The Helmet of Salvation
The Shield, Helmet and Sword are to be “taken up”. We’ve seen how faith in action protects us from harm and ensures that we do the work of God, now we see how trusting in God’s ultimate salvation must be lived out to effectively protect our minds in the heat of spiritual conflict.
The Shield of Faith
The first three pieces of armour are to be in place all the time, the second three need to be “taken up” and used as the specific attacks of the enemy occur. They are necessary in addition to the first three. They prevent the attack from reaching to the level protected by the first three. The shield of faith is not only what we believe, but what we do abut our belief. When we don’t act on our faith, we get more deeply impacted by the evil one’s attacks. Standing firm in our faith and continuing our work, guards us and keeps us from harm!
The Way of Peace
We are at war whether we like it or not. When we are going through any form of conflict, our natural desire is to have to end so that we can experience peace. In today’s message, we learn that we need to take peace with us into the battle in order to win it. Like most of God’s wisdom, it is counter-cultural but profoundly accurate. When we seek peace before the battle, we are assured of victory. To prepare us for this peace, Paul tells us that we must put on the sandals of peace. In the ancient Meditteraen, the war sandals were a major advancement in modern warfare. They were studded with spikes to give them stability in battle. Yet they were light, allowing great mobility for the army. Let’s take a look at the spiritual implications of these two attributes of the sandals.
The unbreakable Righteousness of Jesus Christ
God has given us armoured spiritual protection from the attacks of the enemy, we’ve learned that we wear these through reading, trusting and praying through the Word of God. Having looked at the attack against who God is, and the belt of truth, we turn to the Breatplate of Righteousness, and the attack on who we are in God’s eyes. Job is given to us as an example of how to fight under the protection of God’s Righteousness through Jesus Christ our King.
Truth, What is Truth?
Knowing that we’re in a battle between good and evil, and knowing that we can only survive by trusting in God’s power, we start looking at the first piece of God’s mighty armour, the belt of truth. What is the truth, and how can that truth be so powerful that it protects us from the attacks of the very strong spiritual enemies that war against God and His Church? Knowing this and trusting God’s promises about this will truly set us free.
The Armour of God
The book of Ephesians teaches what is true and what to do, what we believe and how we should live it out. Having finished the teaching on living as husbands and wives, parents and children, employers and employees, the Holy Spirit now moves to show us how to have victory in our lives. To win in every fight, we need to know we’re in a fight, who we’re fighting, and what tools we have to fight with. Ephesians six does all this in teaching us all about God’s Powerful Armour.
Being Human; Part 3: Wisdom
In our short “Being Human” miniseries, we have taken time out from Ephesians to consider what it means to be human. We live in times where we are flooded with information and that information is generally seen as knowledge. When we apply that knowledge, we are then considered wise in the ways of the world. The problem with this is that there can be no real wisdom apart from the knowledge of God and understanding that knowledge to a point where we can apply it in our everyday lives. That is true wisdom. In today’s sermon, we consider the wisdom of Jesus and what it means for us to be wise. Today we are focusing on verses 37 and 38.
Being Human; Part 2: Compassion
Building on our theme from last week (where we learnt that humility leads to submission, and submission to obedience) another thing that we lack as modern, highly intelligent humans is compassion. Jesus tells us as the second of the two great commandments to love our neighbor as ourselves. But this is easier said than done. We live in times where people in general are getting more and more selfish and hurting others to get what they want. Our natural response is to dislike those people and to see revenge or justice when we are hard done by. What we will learn from Jesus today is how to love those who we struggle to, even those who hate us.
Being Human; Part 1: Humility
With all the exciting advances in technology and AI, it’s not uncommon for us to question our value as humans. In many cases, machines can do a better job than us. And as the world hurtles down this scary road, we’re already seeing signs of humanity becoming more and more artificial. We no longer need to think, the machines do that for us. Society tells us how to react to different situations and how to live in the world. While we’re breaking from Ephesians, we’re going to take a look at some of the things that make us human. What better way to do that than to study Jesus? We’ll start today to look at what Jesus implies is the cornerstone of our characters: humility. Humility is an elusive thing, just when you think you have it, you don’t! Today, we will be focusing only on verse 35.
Take Jesus to Work
For the last few weeks, we have been looking at how God wants us to conduct our faith in relationships. We’ve looked at the relationship between wife and husband, children and parents, and now Paul turns his attention to employees and their employers. Isn’t that such a wonderful thought? God loves us so much, He even gives us instructions on how to get the most out of our work lives. Whether you are an employer or employee, God wants you to glorify Him in your work and today we learn how.
The Word on Heavenly Families
God designed the family before it existed. He has determined our roles and responsibilities in order to help us be the people He designed us to be. To fulfil God’s purposes we must believe His promises and obey His commands. Obedience is hard, it can only be accomplished when God empowers us to obey. At the heart of God’s teaching on family lies the profound principle of the Gospel. Obedience comes by believing, and that obedience brings about God’s purpose for us.
The Mystery
According to Jesus, the Bible is about Him. The creation account is no exception, in fact it forms the basis for understanding the Gospel and God’s gift of forgiveness and eternal life itself. Marriage and the Church are under attack, that’s nothing new, but the attack started on the Bible, and especially on it’s account of creation. For strong marriages and a strong Church, we need to know honour and obey the Word of God. When we read the Bible, we read about God’s love and power, when we trust and obey it, we experience what we read and grow as individuals, as families and as the Church.
Marriage made in Heaven
A strong Church depends on strong families, which depend on strong marriages. Marriage is God’s design and is precious to Him. To have Heaven in the home we need strong marriages, and strong marriage come from following God’s instructions on how wives and husbands should treat each other. God made marriage and He will make it work if we trust and obey Him.
Heaven in the home
To have Heaven in our home is to have holy and happy homes. Our homes should be havens from the outside world where we can be connected with God and each other. Sadly, homes are not always like this and it’s always been an issue. Ephesians 5 reveals how we can reject the fakes that promise happiness and pursue what’s real and what leads to heaven in our homes.
Ask and Tell
This morning, we take a break from our journey through Ephesians to focus on youth. As the world celebrates and exults the youth at this time, so do we at Family Church as the youth put together this morning’s service - part of a faith-at-home series based on the concept that faith is caught, not taught. Today’s scripture tells the family unit to remember God, the days of old, and the stories of generations gone before.
Exposing darkness with light
Contrast is a measure of the difference between two things. The Lord Jesus Christ came into this world to save us from the darkness of ignorance, untruth and separation from God. He is the light and is totally different from the world, and He demonstrated how we should be the same, by following Him in the power of the Holy Spirit. The instructions issued in Ephesians 5:7-14 show how radically we are to be different from who we were before Jesus saved us.
The danger of empty words
Empty words promise much but deliver little. They are especially dangerous especially when encourage us to keep going in the wrong direction, claiming that everything will be ok, when it will not. Ephesians 5:6 warns us not to trust these empty words and reminds us of the deadly consequences of doing so.
Sexual Immorality
We live in a world of subtle sexual innuendoes - like subliminal advertising that feeds false information into our sub-conscience. Billboards advertising sin-filled sex shops, and programs that promote adultery and promiscuity. They are all part of a system that is designed to first get us to accept the unacceptable, then to normalise it, then to celebrate it - to the point where we are all living in sexual immorality that we can’t even recognize. The Ephesians faced the same challenges, if not worse. The temple of Artemis promoted temple prostitution, drunken orgies in the streets, and pornographic art that was built into every aspect of society. In this morning’s scripture, Paul is addressing the dire concern of sexual immorality with the Ephesians and gives them some guidelines to overcome it. Through this scripture, we can overcome our own challenges with sexual immorality.
Good Imitation
Innovation is often valued above imitation, but the truth is that we are born imitators. We learn by imitating, it’s not a bad thing, but who we imitate makes all the difference. There are endless examples of who we could imitate, and all of them set a poor example some time or another. Only One person is perfect. Imitating Jesus is God’s plan for every one of us.