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Paul
says to those Ephesians, "Friend, when we get to heaven, there are not going
to be any Baptists, Methodists, or Presbyterians. There are going to be
people covered by the blood of Jesus standing there overwhelmed by the grace
of their salvation. There, for sure, we will realize that we have been made
in heaven by the grace of God." The label that is on us should be just
simply, "Jesus." That’s it. Wherever we go, whatever we do, when people look
at us they ought to see Him. When they hear us, they ought to hear Him. When
they watch us, they ought to see Him. You see, in everything that we do,
that label ought to be upon us.
Well, let’s look at the fact that we are made in heaven by the grace of God.
In
verses 8-10 we are the living demonstration of God’s grace. First of all,
look at this thought in verses 8 and 9, by the grace of God. We are what we
are by the grace of God. Verse 8 says,
"For by grace you have been saved
through faith; and that not of yourselves, it is
the gift of God."
In other words, I am a product of God and His grace.
It is a gift of God. Paul is telling the Gentile believers that they are
what they are because of the grace of God.
If somebody gets up to testify of
their salvation experience, they have not one right under heaven to say they
had anything to do with it. Grace is what only God can do to a man, for a
man, in a man and through a man that a man could never do and on this earth
will never deserve. It will never be deserved in any way. It is what God has
done for you and me. A believer cannot take any credit whatsoever for his
salvation.
Paul
says in Verse 8,
"For by
grace you have been saved through faith; and that not of yourselves."
It kind
of tickles me sometimes to say that there are two "not's" in Greek, but
there are. The first one is me, which is a relative "not", and means
sometimes, sometimes yes, sometimes no. It always is subjective to whatever
you are talking about. However there is another not in Scripture. It is the
word ou
and it means absolutely not in any way, shape or form. Paul says, "We are
saved by grace, not in any way, shape or form, of yourselves. It is the gift
of God."
Now I
can hear somebody saying, "You said not of anything of man and yet you say,
we must believe. How do you reconcile that?" Well first of all, let’s see if
we can explain it. The word "faith" there is the word
pistis.
It means to put your trust in and to obey. That’s exactly what the Ephesians
had done. Look back at 1:13. It is the same form of the word. In Ephesians
1:13 Paul writes,
"In Him, you also, after listening to the
message of truth, the gospel of your salvation—having also believed, you
were sealed in Him with the Holy Spirit of promise."
There has got to be belief. When the gospel is
presented, revealed to the human heart, there has got to be a response of
faith, of receiving of trusting in, of being willing to obey what the gospel
has said. There is one thing we tend to overlook, lest anybody think you did
anything to get saved: it is all God’s idea.
Turn to
Philippians 1:29. I want to show you something. Not only is our salvation by
the grace of God, even the way we receive it is by the grace of God.
"For to
you, it has been granted for Christ’s sake, not only to believe in Him, but
also to suffer for His sake."
Now if
you jump to the suffering, you pick up the fact that Paul is in prison. He
is talking about that, but he said something else there. You have also been
granted, it is given as a gift, to believe in Him, which is in the present
tense.
By the way, there is a difference
here. When God enables a person to see the gospel revealed to him by the
Holy Spirit and be convicted of his sin by the Holy Spirit, He also enables
him with a different kind of belief than what man calls belief. Belief is
not static. That’s human belief. "Oh, I understand. I think I know
what you are talking about. I’ll do what you say." It stops right there.
With God, when He quickens belief in a person’s heart, when he is responding
to gospel of their salvation, it is a belief that starts and never stops.
Oh, it may wane for a while. It may even be little for a while. It might be
like the centurion, "Lord, I believe, help me in my unbelief." But that
spark is still there. That flame is still there. You see, what starts by God
continues.
That is
why the Apostle John over in I John doesn’t say, "Did you get saved back
here?" Every time he says, "Those who believe," in the present tense.
Listen, it is no good to go back and say "I believed back then" if you are
not believing right now. God quickens that measure of faith that He gave to
all men on this earth. When that is enacted, when they respond out of the
grace of God to the gospel of their salvation, it is something that starts
and it never, ever, ever stops. It has been granted to you to believe in
Him. So, yes, we must respond. Yes, it must be a response of faith. But my
friend, God gave you the faith to respond, and it is God who, when you do
respond in His power and by His grace, enables that belief to go on and on
and on and on and on. There is one thing then we must remember: our
salvation is by the grace of God.
Going
back to Ephesians 2, verses 8 and 9 say,
"For by
grace you have been saved through faith; and that not of yourselves, it is
the gift of God, not as a result of works, that no one should boast."
Now
what does he mean, the result of works? Well, it is a deed. That word is
used three times in the book of Ephesians. Let’s just find out how Paul
wants us to see it used. First of all, it is in 1:11. It refers to that
which someone does, a deed that a person does:
"also
we have obtained an inheritance, having been predestined according to His
purpose who works all things after the counsel of His will."
Who
does something? You see, a deed is something you do.
In
chapter 2 it is used again in verse 10.
"For we
are His workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works."
So it
is not only what somebody does, it is what they are supposed to do. It is a
deed, something you do.
In
Ephesians 3:20, it even conveys the idea of the energy of that deed.
"Now to
Him who is able to do exceeding abundantly beyond all that we ask or think,
according to the power that works within us."
That’s
energy. That word is the energy behind a deed that one does. Now you say,
"Why are you laboring the point?" Well, anything that a man does in his own
energy is not and cannot be the basis for his salvation other than
activating the faith that God has already given him to respond to the gospel
of the Lord Jesus Christ. Salvation is from God alone. We are products of
His grace, made in heaven by the grace of God.
Now,
what work could anybody attach to being saved? Some people say you have to
be baptized to be saved. Have you ever heard that? There are some people who
say, "Hey, it is not even the baptism. You’ve got to believe, when you are
being baptized, that the water cleanses your sin and washes away your sin,
so that you can be regenerated. If you don’t believe that when you were
baptized, then you aren’t saved when you are baptized." Some people say,
"You have to be baptized by a minister of a particular church that holds to
that creed. You can’t just be baptized by anybody." Folks, how does that
match up with what Paul says here? Not of works, in no way of yourself,
not of any energized deed
that you do can you be saved. In no
way can you be saved.
You
see, salvation is that which God does. We are what we are because of the
grace of God. He is telling these Ephesians, "The Jews can’t take any
credit. You can’t take any credit.
We are all what we are by the grace of God."
Secondly, His label should be on what we do. We should do what we do by the
grace of God. Now that is different. We are what we are. Yes sir, I’ll wear
that label. But on what I do, I put my own label because I’ll do it and ask
God to bless it. Is that what verse 10 says? Let’s look at it. He says,
"For we are
His workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared
beforehand, that we should walk in them."
Uh oh.
"Beforehand" in the context of Ephesians means before the foundation of the
world. You mean only God knows what those good works are? Well, that’s the
thought I’ve got. They are in Christ.
That is the only way they can be accomplished, and we are to walk in them.
Not only are we to have His label on who we are, but we are to have His
label on what and how we do what we do.
Notice
I said we should do what we do by His grace. We have a choice here. You say,
"Wait a minute, you’re confusing me. I’m to walk in these good works, I am
not to come up with them; He has already predestined them before the
foundation of the world. How in the world can I walk in something if I don’t
know what they are?" Well now, many of them we do know. They are right here
in the Word. You need to remember we are only in Chapter 2 of Ephesians.
We’re laying the ground work for chapters 4-6. We haven’t gotten to the
instructional part. We are in the doctrinal part right now. Now the
instructional part makes a lot of sense, if you understand the doctrinal
part.
How are
we going to walk in those works? It’s not going to be because of our own
self-effort or our own creativity. We were saved by the grace of God,
therefore, what we do should be by the grace of God. That is only what God
can do in a man, to a man, for a man and through a man. Ephesians 5:18 says,
"And do
not get drunk with wine, for that is dissipation, but be filled with the
Spirit."
The
tense here means "being at all times." That’s the Spirit-filled life. How do
I walk in those works when I don’t know what they are apart from His
intervention in my life? I simply am being filled at all times with the
Spirit of God. What does that mean? Listen, it doesn’t mean I get something
new every day. It means I’ve already got what I need. I bow to that every
day. I am submissive to Him, yielded to Him, and overwhelmed that this is
His idea and not my idea. In other words when I understand this is God’s
work, when I am yielded to His Word and His will, then His Spirit within me
begins to produce, with my cooperation, through me works that are good and
have His label on them. It is not my label. His label is on them.
As a
matter of fact, in Galatians 3:1ff Paul writes
"You foolish
Galatians, who has bewitched you, before whose eyes Jesus Christ was
publicly portrayed as crucified? This is the only thing I want to find out
from you: did you receive the Spirit by the works of the Law, or by hearing
with faith? Are you so foolish? Having begun by the Spirit, are you now
being perfected by the flesh?"
"You
got saved in the Spirit. You wore His label of salvation. Now are you going
to be sanctified by the flesh?" You know, a lot of people are hung up in
that. They don’t mind wearing the label and saying, "Hey, I didn’t have
anything to do with my salvation." But they take on the responsibility that
they have everything to do with their sanctification, as if they have got to
work their way into perfection.
Philippians 1:6 says,
"For I
am confident of this very thing, that He who began a good work in you will
perfect it until the day of Christ Jesus."
It is
all Christ and what He does in our life. We simply line up. We simply
cooperate with Him. What comes out of that intimate relationship with Him in
His Word is called the good works.
Do you
want to see what the deeds of the flesh are, what we can do, what we will
end up being, what the root attitudes are? In Galatians 5:19 Paul tries to
warn them. He tells them if they live this way, they can’t even be saved. If
they start acting these ways nobody will ever know they are even Christians.
Verse 19 says,
"Now the deeds
of the flesh are evident, which are: immorality, impurity, sensuality,
idolatry, sorcery, enmities, strife, jealousy, outbursts of anger, disputes,
dissensions, factions, envying, drunkenness, carousing."
He doesn’t
even finish the list. He says,
"I have
forewarned you that those who practice such things shall not inherit the
kingdom of God."
In
other words, you don’t want this stuff to get in your life. You don’t want
the flesh to control your life. These things will start coming in your life,
and people won’t know if you are saved or if you are lost.
It says
in verse 22,
"But
the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness,
faithfulness, gentleness, self-control; against such things there is no
law."
In
other words, I want you to see there is a difference in what comes out of a
person when he is in tune with the One who lives in him. There is a
difference when he does it himself and when God through him does a work. He
has done a work to us. That is the label we wear, "Made in heaven by the
grace of God."
Now He
wants to do a work through us on earth by the grace of God. That’s what He
wants to do. Look at 2 Timothy 3:16-17. I think this explains it even
better. The first part of chapter 3 is about loving self. A lover of self is
one. The first characteristic is a lover of money. In Verse 10 he switches
to people who love God. In that context we find verse 16.
"All
Scripture is inspired by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for
correction, for training in righteousness that the man of God may be
adequate, equipped for every good work."
Now
wait a minute. Which comes first, the work or the word? You see what happens
is, we get saved by grace. I’ll wear that label. Then we jump into the work.
No. We must surrender to the Word so then we are equipped for every good
work. His label should not only be on what we are, but it should be on what
we do.
Well, I
could have added another one. One day we will be what we will be by the
grace of God. We are what we are by the grace of God. We should do what we
do by the grace of God, and one day we will be what we will be by the grace
of God. His grace continues to be demonstrated in us from ages to ages, to
ages to come of His love and mercy towards His creation.
That’s what
Paul is saying. You are saved by the grace of God. You are made in heaven by
the grace of God. Wear His label on who you are and wear His label on what
you do. Don’t you dare take an ounce of credit for any of it. |