Ephesians is a “Prison Epistle,” along with Philippians, Colossians, and Philemon (see Eph 3:1, Eph 4:1, and Eph 6:20). Written by Paul from Rome, the epistle expands on themes in Colossians, much as Romans does to Galatians. Whereas Colossians develops the all-sufficiency of Christ to the Church, Ephesians shows the blessings of that “fullness” enjoyed by the members of God’s family. The idea of unity resulting from reconciliation runs strong through the book (Eph 1:9-10; Eph 2:16-18; Eph 3:4-6; Eph 4:3-6; Eph 5:30-32; Eph 6:18-20). It is possible that the epistle was actually a circular letter to the churches of Asia. Paul’s goal is to inform the saints of their privileged status and exhort them to live in a way worthy of their standing.

Ephesians – Positions of Privilege in the Household of Faith – Colorado 2010

Gene Cunningham - February 7, 2003

The Transforming Power of Abiding in Christ #7

1st John - The Transforming Power of Abiding in Christ - Northern VA 2007

Eph 4:1-13 - three levels of unity: of the Spirit; of service; of faith. 1Jo 5:1-21 - Necessity of cleansing, obedience to His commandments (love one another as I have loved you). We are all called to be martyrs - "Not my will but Thine be done." Jam 1:22 - Key to victorious life is surrender. Faith conquers fear. Effective prayer has two aspects: 1. praise and exult God, 2. pray for somebody else.

Conference notes for this series can be found [HERE

Scripture References: James 1:22, John 5:1-21, Ephesians 4:1-13

From Series: "1st John - The Transforming Power of Abiding in Christ - Northern VA 2007"

This series details John's description of our being 'in Him' - abiding in Christ. This contrasts Paul's use of the phrase expressing positional truth. The key verse is 1Jo 2:6 'He who says he abides in Him ought to walk just as He walked.' The series opens many truths in 1st John while covering the entire epistle.

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