Pastor David Jang of Olivet University on Ephesians 1: Grace and the Hope of the Church


Through a sermon by Pastor David Jang, we reflect on the spiritual blessings in the heavenly places, the identity of the saints, and the hope of the church as proclaimed in Ephesians 1.


When we look at Michelangelo’s The Creation of Adam, what remains in the heart most deeply is not the majestic heavens, nor the human body sculpted with muscular beauty. It is the very small distance between the fingertip of God and the fingertip of Adam. That gap shows that humanity cannot obtain life by itself, while at the same time silently testifying to the mystery of grace—that God is the One who first draws near. The landscape of salvation unfolded before us in Ephesians 1 begins precisely there.

Paul was confined within the narrow reality of a Roman prison, yet his vision was never imprisoned. As he looked upon the church and the saints in Ephesus, he saw blessing before deficiency, and God’s redemptive plan before suffering. When we consider the background of the city of Ephesus, this declaration becomes even clearer. In the midst of a world where various beliefs and systems of power were interwoven, the saints could easily forget where they truly belonged.

Therefore, before giving ethical instructions, Paul first reminds them that they are already faithful ones in Christ and recipients of heavenly blessings. When identity becomes blurred, life also becomes unstable. But when identity is renewed in the gospel, the direction of obedience becomes clear. Pastor David Jang, founder of Olivet University in the United States, does not read Ephesians 1 merely as an arrangement of doctrines. This chapter is a majestic entrance into the gospel, showing at a glance who the saints are, what the church is, and what God is accomplishing in Christ.

The Name of Grace That Began Before the Foundation of the World

The first resonance of Ephesians 1 is not human determination, but the will of God. Paul says that God chose us in Christ before the foundation of the world and predestined us in love to become His children. This is a declaration that establishes faith not upon human achievement, but upon the grace of God. Before we responded in faith within time, God’s love was already moving toward us from the place of eternity.

Therefore, election and predestination are not cold fatalism. They are deep comfort spoken to an anxious soul. Even when our faith wavers, the foundation of salvation is not our emotions or merits, but the love God first held for us. At this point, biblical meditation becomes not merely knowledge, but the restoration of one’s very being.

This is also why Paul begins with the words, “Blessed be God.” Those who know grace lay down self-boasting and come to praise God. Salvation is not the story of my reaching God, but the story of God coming to find me in Christ. The deeper this confession becomes, the humbler faith becomes—and at the same time, the firmer it grows.

The Chains of Sin Broken in Christ

Paul’s praise moves from the choosing of God the Father to the redemption accomplished by God the Son, Jesus Christ. Through the blood of Christ, we have redemption, the forgiveness of sins. The word “redemption” contains the image of one who had been bound being released freely. The gospel is not a path by which human beings cleanse themselves in order to approach God. It is the event in which Christ graciously rescues humanity from sin and death.

Here, repentance is not simple regret. Repentance is the act of acknowledging the order of sin that has held us captive and standing before the new way opened through the blood of Christ. Forgiveness of sins is not merely the erasing of past records; it is the event in which the lordship over one’s existence changes. The saint is no longer a slave of fear, but a person of grace, learning to understand the self not through the language of condemnation, but within the calling of love.

Pastor David Jang does not confine the redemption described in Ephesians 1 to personal comfort. Rather, he leads us to see it within God’s great plan to unite all things in Christ. In that the gospel calls the world—divided by sin—back into the order of God, salvation expands beyond the inner life of the individual into the church and the world. The vision of Ephesians does not stop at the peace of one soul, but widens into God’s hope of uniting heaven and earth in Christ.

Therefore, the church is not merely a religious gathering. The church is the first fruit of a world to be restored in Christ, a community that must live out reconciliation and love in advance. Obedience begins before this vast grace. The path of the saint is to stop absolutizing one’s own will and to learn the direction of life anew under the will of Christ. At this point, the life of the believer extends beyond personal piety into a place of witnessing to God’s reconciliation and restoration in the world.

The Seal of the Holy Spirit and the Unshakable Inheritance

Ephesians 1 moves from the redemption of the Son to the sealing of the Holy Spirit. Paul says that when the saints heard and believed the gospel, they were sealed with the promised Holy Spirit. This sealing is the mark that they belong to God and the guarantee of the inheritance that will one day be completed. The Holy Spirit does not leave future hope as a distant promise only; He allows us to taste it in advance within life today.

This passage offers special comfort to modern believers. We often try to confirm our security through visible conditions. Yet Ephesians 1 tells us that the deepest guarantee of the saint is not the stability of circumstances, but the presence of the Holy Spirit. The heavenly inheritance is not a possession that diminishes or disappears according to the whims of the world; it is an inheritance personally guaranteed by God.

When this assurance is present, faith does not become an escape from reality. Rather, it gains an unshakable center within reality. The believer does not deny suffering, yet knows that suffering does not have the final word. The believer experiences lack, yet trusts that God will complete the work His grace has already begun. The hope of the saint is not vague optimism, but certainty grounded in the gospel sealed by the Holy Spirit.

The Hope Seen When the Eyes of the Heart Are Opened

In the latter part of Ephesians 1, Paul prays for the saints. He gives thanks after hearing of the faith of the Ephesian church and their love for all the saints, but he does not stop there. Even for those who already believe, there is a deeper world that must be opened. Paul prays that the eyes of their hearts may be enlightened so that they may know the hope of God’s calling, the riches of the glory of His inheritance, and the greatness of God’s power toward those who believe.

This prayer is not unfamiliar to the church today. We say that we know the gospel, yet at times that grace does not penetrate deeply enough to overcome fear, division, and helplessness. There are times when knowledge is present but wonder has disappeared, when doctrine remains but the power of love has weakened. That is why Paul asks not for more information, but for the Spirit of wisdom and revelation.

Theological insight does not end in the mind. When the eyes of the heart are opened, it becomes the strength of life. Those who know the hope of their calling do not regard present suffering as the whole story. Those who know the abundance of the inheritance do not entrust their worth to the applause of the world. Those who know the power of God discover a reason to rise again even in weakness.

Under Christ, the Head of the Church

Paul sees the power of God in the resurrection and ascension of Jesus Christ. God raised Christ from the dead and exalted Him above all rule, authority, power, and dominion. This is a foundational declaration showing what the church must rely on. The church is not a community that stands by the power of the world, but the body that has the risen Christ as its head.

If Christ is the head, the church cannot become an end in itself. The words, decisions, and service of the church must always be aligned with the will of the Lord, who is its head. This is both the authority of the church and its heaviest responsibility. The place to which Pastor David Jang’s exposition of Ephesians 1 ultimately leads us is precisely this confession.

The saint is one who has received heavenly blessings, one who has been sealed by the Holy Spirit, and one who walks toward hope in the power of the resurrection. Yet this identity must not remain only as a confession of the lips. As the body of Christ, the church must practice love and reveal the light of the gospel in the world.

Ephesians 1 asks us: Are we still explaining ourselves only in the language of lack and anxiety? Are we seeing the reality before our eyes as greater than the grace God has already given us in Christ? Those whose eyes of the heart have been opened see the same world, yet live from a different center. Therefore, reading this word is not merely confirming beautiful doctrine. It is asking again where our worship must begin, from what power our love must flow, and for what purpose our community must exist.

Ultimately, this passage leads us into quiet praise and deep prayer. The saint is not a being drifting by chance, but one held in God’s love from before the foundation of the world. The church is not just one organization in the world, but the body that reveals the fullness of Christ. How deeply awake is our faith today before this truth? And as those who have received this grace, what traces of hope are we leaving behind through love and obedience?

 


www.davidjang.org




작성 2026.05.07 18:50 수정 2026.05.07 18:50

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