THE RETURN: BE AT PEACE - Part 2 (Glory In The Church) - 03/20/2022
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Grace Place Atlanta COGBF
4700 Mitchell Street
Forest Park, GA 30297
Website: atlantacogbf.org
Email: info@atlantacogbf.org
Phone: (404) 241-6781
Wayne D. Mack, Pastor
Pastor Wayne D. Mack Sermon Notes
March 20, 2022
The Return: Glory in the Church!
The Return: BE AT PEACE!
Ephesians 3:20 & 21
20 Now
to Him who is able to do exceedingly abundantly above all that we ask or
think, according to the power that works in us, 21 to Him be glory in the church by Christ
Jesus to all generations, forever and ever. Amen.
GM Grace Place!
As we prepare to corporately celebrate God for allowing us to return to corporate worship and
fellowship (aka: “Return to Church), as your pastor, I want to wisely alert the GP family and
friends of GP to “how” we are expected to return to the church house after a two-year absence.
Did you know that “How We Return” is critically important? It is important because it will
determine how richly blessed of the Lord we will be in terms of experiencing peace, prosperity,
turn-a-round, joy, contentment, spiritual fulfillment, wholeness, healing, and completion in
our life with Christ.
There’s no way we can just show back up and pick up where left off before the pandemic. That
is to say “God had nothing to do with the pandemic” or that the pandemic carried no significant
message or clear motivating message for the church. It also arrogantly suggests that pandemic
was an ungodly aggravation and anything but a tool used by God to minister to His people.
If we land there and stay, we are destined to miss God. For churches that are now returning, our
ears should be wide open and burning.
Considering what the Spirit has been saying to churches over the past 24 months, plus those God
would have us to know as we stand on the threshold of reentering HIS CHURCH two years later,
it would behoove us to pause and give our ears to God. I believe He has something to remind us
of about His Church and Our Conduct in the church.
So, as we hold the party hats and confetti for yet another week, I believe its to our advantage to
hear the rest of what God has to say to us before we enter in.
This approach is likened to the Children of Israel receiving a word of wise instruction from
Moses [in Deuteronomy] within weeks of entering the Promised Land. Moses’ job was to
prepare the Israelites’ hearts for how to serve God in the land, and to instruct them on how to
possess the Land based on God’s expectations -- not their own.
The church is in the same position after two years of disconnect. We need a refresher and a
reminder of what God expects of us and His church “post-pandemic”. Understanding it will
make us all the better by and by. And, that’s worth celebrating for years and years to come.
Last week, in this mini-series, I’ve entitled: The Return, we talked about “Be At Peace”
whereas when we have the peace of God in our hearts, then it is certain there will be Peace in the
Church.
This morning, the focus of the message, entitled: The Return: Glory in the Church – is an
opportunity to learn about a single attribute God desires to see in His church and who He uses to
achieve it.
That attribute is GLORY – as in Glory in the church. Coupled with that,
I believe that God has used the pandemic-pause of two years to present the church a fresh
opportunity to bring back and rekindle glory in the church.
While thinking about GLORY . . . let’s define it:
What is Glory?
Glory by man’s definition is:
• high renown or honor won by notable achievements. magnificence or great beauty; take
great pride or pleasure in; the Bible portrays glorying in yourself or in nature as sinful.
The Biblical definition of Glory is:
• The most common use of the word "glory" in the Bible is to describe the splendor,
holiness and majesty of God. Glory, in this sense, is often associated with a person
experiencing God's presence in a tangible way. When used this way, the word glory
conveys a sense of heavy dignity.
The glory of man is about himself – including his pride, conceit, self-importance, pretense,
hypocrisy, arrogance, and egotism. Man’s glory is about me, me, me, . . . my, my, my, …
and I, I, I!
Now, Our Scripture text is Ephesians, Chapter 3, Verses 20 and 21 (NKJV):
Listen to how it reads:
20 Now
to Him who is able to do exceedingly abundantly above all that we ask or
think, according to the power that works in us, 21 to Him be glory in the church by Christ
Jesus to all generations, forever and ever. Amen.
Traditionally, this passage is often used as a benediction or a hype verse.
But it is that and much more. These two verses are the Apostle Paul’s close to a prayer he
prayed for the Saints at the Ephesus church and future believers. It is soul stirring and soul
inspiring.
In the prayer, Paul asked God for some bold and seemingly impossible requests like:
•
Praying that out of the great and glorious riches of God’s resources, God Himself would
enable the saints to know the power of the spirit’s indwelling —that Christ might actually
live in our hearts by faith.
Paul prayed that each one of us be firmly fixed in love so much so that we be enabled to
grasp (with all Christians) how wide and deep and long and high is the love of Christ—
and to know for ourselves Christ’s love which goes far beyond our comprehension. And,
finally that we as God’s children might be filled through all our being with God himself!
The hope of Paul’s prayer is that all believers would be emptied of themselves to allow God to
fully indwell them [each one of us] to the brim.
Why? So, everything about us would be about God and not about us.
Psalm 115:1 says:
Not unto us, O Lord, not unto us, But to Your name give glory, Because of Your mercy,
Because of Your truth.
But the BIGGER “WHY” is so that only God is seen dominating our lives in love and in
connection with all saints -- wherever we go and wherever we are – especially as professing
Jesus followers in the church. Paul is saying everything about every believer should represent
God.
Ephesians – Chapter 3 – Verses 14-19 bears repeating again . . .
Paul is praying . . .
14 For this reason I bow my knees to the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, 15 from whom the
whole family in heaven and earth is named, 16 that He would grant you, according to the
riches of His glory, to be strengthened with might through His Spirit in the inner
man, 17 that Christ may dwell in your hearts through faith; that you, being rooted and
grounded in love, 18 may be able to comprehend with all the saints what is the width and
length and depth and height— 19 to know the love of Christ which passes knowledge; that
you may be filled with all the fullness of God.
The FULLNESS of God is to be so strong spiritually, so compelled by divine love, that you are
totally dominated by the Lord with nothing left of self.
Although to be constantly dominated by the Lord would be an impossibility, still Paul is saying
this should be the believer’s everyday pursuit. Everyday we should strive to grasp God’s
attributes and characteristics – His power, majesty, wisdom, love, mercy, patience, kindness, and
every thing about Him.
We as God’s children can experience the greatness of God in our lives as a result of total
devotion to Him.
But know this, that achieving this feat is not done in the power of our natural might, but rather
the power of His might.
Ephesians 3 verse 20 says:
20 Now to Him who is able to do
When the conditions of verses 16-19 are met, God’s power at work in and through us is
unlimited and far beyond our comprehension.
Ephesians 3:16-19
16 that He would grant you, according to the riches of His glory, to be strengthened with might
through His Spirit in the inner man, 17 that Christ may dwell in your hearts through faith; that
you, being rooted and grounded in love, 18 may be able to comprehend with all the
saints what is the width and length and depth and height— 19 to know the love of Christ which
passes knowledge; that you may be filled with all the fullness of God.
That’s because according to Ephesians 3:20b Christ is able to do
exceedingly abundantly above all that we ask or think, according to the power that works
in us,
Paul is proof positive of this. He is praying and asking that God’s fulness fill every believer to
overflowing. He is sparing no confidence that God is able to answer his prayer.
His prayer is signaling to the church that God will far exceed our every petition when we pray
according to His will.
God is able to do exceedingly abundantly above all that we ask or think, according to the
power that works in us,
The means by which God answers prayer is given in the expression, according to the power
that works in us.
This refers to the Holy Spirit, Who is constantly at work in our lives, seeking to produce the fruit
of a Christlike character – rebuking us because of sin, guiding us in worship, directing us in
service.
The more we are yielded to Him, the greater will be His effectiveness in conforming us to Christ.
21 to
Him be glory in the church by Christ Jesus to all generations, forever and ever. Amen.
The more we align ourselves with God, and the more He dwells in our hearts by faith -- the more
we are filled unto all the fulness of Him – it is here that we are the manifestation of GLORY in
the church. We have been entrusted with a sacred charge. Do you look like the glory of God?
Is it to God you are determined to bring glory to – or are you determined to have things your way
– especially in the church.
I believe the pandemic-pause experienced over the two years has presented the church a fresh
opportunity to be the church. I pray that while not at church, we have learned something about
being the church.
When God is fully at work in charge of our lives and when we are fully engulfed by Him and
submitted – then the only personality and spirit that is seen in the church is God. That then is
the first sign of GLORY in the Church. It’s God that is seen and pictured and not man; not
church people; not titles; not pride.
Paul’s focus is on the GLORY of God and it reigning in the church.
[In our case, it’s about bringing God’s glory back into the church.]
Paul understands that there can appear to be two glories in the church: God’s Glory and Man’s
glory.
But only one glory glorifies God. It is that one that He has empowered us to portray thus
bringing to Him glory in the church by Christ Jesus to all generations, forever and ever.
Amen.
The Return: Glory in the Church!