Pitt Street
22 August 2021
Ephesians 6: 10 – 20
We’ve just heard Anne read for us the words from Ephesians 6, verses 10 to 20. I’d be surprised if this is the first time we’ve heard these iconic words. The last two verses shout out with meaning. Recall:
“Always pray in the Spirit, with all your prayers and petitions. Pray constantly and attentively for all God’s holy people. Pray also for me, that God will open my mouth and put words on my lips, that I may boldly make known the mystery of the Good News – that mystery for which I am an ambassador in chains.
Pray that I may have courage to proclaim it as I ought.”
Wow! What a challenge to us all!
Last Monday I had a clear view of what I may say today. Our move to Lockdown Level 4 has caused me to begin to view the whole reading in a somewhat different light. There were three interlocking challenges for me as I prepared. The first was to take a memorable section of scripture … you know those words challenging hearers to ‘put on the full armour of God’. This scripture is set in the first century of the Christian era. How would I place it in the here and now some twenty centuries later? My memory recalls Sunday School lessons accompanied by models of soldiers being dressed according to the words we have heard again this morning. When we see a graphic of the Roman Soldier in all his glory, how we missed the mark with our towels for togas and crude wooden implements. What on earth does all this mean for us now?
My second challenge has been to put aside those mental images of being part of an army, being dressed like a soldier, intending to encourage Christian living. Like several others raised in a Pacifist tradition I have tried to find other images. Over the last few days another image has surfaced with some importance.
The image is that of the front-line hospital worker clad in full PPE gear – Personal Protective Equipment.
These courageous people have certainly put on their full armour. In my view PPE is the full armour of God in their setting. Hospital workers so dressed are protected from this rampant infectious virus. I wonder if I could rephrase the words associated with this modern line of defence. I acknowledge that I haven’t yet been able to put these thoughts into words that would stand the test of even a slight examination. This will be a task for me; and I invite your responses so that together we may have a relevant contemporary set of words to share.
My third challenge has been to put aside the images of religious terrorism and militaristic language that thrive, even in our world, so that I can see past those images and appreciate a contemporary understanding of those words from Ephesians.
In its briefest form the message is simple. Paul is urging his friends in a very young Christian community to fortify themselves against evil and to be in constant prayer. He advises his readers to ‘put on all the armour that God makes available to resist evil. That word is powerful today! Put on the full armour of God!
Paul has a clear view of ‘evil’. We read about it last week. Paul wrote: ‘Be careful how you live, not as unwise people, but as wise, because the days are evil’; or to use Eugene Peterson’s The Message paraphrase, “Wake up from your sleep, climb out of your coffins, Christ will show you the light! So, watch your step. Use your head. Make the most of every chance you get. These are desperate times!” That word is powerful today! Put on all the armour of God.
We know that Paul was writing this letter in prison: it has been suggested that he was writing while chained to a Roman Soldier, so that he couldn’t escape. Paul knew what a Roman Soldier, clad in his armour, looked like. So, Paul uses this armour as a metaphor to illustrate his message; for Paul, who knew exactly what the might of Rome meant for those living in his world – the image of the soldier was very real. The might of Rome – the evil and oppressive colonial power was ever present. Jewish people looked for liberation from the oppressor. For Paul, Rome represented all that was evil. I wonder how the people of Afghanistan will rate events in their world in the days that are to come; and who they will rate as the liberator and the oppressor.
Amid this … in verse 12 of his letter, Paul writes that the battle was not against human forces, but against sovereignties and powers, the rulers of the world of darkness, and the evil spirits of the heavenly realms. What then are we to make of this as 21st century people? It’s difficult to grasp the concept of sovereignties, the rulers of the world of darkness, and the evil spirits of the heavenly realms. Doesn’t this sound a bit like voodoo? In our world there are those who are comfortable attributing the ills of our age strictly to demonic forces. Others will say that it’s more likely that the modern-day ills that we experience and know well, are related to the social and economic factors that are prevalent in our world. It is easy to find that behind the political and economic forces that bring to our world such evils as genocide, ethnic-cleansing and racial discrimination that there are evil spiritual forces at work. I would rather name these ills for what they are. However, there are times when I can only describe what is around me as evil. Think of the Waikato couple sent to prison two weeks ago for unimaginable acts of child abuse. The emptiness in my stomach can only describe these acts as evil.
Please allow me to conclude with a challenge. That challenge is to find words to express what a concrete image of the armour of God – maybe the full PPE gear that we’re now familiar with, which may yet be even more obvious in our world – and to rewrite the script so that we can voice relevant encouragement for our times. May we know God will be with us as we create meaningful words and images.
Thanks be to God.
Amen