The notes below are from a sermon I preached on Ephesians 2:11-22. Some of them are incomplete, but I hope that they are a blessing nonetheless. I preached this about 8 months ago.
Intro—Walls take all kinds of forms. They can be
tall, they can be short, they can be wide, they can be narrow, they can even
span miles. Just think of some famous walls: Berlin Wall (built in the 60s, came down later 1989-90), Great
Wall of China (parts are over 2000 years old, 13,000 miles long), Wall of
separation between church and state, border wall, the Wall of the
Jewish Temple, etc.
What is
the purpose of a wall? It could be many things: Protection, enclosure, imprisonment, keeping others out,
etc. Robert
Frost—“Mending Wall”—“Something there is that doesn’t love a wall.” “Good
fences make good neighors.”
One purpose for a wall is separation—a completion of a barrier keeping two
groups apart. Our
passage today deals with walls, and even though part of the focus is on a
spiritual kind of wall, physical walls play a role. Look at Paul’s
words in Ephesians 2:11-22.
When the walls come down, God’s
temple can go up.
Point 1 Walls Cause Division: The Wall of Hostility (2:11-16)
Paul
starts by distinguishing between Jews and Gentiles. It was an age old
prejudice. The people of God vs. the others. God’s chosen vs. the excluded.
Clean vs. unclean. There is no secret that in Paul’s day Jews and gentiles
didn’t get along. Note how Paul describes the Gentiles here (2:11-12):
uncircumcised, outside of Messiah (and the messianic promises), excluded from
Israel, strangers/aliens to the covenants and promises (i.e., outside of Jewish
world), and without hope and without God in the world. This is at least how some of the
Jewish people understood gentiles.
Look at
the Temple: Holy of Holies, Holy Place, Court of the Jews, and Court of the Gentiles (where Jesus chases out the
moneychangers). On the wall between the court of the Gentiles and the court of
the Jews was a sign warning anyone who was not a Jew that they could die
(perhaps by God’s hand) if they entered the court unworthily. These walls created
division, they separated people, perhaps they even caused prejudice.
What walls
separate us today? Walls of race, economics/income, politics, personal issues. Sometimes
we build walls in an effort to “protect” ourselves, but we often end up in isolation. Sometimes we
build walls by our selfish endeavors, we have a kingdom to protect so we build
walls to keep the undesirable or competitor out.
How do we
build those walls? We build them by excluding anyone we consider the “other”,
the “gentile”, the “unclean”. Disagreement on protocol, disagreement on
decisions, even the willingness and desire to focus on the past (how we used to
do it) instead of listening to God about our future.
Walls
separate—walls that may be a result of some form of hostility.
We
disagree, so we build walls. We don’t want to mix with “those kind of people”,
so we build walls. We think we know better than others, so we build walls. Soon
we find ourselves walled in like a monastery. We are no longer in community, but
we find ourselves isolated. Walls can isolate, and that isolation can cause division and
hostility.
Don
Harbuck once said that all these walls are really just one wall. “The wall is
everywhere. All of us know about it. No age or age group has gone unshaped by
its pernicious power. Its menacing power moves the length and breadth of human
existence. What wall is it? Paul calls it the dividing wall of hostility. It is
the wall that separates and fragments and isolates. It is the wall that keeps
people apart. It makes them suspicious and distrustful of each other. It kills
fellowship and breeds prejudice and spreads gossip and sets loose the dogs of
war. It takes many forms but it always remains the same wall wherever we
encounter it.”
Remember,
when the walls come down, God’s Temple can go up.
My
favorite words in this passage are in verse 13: “But now in Messiah Jesus”—here
we have God’s great wrecking ball by which he brings down the walls of
hostility that divide us. Those who are
far away—the people who did not know God, who were not part of God’s people,
the unclean. Those who are near—those who think of themselves as “clean” or
“in”.
In verses
14-16, Paul reminds us that God uses the blood of Jesus to bring together both
groups of people. Think of the sacrificial system of Israel—without the
shedding of blood there is no remission of sin. Consider the separation the
wall of sin creates. The sacrificial system provided a temporary patch to deal
with the separation of sin. Jesus’ “once for all” sacrifice deals with it
permanently. The wall of hostility has come down because of Jesus’ death. But
it wasn’t just the demolition of a wall that was God’s goal, he also intended
to take two disparate and even warring groups and make one new person out of them.
When the walls come down, God’s temple can go up!
Note the
corporate nature of this event. God isn’t simply saving individual souls to
make them “clean,” God is reconciling groups to make ONE NEW PERSON out of them
all. As Paul will go on in chapters 3 and 4 to discuss, the goal here is the
building up of the body of Christ. The body of Christ, the bride of Christ, the
people of God is indeed composed of individuals, but it is supposed to be a
company of “peace”. The body of Christ is a corporate thing, not an isolated
individual thing. To bring about peace (i.e. "shalom") requires at least two people, it requires a community.
Shalom—a
sense of wholeness—humans cannot have that in isolation, but only in community!
Jesus becomes the means by which the walls come down, the person whose
sacrifice produces reconciliation, and the one who brings peace. It is
non-negotiable, there is no other way. The reconciliation
of verse 16 is brought about by the death of hostility. The walls MUST come
down or God’s temple will not go up. God will not build on YOUR personal favorite
foundation. He will only build on the foundation of the death and resurrection
of Jesus the Messiah. Jesus' death on the cross is the means by which hostility
is defeated, the walls are torn down, and God’s temple is built. You cannot
have it any other way.
Tozer says: "God
never negotiates with men. Jesus Christ's death on the Cross put an end to any
kind of negotiations. It is now Christ or nothing. It is God's Word or its
entirety or nothing."
What walls
do we need to tear down (or better, where does Jesus need to come and tear down
our walls by his sacrificial life and death)? Where do we need hostility to
cease? Where do we need to repent and turn to the wrecking ball and architect
of God (remember, Jesus’ earthly adopted father Joseph was a builder, and Jesus’
heavenly Father is a Creator)?
Jesus
brings the walls down, but he is also the cornerstone on which the new Temple
is built. When walls
come down, God’s Temple can go up!
Point 2 God’s Foundation brings Unity: The Temple of God
(2:17-22)
Two
“peoples” of God: One made up of human ancestry (Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, etc.) the other
created by the Holy Spirit. Both came into existence by God’s grace and promises. Circumcision
of flesh vs circumcision of heart. One is a physical wall/demarcation, the
other is spiritual. It is a matter of the heart.
There are two
Temples in our passage: One made with human hands, one made by God; one that
was stable, immovable, and had walls to separate people, one that is dynamic,
active, and without walls—both commanded by God and by his promises. The Temple
God desires is NOT a building or a specific group, it is a living, breathing,
“going” entity/congregation that does not sit idle or look to the past. Look at Isaiah
66—where will God dwell?
Paul tells
us that God will dwell in a people who are built up on Jesus and without walls.
You’ve heard of “Doctors without borders”, think of this as “God’s people
without walls” or “The church without boundaries” or something similar.
2:17-18:
Jesus proclaims shalom to ALL—those who are in and those who are not. There is
no privileged position, since ALL need to hear the good news of Shalom from
Jesus. Paul returns to “we” language in verse 18 and reminds us that WE ALL
have access to God’s reconciliation, to God himself, as a result of what Jesus
has accomplished. We can’t be the people we are called to be unless we come to
the wall wrecker and temple builder—Jesus the Messiah. Outside of him there is
no peace, no people, and no reconciliation. Paul reminds us that Jesus is the
ONLY way to be a part of God’s temple. He tears down our walls and then builds
us up. When the walls come down, God’s temple can go up!
2:19-20:
When Jesus tears down our walls of hostility, he brings us into a family. We
are not saved as lone ranger Christians to “go it” on our own. We are born into
a community of people who allow Jesus to destroy their walls while relying on
him to also build them up! Through Jesus, and him alone, we become God’s
household built on God’s foundation and cornerstone. We cannot get there
without help. Our walls hinder us, and we need Jesus to make us a “new
creation”.
2:21-22:
God’s Temple—built on Jesus, built for Jesus, full of God’s Spirit. You cannot
claim to have God’s Spirit if you also build a wall between yourself and
others.
Galatians
3:28: There is no Jew or Greek, slave or free, male or female; for you are all
one in Christ Jesus.
When the
walls come down, God’s Temple can go up.
God will not
build his church with our walls, with our selfish plans, with our prejudices,
with our hostilities. He will build it on selfless sacrifice. He will build it
by tearing down walls of hostility and building on the death and resurrection
of Jesus. If we do not have the right foundation, we will find our work
failing.
When the
walls come down, God’s temple can go up.
Conclusion:
So, how do
we respond?
First—what
walls of hostility do you have between you and God? Have you come to know his
grace and mercy through Jesus? Are you
angry at God for not doing things the way you want him to? Are you living in a
past tense view of ministry and longing for the old ways when God has called
you to move forward? His people, his body, his temple is not stationary, it is
on the move! Ask Jesus to deal with your walls today. Repent of building your
own temple and ask God to show you how to move forward. Call on him, he will
respond.
Second—what
walls of hostility do we have with others? We need to tear those down. We need
to humble ourselves and serve others EVEN if they do NOT deserve it (as Jesus
did in Phil 2).
Third—a
church cannot move forward if it is content to sit still and build its own
little kingdoms and walls. Jesus said to seek God’s kingdom first, not our own
isolated realms. What do we need to leave behind today to move forward with
Jesus. What grudges are we holding, what walls are we building, where do we
need to repent.
Finally—where
do you need God’s Shalom? Where is reconciliation and a sense of well-being
needed in your life today? Come to the wall wrecker and temple builder and let
him deal with it. Ask him to destroy what is keeping you from reconciliation,
and ask him to establish what will lead to Shalom.
Thank your for reading!