He Himself. Ephesians 2:14-18 Pastor Jason Van Bemmel

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1 He Himself Ephesians 2:14-18 Pastor Jason Van Bemmel For he himself is our peace, who has made us both one and has broken down in his flesh the dividing wall of hostility 15 by abolishing the law of commandments expressed in ordinances, that he might create in himself one new man in place of the two, so making peace, 16 and might reconcile us both to God in one body through the cross, thereby killing the hostility. 17 And he came and preached peace to you who were far off and peace to those who were near. 18 For through him we both have access in one Spirit to the Father. Eph 2:14-18, ESV Introduction: Alienation and Hostility Two of the most persistent and deeply rooted problems in our world are alienation and hostility. Individual people and groups of people feel cut off, isolated abandoned, estranged this is alienation and individual people and groups of people also fight with each other on large and small scales. Sometimes, alienation leads to hostility, as we can see in many rebellious teenagers who feel isolated and misunderstood within their own families and who then act out in anger and resentment. Sometimes it is alienation that creates hostility and, in other cases, it is hostility that creates alienation. What we re seeing now in the ISIS refugee situation is a case where evil men have created a violent hostility that has displaced tens of thousands of people from their homes and created alienation on a mass scale. It s not just on a human-to-human level that we must deal with the issues of alienation and hostility. Here in Ephesians 2, we see that we face these two problems spiritually in our relationships with God and with one another. In verses 11-13, which we looked at two weeks ago, we see how the Gospel deals with our alienation from God. Verse 13 says, But now in Christ Jesus you who once were far off have been brought near by the blood of Christ. Now, in verses 14-18, we ll see how God deals with the issue of hostility, and we ll see that both problems are solved in the same way, through the Gospel the good news of who Jesus is and what He has done for us.

2 I. He Himself is Our Peace The first answer Paul gives to the problem of hostility might be surprising. He opens verse 14 with an emphatic statement: He Himself is our peace. Before Paul tells us how Christ makes peace and removes the hostility between Jew and Gentile and between us both and God, he wants us to know clearly that Christ has done so much more than just make peace. He has made peace in such a way that He Himself has become and is our peace. Some people want the benefits of Christ without Christ Himself. Some Christian leaders and teachers have taught that we can have peace in our lives and peace in our world by applying Christian principles, the teachings of Jesus, to our lives and to our global politics. But Paul does not say that Christ has taught us how to make peace or is the teacher of the principles of peace. No, he says that He Himself is our peace. Peace is found in the person of Jesus Christ and nowhere else. This is because Christ makes peace in Himself and we find peace in Him alone. II. Peace Accomplished, vv. 14-16 Paul explains how Christ accomplished, or made, peace in an unusual order. We might expect him to begin with peace with Good and then turn to peace between peoples. But he doesn t. In verses 14-15, he first explains how Jesus makes peace between Jews and Gentiles and then, in verse 16, he explains how Christ makes peace between both kinds of believers and God. Both the horizontal peace between Jewish and Gentile believer and the vertical peace between both Jewish and Gentile believers and God are made in Christ Himself. In fact, they re made at the same time and in the same way- at the cross. Two things are needed for Christ to make peace: Hostility must be destroyed and a new type of humanity must be created. Thus there is the negative aspect of peace, the destruction of hostility, and the positive aspect of peace, the creation of a new humanity. In all peace-making and reconciliation, the hostility must first be removed or destroyed before a new relationship or a new reality can be established. a. Hostility Destroyed So first, the hostility is destroyed and then new creation is realized. Listen to a very literal rendering of verses 14-16 to hear this: For He Himself is our peace, having made the two one and having broken the middle wall of separation, the hostility, in His flesh, having nullified the law of commandments in ordinances, that He might create the two in

Himself into one new man, thus making peace, and that He might reconcile both in one body to God through the cross, having killed the hostility in Himself. Paul refers to two different hostilities here, one of which Christ has broken and the other of which he has killed. Christ broke the hostility between Jew and Gentile by breaking down the middle wall of separation, which He did by nullifying the law of commandments in ordinances. He did this in His own flesh. Christ killed the hostility between man and God by reconciling us to God through the cross, where He killed the hostility in Himself. So, that s what Paul says, but what does he mean? After all, he uses a lot of important words but the meaning is not crystal clear- at least, it wasn t to me when I first read it. So many questions arise: What s the middle wall of separation? What does Paul mean when he says that Christ nullified the law? How could Christ kill the hostility in Himself? So let s look more closely to find these answers and more: The hostility between Jew and Gentile is described as a middle wall of partition or separation that needed to be broken. In the Temple in Jerusalem, a wall separated the Court of the Gentiles from the Jewish courts. The Gentile courts were farther away from the throne room of God in the Holy of Holies, while the Courts of the Jews were closer. In between the two stood a wall with signs all around that read: Let no foreigner enter within the partition and enclosure surrounding the Temple. Whoever is arrested will himself be responsible for his death which will follow. It is possible that this wall in the Temple is the wall Paul has in mind here, but if it is, it s as a symbol for the Law of Moses itself, which formed a barrier of separation between the Jew and the Gentile. We know that the Law of Moses is the wall that separated because Christ breaks the wall by nullifying the law of commandments and ordinances. Here s where we need to be careful: The ESV uses the word abolishing, abolishing the law of commandments expressed in ordinances. But Jesus said, in Matthew 5:17, Do not think that I have come to abolish the Law or the Prophets; I have not come to abolish them but to fulfill them. And the word abolish is not the word used here. The word used here in Ephesians 2:15 means to nullify or invalidate, a different meaning than abolishing. When Jesus said He came to fulfill the Law, He meant that He came to fulfill all of the Law, but the ways in which He fulfilled the Law are different related to the different aspects of the Law. Traditionally, we understand the Law of Moses as having three different aspects, or facets, to it: Moral 3

(reflecting the righteous character of God), Ceremonial (reflecting the holy worship of God) and Civil (reflecting the just rule of God). Jesus came to fulfill all three aspects of the Law of Moses as our prophet, priest and king, as the perfectly righteous, absolutely holy and totally sovereign Anointed One. What was it about the Law of Moses that made a dividing law between Jew and Gentile? It wasn t the Moral Law aspect, because we know that all have sinned and fallen short of the glory of God, that the Moral Law condemns Jew and Gentile alike equally as unrighteous sinners when measured against God s perfect righteousness. We also know that when Jesus fulfilled the Moral Law of God, He earned a perfect righteousness for us, but He did not nullify the Moral Law. In fact, later in this letter, in Ephesians 6:2, Paul will quote the Moral Law in the 5 th Commandment, Honor your father and your mother, as a binding commandment for children in the Lord. No, the dividing wall between Jew and Gentile was found in the ceremonial law, by which Jews were identified as God s clean and holy people and the Gentiles were unclean, unholy outsiders. It was in the Temple worship that the Gentiles were far away and the Jews were near, that the Gentiles were excluded and the Jews were included. And this separation extended to every aspect of life. The ceremonial aspect of the Law of Moses made the dividing wall, the hostility between Jew and Gentile. And we also know that when Jesus fulfilled the Ceremonial Law, He nullified it. Having fulfilled it in Himself as the Great High Priest and the Perfect Lamb of God, Jesus set aside the Ceremonial Law as invalid, no longer in effect: no more sacrifices, dietary laws, laws of clean and unclean, etc. So, if the Ceremonial Law creates the division of hostility between Jew and Gentile, what creates the hostility between both Jew and Gentile and God? In a word: sin. Now we re dealing with the Moral Law, which reflects God s moral character. Sin, a falling short of God s perfect standard, separates us from God. It creates a gulf of hostility as we are alienated from God by our guilt and our shame and we are enemies of God in our sinful rebellion against His good Law. God s Moral Law is never nullified, but Christ took the curse we deserve for our sin on Himself, in His flesh on the cross, thereby reconciling us to God. Galatians 3:13-14 says, Christ redeemed us from the curse of the law by becoming a curse for us for it is written, Cursed is everyone who is hanged on a tree so that in Christ Jesus the blessing of Abraham might come to the Gentiles, so that we might receive the promised Spirit through faith. (ESV) And Galatians 4:4-7 says, But when the fullness of time had come, God sent forth his Son, born of woman, born under the law, to redeem those who were under the law, so that we might receive adoption as sons. And 4

because you are sons, God has sent the Spirit of his Son into our hearts, crying, Abba! Father! So you are no longer a slave, but a son, and if a son, then an heir through God. (ESV) By fulfilling all righteousness and then by dying in our place in the cursed death of the cross, Jesus reconciled us both Jew and Gentile, who are alike guilty before God. He did this by killing the hostility in Himself, taking the punishment we deserve and redeeming us with His own blood. The word Paul uses for reconcile here in Ephesians 2:16 is a very strong word that indicates that Jesus Himself is the One who does the reconciling work and that He reconciles us fully and completely. Our sin was the cause of our alienation. Our rebellion was the cause of the hostility, but Jesus reconciled us and He killed the hostility in Himself. 5 b. New Creation Realized But Jesus doesn t just make peace by removing the hostility between Jew and Gentile and by killing the hostility between sinful people and a Holy God. He does even more. He makes both Jew and Gentile into a new creation, into one new man, and He does this, too, in Himself. Jesus is not just our peace; He is also the Head of a new humanity, as He creates in Himself a new kind of man one new man out of both believing Jews and believing Gentiles. Before Christ came, there were two kinds of human beings, Jews and Gentiles. Not all of those who belonged to physical Israel were spiritual Israel, but the way of salvation was found within the nation of Israel, so being God s people meant being ethnically Jewish and identifying with the nation of Israel. All Gentiles were cut off from the people of God. Now, in Christ Himself, there is a new humanity: those who are in Christ, those who are under the headship of Christ and are partakers in the eternal life found in Him. This is why being in Christ is so central to Paul s thinking. As he writes in 2 Cor. 5:17, If anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation. Old things have passed away. Behold, new things have come. As the new humanity in Christ, we don t belong to this fallen creation and this dark and passing age, which is like a shadow on God s eternal glorious kingdom. We belong to the new creation, to the new heavens and the new earth, to the risen and exalted One who lives and reigns forever. As surely as He is risen and we are in Him, we have been made new, we are being made new and we will be made new on the great Day of Resurrection.

6 III. Peace Proclaimed In verse 17, Paul tells us that Jesus not only accomplished peace but He also has proclaimed peace peace to those who are far away from God (that is, Gentiles) and peace to those who are near (that is, Jews): And he came and preached peace to you who were far off and peace to those who were near. Now, scholars have debated what exactly verse 17 refers to. It seems unlikely that it can only or even primarily refer to the earthly ministry of Jesus, because His earthly ministry was focused on the House of Israel and He didn t do much preaching of peace to the Gentiles. Also, the word used for preached here might better be translated as evangelized or literally Gospelized or Gospelpreached or Gospel-proclaimed. Jesus preaches peace in the Gospel, not apart from it. So, it seems likely that Jesus proclamation of peace here must be based on His finished work in His death and resurrection. It seems best to understand this verse as referring to the post-resurrection preaching of Jesus, when He came to His disciples and announced, Peace be with you and then also to the Apostolic preaching, which came with the full authority of Jesus as they brought the Gospel to the Gentiles. But even now, today, if you hear the good news of what Jesus has done to make peace and to be our peace in Himself, then even now, it is His voice you hear through His word written on your hearts by your Holy Spirit. If you hear the call of Christ to trust in Him in your hearts as an inward and compelling call, this is Christ gospelizing peace to you! He is good-news-proclaiming peace peace that He alone has accomplished and that is found in Him alone. IV. Peace Applied: Access Granted Jesus is able to come to us and proclaim His peace to us because through Him we all have access to the Father by One Spirit. It is the access, the way to the throne of grace that Jesus has opened up through Himself that allows Him to come and proclaim peace to us. Think about the privilege of this access. We have access to the Father in the Holy Spirit through our Savior, Jesus Christ. Just as we have seen earlier in Ephesians that all three persons of the Trinity are involved in our salvation and in our receiving every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places, so we see here that all three persons of the Trinity are involved in giving us access to God as our Father. It is Jesus who has opened up the way of access through His mediation and it is in the Holy Spirit that we access God as Father. The Spirit enables our hearts to cry, Abba! Father! and makes intercession for us as we pray. Jesus sits as God s right hand and represents us, interceding for us all the time. We have access to the throne of the God of the Universe as our Father.

Think about how cool it would be to have the powerful king of some wealthy kingdom as your fatherand not just some figurehead king over some pretend monarchy. That s the stuff kids dream of! Sadly, too often kids who are in those positions end up so spoiled and self-centered. We have something so much better: The God of the Universe, who is infinite in wisdom, power, riches, love and grace has adopted us as His children and has granted us access to His royal throne as the throne of grace where we may receive mercy and find grace to help in time of need. And before His throne, our Head and Representative ever stands to ensure our continued access. Conclusion: He Himself: in Him, in Him, through Him One thing is very clear: You need Jesus. I need Jesus. We all together as one people of God need Jesus all of the time. He Himself is our peace. He has broken down the dividing wall of hostility in His own flesh. He has killed the hostility that existed between us and God in Himself, in His own body on the cross. He has made us into a new humanity in Himself and He grants us access to the throne of God through Himself. If we need peace, we need Jesus. He Himself is our peace. If we need new life, we need Jesus. He is our new life. If we need reconciliation to God, we need Jesus, for He is the One who has reconciled us to God in Himself. If we need our guilt and shame removed, we need Jesus, for He is the One who has reconciled us, killing the hostility of our sin in His own body on the cross. If we need mercy and grace to help in time of need, we need Jesus, for He is our ever-ready and all-sufficient Great High Priest who ever lives to make intercession for us. You don t need a new technique for hoe to live a happy and successful life. You need Jesus. I need Jesus. Let us go to Him! 7