's argument, you see, is this: if you want to know the greatness of God's power, you've got to realize the depth of sin. You've got to realize the problem which confronted God. You've got to realize the problem that confronts you—that is, men in sin.

Very well, says Paul, I want to show you this power. We're down first. You can only avail as how high you've been brought up if you realize the depths to which you'd sunk.

That's one. The second, of course, follows. The second thing is that he goes on to show us what God has done for us. That's the theme of this.

His Father said, "But God, who is rich in mercy, for His great love wherewith He loved us, even when we were dead in sins, we were bound in the depths of that grave, as Christ was down in the grave. God, even when we were there, because of His rich mercy, for His great love wherewith He loved us, even when we were dead in sins, hath quickened us together with Christ and hath raised us up together and made us sit together in heavenly places in Christ Jesus."

And it's only as we understand and realize something about that that we shall realize the greatness of God's power.

You see, we tend to think of salvation, don't we, and of Christianity in terms of a little bit of morality and decency. What an insult to the Christian! As if the Christian were just the good and the nice and a harmless individual.

Not at all! He's a man who has undergone all this tremendous change. There has been this dynamic. He's been raised, resurrected; he's in the heavenly places. That's the power of God.

And if you think of your Christianity in those terms, you'll see that nothing but the power of God could do that. Therefore, the Apostle puts it forth in detail, and we've got to consider it.

And then, you see, he comes to the third thing, which he can never leave out. You say to yourself at this point, "Is all this true? Was I really like that—dead in trespasses and sins, walking according to the course of this world, dominated by the prince of the power of the air, living to the lusts of the flesh and of the mind, a child of wrath and disobedient? Was I?"

Is it true that I know this in Christ, in the heavenly places? Is it true that God has done all this and distanced me from that to this? Why has He done it?

And there's only one answer: "According to the riches of His grace, that in the ages to come He might show the exceeding riches of His grace in His kindness toward us through Jesus Christ."

"For by grace ye are saved through faith, and that not of yourselves; it is the gift of God, not of works, lest any man should boast. For we are His workmanship."

Now you see the Apostle's argument. You see how this chapter follows on from chapter number one.

Now let me put certain points, therefore, before we go any further. Isn't it quite clear that it is only as we have realized these things that we shall praise God as we ought?

We were considering together last Sunday morning, "Bless the Lord, O my soul, and all that is within me, bless His holy name." That's the norm for the Christian. Every Christian should be like that and should be doing that.

Why aren't we doing that, my dear friends? There's only one answer to the question: it's because we don't realize what God has done for us. It's because we don't know what sin is in us, because we don't realize what we were and what God has done for us and how He has done it.

If you realize these things, you couldn't help praising God. It's because we don't realize these things that there's such a little sense of wonder in our Christian life.

There is, to me, nothing more appalling than the glibness with which these things are spoken about and the way we take them for granted. My friends, there is nothing so lacking in Christian life today as a sense of wonder.

You need to read these epistles, read the epistles of the others, and as they begin to talk about this great salvation, they stop and they begin to sing. They're filled with wonder; they're amazed; they're astounded.

Are you surprised that you see? Are you amazed at yourself? Is it easy to you an astounding thing that you're in this chapel at this moment listening to this kind of thing, that you are interested in these things? Does it amaze you?

If you realize the truth, it would have to. It's failure to realize these truths that accounts for our loss and our lack of wonder and of worship.

Yes, it's this that accounts for our lack of love to God. Are you worried about the coldness of your heart? I'm sure you are. We all ought to be.

That we can come and eat the bread and the wine and come to this table and be so moved as we do so that our hearts are not overflowing with love to God. Why aren't they overflowing with love?

I'll tell you: it's because we don't realize the greatness of His love. If you want to love God, don't try and work up something inside yourself. Realize His love.

Pray that the eyes of your understanding may be enlightened, that you may realize the peril which you've been held up from—the depths to which you were sunk, your terrible, precarious, perilous position—and what God has done for you of His grace in Christ.

That's the way to realize it, and you will love Him. "We love Him because He first loved us," as John says. It's the same argument.

Very well, the understanding of these things is essential to a sense of wonder, love, and praise.

But come to something still more practical. Do you know it's because we don't realize these things as we ought that we don't feel the burden of the souls of others as we ought?

Christian people are but a handful in the world today. The mess is not outside Christ, outside the church, in godlessness and dear religion, and in a terrible state of sin.

Are we concerned about them? Does their condition burden us? Every missionary sense with regard to our fellow citizens in this country—does the condition of the benighted masses in other lands weigh upon us at all?

Are we concerned about the missionary enterprise? Do we think about these things? Do they burden us? Do we pray to God about them? Are we asking, "What can I do? How can I help? What contribution can I make?"

Are we? If we're not, there's only one explanation: we've never realized the truth about those people in a state of sin.

We are just irritated by them—these people that play polo on Sunday and others. We are just annoyed. That's not enough.

Be concerned about souls. We must be concerned about sin. We must see them as they are—the children of wrath, abounding in this degradation, in this pollution that the Apostle here describes.

If we only saw it, our hearts would go out to them. We'd see them as our Lord saw them, and the other great heart of compassion for them.

The failure in our missionary and evangelistic zeal is entirely due to this: we haven't seen it as it is—what they are, what they might be, and what Christ has done for them.

And the third thing that it brings us to see is this: if we only saw these things truly, you know it would even control our evangelism.

The trouble with all false evangelism is that it doesn't start with doctrine. It doesn't start by realizing men's condition.

All fleshy, kernel man-made evangelism is the result of inadequate understanding of what the Apostle teaches us in the first 10 verses of this second chapter of the Epistle to the Ephesians.

If you and I but realized that every man who is yet a sinner, he is absolutely dominated by the prince of the power of the air, the spirit that now worketh in the children of disobedience.

If we only knew that he is really a child of wrath, dead in trespasses and sins, we would realize that only one power can deal with such an individual, and that is the power of God—the power of the Holy Ghost.

And so we would put our confidence not in man-made organizations but in the power of God, in the prayer that holds onto God and asks for revival and the descent of the Spirit.

We realize that nothing else can do it. We can change men; we can win mental our side into our party; we can do many things, but we can never raise the dead spiritually. God alone can do it.

So that it would absolutely determine and control all our evangelism.

Very well then, my friends, you see why it is that the Apostle Paul is so concerned about these things—why he prays for these Ephesians that the eyes of their understanding may be enlightened.

You see, it's affecting the whole of our Christian life. It affects me individually in my prayer life, my praise, my worship, my love, my relationship to Him, my relationship to other people, my activities as a Christian.

It's all controlled by this. The Apostle has stated it all in principle, yes, but he says you mustn't only see it in principle; you must understand and grasp it in detail.

So I'm going to take you to the details, he says, and he starts off upon it in this second chapter.

And he went away, my friends, must do the same. We must contemplate men in sin until we are horrified, until we are alarmed, until we are desperate about them, until we're praying for them.

And until, having seen that we've been brought out of it, we are ourselves lost in a sense of wonder, love, and praise.

Very well, that is the introduction to the second chapter of Paul's epistle to the Ephesians. That is the essential predominant—if you like it in other language, it's no use rushing at these details without that background.

That's why we must do it—not simply that we may work through verses here and enjoy ourselves as we do so. No, no, no! Christian life is involved here, and we must understand these things.

So let us commit ourselves to God and pray that we may have the eyes of our understandings enlightened, that we may see and know these things—that we may see God's great plan and purpose being worked out, that He alone can do it, but that He does it in Christ, and nothing less than that could do it.

Let us therefore dedicate ourselves to a new consideration of these things, that we may truly be to the praise of the glory of His grace and be of immediate practical help to our fellow men and women—the children of wrath, lost and doomed and condemned in sin.

We do hope that you've been helped by the preaching of Dr. Martin Lloyd-Jones. All of the sermons contained within the MLJ Trust audio library are now available for free download.

You may share the sermons or broadcast them; however, because of international copyright, please be advised that we are asking first that these sermons never be offered for sale by a third party, and second that these sermons will not be edited in any way for length or to use as audio clips.

You can find our contact information on our website at MLJTrust.org. That's MLJTRUST.org.

Subject: Transformed by Grace: Understanding Salvation in Christ



Dear MLJTrust,



What a privilege it was to reflect on the profound truth that we are quickened by God's grace, moving from death in sin to life in Christ.



In last Sunday’s sermon, we explored the Apostle Paul’s powerful message in Ephesians, emphasizing that our salvation is entirely the work of God. We were reminded that we were once dead in our trespasses and sins, yet through His rich mercy and great love, God has quickened us together with Christ. This transformation is not merely a change in behavior but a complete renewal of our very being, rooted in the grace of God and centered in Christ alone.



As we consider these truths, let us not take for granted the depth of our salvation. I urge you to reflect on the greatness of God's power that has brought us from darkness into light. May this understanding compel us to live with a sense of wonder and urgency, sharing the hope we have in Christ with those who are still lost in sin, recognizing that only the power of God can truly transform lives.



Blessings,

MLJTrust Team

Login
Check your email

You should receive an email in the next few seconds with a link to sign you in. Be sure to check your spam folder.

Or

Sign In with Google

Embed link

Add this chatbot onto your site with the embed code below

<iframe frameborder="0" src="https://pastors.ai/sermonWidget/sermon/embracing-gods-call-a-journey-of-faith-and-obedience" width="100%" height="100%" style="height:100vh;"></iframe>
Copy

© Pastor.ai