The central purpose of God's plan of salvation was to create for Himself "a people"; children of His very own; who would share in the blessings of His goodness and bring forth the fruits of their relationship with Him "to the praise of His glory."
This plan of God was "purposed" in the Messiah
(Ephesian 1:9) before the creation of the world and "accomplished" in
time through the Messiah's redemptive work for the elect (Ephesians 3:11).
The central focus of this plan is clearly outlined in Paul's Letter to the
Ephesians: Praise be to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus the Messiah, who
has blessed us in the heavenly realms with every spiritual blessing in the
Messiah. For He chose us in him before the creation of the world to be holy and
blameless in His sight. In love He predestined [marked out beforehand] us to
be adopted as His sons through Jesus the Messiah, in accordance with His
pleasure and will; to the praise of His glorious grace, which He has freely
given us in the one he loves (Ephesians 1:3-6).
God's choice to have a people as new creations in the Messiah was conceived
in His love "before the creation of the world," it was worked out
"in history" through God's choice of Abraham and his seed; Israel, to
be the vehicle of bringing the blessings of His salvation to "all
nations" of the world. This is explicitly recorded in the Book of Genesis:
Then Yehovah said, "Shall I hide from Abraham what I am about to do? Abraham
will surely become a great and powerful nation, and all nations will be blessed
through him. For I have chosen him so that he will direct his children and his
household after him to keep the way of Yehovah by doing what is right and just
so that Yehoah will bring about for Abraham what he has promised him (Genesis
18:17-19; cf. 12:1-3; 15:1ff).
This promise to Abraham culminates in the coming of Jesus
the Messiah from the people of Israel (Romans 9:4-5). He is the true "seed
of Abraham" (Galatians 3:16) and the "elect" or "chosen
one" of God (Isaiah 42:1-4; Luke 3:22, 9:35). He is, in fact, the
representative leader, the federal head of the people of God (Daniel 7:13ff.);
indeed, he is in a sense the ideal "Israel" (Matthew 2:15; Hosea
11:1; Isaiah 49:3); embodying in himself God's purposes and destiny for the people of God.
Andrew Lincoln, in his commentary on Ephesians, explains God's election of a people and the fulfillment of His purposes "in the
Messiah": God's purpose in choosing out a people for himself is, of course, a familiar idea in the OT (e.g., Deuteronomy 7:6-8; 14:2), which witnesses to
Israel's consciousness of God's choice of her in the twists and
turns in her historical fortunes. God had chosen Abraham so that in him the
nations of the earth would be blessed, and Israel's election was not for her
own self-indulgence but for the blessing of the nations: it was a privilege but
also a summons to service. Christian believers also had this consciousness
of being chosen to be the people of God. The new element was the [in the
Messiah] phrase.
Their sense of God's gracious choice of them was inextricably interwoven with their sense of belonging to the Messiah, bought and paid for by his shed blood. God's design for them to be His people had been affected in and through the Messiah. They saw him as God's Chosen One. Indeed, Paul in Galatians 3 treats the Messiah as in a sense fulfilling Israel's election. The Messiah is the offspring of Abraham par excellence (Galatians 3:16) so they too, because they are the Messiah's, are Abraham's offspring (Galatians 3:29: Now if you belong to Christ, then you are Abraham’s seed; and heirs of what was promised). The notion of being chosen in the Messiah here in Ephesians is likely to include the idea of incorporation into the Messiah as the representative on whom God's gracious decision was focused [WBC, Ephesians, p. 23]. Thus, it is "in the Messiah" that all of God's purposes for His people; as well as for His creation; are brought to fulfillment (Galatians 3:16-29; Ephesians 1:3-14).
The phrase "in the Messiah" therefore sets forth
a key concept that ties together the Old Testament and the New Testament and that
provides the basis for the life of all Christian believers. In fact, the
"in the Messiah" concept is the key to both the continuity; as well
as the discontinuity; which the NT people of God have in relationship to the OT
people of God, Israel. As for continuity, NT scholar F.F. Bruce states, that Jesus
provides in himself the vital continuity between the old Israel and the new,
and his faithful followers were both the righteous remnant of the old and the
nucleus of the new (The Origin of the Bible, p.12, Tyndale Pub., emphasis
mine). It is "in the Messiah" that new covenant believers
"participate" in the "body" and "blood of the Messiah";
a truth that is so vividly symbolized in the Lord's supper (I Corinthians
10:15-17).
Jesus called out and chose his twelve apostles from the
nation of Israel to be the leaders of the called-out Assembly of God. It was specifically "for
them" (i.e., "for you" Luke 22:19-20); the representatives of
the new covenant people of God; that Jesus' body was "broken" and
Jesus' blood was "poured out, as a sin-offering sacrifice". And so,
through the apostles, the Messiah established with the called-out Assembly
"the new covenant in my blood" (Luke 22:14-20, cf. I Corinthians 11).
Thus, the continuity between the Old and the New Covenant people is established
"in the Messian." But it is also "in the Messiah" that the
discontinuity between the Old and the New takes place, for the new covenant
people of God no longer consist of just "Israel according to the
flesh" (I Corinthians 10:18) because all those in the Messiah have been grafted into the true Israel of god (Romans 11). Instead, "in the Messiah" the
reconciliation of all mankind; both Jew and Gentile; has taken place.
Therefore, all barriers between Jew and Gentile; as well as between man and God;
have been broken down.
The result is "one new man in the Messiah, a member of
the New Humanity." As Ephesians states, but now in the Messiah Jesus, you
who once were far away (i.e., Gentiles) have been brought near through the
blood – the sin-offering sacrifice of the Messiah. For he in our place
has made the two one and has destroyed the barrier, the dividing wall of
hostility, by abolishing in his flesh the law with its commandments and
regulations. His purpose was to create in himself one new man out of the two
(Jews and Gentiles), thus making peace (Ephesians 2:13-15). Thus, via Christian
believers' incorporation "in the Messiah" direct continuity is
maintained with the Old Testament people of God; making the Old Testament the
spiritual history of the disciples' church. And yet, there is also discontinuity
in the fact that the one people of God no longer consists of only "Israel
according to the flesh" (I Corinthians 10:18) but has expanded to include
all people; both Jew and Gentile, who by faith and the Spirit are incorporated
"in the Messiah."
It is important to understand that both
"election", "predestination [being marked out beforehand]"
and the "in the Messiah" concept are all corporate concepts in the
Bible. It is only by being incorporated into the Messiah; through faith and the
Spirit; that individual believers become part of the "elect" or
"chosen people" of God (e.g. Colossians 3:12; I Peter 1:2; 2:9). Just
as Israel as a nation was called to be the OT chosen people of God, so in the
new covenant era the people of God are the "elect" or "chosen
people" of God only as a corporate entity "in the Messiah" (Ephesians
1:4). As C.K. Barrett explains: It is important to recall here that the seed of
Abraham contracted till it became ultimately the Messiah (Galatians 3:16) and
was subsequently expanded to include those who were in the Messiah. This means
that election does not take place arbitrarily or fortuitously; it takes place
always and only in the Messiah. They are elect who are in him; they who are
elect are in him. It is failure to remember this that causes confusion over
Paul's doctrine of election and predestination (being marked out beforehand) (cf. Galatians 3:29 emphasis
mine). [Black's NT Commentaries, Romans, p. 171.].
F.F. Bruce, then, summarizes for us the NT doctrine of
election in his commentary on Ephesians: It was in the Messiah, then, that God
chose His people "before the world's foundation." This phrase ...
denotes the divine act of election as taking place in eternity. Time belongs to
the created order: believers' present experience of the blessings bestowed by
God is the fulfillment on the temporal plane of His purpose of grace toward
them conceived in eternity. As the fulfillment is experienced "in the
Messiah," so is in him that the purpose is conceived. If, as Colossians
1:16 affirms, it was "because of him" that all things were created,
so we are assured, earlier still it was "because of him" that the
people of God were chosen. He is the Chosen of God par excellence; it is by
union with him, according to God's purpose and plan realized in time, that others
are chosen [NICNT, Ephesians, Colossians, Philemon, p. 254, Eerdmans).
"New Creation!" It is important to realize that the phrase "in the
Messiah" encapsulates an eschatological perspective - i.e., a perspective
that recognizes the fulfillment of God's promises, bringing "the
end" to this present age, and ushering in the age to come.
This perspective was the driving force of the new covenant
believers of the first-century church. The resurrection of the Messiah and the
giving of the Spirit were clear signs to the first-century church that the end
of the present age had already begun and that the first fruits of the age to
come were already theirs. They were thus a people living "between the
times" of the old and the new creation. But, as C.K. Barrett explains, it
was only "in the Messiah" that believers now participated in this
reality. "In Messiah" is itself a Pauline phrase of central significance. It is best explained as originating in primitive Christian
eschatology. The death and resurrection of Jesus were eschatological events,
affecting the transition from this age to the age to come. Believers could take
advantage of this transition, but the transference from one age to the
other could take place only "in the Messiah" (ibid., p. 119). A key
verse in understanding this perspective is, of course, 2 Corinthians 5:17. I
quote this verse in several different versions for comparison’s sake:
Therefore, if anyone is in the Messiah, he is a new creation; old things have
passed away; behold, all things have become new (NKJV; italicized words are not
in the underlying Greek text). Therefore, if anyone is in the Messiah, he is a
new creation; the old has gone, and the new has come (NIV). So, if anyone is in the
Messiah, there is a new creation: everything old has passed away; see,
everything has become new! (NRSV). For anyone united to the Messiah, there is a
new creation: the old order has gone; a new order has already begun (REB). All
of these translations have their good points, but the New Geneva Study Bible
summarizes the thought behind the verse in one of its notes and points out a
key matter regarding the translation of this verse: In the Messiah: Union with
Christ summarizes our experience of redemption. Believers are elected (Ephesians
1:4, 11), justified (Romans 8:1), sanctified (I Corinthians 1:2), and glorified
(3:18) "in the Messiah." Here Paul focuses on the momentous
significance of the believer's union with the Savior. Because the Messiah is the
"last Adam," the One in whom humanity is recreated (I Corinthians
15:45; Galatians 6:16; Ephesians 2:10) and who inaugurates the new age of
messianic blessing (Galatians 1:4; cf. Matthew 11:2-6), the believer's
spiritual union with the Messiah is nothing less than participation in the
"new creation."
Translating "there is a new creation" instead of
"he is a new creation" draws this conclusion more clearly, but the
thought is there either way [p. 1835]. This is certainly an important point.
"In the Messiah" believers have already become not just a new
creation but a part of God's entire "new creation" of the coming age.
The whole outlook of Christian believers should be conditioned by this reality.
Believers' lives are no longer to be "conformed to this age" but to
be "transformed by the renewing of your minds" (Romans 12:2). Richard
B. Hays in his book The Moral Vision of the New Testament summarizes this NT
perspective for believers today: According to Paul, the death and resurrection
of Jesus was an apocalyptic [or, eschatological] event that signaled the end of
the old age and portended the beginning of the new. Paul's moral vision is
intelligible only when his apocalyptic perspective is kept clearly in mind: the
church is to find its identity and vocation by recognizing its role within the
cosmic drama of God's reconciliation of the world to himself. The image of
"new creation" belongs to the thought world of Jewish apocalypticism.
One of the fundamental beliefs of apocalyptic thought was its doctrine of the
"two ages": the present age of evil and suffering was to be
superseded by a glorious messianic age in which God would prevail over injustice
and establish righteousness in a restored Israel."
Paul's use of the phrase "new creation" echoes
Isaiah's prophecy of hope: For I am about to create a new heavens and a new
earth; the former things shall not be remembered or come into mind. But be glad
and rejoice forever in what I am creating; for I am about to create Jerusalem
as a joy, and its people as a delight. I will rejoice in Jerusalem, and delight
in my people; no more shall the sound of weeping be heard in it, or the cry of
distress (Isaiah 65:17-19 NRSV; cp. 2 Peter 3:13; Revelation 21-22). When we
hear 2 Corinthians 5 in the context of Isaiah's fervent prophetic hope for the
renewal of the world, we understand that Paul is proclaiming that the church
has already entered the sphere of the eschatological age. The apocalyptic scope
of 2 Corinthians 5 was obscured by older translations that rendered the phrase
in verse 17 as "he is a new creation" (RSV) or; worse yet; "he
is a new creation" (KJV).
Such translations seriously distort Paul's meaning by making it appear that he is describing only the personal transformation of the individual through conversion experience. The sentence in Greek, however, lacks both subject and verb; a very literal translation might treat the words "new creation" as an exclamatory interjection: "If anyone is in the Messiah - new creation!" ... Paul is not talking about an individual's subjective experience of renewal through conversion; rather, for Paul, ktisis ("creation") refers to the whole created order (cf. Romans 8:18-25). He is proclaiming the apocalyptic message that through the cross God has nullified the kosmos of sin and death and brought a new kosmos into being. That is why Paul can describe himself and his readers as those "on whom the ends of the ages have met" (I Corinthians 10:11). The old age is passing away (cf. I Corinthians 7:31b), the new age has appeared in the Messiah, and the called-out Assembly stands at the juncture between them. [The Moral Vision of the New Testament, pp. 19-20, Harper- Collins] Whichever translation is chosen it is this perspective that should dominate the thinking of all who are "in the Messiah." In him "the old has gone, the new has come." It is to participate in this "new creation" that God has called us and chosen us to be his children; to be a people who are transformed by the power and vision of all that we have in the Messiah. Once again, as so often, Paul's letter to the Ephesians summarizes these great truths in God's plan of salvation:
But because of his great love for us, God, who is rich in mercy, made us alive in the Messiah even when we were dead in transgressions; it is by grace you have been saved. And God raised us up to newness of lie, with the Messiah and seated us with him in the heavenly realms in the Messiah Jesus, so that in the coming ages he might show the incomparable riches of His grace, expressed in His kindness to us in the Messiah Jesus. For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith; and this not from yourselves, it is the gift of God; not by works, so that no one can boast. For we are His workmanship, created in the Messiah Jesus to do good works, which God prepared in advance for us to do (Ephesians 2:8-10 NIV).
This is truly "amazing
grace!" May we be found worthy of such a high and holy calling.
No comments:
Post a Comment