‘Peace be to the brothers, and love with faith, from God the Father and the Lord Jesus Christ. Grace be with all who love our Lord Jesus Christ with love incorruptible’ (Ephesians 6:23-24).
When Quentin Tarantino was trying to get his career going as a writer and film director, he supplemented his earnings with acting jobs. One day a casting call came from a TV programme for someone to play an Elvis impersonator. Everyone else who audition for the part turned up dressed as Elvis from the Las Vegas part of his career with the flashy rhinestone jackets with large lapels and flared trousers. However, Quentin Tarantino decided to audition as Elvis from his hillbilly truck driving days at the start of his career when he wore jeans and a checked shirt. I can’t remember whether he got the job, but I bet he stood out!
In his letter to the Ephesian Church Paul has made this very point. Christians are called by God (1:11), they’re equipped by God (3:8), and they are therefore different! They stand out as ‘children of light’ (4:17-24)! In those days, this difference would have been very notable due to their allegiance to Christ, and not, as the Roman empire demanded, the Emperor with his title ‘Christos’ (Christ). Because of this they needed to be: ‘strong in the Lord and in the strength of his might’ (6:10). So Paul gives them the illustration of the Roman soldier. He uses the armour to represent everything the Lord had given them so that they might stand firm and be equipped in his service in the face of the sternest temptation and opposition (6:11-17). This is reflected in the way the letter ends.
The start of this blessing is very similar to the greeting that opens a letter (1:2). This is hardly surprising as Paul would have closed the letter with the same concerns he started with and the same agenda which was to encourage and build up the Church. Yet the phrase: ‘Peace be to the brothers and love with faith from God the Father and the Lord Jesus Christ’ (v23) suggest that Paul is encouraging them to stand firm by being unified by the doctrines that he has outlined in the letter. These can only be realised if their faith is grounded in the faith and, therefore, hope they have in: ‘God the Father and the Lord Jesus Christ.’ William Hendriksen draws our attention to the fact peace and love cannot be separated as: ‘It is impossible to separate these two. Love, too, although here again empathetically that among brothers, cannot be separated from the love toward God in Christ; both of these resulting from the love of God in Christ for those who are his own. Faith means trusting in God Triune who has revealed himself to the Church in Jesus Christ.’[1]
Grace, which has been a major subject of the letter, in that we are not chosen for who we are, but only through God’s grace (2:8-9), is, not surprisingly the subject of verse 24. Yet it’s coupled with the phrase: ‘with all who love our Lord Jesus Christ with love incorruptible.’ This obviously raises the question what exactly does Paul mean by: ‘love incorruptible’? The answer is twofold.
Firstly, human love is corrupt because of our sinful nature, but God’s love isn’t. As the Christian is to take on the mind and attitudes of God, the old self is slowly being put to death and our mind and attitudes are being transformed. Yet there’s a second explanation, which is coupled to the first. Harry Uprichard points out that as the use of it in Paul’s other letters is in the context of the resurrection: ‘It suggests both immortality and incorruption. It connotes eternity and purity.’[2] There’s a question over whether this phrase applies to the believer or to Christ, but in the end I don’t think it makes much difference. In eternity the believers love for Christ will be made perfect, whereas the believer will be subject to Christ’s perfect love. There, the fellowship of the Church here on earth, will be replaced by an eternal unbroken fellowship between God and his people! A blessing indeed!
[1] William Hendriksen, Ephesians, (London, The Banner of Truth Trust,1967) 284-5.
[2] Harry Uprichard, A Study Commentary on Ephesians, (Darlington, Evangelical Press, 2004) 389.