Page last updated

 

                                                                                  

Ephesians 2:11-22                                          

 

1 + 1 = 1 - Paul names two groups-gentiles and Jews-as being communities quite different in covenantal status but equally alien to God’s household who are brought together as household members through Christ. Thus, Christ is the universal "peace child" who reconciles both groups to God thereby creating a new People of God. Paul forms this argument by using the once-but-now pattern that begins the chapter.

Common Concern - Ephesians posits a challenge to both Jews and Christians by insisting that cultural and religious divisions are contrary to God’s vision of human salvation. Circumcision or lack of circumcision is "in the flesh," ethnic divisions (2:11) that divide people into opposing camps. So Christians and Jews should not just talk about shared beliefs . . . they should find ways to witness to faith in the God who unites us . . . Social projects that embody a shared concern for justice are one way of recognizing common values grounded in Scripture. [1]

An Early Christian Voice - Both Jews and Gentiles have access to the Father through Christ himself. But how? In one Spirit. For the Spirit, who is one with Christ, enters into us when we believe in Christ. We then feel God’s presence, know God and worship God. Thus we come to the Father in that same Spirit through Christ. [2]

From where did your family lines emigrate? What did their new citizenship mean to them? What might such a transition from a country of origin to a new land require of newly arriving emigrates?

How do you think the practicing Jews felt when these Gentiles started coming to their church, but didn’t want to adopt the Jewish custom of circumcision?

 

In Jim Jackson’s The Path to Perfect Peace, the question of peace is posed. [3] Moving textually through the first paragraph, the homilist describes the words and phrases that Paul uses to describe un-peace: aliens, strangers to God, hopelessness, etc.

Homily Illustration: the development of the Transcontinental Railroad that connected the Atlantic and Pacific oceans by rail.

Shift to the Cross and the three-fold peace that resulted: peace with other people and peace with God and peace with ourselves. In the first sense, we continue to tear down the dividing walls of race, class, gender, education. Language, economic , political, religious, etc.

Shift to final paragraph in biblical text: the architectural metaphor. Christians have become through Christ’s cross mobile, ambulatory, conduits of the kingdom of God come in Jesus. Doesn’t that give you peace? he concludes.

______________________________________________________

[1] The New Interpreter’s Bible XI (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 2000), page 404.
[2] marius victorinus, 355 ace in Ancient Christian Commentary on Scripture VIII (InterVarsity, 1999), page 142.
[3] Jim Jackson, “The Path to Perfect Peace,” in The Abingdon Preaching Annual 2003 ed. (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 2002), page 248.