Friday, September 29, 2017

Final Benediction


I began this series on Ephesians months ago.  Now we are at the end.  Paul has driven home his message:  Through Christ, a gracious God has created one new people to live for him and work for him in the real world.
Even as he wrote—or more likely dictated—the final words of the letter (6:21-24), this message must have been on his mind. 
Of course, the people in the churches were on his mind as well.  For this reason he sent Tychicus.  One of those individuals we would love to know more about, Tychicus was a gentile from the province of Asia, so Paul was sending him back home with this letter and a report on the apostle’s situation.
In so doing Paul was modeling the new relationship that should mark God’s people: Paul, a Jew, regards Tychicus, a gentile, as “a beloved brother.”  Moreover, he trusts this “faithful servant” to carry the letter to the Ephesians (and with letters to the Philippians and the Colossians) and to accurately report on what Paul faced.  Some scholars suggest Tychicus may have been sent to Crete to relieve Titus (Titus 3:12) so he could join the imprisoned Paul.  It isn’t clear that happened but Paul does mention plans to send him to Ephesus (2 Timothy 2:12); again, this was so Paul’s protégé could join him, bringing some crucial supplies: “the cloak … left with Carpus at Troas, also the books, and above all the parchments.”  (It isn’t clear if Timothy was able to reach Paul before the apostle’s execution.)  This leaves us to speculate about the number of visits Tychicus made to Ephesus. 
What is less open to speculation is the purpose of Tychicus’s visit to Ephesus.  He came to inform them about Paul’s situation and to encourage them.  Certainly he had more to say thank,  “Well, Paul is still in jail.”  No, the likely report went something like this, “Yes, Paul is still in prison but he is still rejoicing, still witnessing, still overcoming right there in the jail.” (cf. Phil. 1:12-14)  Such a report testifies to the sustaining power of faith.
If that at all represents the report Tychicus brought, it models how we might answer the simple question, “How are you?”  Of course, when someone is just offering a traditional greeting it isn’t necessary to give a list of all the challenges we might be facing.  That can be weird.  But, sometimes people ask the question and we know they want more than a superficial, clichéd response.  How good when we can balance an honest recognition of the tough things and a joyous testimony of the good things. 
Paul now turns to his final benediction.  While it contains elements found in other benedictions, the order is different.  Peace precedes grace and both precede love.
Above all, Paul wanted the Ephesian Christians—and all Christians—to know “peace,” the harmony that transcends differences.  He longed to see Jews and Gentiles functioning as one new people; reconciled in such a way that the past, though not really forgotten, can no longer drive a wedge between them.  Such peace is rooted in “love with faith,” love born out of their common faith in Christ, a faith which sees God’s great purpose to make one new people. 
In a world filled with divisions, social, economic, political, racial, and cultural this vision cannot become a reality without God’s “grace” in the hearts of “all … who love our Lord Jesus Christ with love that never ends, an imperishable/undying love.”  Where such love exists, Christian people can live in harmony; where such love withers, Christian people are divided and spoil their testimony.
As I think about this benediction, I recall the indictment made against the Ephesian church in letters to the seven churches of Asia Minor found in the opening chapters of the Revelation.  Though he praised their hard work, passion for purity, commitment to the faith, and willingness to face hardship, the Lord declared the church had one great deficit. 
“‘I know your works, your toil and your patient endurance, and how you cannot bear with those who are evil, but have tested those who call themselves apostles and are not, and found them to be false. I know you are enduring patiently and bearing up for my name's sake, and you have not grown weary. But I have this against you, that you have abandoned the love you had at first.”
Each of the elements Paul mentions in this benediction is important but, perhaps, none is more important to a church that wishes to last than love.
The vision Paul embraces in this benediction is one that changes so much.  If taken seriously, it would end much division in the world.  Unfortunately, the church has often failed to take the vision of Ephesians seriously.
Too often, the church has allowed anti-Semitism to flourish.
Too often, the church has divided over trivial matters, failing to remember there is “one faith, one Lord, one baptism….”
Too often, the church has failed to demonstrate the love that makes us brothers and sisters to fellow Christians regardless of their race or cultural background.
In short, we have failed to live like new people.  But, recognizing this, we can repent and allow Christ to make us his “workmanship,” his “masterpiece,” his “poetry.” (2:10)

Thank you for reading this far.  If you are a regular visitor to the blog, you know I haven’t posted in a few weeks.  There were some technical problems that I won’t detail but I do appreciate your faithfulness.

As I bring this study to an end, I want to announce an important decision I have made about my blog. There will be fewer sermons and more essays and observations on a variety of topics.  Sometimes I will look back and comment on what happened years ago, sometimes I will look around and comment on what is happening now.  Sometimes I may even look inside and comment on what is happening in me—but not too often.  Please stay with me and, if you like what you read, tell your friends.