Every Blessing that is Spiritual
Having seen that the opening section of Ephesians is threefold, and deals with:
The Will of the Father (1:3-6)
The Work of the Son (1:7-11)
The Witness of the Spirit (1:12-14),
each department in this great passage is devoted to one phase of the truth and together make up the Charter of the Church. We go back in time to ‘before the foundation of the world’ (1:4) and on to the future day of redemption (1:14 with 4:30). This redemption comes under the heading ‘The Work of the Son’, for He alone is the Mediator, He alone the Redeemer, for He alone offered Himself without spot an offering and a sacrifice for sin. The Spirit’s seal and earnest follows and does not precede this great redemptive work; the Witness of the Spirit combines the promise given before age times (2 Tim. 1:8-10 and Eph. 1:4) with the Redemption accomplished by Christ.
In Ephesians 1:3-6 we have ‘The Will of the Father’. We ask a series of questions concerning this will and submit the answers:
What does the believer inherit?
‘All spiritual blessings’.
Where will this inheritance be enjoyed?
‘In heavenly places’.
When was this will made?
‘Before the foundation of the world’.
Who will inherit?
Those who receive ‘The Adoption’.
Why did the Father thus choose?
‘The good pleasure of His will’.
While these five subdivisions of this mighty subject do not actually state all that is written, it will be found that they will help us as we endeavour to grasp something of the stupendous revelation which is here unfolded to us.
‘All Spiritual Blessings’
‘Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, Who hath blessed us with all spiritual blessings in heavenly places in Christ’ (1:3).
Our blessings are not so much in mind in this opening passage as an overwhelming sense of grace. ‘Blessed be God’. No petition rises to the Father, no confession, no vows of reform, no statement of failure, but thanksgiving and worship, full and free, ascends unto the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. No blessing is sought or desired, ‘all blessings’ are acknowledged.
The opening words of this glorious revelation are not ‘may I be blessed’ but ‘may He be blessed’. This note struck so early, should never be forgotten by the reader as he follows his guide through chamber after chamber of unspeakable glory. ‘He hath blessed us’. The word eulogia ‘blessing’ is derived from the verb eulogeo ‘to bless’, which is a compound of eu ‘well’ and lego ‘to speak’. The reader will recognise that this word is the origin of the English ‘eulogy’, a word meaning a high form of praise. The word translated ‘blessings’ in Ephesians 1:3 is actually once translated ‘fair speeches’, namely in Romans 16:18 which reveals the primary meaning of the word. Eu is an adverb and is found in Ephesians 6:3, ‘that it may be well with thee’. It is of frequent use as a particle in combination with other words, and is most familiar to the reader in the word evangel or ‘gospel’, where the letter ‘u’ is pronounced ‘v’ in English.
Writing to the believer before the great dispensational landmark of Acts 28, Paul speaks of ‘the blessing of Abraham’ (Gal. 3:14) coming on the Gentiles, but Abraham is never mentioned in the Prison Epistles, and no blessing of Abraham is associated either with ‘heavenly places’ or ‘before the foundation of the world’. Paul refers also to, ‘the fulness of the blessing of the gospel of Christ’ (Rom. 15:29) and, ‘the cup of blessing which we bless’ (1 Cor. 10:16).
There are some terms used in the Scriptures, which by their very nature and the place they occupy in the scheme of salvation, come over and over again in the writings of the apostle. Such terms as ‘faith’, ‘redemption’, ‘justification’ will come to the mind immediately, and are found in many of the epistles whether written before or after Acts 28. No one, moreover, could deny the use of the word ‘blessing’ when speaking of these great doctrines of salvation. So far as the Prison Epistles are concerned, Ephesians 1:3 stands alone, the word ‘blessing’ meeting us in the very opening words of the new revelation, and never again employed in any capacity by the apostle. Terms such as ‘seated together’ and ‘blessing’ receive emphasis by their glorious solitariness. They stand alone and are beyond compare.
These blessings of Ephesians 1:3 are moreover peculiar in this, that they are ‘all spiritual’. As the record stands in the Authorized Version ‘all spiritual blessings’ must be considered as plural. The fact is, however, that in the original the word is singular, and a literal rendering is ‘in (or with) every blessing (that is) spiritual’. Where the Greek word pas ‘all’ is used of one it means ‘the whole’, ‘entire’ or ‘all the ...’, but if it is used to cover several items, it means ‘every’.
Green, in his handbook, says that where the adjective pas ‘all’ in the singular number is written without the article ‘the’, it signifies ‘every’, but with the article it means ‘the whole of’ the object which it qualifies. Thus pasa polis means ‘every city’; pasa he polis, or he pasa polis ‘the whole city’ and he polis pasa would have a slightly different meaning — either ‘the city, all of it’ or ‘the city in every part’.
The church of the One Body is blessed ‘with every blessing that is spiritual’. This is even wider in its scope than to say ‘all spiritual blessings’, for if the number of the blessings were but few — say four, they could be defined as ‘all spiritual’, whereas the mind reels as it endeavours to grasp the fact that there is no blessing that comes under the category of ‘spiritual’ that is omitted. It is highly improbable that while we are in this life we shall be able to appreciate a tithe of what is here so freely bestowed.
We turn our attention from this vision of unspeakable glory to consider the nature of the blessings thus bestowed. They are ‘spiritual’, Greek pneumatikos. Pneuma ‘spirit’ is derived from the idea of ‘breath’ and goes back to the equivalent terms that are found in the Hebrew. It would be a mistake however just here and now to attempt a dissertation on the origin and usage of pneuma, for that would take us so far afield that we should be in danger of forgetting our immediate quest. First of all, we discover that pneumatikos occurs three times in Ephesians:
‘All spiritual blessings’ (1:3).
‘Hymns and spiritual songs’ (5:19).
‘Spiritual wickedness’ (6:12).
Without comparison or consideration, we might have been tempted to think that ‘spiritual’ blessing must mean any blessing that comes from God; that they must be good, that they must refer to redemption and so on. But Ephesians 6:12 gives us pause, for there we read of ‘spiritual Wickedness’. It is manifestly absurd to speak of ‘good’ ‘holy’ or ‘Divine’ wickedness, and therefore we realize that the word spiritual has other and different connotations if it can be used in the same epistle of both ‘blessing’ and ‘wickedness’. In Ephesians 6:12 ‘spiritual’ wickedness is set over against ‘flesh and blood’. It is evident that the word ‘spiritual’ is the opposite of the word ‘corporeal’, and this is what we find elsewhere. Paul, writing in the epistle to the Romans places the idea of ‘spiritual’ over against the ‘carnal’, ‘for we know that the law is spiritual (pneumatikos): but I am carnal (sarkikos)’ (Rom. 7:14). ‘For if the Gentiles have been made partakers of their spiritual things, their duty is also to minister unto them in carnal things’ (Rom. 15:27). In first Corinthians he not only contrasts spiritual with carnal, but also with ‘natural’.
‘The natural man (psuchikos) ... but he that is spiritual’ (1 Cor. 2:14,15).
‘It is sown a natural body; it is raised a spiritual body. There is a natural body, and there is a spiritual body’ (1 Cor. 15:44).
The ‘carnal’ things of Romans 15:27 were good. We can learn from other passages that the apostle was very earnest in his endeavour to fulfil the injunction received at Jerusalem, that in the exercise of his ministry among the Gentiles he should remember the poor saints at Jerusalem, and quite a large portion of the epistles to the Corinthians is occupied with the ‘collection’. These ‘carnal’ things would include food, drink, clothing and other necessities of life. The ‘natural’ is placed over against the spiritual, for the spiritual is supernatural and is enjoyed on resurrection ground.
In complete contrast with the spiritual blessings of the Mystery, are the ‘carnal’ or ‘natural’ blessings of the law.
‘Blessed shalt thou be in the city, and blessed shalt thou be in the field ... blessed shall be thy basket and thy store ... the Lord shall command the blessing upon thee in thy storehouses ... the Lord shall make thee plenteous in goods ...’ (Deut. 28:1-13).
‘Blessed is every one that feareth the Lord; that walketh in His ways. For thou shalt eat the labour of thine hands: happy shalt thou be, and it shall be well with thee. Thy wife shall be as a fruitful vine by the sides of thine house: thy children like olive plants round about thy table’ (Psa. 128:1-3).
How completely opposite all this is from the experience of the believer under the dispensation of grace. Like Paul, he may know what it is to suffer need, to be in want, to know what it is to be continually in trouble. He will have no guarantee of a settled dwelling place, he has no promise of special protection during periods of danger; his ‘basket and store’ may show impoverishment, while the ungodly may appear to prosper. It would be foolish to assess a man’s spiritual worth today by the size of his bank balance. Ephesians 1:3 does not speak of daily bread, of dwelling place, of home comforts or of business success; it visualizes a new plane, the spiritual, which is on resurrection ground. The earnest of our inheritance is not a bunch of grapes, as it was when the spies returned with the grapes of Eshcol, neither are our enemies men of flesh and blood, but spiritual foes.
The individual believer, like the rest of mankind, must needs find the means of living and provide things honest in the sight of all men, but these come to him as the blessings of the wilderness. They are no more ‘spiritual blessings’ than the ‘manna’ of the wilderness was the fruit of the land of promise. A member of the One Body may be rich or poor, sick or well, troubled or tranquil, but such conditions have noreference to ‘every blessing that is spiritual’ for two reasons, i.e., their nature and their sphere.
In Heavenly Places. En tois epouraniois
The believer in the dispensation of the mystery is blessed with every blessing that is spiritual. No limits are set to the extent of these blessings, only to their character. We now leave one subject of wonder, but to exchange it for another of equal marvel. These spiritual blessings are linked with a sphere ‘in heavenly places’.
We have said elsewhere that this phrase is unique, that it occurs in the epistle to the Ephesians and nowhere else. The unwary can easily be moved when they read that, in spite of what we have said, epouranios occurs in fifteen other places outside of Ephesians, as widely distributed as Matthew, John, 1 Corinthians, Philippians, 2 Timothy and Hebrews. We have been accused of misleading God’s people and of misquoting Scripture, and yet, in spite of all that has or can be said, we repeat that the phrase ‘in heavenly places’ en tois epouraniois is unique, occurring nowhere else than in the epistle to the Ephesians. The word ‘heavenly’ epouranios most certainly occurs elsewhere, this we have never denied; we read in Matthew 18:35 (in the Received Text) of ‘My heavenly Father’ and in John 3:12 of ‘heavenly things’, in 1 Corinthians 15:40 of ‘celestial bodies’ and in Hebrews 6:4 of those who ‘tasted of the heavenly gift’. No one, so far as our knowledge permits us to say, has ever maintained that those Hebrews who had tasted of the heavenly gift, had actually ascended up to heaven itself in order to taste it! Many things may be heavenly in origin and in character that are not enjoyed ‘in heaven’, and this is the point; it is this feature that is unique.
First, let us consider the implications of this term ‘in heavenly places’. What justification is there for the added word ‘places’? The reader will agree that the word ‘places’ answers the question ‘where?’ and our first consideration must be to examine the Scriptures to see whether this is so.
Hou is an adverb of place, and is used elliptically instead of the full expression eph hou topou ‘in what place’. We read in Colossians 3:1 ‘seek those things which are above, where Christ sitteth on the right hand of God’. Presently we shall see that ‘heavenly places’ is synonymous with ‘where Christ sitteth on the right hand of God’, and that it is moreover allied with the word ano ‘above’, which also is directly connected with these heavenly places.
This one passage, Colossians 3:1, establishes that Christ is represented as being somewhere, and if He is said to be seated on the right hand of God in heavenly places in Ephesians, no more need be said on that score. That such a statement is true every reader is aware, for Ephesians 1:20-22 directs our wondering attention to the exalted position of Christ, Who being raised from the dead was set ‘at His own right hand in the heavenly places’. This sphere of exalted glory is further defined; it is said to be ‘far above all principality and power’ (Eph. 1:21). Now the simple connective ano is sufficient to take us to ‘where’ Christ sitteth on the right hand of God (Col. 3:1), consequently the intensive huperano employed by the apostle, and translated ‘far above’ in Ephesians 1:21, cannot certainly mean less, it must mean more than the simple ano. If we allow the apostle to speak for himself we shall be left in no doubt as to the nature of this exaltation. In Ephesians 4, we read:
‘He that descended is the same also that ascended up far above all
heavens, that He might fill all things’ (Eph. 4:10).
Let us notice one or two important features in this passage. ‘He ascended up’ anabaino literally means ‘to go up’ as one would a mountain (Matt. 5:1); or as the false shepherds who ‘climb up’ some other way (John 10:1). The ascension is put in contrast with His ‘descent’ katabaino. This also primarily means ‘to go down’ as rain descends (Matt. 7:25), or when one descends a mountain (Matt. 17:9). Ephesians 4 tells us that His descent was to ‘the lower parts’ katoteros, and that His ascent was ‘far above all heavens’, and lest we should be tempted for any reason to set a limit to this ascent, we are further informed that this descent and this ascent were in order that He might ‘fill all things’. Consequently, the Saviour ascended to the highest conceivable position in glory. Now this position described as huperano ‘far above all heavens’ is found in Ephesians 1:21, ‘far above all principality and power’. They are coextensive in scope and meaning. In other parts of the New Testament we read of this ascension and one or two passages give further meaning and point to the phrase we are examining. When the apostle speaks of the ascension in the epistle to the Hebrews (4:14), he says of Christ that He ‘is passed into the heavens’, which the Revised Version corrects to read ‘passed through the heavens’. The word here is dierchomai ‘passed through’ as Israel passed through the Red Sea (1 Cor. 10:1), or as the proverbial camel is spoken of as going through the eye of a needle (Matt. 19:24). Again, in Hebrews 7:26 Christ is said to have been made ‘higher than the heavens’. We can therefore understand that the epi in the compound epouranios does really indicate position and place — every reference so far considered points to that one fact, this is ‘where’ Christ sits, this is ‘where’ all spiritual blessings will be enjoyed.
However, we have not yet concluded our examination. Christ is said to be in ‘heaven’ (Heb. 9:24) in the selfsame epistle that says He ‘passed through the heavens’. How can this be? The Hebrew reader acquainted with the first chapter of Genesis would need no explanation. The heaven, which is ‘at the right hand of God’ is the heaven of Genesis 1:1. The heavens through which Christ ‘passed’ and above which He ascended is called the ‘firmament’ or ‘expansion’ in Genesis 1:6. This ‘heaven’ spread out during the ages ‘as a curtain’ and ‘as a tent to dwell in’ is to pass away. The Lord is far above this limited ‘heaven’ and so is the sphere of blessing allotted to the church of this dispensation.
While there are references in the Old Testament Scriptures, as well as in the New, which show that saints of old knew that there were ‘heavens’ beyond the limited firmament of Genesis 1:6, no believer ever entertained a hope that the sphere of his blessing was there where the exalted Christ now sits ‘far above all heavens’, yet this is what we are now to learn.
The expression en tois epouraniois occurs five times in Ephesians as follows:
We will not attempt to examine these references here, but each one will come before us in its turn, and will be given the attention that such a revelation of grace demands. We have been concerned in this study to establish two related truths:
(1) That ‘in heavenly places’ refers to a sphere, a place, a condition that answers the question where!
(2) That ‘in heavenly places’ is unique, and is found only in the Epistle to the Ephesians.
--------------
(From IN HEAVENLY PAGES pages 37-43).
http://charleswelch.net/HeavenlyPlaces.pdf
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‘The natural man (psuchikos) ... but he that is spiritual’ (1 Cor. 2:14,15).
‘It is sown a natural body; it is raised a spiritual body. There is a natural body, and there is a spiritual body’ (1 Cor. 15:44).
In complete contrast with the spiritual blessings of the Mystery, are the ‘carnal’ or ‘natural’ blessings of the law.
‘Blessed shalt thou be in the city, and blessed shalt thou be in the field ... blessed shall be thy basket and thy store ... the Lord shall command the blessing upon thee in thy storehouses ... the Lord shall make thee plenteous in goods ...’ (Deut. 28:1-13).
‘Blessed is every one that feareth the Lord; that walketh in His ways. For thou shalt eat the labour of thine hands: happy shalt thou be, and it shall be well with thee. Thy wife shall be as a fruitful vine by the sides of thine house: thy children like olive plants round about thy table’ (Psa. 128:1-3).
How completely opposite all this is from the experience of the believer under the dispensation of grace. Like Paul, he may know what it is to suffer need, to be in want, to know what it is to be continually in trouble. He will have no guarantee of a settled dwelling place, he has no promise of special protection during periods of danger; his ‘basket and store’ may show impoverishment, while the ungodly may appear to prosper. It would be foolish to assess a man’s spiritual worth today by the size of his bank balance. Ephesians 1:3 does not speak of daily bread, of dwelling place, of home comforts or of business success; it visualizes a new plane, the spiritual, which is on resurrection ground. The earnest of our inheritance is not a bunch of grapes, as it was when the spies returned with the grapes of Eshcol, neither are our enemies men of flesh and blood, but spiritual foes.
The individual believer, like the rest of mankind, must needs find the means of living and provide things honest in the sight of all men, but these come to him as the blessings of the wilderness. They are no more ‘spiritual blessings’ than the ‘manna’ of the wilderness was the fruit of the land of promise. A member of the One Body may be rich or poor, sick or well, troubled or tranquil, but such conditions have noreference to ‘every blessing that is spiritual’ for two reasons, i.e., their nature and their sphere.
In Heavenly Places. En tois epouraniois
The believer in the dispensation of the mystery is blessed with every blessing that is spiritual. No limits are set to the extent of these blessings, only to their character. We now leave one subject of wonder, but to exchange it for another of equal marvel. These spiritual blessings are linked with a sphere ‘in heavenly places’.
We have said elsewhere that this phrase is unique, that it occurs in the epistle to the Ephesians and nowhere else. The unwary can easily be moved when they read that, in spite of what we have said, epouranios occurs in fifteen other places outside of Ephesians, as widely distributed as Matthew, John, 1 Corinthians, Philippians, 2 Timothy and Hebrews. We have been accused of misleading God’s people and of misquoting Scripture, and yet, in spite of all that has or can be said, we repeat that the phrase ‘in heavenly places’ en tois epouraniois is unique, occurring nowhere else than in the epistle to the Ephesians. The word ‘heavenly’ epouranios most certainly occurs elsewhere, this we have never denied; we read in Matthew 18:35 (in the Received Text) of ‘My heavenly Father’ and in John 3:12 of ‘heavenly things’, in 1 Corinthians 15:40 of ‘celestial bodies’ and in Hebrews 6:4 of those who ‘tasted of the heavenly gift’. No one, so far as our knowledge permits us to say, has ever maintained that those Hebrews who had tasted of the heavenly gift, had actually ascended up to heaven itself in order to taste it! Many things may be heavenly in origin and in character that are not enjoyed ‘in heaven’, and this is the point; it is this feature that is unique.
First, let us consider the implications of this term ‘in heavenly places’. What justification is there for the added word ‘places’? The reader will agree that the word ‘places’ answers the question ‘where?’ and our first consideration must be to examine the Scriptures to see whether this is so.
Hou is an adverb of place, and is used elliptically instead of the full expression eph hou topou ‘in what place’. We read in Colossians 3:1 ‘seek those things which are above, where Christ sitteth on the right hand of God’. Presently we shall see that ‘heavenly places’ is synonymous with ‘where Christ sitteth on the right hand of God’, and that it is moreover allied with the word ano ‘above’, which also is directly connected with these heavenly places.
This one passage, Colossians 3:1, establishes that Christ is represented as being somewhere, and if He is said to be seated on the right hand of God in heavenly places in Ephesians, no more need be said on that score. That such a statement is true every reader is aware, for Ephesians 1:20-22 directs our wondering attention to the exalted position of Christ, Who being raised from the dead was set ‘at His own right hand in the heavenly places’. This sphere of exalted glory is further defined; it is said to be ‘far above all principality and power’ (Eph. 1:21). Now the simple connective ano is sufficient to take us to ‘where’ Christ sitteth on the right hand of God (Col. 3:1), consequently the intensive huperano employed by the apostle, and translated ‘far above’ in Ephesians 1:21, cannot certainly mean less, it must mean more than the simple ano. If we allow the apostle to speak for himself we shall be left in no doubt as to the nature of this exaltation. In Ephesians 4, we read:
‘He that descended is the same also that ascended up far above all
heavens, that He might fill all things’ (Eph. 4:10).
Let us notice one or two important features in this passage. ‘He ascended up’ anabaino literally means ‘to go up’ as one would a mountain (Matt. 5:1); or as the false shepherds who ‘climb up’ some other way (John 10:1). The ascension is put in contrast with His ‘descent’ katabaino. This also primarily means ‘to go down’ as rain descends (Matt. 7:25), or when one descends a mountain (Matt. 17:9). Ephesians 4 tells us that His descent was to ‘the lower parts’ katoteros, and that His ascent was ‘far above all heavens’, and lest we should be tempted for any reason to set a limit to this ascent, we are further informed that this descent and this ascent were in order that He might ‘fill all things’. Consequently, the Saviour ascended to the highest conceivable position in glory. Now this position described as huperano ‘far above all heavens’ is found in Ephesians 1:21, ‘far above all principality and power’. They are coextensive in scope and meaning. In other parts of the New Testament we read of this ascension and one or two passages give further meaning and point to the phrase we are examining. When the apostle speaks of the ascension in the epistle to the Hebrews (4:14), he says of Christ that He ‘is passed into the heavens’, which the Revised Version corrects to read ‘passed through the heavens’. The word here is dierchomai ‘passed through’ as Israel passed through the Red Sea (1 Cor. 10:1), or as the proverbial camel is spoken of as going through the eye of a needle (Matt. 19:24). Again, in Hebrews 7:26 Christ is said to have been made ‘higher than the heavens’. We can therefore understand that the epi in the compound epouranios does really indicate position and place — every reference so far considered points to that one fact, this is ‘where’ Christ sits, this is ‘where’ all spiritual blessings will be enjoyed.
However, we have not yet concluded our examination. Christ is said to be in ‘heaven’ (Heb. 9:24) in the selfsame epistle that says He ‘passed through the heavens’. How can this be? The Hebrew reader acquainted with the first chapter of Genesis would need no explanation. The heaven, which is ‘at the right hand of God’ is the heaven of Genesis 1:1. The heavens through which Christ ‘passed’ and above which He ascended is called the ‘firmament’ or ‘expansion’ in Genesis 1:6. This ‘heaven’ spread out during the ages ‘as a curtain’ and ‘as a tent to dwell in’ is to pass away. The Lord is far above this limited ‘heaven’ and so is the sphere of blessing allotted to the church of this dispensation.
While there are references in the Old Testament Scriptures, as well as in the New, which show that saints of old knew that there were ‘heavens’ beyond the limited firmament of Genesis 1:6, no believer ever entertained a hope that the sphere of his blessing was there where the exalted Christ now sits ‘far above all heavens’, yet this is what we are now to learn.
The expression en tois epouraniois occurs five times in Ephesians as follows:
We will not attempt to examine these references here, but each one will come before us in its turn, and will be given the attention that such a revelation of grace demands. We have been concerned in this study to establish two related truths:
(1) That ‘in heavenly places’ refers to a sphere, a place, a condition that answers the question where!
(2) That ‘in heavenly places’ is unique, and is found only in the Epistle to the Ephesians.
--------------
(From IN HEAVENLY PAGES pages 37-43).
http://charleswelch.net/HeavenlyPlaces.pdf
--------------