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Ephesians 3:1 PAUL THE PRISONER Intro: Paul’s letter to the Ephesian church is a
blessing. For it is in this letter that we learn about who we are and all that
we have as a result of God’s grace. We have discovered the truth that grace is
the reason we are saved in the first place. We have learned about how lost we
really were before the Lord came to us and delivered us from the bondage and
deadness of our sins. We have learned that, in Jesus, we are brought near to
God. We have learned that through Jesus, we are in His kingdom. We are members
of his family. We are stones in the living temple of God. For me, the journey
to this place in this book has been a joy, a challenge and a blessing As
Paul opens this chapter, he begins with the intention of praying for the
Ephesian church. He makes the opening statement we have here in verse 1,
then for the next thirteen verses Paul delays his prayer as he continues to
talk about the divine mystery of the body of Christ. He doesn’t begin his
prayer until verse
14. We will look at the teaching in these verses over the next
few weeks. Today,
I want to focus in on Paul’s statement in Eph. 3:1. In this verse, Paul reveals his
identity as “a prisoner of Jesus Christ.”
In this small, but powerful verse, Paul gives us some insights
into life that we do not want to miss. I want to preach about Paul The Prisoner today. I want to share
with you the insights into being a
prisoner that not only helped transform Paul’s time in prison into a ministry,
but that also served to transform his life for the glory of God. The insights given here have the potential to
do the same for us. Let’s take a few minutes to consider Paul
The Prisoner. I.
THE
CONTEXT OF HIS IMPRISONMENT Verse 1 identifies Paul as “a
prisoner”. The word refers to “one
held in bonds.” By the time Paul wrote the book of Ephesians, he
had been in prison for five years. He was originally arrested by the Jews and
charged with taking a man named Trophimus, a Gentile companion of Paul’s, into
a forbidden area of the Temple in Jerusalem, Acts 21. Paul did not do
this, but the Jews believed he did. They tried to kill him, but he came under
protection of the Roman soldiers. The
Jews wanted Paul dead. The Romans were obliged to protect him since he was a
roman citizen, and there was no proof of his guilt. Eventually, Paul was sent
to Caesarea, where he spent two years in prison. While there, Paul was examined
by the Jewish Sanhedrin, Roman governors Felix and Festus, and before King
Agrippa. If Paul had not appealed to Caesar, Agrippa would have released him.
However, since Paul had appealed his case to Caesar he was sent by ship to
Rome. The voyage took nearly a year to complete. When Paul arrived in Rome, he
remained under house arrest for the next two years. Paul
lived in a rented house. In that house, he was free to move about during the
day, but at night he was chained to Roman soldiers to prevent him from
escaping. Paul’s life was not one of luxury. He was a prisoner and his
circumstances reflected that fact. This
is just a reminder that life does not always go how we plan it. I am sure that
Paul never thought he would end up in prison. I would imagine that he saw
himself going to Rome to stand in the Forum preaching to huge crowds. I am sure
he thought that he would preach to Caesar and the Senate of Rome and see great
numbers of Romans converted. But, here he is, in prison because he dared preach
Jesus crucified and resurrected. No, Paul’s ministry did not play out the way
he surely thought it would. But,
that’s life isn’t it? The path of life never takes us where we think it will.
Most things in life never go as we plan them, do they? Whether it’s a
relationship, a job, a vacation, or a hobby, there are always changes to the
plans we have scripted in our minds. What if everything in your life turned out
the way you planned it? Would you agree with me that if we were left to drive
the course of our lives, we would end up in bigger trouble that we already do? The
fact is, we rarely know what is best for our lives. Why? We lack all the
information. We cannot see very far down the road. We do not even know what is
going to take place in the next few minutes. We just don’t know, so we make our
plans on faulty information. As
we will see, God had Paul right where He wanted him. God put him in a prison so
that he might expand his ministry. That sounds strange to our ears, and it is
strange, but it is still the truth. If
you are saved, and you belong to the Lord, you are under His direction. He
determines where the path of life leads you. ·
Solomon said
this, “Trust in the LORD with all thine heart; and
lean not unto thine own understanding. In all thy ways acknowledge him, and he
shall direct thy paths,” Pro. 3:5-6. ·
And this, “A man's heart deviseth his way: but the LORD directeth his
steps,” Pro. 16:9. ·
Jeremiah
said it this way, “O LORD, I know that the way of man is not in
himself: it is not in man that walketh to direct his steps,” Jer. 10:23. Regardless
of where we find ourselves in life, we must come to the place where we are
confident of His sovereign leadership and direction. Otherwise, we will never
have peace and joy as you walk in this world. I.
The
Context Of His Imprisonment II. THE CAUSE OF HIS IMPRISONMENT Paul
says, “For this cause I Paul...for you Gentiles.”
Paul wants his readers to know that he is where he is for their sakes. God had
taken this strong, prejudiced, powerful Jewish man. God saved him by his grace,
and sent him out to take the Gospel to the Gentiles. The Jews hated Paul for
this. They saw him as a traitor to God, to the Law, to his birthright, and to
God. They wanted him dead! Thus, they did everything in their power to rid
themselves of him and his preaching. When
Paul was arrested and carted off first to Caesarea and then to Rome, the Jews
probably assumed they were finished with Paul forever. They probably believed
they had silenced this troublesome preacher. They might have stopped Paul from
traveling around the world preaching, but their hatred against Paul had a
surprising effect. Because he was locked up in prison, Paul had a lot of time
on his hands. He used that time to write many of his epistles. He also used
that time to tell people about Jesus Christ, and some, even some in Caesar’s
household, were saved. Phil. 4:22 says, “All
the saints salute you, chiefly they that are of Caesar's household.” So,
while we do not possess a large body of Paul’s preaching;
we do possess an astounding wealth of theology from the pen of this amazing
man. The Jews unwittingly helped place Paul in a position where the Lord could
speak through him to the churches. We are still benefitting from their error
today! God
used Paul to lay an incredibly important foundation for the church. God
actually used Paul’s imprisonment to expand his ministry. If Paul had been free
to do as he pleased, he would have traveled around and preached from place to
place, but because God was directing the course of his life, Paul ended up
right where God wanted him. He ended up in the place he could do the most good.
Even
in Paul’s day, he was not considered to be a very powerful speaker. Paul wrote
the following to the church of Corinth, “For his letters,
say they, are weighty and powerful; but his bodily presence is weak, and his
speech contemptible,” 2 Cor. 10:10. The ministry of Paul might
have been no more than a footnote in the history of the church had he not been
imprisoned and given the time to empty the contents of the divine revelations
that were given to him by the Lord. Paul suffered and we are still benefitting
from his sacrifice for the Lord. This
is just a reminder that nothing will derail God’s plan! He accomplishes His
purposes in spite of the sins and opposition of His enemies. I praise Him for
that, don’t you? I’m not going to stop Him. You’re not going to stop Him. Those
who oppose the church are not going to stop Him. Our enemies will never even
slow Him down. He is the Lord and He is in charge of all things at all times; no matter how it may appear to us! God
has you where you are for it is there that you will bring Him the most glory.
It is there that you will be prepared for the assignments He has for you down
the road. It is there you will be shade into the image of Jesus. It is there
you will grow, be developed, and shaped for His glory. He has you right where
He wants you! The best thing you can ever do is learn to “grow
where you are planted” and become all God saved you to be! I.
The
Context Of His Imprisonment II.
The
Cause Of His Imprisonment III. THE CONTROLLER OF HIS IMPRISONMENT The
Jews had arrested Paul, but he did not see himself as their prisoner. They
charged him with blasphemy and wanted him killed. He had been detained for his
own protection, and sent to Rome, at his own request, by the Romans, but he did
not see himself as their prisoner either. He was waiting to appear before
Caesar to face examination by the most powerful man in the world, but he did
not consider himself to be Caesar’s prisoner either! Paul
says that he is “the prisoner of Jesus Christ.”
Paul saw himself as a man who lived under the sovereign control of God. He saw
all the events of his life, the good and the bad, as being part of God’s divine
plan. He knew that the Romans could not hold him; the Jews could not stone him;
and Caesar could not execute him, unless it was part of God’s plan for his
life. Paul saw himself as “the prisoner of
Jesus Christ.” That phrase suggests the idea that Paul saw Jesus
Christ as the ultimate cause behind his imprisonment. He knew that unless God
had ordained it, he would not be where he was. The
Romans may have kept him chained, but Paul was bound to Christ by the very fact
that Jesus had redeemed him from the deadness of his sins and given him a new
life. Paul was the prisoner of Jesus Christ, bound to Him forever, regardless
of where the Lord might lead him, or cause to happen in his life. Paul’s
perspective regarding his trials served to help his faith grow. If Paul had
come to the place where he thoughts the Jews, the Romans, or even Caesar was in
control, he would have given up and fallen into discouragement and despair.
Because Paul knew that everything he faced was part of God’s plan, he could
rejoice even in trials, Phil. 1:12-14. Perspective
is everything! How you view the events of your life is more important than the
events themselves. We are taught in the Bible to walk “by
faith and not by sight,” 2 Cor. 5:7. We are taught that God is
working “all things together for good to them that love
God,” Rom. 8:28. We are taught that we should
rejoice in our trials, because they help us to grow in the Lord, James 2:1-4; 1 Pet. 4:12-19. Ill. Paul and Silas - Acts 16:19-25. If
we lose sight of God’s power to control all of life, we will be discouraged and
we will quit. Consider this E-mail I received this week: “I know
you don’t care but I am going to write this letter anyway. By accident I read
the sermon when your dream becomes a nightmare at the end you say bring your
life to Jesus and let him turn them into a source of glory, etc. Well, I had a
vision for service and thought that God was leading, but that was 25 years ago.
I am now 46 and too old and beat up to be used of God if he wanted to use me. I
am broken spiritually, financially, relationally, emotionally, and every other
way. I worked in the church for years, but have quit totally. In fact I have
basically quite going to church. It DOES NOT WORK and God does NOT fix you! I
think of suicide almost daily. Well, as I said, I doubt you care or can do
anything, so I guess this is just a waste of time so I’ll quit.” I
pray for this man. I pray the Lord will help him and cause him to see his life
through God’s eyes. I do not know what he has been through, but every bit of it
was designed to either bring him to God if he is lost, or to make him more like
Jesus if he is saved. That is the perspective we must develop, if we are going
to survive the various upheavals of life. Who
is your warden today? Are you a prisoner of your circumstances, or are you the
prisoner of the Lord? Paul saw himself as being under the direct, sovereign of
God Himself. He understood the truth that the Lord was the Master of all the
paths of life, Psa. 37:23. Paul understood that the Lord
was working in his life. Paul understood was working to accomplish the things
that brought God the most glory, Job 23:10. If
you are a prisoner of the circumstances of your life, you are going to be a
miserable person. If you allow the actions of other people to cause you
problems, you will never have joy. If you allow the setbacks, the problems, the
trials, the tribulations, and the many other disruptions that can occur to
cause you to forget that you are being led every step of every day by the “unseen hand” of Almighty God, you are going
to have a hard time in life. However,
if you can comprehend the truth that all of life, including every good and
every bad day, every mountain, and every valley, every success and every
failure, every blessing and every burden, and every moment of peace and every
moment of pain, are all the work of God in your life, you can experience “joy unspeakable and full of glory.” Our
lives are not the product of chance, luck, karma, or accident; they are the
product of the love of a sovereign God Who controls
all of life for his glory and our good. ·
“In whom also we have obtained an inheritance, being
predestinated according to the purpose of him who worketh all things after the
counsel of his own will,” Eph. 1:11. ·
“Whatsoever the LORD pleased, that did he in heaven, and in
earth, in the seas, and all deep places,” Psa. 135:6. ·
“Remember the former things of old: for I am God, and there
is none else; I am God, and there is none like me, Declaring the end from the
beginning, and from ancient times the things that are not yet done, saying, My
counsel shall stand, and I will do all my pleasure: Calling a ravenous bird
from the east, the man that executeth my counsel from a far country: yea, I
have spoken it, I will also bring it to pass; I have purposed it, I will also
do it,” Isa. 46:9-11. ·
“And all the inhabitants of the earth are reputed as
nothing: and he doeth according to his will in the army of heaven, and among
the inhabitants of the earth: and none can stay his hand, or say unto him, What
doest thou?” Dan. 4:35. Our
duty, even when we cannot comprehend the burdens and the problems of this life,
is for us to bow before the Lord in humble acceptance of the path He has chosen
for us. Anything less is a recipe for disaster. But, to do so brings both peace
and ultimate blessing in the Lord’s time. That
is the message of 1 Pet. 5:5-7. Peter writes, “Likewise, ye younger, submit yourselves unto the elder.
Yea, all of you be subject one to another, and be
clothed with humility: for God resisteth the proud, and giveth grace to the
humble. Humble yourselves therefore under the mighty hand of God, that he may
exalt you in due time: Casting all your care upon him; for he careth for you.” We
must ever remember that He is the potter and we are the clay! Ill. Rom. 9:18-21;
Jer. 18:1-6; Isa. 45:9. Illustration: As I said, perspective is everything.
William Barclay shares the following illustration. “There is a famous story of
the days when Sir Christopher Wren was building St. Paul’s Cathedral. On one
occasion he was making a tour of the work in progress. He
came upon a man at work and asked him: “ÒWhat are you doing?Ò” The
man said: “ÒI am cutting this stone to a
certain size and shape.Ò” He
came to a second man and asked him what he was doing. The
man said: “ÒI am earning so much money at my
work.Ò” He
came to a third man at work and asked him what he was doing. The
man paused for a moment, straightened himself and answered: “ÒI am helping Sir Christopher Wren
build St. Paul’s Cathedral.Ò” If
a man is in prison for some great cause he may either grumblingly regard
himself as an ill-used creature, or he may radiantly regard himself as the
standard-bearer of some great cause. The one regards his prison as a penance;
the other regards it as a privilege. When we are undergoing hardship, unpopularity,
material loss for the sake of Christian principles we may either regard
ourselves as the victims of men or as the champions of Christ. Paul is our
example; he regarded himself, not as the prisoner of Nero, but as the prisoner
of Christ.”[i] Conc: Are you the prisoner of Jesus Christ, or do
other things hold the keys to your life? Paul
suffered much in his life, 2 Cor. 11:23-28. He placed his sufferings
along the sovereign will of God and here is his conclusion. In 2 Cor. 4:8-15,
Paul says this, “We are troubled on every side, yet not
distressed; we are perplexed, but not in despair; Persecuted, but not forsaken;
cast down, but not destroyed; Always bearing about in the body the dying of the
Lord Jesus, that the life also of Jesus might be made manifest in our body. For
we which live are alway delivered unto death for
Jesus' sake, that the life also of Jesus might be made manifest in our mortal
flesh. So then death worketh in us, but life in you. We having the same spirit
of faith, according as it is written, I believed, and therefore have I spoken;
we also believe, and therefore speak; Knowing that he
which raised up the Lord Jesus shall raise up us also by Jesus, and shall
present us with you. For all things are for your sakes, that the abundant grace
might through the thanksgiving of many redound to the glory of God.” What’s
going on in your life today? ·
If the Lord
is working in some ways in your life that you do not understand, why not bring
that to Him right now? ·
If it seems
that the Lord has you shut down, locked up and hemmed in, why not come talk to
Him about that today? ·
If you can
see the hand of God working, leading and moving in your life, why not come and
praise Him for that right now? ·
If you are
not His, why not come to Him right now so that you can be saved? [i] The letters to
the Galatians and Ephesians. 2000, c1976 (W. Barclay, lecturer in
the University of Glasgow, Ed.). The Daily study Bible
series, Rev. ed. (121). Philadelphia: The Westminster Press. |
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