The epistle to the Ephesians gives us the richest exposition of the
blessings of the saints individually, and of the assembly, setting forth at
the same time the counsels of God with regard to the glory of Christ.
Christ Himself is viewed as the One who is to hold all things united in one
under His hand, as Head of the assembly. We see the assembly placed in the
most intimate relationship with Him, as those who compose it are with the
Father Himself, and in the heavenly position dispensed to her by the
sovereign grace of God. Now these ways of grace to her reveal God Himself,
and in two distinct characters; as well in connection with Christ as with
Christians. He is the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. He is the
God of Christ, when Christ is looked at as man; the Father of Christ when
Christ is looked at as the Son of His love. In the first character the
nature of God is revealed; in the second, we see the intimate relationship
which we enjoy to Him who bears this character of Father, and that
according to the excellence of Christ's own relationship to Him. It is this
relationship to the Father, as well as that in which we stand to Christ as
His body and His bride, that is the source of blessing to the saints and to
the assembly of God, of which grace has made us members as a whole.
The form even of the epistle shews how much the apostle's mind was filled
with the sense of the blessing that belongs to the assembly. After having
wished grace and peace to the saints and the faithful[see note #1]
at Ephesus from God, the Father of true Christians, and from Jesus Christ
their Lord, he begins at once to speak of the blessings in which all the
members of Christ participate. His heart was full of the immensity of
grace; and nothing in the state of the Ephesian Christians required any
particular remarks adapted to that state. It is nearness of heart to God
that produces simplicity, and that enables us in simplicity to enjoy the
blessings of God as God Himself bestows them, as they flow from His heart,
in all their own excellence-to enjoy them in connection with Him who
imparts them, and not merely in a mode adapted to the state of those to
whom they are imparted; or through a communication that only reveals a part
of these blessings, because the soul would not be able to receive more.
Yes, when near to God, we are in simplicity, and the whole extent of His
grace and of our blessings unfolds itself as it is found in Him.
It is important to remark two things here in passing: first, that moral
nearness to God, and communion with Him, is the only means of any true
enlargement in the knowledge of His ways and of the blessings which He
imparts to His children, because it is the only position in which we can
perceive them, or be morally capable of so doing; and, also, that all
conduct which is not suitable to this nearness to God, all levity of
thought, which His presence does not admit of, makes us lose these
communications from Him and renders us incapable of receiving them.
(Compare John 14:21-23). Secondly, it is not that the Lord forsakes us on
account of these faults or this carelessness; He intercedes for us, and we
experience His grace, but it is no longer communion or intelligent progress
in the riches of the revelation of Himself, of the fulness which is in
Christ. It is grace adapted to our wants, an answer to our misery. Jesus
stretches out His hand to us according to the need that we feel-need
produced in our hearts by the operation of the Holy Ghost. This is
infinitely precious grace, a sweet experience of His faithfulness and love:
we learn by this means to discern good and evil by judging self; but the
grace had to be adapted to our wants, and to receive a character according
to those wants, as an answer made to them; we have had to think of
ourselves.
In a case like this the Holy Ghost occupies us with ourselves (in grace, no
doubt), and when we have lost communion with God, we cannot neglect this
turning back upon ourselves without deceiving and hardening ourselves.
Alas! the dealings of many souls with Christ hardly go beyond this
character. It is with all too often the case. In a word, when this happens
the thought of sin having been admitted into the heart, our dealings with
the Lord to be true must be on the ground of this sad admission of sin (in
thought, at least). It is grace alone which allows us again to have to do
with God. The fact that He restores us enhances His grace in our eyes; but
this is not communion. When we walk with God, when we walk after the Spirit
without grieving Him, He maintains us in communion, in the enjoyment of
God, the positive source of joy-of an everlasting joy. This is a position
in which He can occupy us-as being ourselves interested in all that
interests Him-with all the development of His counsels, His glory, and His
goodness, in the Person of Jesus the Christ, Jesus the Son of His love; and
the heart is enlarged in the measure of the objects that occupy it. This is
our normal condition. This, in the main, was the case with the Ephesians.
We have already remarked, that Paul was specially gifted of God to
communicate His counsels and His ways in Christ; as John was gifted to
reveal His character and life as it was manifested in Jesus. The result of
this particular gift in our apostle is naturally found in the epistle we
are considering. Nevertheless we, as being ourselves in Christ, find in it
a remarkable development of our relationships with God, of the intimacy of
those relationships, and of the effect of that intimacy. Christ is the
foundation on which our blessings are built. It is as being in Him that we
enjoy them. We thus become the actual and present object of the favour of
God the Father, even as Christ Himself is its object. The Father has given
us to Him; Christ has died for us, has redeemed, washed, and quickened us,
and presents us, according to the efficacy of His work, and according to
the acceptance of His Person, before God His Father. The secret of all the
assembly's blessing is, that it is blessed with Jesus Himself; and
thus-like Him, viewed as a man-is accepted before God; for the assembly is
His body, and enjoys in Him and by Him all that His Father has bestowed on
Him. Individually the Christian is loved as Christ on earth was loved; he
will hereafter share in the glory of Christ before the eyes of the world,
as a proof that he was so loved, in connection with the name of Father,
which God maintains in regard to this (see John 17:23-26). Hence in
general we have in this epistle the believer in Christ, not Christ in the
believer, though that of course be true. It leads up to the privileges of
the believer and of the assembly, more than to the fulness of Christ
Himself, and we find more the contrast of this new position with what we
were as of the world than development of the life of Christ: this is more
largely found in Colossians, which looks more at Christ in us. But this
epistle, setting us in Christ's relationship with God and the Father, and
sitting in heavenly places, gives the highest character of our testimony
here.
Now Christ stands in two relationships with God, His Father. He is a
perfect man before His God; He is a Son with His Father. We are to share
both these relationships. This He announced to His disciples ere He went
back to heaven: it is unfolded in all its extent by the words He spoke, "I
go to my Father and your Father, to my God and your God." This precious-this
inappreciable truth is the foundation of the apostle's teaching in this
place. He considered God in this double aspect, as the God of our Lord
Jesus Christ, and as the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ; and our blessings
are in connection with these two titles.
But before attempting to set forth in detail the apostle's thought, let us
remark that he begins here entirely with God, His thoughts and His
counsels, not with what man is. We may lay hold of the truth, so to speak,
by one or the other of two ends-by that of the sinner's condition in
connection with man's responsibility, or by that of the thoughts and
eternal counsels of God in view of His own glory. The latter is that side
of the truth on which the Spirit here makes us look. Even redemption, all
glorious as it is in itself, is consigned to the second place, as the means
by which we enjoy the effect of God's counsels.
It was necessary that the ways of God should be considered on this side,
that is, His own thoughts, not merely the means of bringing man into the
enjoyment of the fruit of them. It is the epistle to the Ephesians which
thus presents them to us; as that to the Romans, after saying it is God's
goodness, begins with man's end, demonstrating the evil and presenting
grace as meeting and delivering from it.