Christ Church: August 6th 2006

10.00am

Ephesians 4:1-16


In that passage from Ephesians chapter four that we heard, Paul begins by saying that he wants his Christian readers to live lives that are worthy of the calling they have received; lives which are 'worthy' in the sense of being worth-while and of refelcting that calling- that their calling by God will not seem to have been fruitless. Our lives should be something of value.
This is an important first point that Paul makes, not just to those first-century Christians in Ephesus but also to us here in Newark in the twenty-first century. We have received so much from Christ. To live an unworthy life is an offense to Christ who gave so much and did so much for us.
So that's how Paul begins this section, but then goes on to show us that this life is to be lived out in the fellowship of the church. Paul goes on by speaking about the unity of the church; the underlying unity of the church and then he goes on to speak about the gifts that Christ has bestowed on each member of his church, so that they can fuflfill that purpose, and therefore that that life, that 'worthy life'; that life which is a response to the love that has been shown in Christ is a life which is intended to be worked out in the framework of a Christian fellowship.

We cannot be effectve Christians in isolation, but Paul, in verse 3 of chapter four, says: Make every effort to keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace, going on to speak of the one body, the one Spirit, the one hope, one Lord, one faith, one baptism, and one God who is Father. Paul makes a great statement, a great acclamation of Christian unity; a great acclamation of all that unites true Christian believers; an acclamation of that which is the basis of the church and of Christian fellowship; the bais of those who have been called by Christ.

And here I want us to stop and look, in parentheses as it were, at what the church fundamentally is. The church is there as part of God's plan for Christians. But- what is it? The church let us remember is Christ's foundation. The hymn writer has it:

The church's one foundation
is Jesus Christ, her Lord.

Jesus founded the church and assuredly we will find something in the Gospels about that. The church was not an afterthought. Let us go back for a few moments to Matthew and chapter 16. There is that incident when Jesus says to his disciples, Who do people say that the Son of Man is?. And they come up with the answers like- John the Baptist, Elijah, Jeremiah or one of the prophets. Then Jesus turns to his disciples and says, What about you? Who do you say that I am? That's the question they have to answer for themselves; it's the question that everyone has to make their answer to. It's a question which each one of us in this church has had to answer for themselves. And if there be any who hasn't then I would urge it on you here and now: do not rest until you have made your answer. What do we do with him; what do we make of him? How do we respond to him?
Among those apostles it was Simon who came out with the answer You are the Christ, the Son of the living God. Jesus replies Blessed are you Simon, son of Jonah, for this was not revealed to you by man, but by my Father in heaven. And I tell you that you are Peter, and on this rock I will build my church.
On that rock Jesus built his church. Jesus uses that word 'church', so let us stop to think what that word 'church' really means. We need to understand the word in the original Greek of the New Testament. The word was
ek'klesia- from which we get words like 'ecclesiastical'. It's a compound word. 'ek' and 'klesia'. The 'klesia' but means 'called' in the sense not just of name but of vocation, and the church is the 'called ones' but the 'ek'-klesia or the called-out ones. The ones called out from the world, called out to be Jesus' disciples, followers; the ones who will work for him and his purpose which is the salvation of men and women

So: What then is the rock on which the church is founded. It is not of course the person of Peter, and thence of Peter's successors. No: Jesus was making a play on words, on the word 'petros' (which we find in 'petrol') which is the Greek word for 'rock'. Peter got that name for the confession he made: “you are the Christ, the Son of the living God”. It is that confession which is the foundation of the church.

That is the foundation of the church; that which gives the Church its unity of which Paul writes in our Ephesians 4 reading. That is the foundation of the one Body, is the one hope and the one true faith. All rests on the fact that Jesus Christ is the one, unique Son of God.And we are the ones who are called out, called out of the world and into the membership or fellowship of the Church.
We are called out to bear witness to that truth; the truth of the one who in whom alone is found salvation, who alone is the One who was sacrificed for the sins of the world. We are called to witness by our lives. And we are to do it, not in isolation, but as part of the church; part of that community of the called-out ones.

This really brings us to the second main point in those verses from Ephesians. Jesus bestows gifts on the church; gifts on each individual Christian. And this so that the church may fully carry out its mission with which it was committed: called-out to go and make disciples of all nations (Matt 28:19). And the gifts are given, too, so that as Paul says in verse 13 that the church may become mature and attain to the whole measure of the fulness of Christ. And in verse 11 Paul lists some of the gits which God gives: he gave some to be apostles, some to be prophets, some to be avangelists, some to be pastors and to be teachers. And of course we find similar (though different) lists elsewhere in Paul's epistles- in 1 Corinthians 12 or in Romans 12 It's perhaps wothwhile when you get back home to look up those other passages.

What this means is that everyone in the church, every member of the church, every born-again believer in the church has a ministry, and a gifting from Jesus for it. Each one has a role to fill in that working together in the church. That working togther in the One Body, with its unity. It's as every member works togther; every member, every believer has a ministry. It's a sad refelction that such a small proportion of Christians are involved in any form of service at all. Some of you will be familiar with the Word for Today written by Bob Gass. Just last Monday he wrote this:
Less than ten percent of Christians are involved in any form of service. They go to church for what they can get out of it. Service in Christ's Body is nit optional. In God's Army, there are no volunteers. He has drafted us all into service.

He has given to each one of us a gift- in the words of a well-known parable a 'talent'- and there we are told that one day we will have to give account of what we have done with that talent, that gift.
How much more effective the church might be, how much more healthy Christians would be in their lives, if they knew what their ministry was and exercised it; if they took the care to find out and to fulfill that ministry. It's important that we know, that we take steps to find out if necessary what it is, with what gift we have been bestowed.It's equally incumbent on leadership to enable each member to know and to find out, so all can play their part; to encourage each member ro recognise his or her gifting; to encourage each member to fulfill their part.
And if we don't take our part, something is lost of that maturiry of which Paul writes. Last week we were with our grandchildren. One had done a jigsaw- but one piece was missing and the impact of the whole jigsaw was lost.

Each one of us here this morning has a gifting from Christ. He hasn't called any one of us just to sit in the pews. Each of us has a role to play in the church. Have we recognised, do we know what that gifting is? Are we fulfilling it? I think these words of Paul in Ephesians chapter 4 challenge us.
Without that we become, says Paul, tossed back and forth on waves of uncerainty and doubt and false teaching. The church and we individually suffer if we aren't playing our full part; that full part for which we were called. At the bottom line: are we living a life worthy of our calling?