How we Were ’Before’ Salvation

Topic:
Passage: Ephesians 2:1–3

November 11, 2022

Commentary

This passage uses a similar tactic but to a different end. Paul does paint two pictures for us – one “before” Christ (vv. 1-3) and one “after” (vv. 4-7). He then brings it all together (vv. 8-10) and tells us what the goal of this comparison is.

In these first three verses Paul gives us the “before” picture of an unsaved person:

  1. He is dead (v.1). A corpse does not  hear what people are talking about in the funeral parlor. Just as a person who is physically dead has no appetite for food, neither will a person who is spiritually dead have any appetite for spiritual food (to hear the Word of God). All lost sinners are dead. The last drunkard on skid row and the unsaved society leader are both dead in sin. One corpse cannot be more dead than another.
  2. He is disobedient (vv. 2-3a). There are three main forces that help a person to be disobedient. They are:
    1. The world – This world system is constantly trying to get man to conform to its values.
    2. The flesh – This refers to man’s fallen nature that we were born with and does everything it can to control our mind and body.
    3. The devil – He wants to make people “children of disobedience.” He himself was disobedient to God and he wants others to disobey Him, too.

With these influences there is little wonder that the unsaved person is disobedient to God. There is no way that he can overcome these three great enemies of God by Himself. He had made God angry, and he was going to be punished like everyone else (v. 3b).

Application

Lord, I thank you so much for the way you changed my life and thinking when I was saved.

Ephesians 2:1– 3 (NET)

1 And although you were dead in your offenses and sins, 2 in which you formerly lived according to this world’s present path, according to the ruler of the domain of the air, the ruler of the spirit that is now energizing the sons of disobedience, 3 among whom all of us also formerly lived out our lives in the cravings of our flesh, indulging the desires of the flesh and the mind, and were by nature children of wrath even as the rest…