Walk in Wisdom

As a boy, I grew up climbing the rock peaks around our town. One thing that our father impressed on us was the importance of being self-conscious about where we placed our hands and feet. In Ephesians 5:15–17, Paul calls you to be wise and aware as to how you walk through life.

Watch your step! Live (or walk) wisely. “Walk in wisdom” is the third part (along with “walk in love” and “walk in light”) of what it means to be imitators of God, verse 1. Pay attention. Look carefully. Obedience to God involves effort, not just acting instinctively. Appreciate the tension here. You have been raised with Christ and seated with him. Yet you live and walk in days that are evil. The days are not neutral. Living to God’s glory involves taking care, understanding what is going on around you. It means being aware of the attitudes and assumptions of the world around you. Evaluate them by the Word of God. Remember, and echo Solomon’s prayer. Notice how much of Proverbs is given over to practical warnings.

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Live in the Light of Christ’s Resurrection

Light is crucial for making your way in darkness. In Ephesians 5:8–14. Paul points you to the true light.

Be the light that you are. You were darkness. The light of God’s grace shows most clearly when it is contrasted with the darkness which we once were. Paul repeats the point made in Ephesians 2, that we were dead in sin, blind, unable to remedy the situation. Note the strong language—not that you were in darkness, not that your eyes were dim, but that you were darkness.

But now, because you are light, walk as children of light. Now you are light in the Lord. The One who is the Light of the world has shined into your life, and you, in turn, become a light bearer. You are a lamp on a lampstand. Moses on Mt. Sinai stood in the presence of God until his face shone. You have the glory of the risen Lord permeating your life. You are characterized by light. Because of what you are, walk that way. Walk as children of light. Bear the fruit of goodness, righteousness, and truth. Understand God, soak yourself in his Word, and learn what pleases him.

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Imitators of God

There is something really cute when a 2 year old boy tries to act just like his daddy. And, if the father is the kind of man he should be, it’s wonderful to see that boy at 12 or 17 trying to measure up to his dad’s example. Unfortunately, there are some fathers whom one hopes their children never imitate. In Ephesians 5:1–7, Paul calls you to imitate, not a human father, but the perfect Father in heaven, the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ.

Be imitators of God. Live as the beloved children that you are. The Fifth Commandment summons children to honor their parents. Paul expands on that, and calls you to honor your Father in heaven. Children learn by imitating. You are called to imitate God. Pattern your life after his holiness. The standard expressed in Leviticus 19 is challenging! You are his holy people—saints. Live as is appropriate for a member of his family. Paul continues the theme of walking (living). Walk in love (our text), in the light (verse 8), and in wisdom (verse 15). Love, as we will see, characterized the obedience of Christ. To imitate God, walk in love.

“In saying that we are saints, God employs sweetness and graciousness, as if he should say, My children, consider with yourselves: for I have not created you without plan and purpose in this world, but I have also adopted you, in order to call you to the heavenly heritage…. I have redeemed you with the blood of my Son, and given you my Spirit who dwells in you, in order that you should be my temples, and I be worshipped there…. If you will be my children, keep yourselves in the state in which I have set you.”

John Calvin, Sermons on Ephesians, on Ephesians 5:3–5
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Love and Live the Truth

We may struggle to figure out how much of what we hear is really true. AI can summarize the truth or speak something other than the truth. Regardless of AI and the practice of the world around you, God calls you in Ephesians 4:25–32 to speak the truth.

Do not lie. Put off falsehood. Clear communication is crucial in the military, in business, in marriage, in the family — and in the church. Those who are united to Christ must put off lying, which is a natural response of fallen, sinful mankind. Paul is restating the truth of the Ninth Commandment. God’s law outlines basic principles of justice: judges and public trials were established, Deuteronomy 16:18. Justice was not to be swayed by outside considerations, Exodus 23:1–9. The duty of witnesses was important. There were to be a plurality of witnesses, Deuteronomy 17:6; 19:15, and they were to be participants in the judgment, Deuteronomy 17:7. Maliciously false witnesses were to be punished, Deuteronomy 19:16–21. True witness is impossible without the fear of God. Nothing but the truth must be spoken in testimony. Justice needs God’s law, 2 Chronicles 19:6, 7. In an age when the name of God has become an expletive, is it any wonder that the truthfulness, even of sworn testimony, is often in doubt? We are also called to protect one another’s reputations.

“Scarcely one in a hundred will be found who will be as kind in sparing the character of others, as he himself desires to be pardoned for manifest vices; nay, slander is often praised under the pretext of zeal and conscientiousness. Hence it happens that this vice insinuates itself even among the saints, creeping in under the name of virtue.”

John Calvin, Commentary on the Pentateuch, at Exodus 20:16
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Created Anew

God made mankind, male and female, in his image and gave them dominion and power. But Adam and Eve sinned. They and the earth were cursed. But Christ has come, and in his resurrection power as the second Adam, brings renewal and restoration. As you trust him, you are created anew, as Paul tells you in Ephesians 4:17–24.

Do not walk as the Gentiles do. They live in ignorance of God. You are the body of Christ. Paul insists that you live that way. You may no longer walk (and the theme of walking runs through the passage) or live as the pagan Gentiles do. Their thinking is alienated from God. They live in spiritual darkness–because of the hardness of their hearts. They are separate from God. The ignorance is not an excuse — sinful man willfully cuts himself off from God and God’s self-revelation, see Romans 1.

Idolatry leads to immorality. Having a false god leads to sinning against the true God. Romans 1:24–31 describes the immorality of the Gentiles as God’s judgment. He gives them over. Here Paul describes a similar pattern from a human perspective: they have given themselves over. There is a close relationship between our theology (whether we are conscious of it or not) and our practice, the way we live. Paul pictures a deepening spiral, a whirlpool of sinfulness, which sucks down those who venture in. Paul has a realistic awareness of the enslaving power of sin. Don’t toy with it!

Instead, put off the old. Your old self has died. Is the Christian, this side of heaven, an old self and a new self, both living together in a state of tension? Some see it that way. That leads to blaming what one does on the old self, and even to theological formulation in which someone is saved, but self or the old man is still on the throne. Ephesians 4, taken alone, might be read that way–put off the old self, put on the new. But that doesn’t fit with the way that Paul describes the situation elsewhere, see Romans 6; Colossians 3:3, 9, 10. Paul pictures the old self as having died, as having been buried with Christ. We are now new.

“[Christ] is invested with and is the embodiment of resurrection power. And since believers have been raised with him, they live in the abiding power, virtue, and grace of Jesus’ resurrection life; they walk in newness of life (Romans 6:4).”

John Murray, Principles of Conduct, p. 221

Therefore, get rid of what is old. Recognize the things in your life which are characterized by sin, by the old self, and get rid of them. Throw them out. Be about the business of the slaughter house (John Murray). Be honest about your motivations. Be discerning about what you allow into your brain and heart. Only because the old self is dead can you make these changes. Recognize that sin contradicts what you are in Christ.

Positively, live as the new creation that you are. You have come to learn Christ. Christ is not just someone that you learn about, though you certainly do need to know some things about him. You need to learn him. You need to be his disciple, to follow, to listen, to put what you hear into practice. The sin that you are to put off is an utter contradiction of the risen, glorified Christ. And you have been united with him.

“Now in Scripture the act by which the Holy Spirit causes us to understand the word of Christ in its spiritual sense and content and opens our consciousness to the truth is called by the particular term ‘enlightenment.’ Since sin has darkened the mind (Rom. 1:21; 1 Cor. 1:21; 2:14; Eph. 4:18; 5:8), what is needed is a renewal of the mind (Rom. 12:2; Eph. 4:23). This renewal is accomplished by God, who by revelation takes away from a person the hindrance that up until that time blocked the true understanding of things…. He does this by bestowing the Holy Spirit….”

Herman Bavinck, Reformed Dogmatics, Vol. 4, page 99

That means, put on what has been re-created in God’s image. The first Adam had been made in God’s image, and reflected that in the way he lived. But he sinned, and death, despair, helplessness, and bondage entered this world. Appropriately the second Adam has been raised. In him the enslaving power of sin has been broken. You, if you are united to Christ by faith, now can and must live to God’s glory. God’s creative power is no less present as he changes your sinful habits that it was when he spoke the universe into place. Just as Adam was made in God’s image, you have been re-made in that image. And you do reflect God’s holiness and glory. This transformation affects your life as a believer. But it also gives hope as you do the work restored to you–that of subduing and ruling the world to God’s glory.

Made in the image of God — that’s what you are. But even more, you have been re-made, re-created in God’s image and to his glory. Live as one who is truly alive in Christ.