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THE REFORMED WITNESS HOUR
"The Wall of Separation Broken Down”
Rev.
Wilbur Bruinsma
haak prca.org
September 7, 2008; No. 3427
(Printed copies in a
four-message booklet can be sent monthly without charge. Request from:
Reformed Witness Hour, Box
1230, Grand Rapid s, MI 49501)
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Dear radio friends,
Today we are going to consider a number of verses out of
Paul’s letter to the Ephesians. In Ephesians
2:11-15 we read: “Wherefore remember, that ye being in time past Gentiles
in the flesh, who are called Uncircumcision by that
which is called the Circumcision in the flesh made by hands; that at that time
ye were without Christ, being aliens from the commonwealth of Israel, and
strangers from the covenants of promise, having no hope, and without God in the
world: but now in Christ Jesus ye who sometimes were far off are made nigh by
the blood of Christ. For he is our peace, who hath made both one, and hath
broken down the middle wall of partition between us; having abolished in his
flesh the enmity, even the law of commandments contained in ordinances; for to
make in himself of twain one new man, so making peace.”
This particular
chapter of Ephesians speaks of grace, that is, of the unmerited favor of God
toward His people. The Ephesian church is reminded of
the work of grace in a number of different ways. In the first few verses this
church is reminded that the personal salvation that each of God’s children
receive is of grace. You who, in times past, had your conversation in the lusts
of the flesh, fulfilling the desires of the flesh; you who were, by nature, children
of wrath; you who were dead in sins and trespasses, God made alive. They were
Gentiles, after all. And that label “Gentile” had come to refer not only to the
Greeks and the Romans, but to all of the pagan nations outside of the nation of
Israel.
You were Gentiles. And now this is true of you: God, who is rich in mercy, for
His great love wherewith He loved us even when we were dead in sins, hath
quickened us together with Christ, by grace ye are saved! So they are reminded
of God’s grace.
In the next few
verses this church is reminded of God’s grace in another way: the works of
faith they performed now, as believers, were not something that merited in
God’s sight. God did not look on these saints for their works’ sake, as if they
were now a holy people on account of their works. We are not saved by works. We
are saved by grace (Eph.
2:8, 9), “For by grace are ye saved through faith; and that not of
yourselves: it is the gift of God: not of works, lest any man should boast.”
The Ephesians, therefore, could not boast in their works either. Just as they
could not boast in their faith, neither could they boast in their works.
Now, in the verses
that we are going to consider today, Paul administers the ax to all human
pride. Here is one more thing to remember about ourselves, and remember it
well. In time past, we were the Uncircumcision, that
is, we were without Christ, without God, strangers from the church and the
covenant. We were without hope, plain and simple. There was no salvation to the
Gentiles, no salvation outside of the nation of Israel. But God, in His grace,
changed that. He has made us into one man with the Old Testament church, and He
has done that once again in the blood of Jesus Christ. Remember that, church of Christ, Paul says. Such was the word of
the gospel to believers then and now. We are what we are, and where we are, by
the grace of God and nothing else. This word we are going to learn as we
consider the grafting in of the Gentile believers.
Now, it is obvious
from the few verses that we consider that the Gentile believers in time past
were not a part of God’s kingdom and church. In verses 11 and 12 we find that
the Gentiles were, at that time, without Christ. In verse 13 we read that they
were sometimes far off. In verse 14 we read of a middle wall of partition
between them and the nation of Israel.
The simple fact that Paul is stressing here in these verses is, therefore, that
God had built a wall of separation between the nation of Israel, the
church of the Old Testament, and the other nations of the world. As far back
already as Noah, we find the separation between national Israel and the
Gentile nations prophesied. God’s blessing that was pronounced by means of Noah
was upon Shem and his generations. God would be the God of Shem, we are told in
Genesis
9:26 —not of Ham, and not, at that time, of Japheth either. That was realized
when God established His covenant in Genesis
17 with Abraham and his children, all of whom came out of the line of Shem.
This line of the covenant and church was narrowed even further when God told
Abraham that in Isaac his seed was going to be called. In other words, the
other children of Abraham, which he had with Hagar
(Ishmael) and with Keturah, would not be included in
the line of His church.
Then slowly, through
several generations, all of that proved true. God narrowed the line of His
covenant to the generation of Abraham, Isaac, and then Jacob. We well know, of
course, that the twelve sons of Jacob were the heads of the tribes that became
known as the commonwealth or kingdom
of Israel. After God had
delivered the children of Jacob, or the children of Israel,
from the bondage of Egypt,
God formed this new nation into a kingdom at Mount Sinai.
It became a theocracy, that is, a nation under God. At Mount Sinai, Israel
was given her law, the Torah, which contained all the commandments. She was
organized into the twelve tribes. The priests, the Levites, were appointed for
service in the temple. The tabernacle was built, and her official worship as a
nation began. Elders were even appointed at that time to rule. So at Sinai, God
made Israel
into a commonwealth, or a kingdom. And the rest is history. Israel was given by God the land of Canaan
as an inheritance. God set up David as the great king. And in this way the
nation of Israel
developed into the greatest commonwealth or kingdom on earth.
The truth is, in the
Old Testament, God did not save any other people than the people of Israel. Now,
that does not mean that everyone in the nation of Israel was saved. God saved only
His elect in the nation of Israel.
But this did not change the fact that those whom God had chosen to save, with
only a few exceptions—there were exceptions in the Old Testament—but those whom
God had chosen to save were always born within the nation of Israel. And that
went on for well over a thousand years. During that long period of time God
chose His people out of that nation.
That means, of
course, that at that time these Gentile believers in Ephesus, in their generations, were not a
part of God’s church. Notice verse 12 of the passage that we read, “At that
time ye were without Christ, being aliens from the commonwealth of Israel,
and strangers from the covenants of promise, having no hope, and without God in
the world.” These people were strangers from the covenant promise. How
horrible. They were estranged from the covenant and all of the promises that
God had given to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. They were strangers from the
covenant God had established with David and his royal seed. In other words, they
were not a part of the friendship and fellowship that God had established with
the seed of Abraham in the Old Testament.
And because these
Gentile peoples were alienated from the covenant promise, they were without
Christ. Our text obviously proves that God’s people in the Old Testament were
viewed by God to be in Christ as well. Believers in Israel,
God’s true Israel,
were saved then in Christ. They were saved through the faith that pointed them
ahead to the coming of the Messiah, to the coming of Christ. Those, therefore,
who were not included in the commonwealth
of Israel or the covenants
of promise were cut off from Christ. They were cut off
altogether from salvation.
And that is why they
were without hope. They had no spiritual desire or longing for the coming of
Jesus Christ. They did not look for His advent like the children of Israel did. And
all of this added up to one thing: they were without God in the world. What a
horrible plight—to be without God! Their eyes were blinded; their hearts were
darkened. They stumbled about in their unbelief. They did not know God, nor did
they even care to know God. They followed after the heathen idols of their own
flesh. They heaped to themselves gods after their own desires. They were not
given to know God Himself as the great and glorious God of heaven and earth.
So there was this
huge spiritual wall that existed between the nation of Israel and the
Gentile nations of the world. That wall divided them into two camps. On the one
side was God, Christ, and salvation. On the other side
there was no hope, only sin and despair. And that wall was rock-solid! That is
to say, man could not break it down. That is true because God had appointed it.
God set that wall up. It was divinely ordained. God did not choose to save the
Gentiles in the Old Testament. He chose to save His people only out of the
natural seed of Jacob. That is it. And what made that wall so solid was the law
of commandments contained in ordinances. In verse 15 we read of that: “Having
abolished in his flesh the enmity, even the law of commandments contained in
ordinances; for to make in himself of twain one new man, so making peace.”
Now what is referred
to here, when this verse speaks of the law of commandments contained in
ordinances, is the Torah—the Old Testament law that God gave to the nation of Israel at Mount Sinai.
It was there that God organized Israel
into a kingdom under law. And He did this by giving the nation of Israel all
kinds of commandments. He gave them civil commandments that governed their life
as a nation; He gave them ceremonial commandments that governed their worship;
and He gave them moral commandments, that is, the Ten Commandments,
that governed their life in general. And all these commandments made up
the Torah, the one law of God. That is why our text speaks of the law of
commandments. God’s law consisted of many types of commandments.
But the particular
type of commandments that Paul has in mind that separated the nation of Israel from all
other nations were the ceremonial laws in particular.
We say that because these particular laws consisted in all kinds of ordinances,
that is, all kinds of ceremonies. The moral law, the law of the Ten
Commandments, did not. But this was especially true of the ceremonial laws.
These commandments, with their ceremonies, were a wall that separated the
nation of Israel
from the Gentiles in the Old Testament. This law of commandments contained in
ordinances formed a barrier between the nations and Israel. And that barrier, we are
told in verse 15, was a wall of enmity. That is, hatred existed between Israel and the
unbelieving heathen nations of the world. Israel was not allowed to form any
league with these nations. Israel
existed in safety alone as a nation. And the only time national Israel did
make league with these nations was when she walked in unbelief. True Israel still
hated the enemies of God. And these enemies of God hated Israel, too.
There was a solid, unmovable wall that existed for hundreds and hundreds of
years between the kingdom
of Israel under her law
of commandments and the Gentiles who were without Christ.
But here is the
amazing and gracious Word of the gospel to the Ephesian
believers, verses 13 and 14: “Now in Christ Jesus ye who sometimes were far off
are made nigh by the blood of Christ. For he is our peace,
who hath made both one, and hath broken down the middle wall of partition
between us.” Wow! Christ has broken down this wall that for years had
divided the nations of the world from true Israel. Christ has now smashed this
wall and demolished it. There is not one stone left on another. He completely
removes that wall. The way that kept us from being a part of God’s church in
the Old Testament is now open to you and me. We are no longer barred by God
from His fellowship or from His church. We are no longer without God in this
world. We may and we do confess that this God is our God. He will be our Guide
even unto death. We have blessed hope. We wait for and long for the second
coming of Jesus Christ. And we look forward to a place in heaven with all of
God’s saints.
Believers today are
a part because Christ has removed the enmity that kept us separated from the
church of the old dispensation. The unbelief that hardened us in our sin at
that time in our generations has now been taken away by Christ. And we are
given eyes to see and hearts to understand that what the saints of old had we
now have. It is true, salvation was theirs then. But
now God’s people from out of all nations of this world, together with them,
have become recipients of salvation. God’s people out of all nations belong to
the commonwealth
of Israel. The church of
today also can be called true Israel.
Look at verse 19 of Ephesians
2: “Now therefore ye are no more strangers and foreigners, but
fellow-citizens with the saints, and of the household of God.” We are fellow
citizens in that commonwealth or kingdom
of Israel.
Is this an earthly
nation, an earthly kingdom or commonwealth? Not at all.
It is a spiritual kingdom, the kingdom of God and of Christ. We belong to the
nation of true Israel,
the elect of God, chosen by God from the foundations of the world, gathered
from the nations of this world. The body of Christ in this world is now true Israel.
That then is what
Christ has accomplished for us.
But there is one
question remaining: How did Christ accomplish this? How did He break down that
wall? What was the hammer that smashed to ruins the law of commandments
contained in ordinances?
Christ’s blood. Verse
13: “Ye who were sometimes afar off are made nigh by the blood of Christ.”
Christ abolished, in His flesh, the enmity, even the law of commandments
contained in ordinances, by shedding His blood to save God’s people chosen from
out of all nations. You see, all the ordinances of the Old Testament laws that
governed the nation of Israel
before Christ came were meant, by God, simply to point His people to Christ. We
could go through all kinds of examples of this, including circumcision itself—a
bloody ordinance that pointed to the shed blood of Christ that would indeed
cleanse His people from sin. The sacrifices pointed to Him. The priesthood
pointed to Him. The tabernacle, later the Temple—its
furniture, all the ordinances and ceremonies of the tabernacle and the
temple—pointed to Christ.
Well, through
Christ’s death (His shed blood), through His resurrection, all these
commandments contained in ceremonies Christ fulfilled. And in doing so, all the
outward ceremonies of the law passed away. They no longer divided between the
nation of Israel
and the Gentiles, that is, the nations of this world. The Gentiles did not have
to keep all of these ceremonies to be a part of the church anymore. And for
that reason, there was no more division. God does not require of you and me
today to worship as did the Old Testament saints. And yet, we are of the same
household of faith with them.
But there is one more
way that the blood of Christ broke down that wall. Salvation.
We who were dead in sins and trespasses God has now saved by His grace, through
the blood of Jesus Christ. Salvation itself is no longer to the Jews but also
to the Gentiles. We have, by Christ’s blood, been reconciled to God.
You understand how
humbling that should be? In our generations that have gone before us, we were
nothing, nothing at all. We were excluded from heaven,
we were excluded from God’s blessed presence. We do not deserve to be where we
are today. Only by God’s grace have we been grafted into the church of Jesus Christ.
Only by grace have we been given the gift of faith so that we can understand
the joy of belonging to the church. Think of what God has done for you and me,
His people! We who were alienated from God, on account of our sin and unbelief,
Christ has brought to God. He has paid the price for
our sins. He has made us righteous before God. Now we are no longer children of
wrath, we are the people of God. God has done that! God has accomplished that
freely for us in the blood of Christ. And God continues to do that today, too,
in the hearts and lives of others.
Here is the result of
this wonderful work of Christ, at the end of verse 15: He has made “in himself
of twain one new man.” Two peoples—Jews and Gentiles—a wall that divided them
for a thousand years. These two were divided by faith and unbelief. God now has
made them into one new man. We have become one body. We are the organism of the
church together—Jewish believers and believers from all nations—interacting
harmoniously as one body, one new man.
No, the church today
is not different from the church of old. It is now that the same church takes
on a new appearance. It is renewed, it is restored in Christ. And it is
identified together with Christ. In fact, the new man we are become is Christ!
He is our head; we are His members.
And it is because of
this that there is peace, peace between the races of men. We have always been
divided. In Christ there is no Jew or Gentile, no Dutch or English, no African
or European or Asian. So long as there is unbelief, there is division. There is
no peace for the nations. But for those who believe, we are all one body
together with our Lord Jesus Christ. All those who believe live in peace with
one another. What a glorious gospel!
Let us pray.
Father in heaven, we
thank Thee that Thou hast made us, together with the Old Testament church, one
new man in Christ Jesus our Lord. Thou hast determined in Thy grace, and in Thy grace alone, to incorporate and ingraft into Thy church us, who in our generations were
lost. We thank Thee for that blessed gift. We thank Thee for what Jesus Christ
has done for us. Now may we together, in this world, out of all nations,
confess our love for Thee and confess our Lord Jesus Christ and what He has
done for us. In His name we pray, Amen.