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Ephesians
2:1-3 I
SEE DEAD PEOPLE Intro: Some years
ago a movie entitled “The Sixth Sense”
was released. In that film, a little boy appears to be suffering from some sort
of mental disorder. It turns out that his problems result from the fact that he
sees ghosts. The problem with the ghosts this little boy sees is that the
ghosts do not know they are ghosts. They do not know they are dead. Among the
dead people the little boy encounters is a child psychologist who attempts to
help the little boy with his problems. The psychologist also does not realize
that he dead. The climactic moment of the film comes when the boy looks at the
psychologist and says, “I see dead people!” Movies and
books that follow that theme are on the increase. There is a morbid fascination
with death, dying, and the dead. This is especially true in the realm of zombie
literature. Zombies are dead people who have somehow returned to life. These
zombies have an insatiable desire for human flesh. There has been a dramatic
increase in books and films related to ghosts and zombies. Our
world is fascinated by the dead. Just for the
record, I do not believe in either ghosts or zombies. The Bible is crystal
clear on this matter. When you die, you go either to Heaven or Hell. You do not
come back to either haunt or eat the living. Thank God! The reason I
mention these things as I introduce this passage is because I also see dead
people. I look around me and see a world that is filled with the living dead.
These poor people live around us, and even among us, but they do not know that
they are dead. They are born, they live, they work, they marry, they reproduce,
they find pleasure, they love, they hate, they fight, they give, they receive,
they go on vacation, and they even sit in churches. They often live rich, full
lives, yet they are dead. There may even be a few dead people among us right
now. We are literally surrounded by spiritual zombies. This passage
details the desperate condition of the lost sinner. This passage also reminds
every redeemed child of God of what they were before God saved them by His
grace. In chapter
1, Paul reminded us of our riches in Christ. He told us how God
came to us, saved us by his grace, and adopted us into his family. Paul
reminded us that the salvation we enjoy is completely of the Lord. This passage
details what we were before we met the Lord Jesus Christ. This passage also
declares the hopeless, helpless condition of those who do not know the Lord
Jesus Christ as their Savior. This passage exposes the devastating results of
sin’s intrusion into the human race. I want to
take these verses, and preach on the subject: “I See
Dead People”. I want to share with you the characteristics
that are common to all those who are trapped in the bondage of sin. If you’ve
never been saved, this message is designed to teach you the truth about sin and
its consequences. If you are saved, this message is designed to remind you of
where you were when Jesus found you, and how He saved you and transformed your
life by his power. This description of the lost around us and among us ought to
stir our hearts to reach them with the Gospel of grace that they too might come
to know the Lord Jesus Christ as their Savior! Notice the characteristics of those who are “dead in trespasses and sin”, as I preach on
the subject “I See Dead People”. I.
v. 1
LOST
PEOPLE ARE DEAD (Ill. The phrase, “And
you hath He quickened…” has reference to the Ephesian believers.
Paul is been writing to them to remind them of their exalted place in Jesus
Christ. And, as he writes these words, he is reminding them of their wretched
past in sin. He reminds them that though they once were dead in their sins, now
in Jesus Christ, they have been made alive. The word “quickened,”
means to be “made to live”. While Paul
was writing to the Saints, there is also a message here to every person who
hears these words. In truth, Paul was writing to the entire human race. He is
writing you. So, I remind you, if you know the Lord, I want to talk about your
past. As we do, you should rejoice that Jesus has delivered you from that past.
If you do not know the Lord, Paul is describing your life today. And if this
passage still finds you dead in sin, I encourage you to turn to Jesus and be
saved today.) A. Their
Condition – Paul tells his readers that they were “dead”. This word literally means “a corpse.” It was the word used to describe
“a dead body”.
In this passage, it refers to “one devoid of all
spiritual life.” It refers to one who is “spiritually
dead”. It speaks to the fact that lost sinners are absolutely
unable to initiate any movement toward God. It reminds us that they are
unwilling and incapable of coming to God by their own initiative. When we think of death, we all have a good idea of what it means.
When a person dies, they are unable to respond to any impulse, or any stimuli,
neither are they able to perform any functions whatsoever. They lack all power
and ability. When a person dies, their body is reduced to an empty, in animate
object that possesses no ability to hear, see, think, or respond to any
stimuli. The touches that used to thrill them no longer elicit a response. The
voices that they were so familiar with can no longer be heard. The eyes that
once marveled at the beauty of this world can no longer see. The body, which
was once vital and alive, has become just an empty shell. Nearly everyone here has had experiences in this area. We have all
experienced the death of a loved one. When they die, they no longer know us,
nor do they respond to our presence. They are like Lazarus. He was dead and
buried in his tomb. Outside that tomb his sisters and their friends were
weeping and mourning his death. Even Jesus came and spoke to the mourners
outside the tomb of Lazarus. Lazarus was unaware of any of those events. Why?
He was dead! The widow of Nain’s son was unaware of his mother’s sobs as they
carried his body away to be buried. He was dead! The daughter of Jairus was unaware of the cries of her broken hearted
parents. She was dead! When a physical body dies, it loses the ability to respond to this
physical world. In a spiritual sense, it is the perfect illustration of those
who do not know the Lord. Paul says
that the lost are “dead”. What is death? Death
is the opposite of life. In John 17:3, Jesus said, “And this is life eternal, that they might know thee the
only true God, and Jesus Christ, whom thou hast sent.” In other
words, those who know the Lord are alive, while those who do not know Jesus
Christ are dead. John repeats this truth in 1 John 5:12, where he
says, “He that hath the Son hath life; and he that
hath not the Son of God hath not life.” Paul says the lost are “dead”.
What is true of a dead body is also true of those who are dead in sin. The lost
are alive to this world. They live in it, move in it, love in it, laugh in it,
and seek pleasure in it; but they are dead even while they live. They are not
dead to the world, but they are dead to God. They cannot see Him, feel Him,
know Him, sense Him or get to Him on their own. They are devoid of all
spiritual life. Not everyone believes this about the lost sinner. Many people
believe that the lost have the ability approach God when they want to, and on
their own terms. Most folk have the idea that the lost are capable of making a
decision for the Lord. The facts are quite different. If sinners are truly “dead”,
then they are unable to come to God, and God must make the first move in
salvation. This dovetails precisely with what Jesus said in John 6:44; 65. You see, the lost are not merely sick
and in need of healing; they are lost and in need of a resurrection. They need
to be “quickened” so they can come
to Jesus Christ and be saved. And that, my friends, is entirely the work of
God! On writer said, “When Adam sinned,
his children bruised their knees”. In truth, when Adam sinned,
his children died, Rom. 5:12! When Paul says that the lost are
dead “in” trespasses and sins; he
means literally that the lost are dead “because”
of their trespasses and sins. Sin is the root cause of mankind’s spiritual
deadness. The lost will stay in that state of deadness until God comes to them
and raises them from the dead like He did with the daughter of Jairus, the widow’s son and Lazarus. If you have never come to Jesus Christ for salvation, you are
dead. That is why the things of God mean nothing to you. That is why you never
“feel” anything when you come to church. That
is why the things that stir the hearts of the redeemed never stir your heart.
You are dead, and you need to be born again! That is why lost people come to church and hear the Gospel and
leave unmoved by the things of God. The dead find spiritual truth boring. God’s
word holds no interest for the lost. The fact that they are physically alive is
proven by the deeds mentioned in verses 2-3. They are not bored with worldly
things; in fact, they find their meaning in the things that appeal to the
flesh. They are spiritually dead and need a resurrection! Ill. How I well remember those dark days of spiritual death. I was
alive in the world, but dead to God. The things of God held no interest for my
dead heart. His Word, His music, His church, His Savior, His people; I was dead
to them all. Church, preaching, Christian people, even the name of Jesus were
all drudgery to my heart in those days. Nothing mattered but my pleasure and my
sin. I was a spiritual zombie; a walking dead man; without God and without hope
in this world, Eph. 2:12. I bless the glorious day when Jesus Christ came to me there in the
tomb of my sin. I remember how He quickened me and made me alive to the things
of God. Oh what a change! It was a “new birth”,
John 3:3,
7. And, I was a “new creature”, 2 Cor. 5:17. Before I met
God, I was dead to Him and to all He represents. Things that had never moved me
before I met Him now arrested my heart. Those things that I was dead to
previously were now the glory and rejoicing of my soul. It has been many years,
but the life that Jesus Christ placed within me when He saved me still pulses
with divine excitement. I thank God for His Word, His House, His people, His
worship, His presence, His music; everything that has anything to do with Him
what thrills my heart! Has that happened to you? Have you been brought back from the
dead? If you have, then you know the joy of which I speak. If you haven’t, then
you are still dead to the things of God. If you are lost, you do not need
rehabilitation; you do not need religion; you need a resurrection! You need to
be born again. You need the God of glory to draw you to the Lord Jesus Christ,
and breathe the “breath of life” into your
dead spirit. To put it simply, you need to come to Jesus for salvation! If you
will, He will receive you and He will save you by His grace, for His glory! B. Their
Circumstances – Having told us about the condition of the
lost, Paul talks about their circumstances. That is, he speaks of the realm in
which they live and operate. They may be dead spiritually, but they are very
alive physically. Their physical life is characterized by two very specific
details. Paul tells us that they are “dead in
trespasses and sins”. These two words are worth considering for
a moment. ·
Trespasses – This word means, “to cross a
boundary”. It refers to “a lapse or
deviation from truth and righteousness”. It has the idea of “a slip, a fall, and a stumble; of a going in the wrong
direction.” The word speaks of an attitude that stands in
opposition to the things of God. A trespass occurs when a person crosses a
clear boundary that has been established by the Lord. God draws His line in the
sand. He says that mankind is not to go beyond that point. When a sinner steps
over that boundary, they are guilty of trespass. They have crossed God’s
boundary and they are in sin. Every sinful act is
a trespass against God’s Word, His holiness, His Person, and His glory. ·
Sins – This word comes from a word that means, “to miss the mark”. It is a hunting term. It
pictures a hunter taking aim at his prey, loosing his arrow, and completely
missing his target. It was a word that came to be used of “falling
short of any goal, standard or purpose.” When applied to the
sinner, it pictures the sinner falling short of, and completely missing, God’s
perfect standards of holiness and righteousness. It is the most common word
used to describe sin in the New Testament, appearing some 173 times. Paul does not use these two words to describe two different types
of sinful activity. He uses them to emphasize the great breadth of sinfulness
of those who are spiritually dead. What he is talking about here is man’s
condition, and man response to that condition. These words do not describe
individual acts of sin. They describe the very sphere in which the lost sinner
finds himself. In that lost condition, the lost sinner proves he is a sinner by
the things he does. Man manifests his sinfulness through sinful deeds. Let me see if I can illustrate this for you. A person does not
become a liar because he lies. He lies because he is already a liar. A person
does not become a murderer because he kills. He kills because there is already
murder in his heart. A person doesn’t become a thief because he steals. He
steals because he is a thief already in his heart. The same is true for any
other sin you can think of. People do not become sinners because they sin; they
sin because they are sinners! The outward manifestations of human sin are
always a reflection of the heart. You see, people are not born with the
ability to choose between good and evil, or between God and the world.
According to the Bible, people are born into this world in inescapable bondage
to their sins, Psa. 51:5. Every person enters this world
the sworn enemy of God, Rom. 8:7. That is why the lost sinner must
be converted! Jesus said it this way, “O generation of
vipers, how can ye, being evil, speak good things? for
out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaketh.
A good man out of the good treasure of the heart bringeth
forth good things: and an evil man out of the evil treasure bringeth
forth evil things,” Matt. 12:34-35. He also said this: “But those things
which proceed out of the mouth come forth from the heart; and they defile the
man. For out of the heart proceed evil thoughts, murders,
adulteries, fornications, thefts, false witness, blasphemies,” Matt. 15:18-19. All sinners are dead, but some give evidence of more decay in
their lives. If you were to walk onto a battlefield and see a dozen corpses,
they would all share one thing in common; they would all be dead. They might be
in differing stages of decay, but they would all be dead. Those who have been
dead longer would be no more dead than those who have just been killed. Dead is
dead! While the Lord Jesus was here on earth, He raised three people
from the dead. He raised the daughter of Jairus; the Widow of Nain’s son, and Lazarus. The daughter of Jairus had been dead few minutes when Jesus arrived. She
probably looked as though she were merely sleeping. She was warm to the touch,
and may not have even looked dead, but she was! The widow of Nain’s son had
probably been dead a few hours, and they were carrying his body away to be
buried when Jesus passed by. This boy’s body was cold, but he has not actually
started the decomposition process. Still, he was dead! Lazarus had been dead
four days when Jesus came to the spot where he was buried. He was in such an
advanced state of decomposition that his sister Martha was worried about the
smell when Jesus commanded them to move the gravestone. There was no doubt that
Lazarus was dead. The thing to note about all three of these individuals is that
they were at differing degrees of decomposition, but they were all dead. When
we speak of spiritual death, we need to understand that every person who is not
saved is dead in his or her sins. The good boy or girl in Sunday School is just as dead as the drunk in the gutter. The lost
preacher is just as dead as the drug addict on the street. The lost church
member is just as dead as the mass murderer. Dead is dead! The only that stands
as a difference between the dead is their degree of composition. The deeds of the flesh declare the allegiance of the heart. “For they that are after the flesh do mind
the things of the flesh; but they that are after the Spirit the things of the
Spirit,” Rom. 8:5. Because man is a sinner, he is separated from God, Isa. 59:2.
The Bible says that every single person in the world is in this condition. Rom. 3:23
says, “For all have sinned, and come short of the
glory of God.” This verse places all humanity in the same
condition. The lost sinner, who is not in a saving relationship with the Lord
Jesus Christ, is dead in “trespasses and
sins”. In other words, they are dead even while they live in the
world. They are dead even while they live out their sinful lives. Again, when Paul uses these two words, he is referring to the
sphere in which lost people live. In that realm of life they are unable to come
to God. They are dead to the things of God and they have no desire to turn to
Him for salvation. That is why Jesus said it is necessary for God to make the
first move in salvation, John 6:44, 65. Even if some lost person did try to come to God, that sinner could
never get reach Him through their own efforts. That is why religious activity
apart from faith in the Lord Jesus is a colossal waste of time. Someone has described the human race as a large group of diverse
people standing on the bank of a wide river. The opposite bank is perhaps a
mile away. They all attempt to jump across the divide. The very young and the
very old cannot jump far at all. Young adults and the physically strong can
jump a little farther. The athletes in the crowd can jump farther still, but
not a single one of them can reach the other side. They may do better than the
person on either side of them, but they all fail to even come close to reaching
the goal. They all fall short. So it is with the lost sinner. They may be good to their families.
They may do good works. They may even be religious and active in the church.
But, they are just like that crowd trying to jump across that wide river. They
are attempting to accomplish the impossible. No one is saved based on how good
they are; how religious they are; or how far they can jump in God’s direction.
Salvation comes through God’s grace alone, Eph. 2:8. Salvation comes when a lost
sinner turns to Jesus Christ by faith, Acts 16:31. And, that is something the lost
sinner simply cannot and will not do until God makes the first move. But, when
He does call that sinner, and they do respond by coming to Him in faith, they
are forever changed! Remember Lazarus? He was dead and buried in that tomb. He was
oblivious to the grief and the tears of his friends and family just outside
that tomb. He was oblivious to the presence of the Lord Jesus as He spoke and
prayed outside that tomb. But, the Lord called the name of Lazarus, and brought
him out of death. Lazarus heard that call and he came out of the tomb. He was
made alive by the power of the Lord Jesus Christ! When he came out, Jesus said,
“Loose him and let him go.” Not only was he
delivered from death, but also he was set free from the bondage of the grave.
He was raised to live a new life in Jesus. The same can happen to you. Is He
calling you? Come to Him now and He will save you and set you free! Conc: As we move
through the next few verses, we will see the sinfulness of sinners very
clearly. In these verses, Paul paints a dismal picture of the human race. As I
close out our time together today, I do not want to end this message on a sad note.
I want to tell you the good news that Jesus Christ died to save sinners. He
entered into death that He might give life to all those who come to Him for
salvation. When He died on the cross, He died that you might be saved from your
sins. He died so that you might have the spiritual resurrection you so
desperately need. As we close
our thoughts today, here is the invitation: ·
If you are not saved, and you
aware of your need of a Savior; it is only because the Lord is calling you to
come to Him. If He is calling you, please do not push Him away. Come to Jesus
today, and He will save your soul. He will bring you out of the deadness of sin
and give you new live in God. Come to Jesus and be saved. ·
If you are saved, you should come
to Him and thank Him for resurrecting you from the deadness, darkness and
depravity of your sins. You should prostrate yourself in His presence and glory
in His love for you, and in His grace in your life. ·
If you are burdened over those
lost ones in your life; those who are trapped in their sins;
I challenge you to come before God today and pray for their salvation. |
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