Looking for a better life?
As you know, this nation, along with
many other nations, has some serious economic problems. But there are some
bright spots, if you look hard enough. Housing prices have fallen 40 percent,
so it might be a good time to buy a house. Or in some cases you can make a deal
with the bank to reduce the amount you owe.
Rents are falling, too, and some
people have asked for and received a reduction in their rent. And there are
some real deals out there, along with some move-in specials and other deals.
I heard in one part of the country
that there was an especially good deal for people on a fixed income. Once you get
in, your rent will never go up. All utilities are paid. There will be free use
of an exercise room, and various entertainment and educational opportunities
are also available. There is good security, and there’s a careful interview
process to make sure that all residents qualify to live there.
And the best part is that it’s free
– free room, free food, even free clothing. [pic of prison] “Some restrictions
apply.”
More seriously, before you move you
really want to know what you are getting into, as much as you can. Some of us
were born here, but most of us have moved here from someplace else.
And why did we move? Because we
thought our life here would be better than if we lived somewhere else. We were
all looking for a better life. We would have more good things here, than wherever we were before. A
better job, a better place to live, better clothes, and other amenities.
But I suggest that we need to look
for a better life in a different sense: we need to be better people. We need to
live in a better way. We need to help others, and to have better relationships
with others. In order to have a higher standard of living, we need a higher
standard of behavior.
Ephesians 2:10 tells us that God has
created us for good works. He wants to give us a good life, and I do mean give. Verse 8 says it comes only by
grace; we can never be good enough on our own to deserve the kind of life that
God wants to give us.
But what does that look like in real
life? What does it look like in our friendships and relationships with other
people?
Today I’d like to move forward in
the book of Ephesians to see how Paul himself describes what the good life is
really like. Let’s go to chapter 4, starting in verse 22. Paul tells his
readers, and that includes us today, You
were taught, with regard to your former way of life, to put off your old self,
which is being corrupted by its deceitful desires;
Paul is describing here a change in
behavior. The old way was corrupted – it was rotten – and the problem was
caused by the way we think. We wanted stuff that wasn’t good for us. We
deceived ourselves into thinking that happiness comes from material goods, from
sensual pleasures, from thinking of ourselves as better than other people, from
winning the competitions we had with other people.
If was basically a selfish approach
to life, and it ended up hurting other people, hurting our relationships, and
hurting us, as well. And so Paul says that in Christ, we have been taught to
put off our old ways, and find a new approach to life.
Verses 23 and 24: to be made new in the attitude of your
minds; 24 and to put on
the new self, created to be like God in true righteousness and holiness. So,
since the problem with the old way of life was in our desires, the solution involves a new attitude – we need to set our
hearts on something different. We need to have desires that do not deceive us –
we need to want things that are really better for us.
Paul says here that our new self is
created to be like God – that is the purpose for which we were made in the
first place, and that is what our new self in Christ should look like. We
have been created to be like God. Not in power or brilliance, but in
righteousness, in the sense of doing what is right.
We were made for that purpose. God
wants us to live with him forever, and he is telling us what that sort of life
is like. This is what we call the Trinitarian life, the way that the Father,
Son, and Holy Spirit live with one another. If we had to describe it in one
word, we could call it righteousness, or holiness, or love, joy, peace,
faithfulness, meekness and kindness.
This is the way that life works best.
If we are going to live forever, and that’s what God is offering us, then we
need to live in such a way that we are not going to cause problems for other
people. If we are supposed to be like God is in righteousness, then we need to find
out what he’s like, and then we need to be like that, too. But as Paul tells us
in other places, we cannot be like God all by ourselves – it comes only from God
living in us. God is the one who does it; our role is simply to agree to what
he wants to do in our lives.
All right, that’s kind of the
overview. Paul gives us some specific examples starting in verse 25: Therefore [that is, because we have
been created to be like God], each of
you must put off falsehood and speak truthfully to his neighbor, for we are all
members of one body.
So the first thing Paul mentions is
that we need to tell the truth. We should stop trying to deceive other people,
because that really messes up relationships. It destroys trust, and
relationships need trust. We cannot have long-range loyalty without truth and
trust. When we deceive people and they find out, they feel betrayed and hurt.
In eternity, we won’t need jobs and
houses and clothing and other material things. We won’t worry about our health
or all sorts of other stuff. But we will have relationships – that’s what we
will have in eternity, so it’s important for us to get our relationships right.
That is what the word “righteousness”
means – it means right conduct in our relationships. Righteousness has no
meaning when it comes to the way we treat rocks. There is no “right” way to
treat a rock. The concept of righteousness has meaning for relationships,
especially relationships with other people, and that’s something that will last
into eternity.
So in order to be like God, to
participate in a life like God has, then we need truth rather than falsehood –
and notice the reason that Paul gives us: “because we are members of one body.”
We are in this together – we are going to be living with each other for a
really long time, so if we hurt somebody else, it is like shooting ourselves in
the foot. We are hurting ourselves, in the long run.
Paul is saying that the main reason
for right behavior is that we are all members of one body. We are one community,
one people. God has made us so that we will be like he is in righteousness, in
the way that we treat other people. God’s purpose for us is righteousness, and
that means relationships.
Let’s look at his next example, in
verses 26 and 27: “In your anger do not
sin”: Do not let the sun go down while you are still angry, 27 and
do not give the devil a foothold.
Anger, in itself, is not always
wrong. The Bible describes God as
being angry at some of the stuff some people do to hurt and abuse defenseless
people. Parents are right to be angry
when one child purposely hurts another. We love them and are angry at what they
have done, all at the same time.
So in theory, anger isn’t always wrong.
But in practice, it usually is. Anger is very destructive to human relationships,
and so Paul says, Be careful with your anger. Don’t stay angry, don’t go to bed
angry, because if you keep nursing a grudge against someone, you are acting
like the devil, accusing people and being an adversary. That sort of attitude
kills relationships.
Another example in verse 28: He who has been stealing must steal no
longer, but must work, doing something useful with his own hands, that he may
have something to share with those in need.
It’s not enough to just quit
stealing, or just stop doing bad stuff. No, we also need to start doing
something good. We don’t just go from bad to neutral, from doing bad stuff to
doing nothing at all. Rather, we replace bad behavior with doing something
good. In this case, we try to earn enough money so that we can help someone who
needs help.
Do you think that there was a big
problem with thievery in the first-century church? I don’t think so. Everybody
in the ancient world knew that they weren’t supposed to steal stuff.
So why did Paul tell people to stop
stealing? I suspect that he includes this because it’s a really good
illustration of replacing destructive behavior with constructive
behavior. It shows a change of attitude from greed and selfishness, to
generosity and helpfulness. It’s a change from the attitude of “get” to the
attitude of “give.”
So far, Paul has mentioned:
·
the
words we use – truth rather than falsehood –
·
and
attitudes that we have – peace rather than anger –
·
and
actions that we do – giving rather than stealing.
Now in verse 29 he gives another
illustration about words: 29 Do
not let any unwholesome talk come out of your mouths, but only what is helpful
for building others up according to their needs, that it may benefit those who
listen.
What does he mean by “unwholesome”
talk? I’m not sure, but it seems to be talk that tears other people down
instead of building them up. It’s gossip about how bad they are. It’s
negativism that says, “You’re never going to amount to anything; you are too ugly;
you are too sinful for God to ever like you.” Those sort of comments damage
relationships, and they are contrary to God’s purpose for our lives.
So what do we do instead? We need
talk that helps others according to their needs, that it gives them some sort
of benefit. It encourages them, helps them improve, lets them know that
somebody cares about them and wants them to do well in life. It’s words that
tell people that the Creator of the Universe made them for a purpose, and he
won’t give up on them. It’s words that strengthen bonds of friendship, words
that express loyalty rather than betrayal, words that build community instead
of tearing it apart.
Paul’s next words seem at first to
be on a completely different topic. In verse 30 he writes, And do not grieve the Holy Spirit of God, with whom you were sealed for
the day of redemption.
Everything else in this part of
Paul’s letter is about our relationships with one another. Why is he suddenly
concerned about our relationship with the Holy Spirit? Why does he say, Don’t
disappoint the Holy Spirit?
I think he does this for two
reasons. First, the Holy Spirit does care about how we treat one another, and
the kind of words we use with one another. When our words are used to tear down
instead of build up, the Holy Spirit is sad – sad at what we have done to the
relationship, sad at how we have hurt someone in the same body, sad that we are
reinforcing in ourselves a habit that isn’t good for us.
Second, the Holy Spirit is the
divine life that is working in us. He is the one who encourages us to do right,
to be helpful, to be truthful. And when we refuse his advice, we are refusing
him, and that grieves our relationship with him. He does care about what we do,
but even more about what sort of persons we are.
Now, all of us fall short. We
disappoint ourselves, and sometimes thwart what God is trying to do in our
lives. But there is no reason for us to despair, Paul says, because the Holy
Spirit’s relationship with us is not fragile. He is not looking for an excuse
to break it off and abandon us to our own folly.
No, Paul says that the Holy Spirit
seals us for the day of redemption – the time in the future when we will be
resurrected and given transformed bodies far better than what we have now. He
has sealed us, earmarked us for God’s family. He wants us to be there, and he
will never disown us.
He is fiercely loyal to us, and even
though we are sometimes faithless toward him, he is always faithful toward us.
We are sealed for salvation, and God won’t give up on us. That’s why he cares
so much about what we do and how we live – because we’ll be living with him,
and with each other, for a long, long time.
Paul has now given several specific
examples. In verse 31 he gives a whole basketful at once: Get rid of all bitterness, rage and anger, brawling and slander, along
with every form of malice.
Why does the Bible give us rules
like this? Is it because God just wants to give us a test that he knows we
can’t pass? Did he just make up these rules to make life difficult for us? No,
not at all. He wants to make life easier
for us, not difficult, and these are the sort of things that mess lives up.
These are the sort of things that hurt people, and God says,
Hey, wait a minute. I like those
people just as much as I like you, and I don’t want you hurting them with your
words of anger, or your slander, and I don’t want them to hurt you in that sort of way, either. Life in
my kingdom doesn’t have any room for that sort of back-stabbing, so that’s not
a very good habit to have. Get rid of it, and life will work a lot better for
everyone concerned.
Bitterness isn’t good for
your health, and it’s not good for your relationships. Rage and anger are
dangerous, and brawling is just plain stupid. And get rid of that bad attitude
called malice. Don’t harbor bad thoughts about people and hope for bad things
to happen to them. This is not what you were created for. This might be what
you did in the past, but this is not the future I have designed for you.
Now, after this basket of rotten
fruit, Paul gives us a basket of good fruit in verse 32, with a few good things
to do instead of malice and rage: Be
kind and compassionate to one another, forgiving each other, just as in Christ
God forgave you.
Be compassionate. Care about other
people. That’s a basic rule of good relationships. That’s a basic guideline for
what it means to be like God in his righteousness. Don’t view your
relationships as a competition for who’s best, for who’s the most important,
for who gets their way.
And in this imperfect world, things
don’t always go right. People don’t always treat us right, even when they are
trying to. Sometimes even the best of people are going to hurt our feelings, do
something that disappoints us, embarrasses us or makes like more difficult for
us. And when that happens, the basic rule of good relationships is to forgive
each other.
Just remember: You were created to
be like God, and his Spirit lives in you, so let him do in you what he does for you – he forgives us a lot, so we should be
willing to forgive other people the stuff they do to us. God forgave the people
who killed his Son. In Acts 7, Stephen forgave the people who were killing him.
God is willing to forgive us no matter what we do to him, even when we were his
enemies, and so we should be willing to forgive other people no matter what
they do to us.
Is that difficult? You bet it is.
But we really do need to forgive other people – for our own sake just as much
as for theirs. As long as the desire for revenge eats at us, we will be captive
to it. It is only when we let go of those hurts of the past, that we can be
freed from a burden we were never supposed to carry.
Some of us carry great pain and an
unwillingness to forgive someone who hurt us a great deal. If that’s you, that
attitude isn’t helping you very much, is it? I suggest that you counsel with
someone about it. That can help lift a burden off of you that is really too big
to carry. Depending on the kind of pain you carry, it can take a long time to
process it all. But the sooner you start, the sooner you’ll complete the
process.
So learn to forgive, Paul says.
Learn to be like God in that respect, too. That is the sort of life that he is
inviting you to enjoy for all eternity. Don’t let something that happened to
you years ago, keep you in its clutches. Don’t let that evil person keep a ball
and chain on your life today. Learn to let go, to forgive, to pray for your
enemies instead of harboring malice toward them.
Paul summarizes his teaching in
chapter 5, verse 1:
Be
imitators of God, therefore, as dearly loved children.
We were created to be like God, so
in all these instructions, Paul is telling us to be like God is. Since we are
his children, we need to act like he does. This is not something we do to earn
a spot in eternity – no, Paul says that we are already in the family. We just
need to learn what this family lives like so we can do it, too.
And the summary word for God’s life
is “love,” as Paul says in verse 2: and live a life of love, just as Christ loved
us and gave himself up for us as a fragrant offering and sacrifice to God.
Again, God set the example. He is
not asking us to do anything he isn’t willing to do himself. God is love, the
Bible says, and that pretty much describes the relationship we are supposed to
have with everyone around us, and it describes the relationship we will have in
eternity.
But we can’t just make up our own
definition of love. Our culture talks about “making love,” but what it seems
like most of the time is that they are just setting somebody up for betrayal.
They use the word “love” for selfish purposes, and that is exactly the opposite
of what it’s supposed to mean.
In one of John’s letters, he tells
us what love is – he says, This is how we know what love is – Jesus Christ died
for us. Love means being willing to suffer to help somebody else. It means
thinking about how we can help somebody else, not how we can get what we want.
It means telling the truth, it means
getting rid of anger, it means working in order to share with people who have
needs, it means giving encouraging words instead of words that put other people
down. It means saying sorry for what we’ve done wrong, it means forgiving when
people do something wrong to us. It means being like God in righteousness and
holiness. It means living like he does; it means letting him live in us.
Most of us moved here because we
thought we’d have a better life here. Now I’d like you to think about another “move”
– a move to the kingdom of God. There is certainly a better life there, in both
senses of the word. There are better things for us, and we are better
people – and the kingdom of God is a wonderful destination precisely because
there are better people there, and we will be better, too. God has designed us
for this very purpose, and he is not going to give up on the good things that
he wants to give us. He is always faithful to his purpose.
But we do not have to wait for the
future to be better people, to have a better life. The kingdom of God exists
even now, in all of God’s children, in all the people the Holy Spirit lives in.
Why is that?
It’s because Jesus gave himself for
us as a fragrant offering and sacrifice. He has done whatever it takes for us
to be in God’s good graces. He has paid the price, or whatever other metaphor
you want to use, so that we can be there. We are included as part of the
family; now he just asks us to act like it, to let the Holy Spirit do his
transforming work in our minds, to change our desires and attitudes, to
strengthen our relationships, to let love and loyalty be the story of our life
rather than betrayal and bitterness.
But it does require some fundamental
changes in the way people live. Paul says to put off the old rotten way of
life. Most of us have already begun this process, to one degree or another. But
no one has completed the process yet. We can always improve, we can always have
a better life, because God offers us the
best life possible – his very own life that he wants to share with us for
all eternity. The perfect love that is characteristic of the Father, Son, and
Holy Spirit, is being offered to us.
How do we describe this life of
divine love? One way to describe it is righteousness, truthfulness, helpfulness,
and forgiveness. This is what Paul says that we, as God’s dearly loved
children, need to choose. This is the life that he offers, and he hopes that we
accept it not just for the distant future, but for the good it will do in our
life and our relationships right now.
But it requires a change – a change
from the way life used to be, and change away from the way life still is for
many people. Paul says in verse 3: But
among you there must not be even a hint of sexual immorality, or of any kind of
impurity, or of greed, because these are improper for God’s holy people.
We should avoid even the appearance
of sexual immorality. Why? Not because Paul is prudish, but because God created
sex for something more important than casual entertainment and trivial
relationships. Sex was designed to strengthen the exclusive relationships we
call marriage, that give children the stability and security that gives them
confidence – and when sex is used outside of the context of an exclusive
relationship, then it weakens its role in marriage.
Well, a lot more could be said on
that, but we don’t need to do it today. Paul is not focusing on that here – it
is just one illustration out of several of things we need to keep well away
from. We also need to avoid impurity and greed, because these are contrary to
the way God’s people should be, for the simple reason that they are contrary to
the way God is.
Verse 4: Nor should there be obscenity, foolish talk or coarse joking, which are
out of place, but rather thanksgiving.
So we need to keep our language
clean, and keep our jokes clean. We don’t need dirty jokes that tarnish
something that God made good. What we need, Paul says, is an attitude of
gratitude. Instead of having our mind in the gutter, or in the sewer, we need
to set our minds on things above, on the good things that God is preparing for
us. Or maybe I should say that God is preparing us for the good things. Either
way, it’s good, and it’s his gift to us, and we ought to be really thankful for
it, because it’s far better than what we deserve. When we remember our future,
we can be really thankful about the present.
In verse 5 Paul tells us why we
should avoid dirty jokes: For of this
you can be sure: No immoral, impure or greedy person—such a man is an idolater—has
any inheritance in the kingdom of Christ and of God.
Now, as Paul says in other letters,
we used to be like that. We used to
have behavior that was contrary to the kingdom of God, but we were forgiven, we
were washed, we were set apart for God’s use by his grace, and the Holy Spirit
now lives in us to change us from that, into something better.
If you are greedy, Paul says, then you have
an idol. If getting more stuff is more important to you than following God,
then you have an idol. If immorality is stronger in your life than the desire
to follow God, then you have an idol. And if you really like impurity, then you
have an idol. And don’t think you can bring idolatry into the kingdom of God.
It just doesn’t fit.
If you really want those corrupt
desires, then you won’t even like the
kingdom of God, because they won’t be there. If you are doing those things,
then you are not participating in the kingdom of God. That doesn’t mean that
you are doomed to failure.
No – Paul is just saying that we end
up getting what we want. If we want greed and impurity, then that’s what we
will get. And if we want to be rescued
from greed and impurity, then we will be rescued in the kingdom of God. If we
had those things in our life before, then we don’t have to keep them. We can
change for the better.
And so I ask you: Do you want a
better life? You can move, if you want, deeper into the kingdom of God. Christ
has already qualified you to be there, but he doesn’t force you to go. It’s not
just a better life – it is the best life
– the life of God that he wants to share with you.
January 2009