http://michaelkelleyministries.com/
The gospel is about wholeness. It’s about fractured, broken people
being the gift of life through the life of another. In Christ we become
complete and whole people—people who are in want for nothing.
Consider the amazing truth Paul expressed in Ephesians 1 when he said
that we have been blessed in Christ with every spiritual blessing. Or
again in Romans 8 that we will be given all things in Christ. Or back to
Ephesians when he talked about the truly mind-boggling concept of
inheritance.
In Ephesians 1:13–19, Paul used the word “inheritance” twice. The
first occurs in verse 14: “He is the down payment of our inheritance,
for the redemption of the possession, to the praise of His glory.”
Paul talked about the Holy Spirit as earnest money. If you’ve ever
bought a house, you know that you have to put down some earnest money as
part of the contract. The earnest money isn’t the full amount, but it’s
the amount of money you have to forfeit if you back out of the
contract. To Paul, the Holy Spirit’s indwelling presence is like earnest
money. It’s a deposit given to us by God that makes us sure He will
uphold His end of the deal. It makes us sure that He will carry us onto
completion, and we will receive our whole inheritance.
So what is that inheritance? We could say it’s heaven, eternity,
mansions, streets of gold, no more tears, and all the other stuff heaven
brings along with it. But ultimately, I think you have to say the
inheritance is the thing which makes heaven so heavenly—our inheritance
is God. It’s knowing Him fully and completely. That’s what makes heaven
so good, and that is what’s waiting for us. The fact that God is giving
us the greatest of all gifts, namely Himself, should bring us closer and
closer to that sense of completeness.
But Paul wasn’t done.
If we skip down to verse 18, this is what we find: “I pray that the
perception of your mind may be enlightened so you may know what is the
hope of His calling, what are the glorious riches of His inheritance
among the saints, and what is the immeasurable greatness of His power to
us who believe.”
Do you see the difference? In this verse “inheritance” isn’t talking
about God or heaven; it’s talking about us. We are the inheritance. So
who is inheriting us? Who is waiting for us? Who considers us so
valuable? God. We are God’s inheritance.
It’s unfathomable to think about what Christ did on the cross, that
He bought something for us, but He also bought something for God. Jesus
secured both our inheritances, and now God waits in expectation to fully
inherit His. And God’s inheritance? That’s us.
Not only do we have an inheritance stored up for us, but we are of
such value to the Creator that we are stored up for Him to the praise of
His glory. This is a good reminder to me as gas prices are high, the
economy is down, and jobs are in question; . . . but we are nonetheless
rich in God. And maybe He’s rich in us, too. The gospel reminds us that
we are absolutely and completely whole. Complete. In Christ.
Is it any wonder, then, that in virtually all of his letters, Paul’s
greetings to the followers of Jesus consisted of two words: “grace” and
“peace.” Perhaps he chose those two words because they represent the
gospel well. We are the beneficiaries of the lavish grace of God in
Christ. And because of the gospel of Jesus, we are whole. We are
complete. We lack nothing in Him. Now that’s shalom.
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