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SLAVES
OF CHRIST
Ephesians
6:5-9 “Slaves, obey your earthly
masters with respect and fear, and with sincerity of heart, just as you would
obey Christ. Obey them not only to win their favour when their eye is on you,
but like slaves of Christ, doing the will of God from your heart. Serve
wholeheartedly, as if you were serving the Lord, not men, because you know that
the Lord will reward everyone for whatever good he does, whether he is slave or
free.”
Two
thousand years ago over half the people in the
Dr.
Martin Luther King, Jr. gave his most famous speech to hundreds of thousands of
people in front of the Lincoln Memorial in
"I have a dream that one day on the red hills of Georgia, sons of former slaves and sons of former slave-owners will be able to sit down together at the table of brotherhood...
"I have a dream my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the colour of their skin but by content of their character. I have a dream today!
"I have a dream that one day . . . little black boys and black girls will be able to join hands with little white boys and white girls as sisters and brothers. I have a dream today!"
Today
we say, “But of course . . .” Any other society is for us unthinkable. We
hate the idea of slavery and grieve that in parts of the world today it is still
a reality. The movement for racial equality has made such progress in the
Western World and black men and women have reached the highest offices in the
In Revelation, chapter 7, the apostle John describes a dream given to him. He says, "I looked and there before me was a great multitude that no one could count, from every nation, tribe, people, and language, standing before the throne and in front of the Lamb. They were wearing white robes and were holding palm branches in their hands. And they cried out in a loud voice: 'Salvation belongs to our God, who sits on the throne, and to the Lamb'" (Revelation 7:9-10). The Bible's vision of heaven includes people from every land and race and tribe praising God and the Lamb, Jesus Christ. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. emphasized the many-coloured, many-cultured aspect of that great biblical dream. Dr. King wasn't perfect in his personal life or in his theology, of course, but he forced people to take seriously a part of the biblical gospel that many people (and even many Bible-believing Christians) ignored for too long. We need to believe that the glorious gospel bridges social and tribal and racial divides.
Martin
Luther King could make that speech only because another King, Jesus Christ, said
so many years earlier "You have only
one Master and you are all brothers.” Wherever Jesus' influence spread,
the lowly were lifted up and the institution of slavery was weakened. Jesus has
been a world changer in many ways, and this is surely true in the area of
freedom and dignity. Millions of people who now enjoy freedom might still be
slaves if not for Christ's impact on the world. Slavery was ingrained in the
cultures of Europe, Asia, Africa, among natives in North and
Not everyone who claimed to follow Jesus took his message to heart. Some tried to defend slavery in God's name and insisted on their own superiority over others, rather than regarding them as members of the same family in Christ. But wherever Jesus' followers faithfully regarded Jesus as their only true Master and each other as brothers and sisters, things changed. Slaves no longer saw themselves as nobodies, and slave owners no longer saw their slaves as property. When slaves gained true human dignity in their own eyes and in the eyes of their masters, the entire relationship of master and slave was sure to change, and the acceptability of slavery was sure to fade.
1. PAUL’S TEACHING ON SLAVERY: THE WIDER NEW TESTAMENT PICTURE.
Let’s step outside these verses for a moment and see the whole impact of his teaching on slavery. One of Paul's letters was written to Philemon, a man Paul had led to faith in Jesus. Philemon had owned a slave, Onesimus. This slave stole from Philemon and ran off to another city. There Onesimus met Paul and became a Christian. Paul loved him like a son but sent him back to his master, Philemon, whom Paul also loved. Paul sent Philemon a letter of advice about what to do with Onesimus.
In
the
Philemon
took Paul's advice and preserved the letter so that others could read it as part
of the Word of God and experience its impact. Paul's advice to see someone not
as a slave but as a dear brother echoed Jesus' principle, "You
have only one Master and you are all brothers." But was Paul supporting
slavery? Some people have charged him with this, that Paul is ordering them to
obey, here in these words and again in his letter to the Colossians (3:22),
"Slaves, obey your earthly masters".
But please remember the time when this was written and the place slaves had in
society. Many church members were slaves and they needed God’s guidance on how
to deal with their situation. What if Paul had told them to rebel or run away?
What would have happened? Countless Christian slaves would have been killed, and
the
Does that mean Paul supported slavery? Not at all. He spoke of "slave traders" as "ungodly and sinful" (1 Timothy 1:9-10). He told slaves, "If you can gain your freedom, do so" (1 Corinthians 7:21). If slaves were offered freedom, they should accept, and if they could buy their freedom, they should do it. Slaves weren’t the only ones Paul instructed. Notice that he goes on to address masters who had become Christians. He told them not to threaten slaves (Ephesians 6:9). Instead, Paul ordered, "Masters, provide your slaves with what is right and fair, because you know that you have a Master in heaven" (Colossians 4:1). Now, what would happen if Christian masters regarded slaves as brothers instead of property? What would happen if masters paid fair wages and did not threaten slaves or force them to be employed against their will? The bondage would no longer exist. And that's what happened as the Spirit of Christ worked in people's lives.
But what about Christian slaves with non-Christian masters? Should they feel sorry for themselves and hate their masters? No, Paul taught them to care more about the salvation of their masters than about their own slavery. It would be far worse for a non-Christian master to suffer in hell forever than for a Christian slave to endure a few bad years. Christian slaves, said Paul, should be cooperative and "show that they can be fully trusted, so that in every way they will make the teaching about God our Savior attractive" (Titus 2:9-10). The main concern was not just social and political equality but to lead people to salvation and make them brothers and sisters in God's family.
Paul urged Christian slaves to focus more on the privilege of belonging to Christ than on the problem of being in slavery. "Were you a slave when you were called?" said Paul. "Don't let it trouble you--although if you can gain your freedom, do so. For he who was a slave when he was called by the Lord is the Lord's freedman; similarly, he who was a free man when he was called is Christ's slave. You were bought at a price; do not become slaves of men." (1 Corinthians 7:21-24). Anyone bought by Jesus’ blood and treasured by God could not think of himself as merely a slave and a nobody. He wasn't just somebody's slave; he was a child of the King of the universe. Paul himself was often mistreated and spent a lot of time in prison for his faith, but even in chains he lived in the freedom of Christ, and he wanted others to have this same Christian freedom even in hard situations.
In those first decades after Christ's coming, economic and social and racial status counted for very little in the church. What counted most was being loved by God and adopted as his children. As Paul put it, "You are all sons of God through faith in Christ Jesus, for all of you who were baptized into Christ have clothed yourselves with Christ. There is neither ... slave nor free ... for you are all one in Christ Jesus..." (Galatians 3:28). "For we were all baptized by one Spirit into one body--whether ... slave or free" (1 Corinthians 12:13). These weren’t just Paul’s own thoughts. They were revealed by God and mirrored the mind of Christ. Jesus didn't overthrow institutions with violence; he transformed relationships with truth and love.
By faith in Jesus, a slave could become a prince in God’s kingdom. Even if the world around him treated him as a slave, he knew himself to be much more than that. The Bible says, “The brother in humble circumstances ought to take pride in his high position” (James 1:9). The honour of being God’s child and a citizen of heaven gave joy and dignity to even the lowliest slave. As the church grew, the Christian brotherhood and respect for people of every social class had a transforming effect not just on individuals but on entire civilizations.
2.
PAUL’S TEACHING ON SLAVERY: THE IMPLICATIONS FOR THE CHURCH.
Let’s
look at Paul’s approach to this congregation. The first thing to note is very
obvious, that Paul did not ignore the slaves in the church. He wrote more about
slaves than he wrote about fathers. He devoted one verse to the duties of
fathers but five verses to the duties of slaves. He wasn’t embarrassed by
their presence; he didn’t think it bad form to talk to them. It would have
been incorrigible to have ignored them. He put the spotlight of the word of God
on them. He said, “God is interested in you slaves too. God wants you to
please him and live to his glory. How you live is important to the Lord.” So
this is what he said to them, “Slaves,
obey your earthly masters with respect and fear, and with sincerity of heart,
just as you would obey Christ. Obey them not only to win their favour when their
eye is on you, but like slaves of Christ, doing the will of God from your heart.
Serve wholeheartedly, as if you were serving the Lord, not men, because you know
that the Lord will reward everyone for whatever good he does, whether he is
slave or free” (Ephesians 6:5-9). What
great words! Choose to obey your masters! Choose to serve them from your hearts.
Serve them as if you were serving the Lord. Consider the reward that lies before
you!
What are the implications of this? Paul is saying, “This is the way the system is going to be changed, by the spread of the gospel and this kind of credible godliness in the lives of those who profess to be Christ’s. You are protagonists of change, and it is not going to come about by the sword and a so called ‘holy war.’ It is going to come about when you live in the closest proximity to slave owners and you live Christlike lives. You needn’t develop a victim mentality. Christ can save you from that, and of course if you are beaten for doing something wrong, you are merely getting what you deserve.” The gospel is the light of the world. Don’t put your light under a bucket. Let it shine, and you slaves can shine by living like this. The Christian faith brings men and women out of the victim zone and into the vision zone.
Most of the time, you slaves won’t get hurt for doing the right thing, says the Bible. “But even if you should suffer for what is right, you are blessed” (1 Peter 3:14). So get rid of the “poor me” mentality. Get out of the victim zone. If you as a slave have been truly wronged through no fault of your own, then look to God for strength and help. The Bible says that no matter what happens to those who belong to Jesus, “we are more than conquerors through him who loved us.” Nothing “can separate us from the love of God that is in Christ Jesus our Lord” (Romans 8:37-39). “Slaves,” Paul exhorts, “The Lord will reward everyone for whatever good he does, whether he is slave or free.” You are not going to lose out in eternity because you were a slave on this earth. Our ultimate vision is to reign with Jesus Christ and to enjoy his happiness forever. This is the life-changing message of the gospel. This is what transforms despair into delight. Faith, forgiveness, and vision—these are the keys to life in the blessing zone. “Thanks be to God. He gives us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ” (1 Corinthians 15:57).
That is the general context of Paul’s words here. What he is doing is to elevate the whole vocation of the slave. He is setting out the agenda of the life and conduct of a slave before the whole church. He is putting it in the faces of the wealthy and the upper classes and the slave owners of the Ephesian congregation. “Now let’s consider the work of the Christian who . . . runs the Coliseum?” No. “. . . who is a land-owner, who is a merchant with a fleet of ships, the centurion in the army? No, . . . who is a slave.” That is what Paul is saying. He makes the congregation examine something that it wants to ignore. He sets the spotlight on the hundreds of slaves who were in the Ephesian congregation. He is, in effect, introducing the management of Sainsbury’s to retrieving trolleys from the far corners of the car-park. He is introducing the directors to the work of the check-out staff. Tesco’s executives would learn more about themselves, their business and human nature from a day manning their own check-outs than from three years at business school. Paul is reminding them that the meanest servants have to glorify God too. So by speaking like this to the slaves Paul is strengthening a humaneness, a sense of reality, a brotherhood and compassion into the church. This was an utterly revolutionary approach.
The
Romans were conscious of the power of the slave class and feared slave
uprisings, and so throughout the
Isn’t
this important? You think how the Tory party in
“Stick
close to your desks and never go to sea,
And
you all may be the rulers of the Queen’s Navee.”
So
Paul wonderfully addresses the underclass of the slave, and notice the priority
that the shrewd old apostle gives to these vocations, that pride of place is
given to the slaves and after them the masters. In classical culture the
wealthy classes of the
So
slaves became loved and treasured as valuable members of the church. Slaves
worshipped beside nobles. Slaves received the same baptism as the rich. Slaves
ate at the same table of the Lord’s Supper as the powerful. Some who were
slaves in society became leaders in the church. One former slave, Callistus,
became bishop of
I am told that if the Englishman goes on holiday with a group of strangers he never asks what another person does for his living nor does he volunteer what his own job might me. If people find out what your job is they immediately classify you as being above them or below them. We are so bound by class structures in our so-called egalitarian society. But there is this gospel of Jesus Christ and it says that there is no shame in being the lowest of all classes, and in working hard to serve others. Jesus defined the difference between a world so conscious of class and the Christian attitude when he said, “You know that those who are regarded as rulers of the Gentiles lord it over them, and their high officials exercise authority over them. Not so with you. Instead, whoever wants to become great among you must be your servant, and whoever wants to be first must be slave of all. For even the Son of Man did not come to be served but to serve, and to give his life as a ransom for many” (Mark 10:42-45).
3. PAUL’S TEACHING ON SLAVERY; INDIVIDUAL IMPLICATIONS.
I
want you to notice in our text something that is very important and distinctive
about ethical and moral exhortations in the New Testament, how Paul brought
Christ to bear on these slaves. John Stott points this out helpfully; “If
children are to obey their parents, slaves are to obey their earthly masters
(verse 5), and for the very same reason, namely that behind them they must learn
to discern the figure of their master in heaven (verse 9), namely the Lord
Christ. In each of the four verses addressed to slaves Jesus Christ is
mentioned. They are to be obedient as to Christ (verse 5), to behave as servants
(literally, ‘slaves’) of Christ (verse 6), to render service as to the Lord
rather than men (verse 7), knowing that they will receive good from the Lord
(verse 8). The Christ-centredness of this instruction is very striking. The
slave’s perspective has changed. His horizons have broadened. He has been
liberated from the slavery of ‘men-pleasing’ into the freedom of serving
Christ. His mundane tasks have been absorbed into a higher preoccupation, namely
the will of God (verse 6) and the good pleasure of Christ” (John Stott, The
Message of Ephesians, IVP.
But
then the application that John Stott makes to us is just as striking; “Exactly
the same principle can be applied by contemporary Christians to their work and
employment. Our great need is the clear-sightedness to see Jesus Christ and to
set him before us. It is possible for the housewife to cook a meal as if Jesus
Christ were going to eat it, or to spring-clean the house as if Jesus Christ
were to be the honoured guest. It is possible for teachers to educate children,
for doctors to treat patients and nurses to care for them, for solicitors to
help clients, shop assistants to serve customers, accountants to audit books and
secretaries to type letters as if in each case they were serving Jesus Christ.
Can the same be said in relation to the masses of industrial workers with
tedious routine machine-minding to do, and to miners who have to work
underground? Surely yes. The presence of Christ in the mine or factory is
certainly no excuse for bad conditions. On the contrary, it should be a spur to
improving them. At the same time, their situation is not nearly as bad as
slavery in the
So notice four brief but mighty words that Paul brings to these Christian slaves as they work out the implications of serving Christ in their calling.
i] First, work respectfully. They would obeying their with fear and trembling (verse 5), which implies not a cringing servility before a human master but rather a reverent acknowledgement of the Lord Jesus whose authority the master represents. This is plain not only from the usual contexts of the _expression ‘fear and trembling’ but also from the fact that in the equivalent Colossians passage it is replaced by ‘fearing the Lord’. There was an incident during the army service of Captain Olyott, the father of Stephen and Stuart. A private in his regiment was converted to Jesus Christ, and he became full of zeal and love for his fellow Christians and for taking the gospel to other soldiers. This young Christian became over-familiar with Captain Olyott, ignoring the reality of the distinction in rank and the respect that army structures have to maintain in order to work efficiently. There are lines of authority that are set and have to be sustained. That had to be dealt with carefully not to crush the young believer and not in some pompous manner. So a slave cannot take advantage of the fact that his master is a professing Christian to begin to ignore the fact that there is a superior/inferior relationship in their work - while there is not in the body of Christ. Paul says, “Obey your masters with fear and trembling.” Work respectfully.
ii] Second, work with singleness of heart (5), with integrity or wholeheartedness, without hypocrisy or ulterior motives. Bunyan urged the pilgrim, “Let him in constancy follow the Master.” In the Sermon on the Mount the Lord said that if our eyes were single then our whole bodies would be full of light. The apostle is speaking about a disdain of hypocrisy, that we are always conscious of the Lord’s eye upon us.
Dr. Lloyd-Jones once spoke of hearing a preacher tell a story which he assured us was simple, literal truth. It illustrates perfectly the point which we are considering. It is the story of a farmer who one day went happily and with great joy in his heart to report to his wife and family that their best cow had given birth to twin calves, one red and one white. And he said, ‘You know I have suddenly had a feeling and impulse that we must dedicate one of these calves to the Lord. We will bring them up together, and when the time comes we will sell one and keep the proceeds, and we will sell the other and give the proceeds to the Lord’s work.’ His wife asked him which he was going to dedicate to the Lord. ‘There is no need to bother about that now,’ he replied, ‘we will treat them both in the same way, and when the time comes we will do as I say.’ And off he went.
In a few months the man entered his kitchen looking very miserable and unhappy. When his wife asked him what was troubling him, he answered, ‘I have bad news to give you. The Lord’s calf is dead.’ ‘But’, she said, ‘you had not decided which was to be the Lord’s calf.’ ‘Oh yes,’ he said; ‘I had always decided it was to be the white one, and it is the white one that has died. The Lord’s calf is dead.’
We may laugh at that story, but God forbid that we should be laughing at ourselves. It is always the Lord’s calf that dies. When money becomes difficult, the first thing we economize on is our contribution to God’s work. It is always the first thing to go. Perhaps we must not say ‘always’, for that would be unfair; but with so many it is the first thing, and the things we really like are the last to go. ‘Ye cannot serve God and mammon.’ These things tend to come between us and God, and our attitude to them ultimately determines our relationship to God. The mere fact that we believe in God, and call Him, Lord, Lord, and likewise with Christ, is not proof in and of itself that we are serving Him, that we recognize His totalitarian demand, and have yielded ourselves with singleness of heart to him.
iii] Thirdly, work conscientiously, not offering eye-service as men-pleasers, busy only when the boss is watching in order to curry favour with him, but as servants of Christ, who in reality is watching all the time and is never deceived by shoddy work. A secretary will busy herself typing at her computer when the office-manager is around, but she sits back and talks when he leaves the room. If the boss is away then lunch-breaks last 90 minutes rather than 60 minutes. Paul is pressing for steady, faithful service as being conscious that the eyes of the Lord himself were always on you.
iv]
Fourthly, work generously. See that the service you render is willing and
‘cheerful’ (
To live like that you need a change of heart, don’t you? A new spirit, and a new birth is essential for slaves to live in this way. The great world changer, Jesus Christ, once said, "If you hold to my teaching, you are really my disciples. Then you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free... If the Son sets you free, you will be free indeed" (John 8:36). Jesus was talking first of all about being freed from slavery to sin. Do you trust Jesus as your Saviour and repent of your sins? That's what we all need most of all: liberation from the guilt, shame, and bondage of the evil within us, and freedom to live in the joy of forgiveness and eternal life. And that's not all. When Christ sets individuals free from sin, the impact ripples throughout entire societies and nations. Wherever people trust in Jesus for and take to heart his words, "You have only one Master and you are all brothers," slavery shrivels and discrimination dies.
6th
November 2005
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