or, figuratively, of a person (1Co 9:2)
b. To mark ownership (So 8:6)
c. To protect against tampering or harm (Mt 27:66; Re 5:1)
B. HOW IS THE HOLY SPIRIT OUR "SEAL"?
1. It could be in every sense of the word...
a. In Ro 8:16, the Spirit Himself "bears witness" that we are
children of God (i.e., guarantees our genuine character)
b. In Ro 8:9, the indwelling Holy Spirit is considered
evidence that we are truly Christ's (i.e., a mark of
ownership, cf. also 1Co 6:19-20)
c. In Ro 8:13-14, it is by the Spirit of God that we "put to
death the deeds of the body" so we can live (i.e., to some
degree helping to protect against tampering or harm, cf.
also Ep 3:16)
2. However, the context of Ephesians makes me think that "proof of
ownership" is what Paul had in mind...
a. He goes on to speak of the Holy Spirit as a "guarantee...until
the redemption of the purchased possession" - Ep 1:14
b. He later says that we were sealed by the Spirit "for the day
of redemption" - Ep 4:30
-- So until that "day of redemption", the Holy Spirit is given
to the Christian as evidence that we truly belong to God
C. WHEN ARE WE "SEALED" WITH THE HOLY SPIRIT?
1. It is AFTER (not before)...
a. One hears the word of truth, the gospel - Ep 1:13
b. One believes the gospel - Ep 1:13; cf. Jn 7:37-39
c. One becomes a son of God - Ga 4:6-7 (which occurs when a
believer is baptized into Christ - cf. Ga 3:26-27)
2. Thus it is only when we obey the gospel of Jesus Christ that we
are "sealed with the Holy Spirit of promise"...
a. As Peter told the crowd on the Day of Pentecost - Ac 2:
38-39
b. And as he told the Sanhedrin Council - Ac 5:32
[This "seal" as a "mark of ownership" is something that might be of more
significance to God (and to Satan, who would try to steal what belongs
to God) than it does to us, but we can take comfort in knowing that God
considers us His property, and that the work of the Holy Spirit in our
lives is to be evidence of such ownership.
Paul describes the Spirit in this passage as "the Holy Spirit OF
PROMISE", which could be understood in two ways:
1) the promised Holy Spirit (cf. Ac 1:4-5; 2:33,38-39); or
2) the Holy Spirit which gives promise of what else lies ahead.
In view of what we learn next about the Holy Spirit, I suspect Paul refers
to the latter, for...]
II. THE HOLY SPIRIT IS OUR "GUARANTEE" (14)
A. DEFINING "GUARANTEE" ("EARNEST", KJV)...
1. The word is arrabon {ar-hrab-ohn'}
2. It is used to refer to "money which in purchases is given as a
pledge or downpayment that the full amount will subsequently be
paid"
3. In the LXX (Septuagint Version of the OT), the word is
translated "pledge" three times in Gen 38:17-20
B. THE HOLY SPIRIT IS A "GUARANTEE OF OUR INHERITANCE"...
1. God has given the Holy Spirit in our hearts as a "deposit"
("earnest", KJV, and is the same Greek word) - 2Co 1:22
2. He is a guarantee of what God has prepared for us - 2Co 5:1-5
3. The blessing of the Holy Spirit working in our lives is only a
foretaste of the glory that will one day be ours
4. And yet, as an example of what the Holy Spirit can do for us
now, consider these passages: Ro 15:13; Ep 3:16; Ga 5:22-23
C. HE SERVES AS SUCH "UNTIL THE REDEMPTION OF THE PURCHASED
POSSESSION"...
1. While in one sense we have been redeemed (Ep 1:7) through the
blood of Christ, in another sense God has yet to redeem those
who are truly His (Ep 4:30)
2. Until that day, the Holy Spirit serves as a guarantee that the
FINAL redemption will one day take place
3. Hendriksen comments: "At the moment when believers receive
THEIR full inheritance, which includes a glorious resurrection
body (4:30), the redemption of GOD'S own possession takes
place, that is, the full release to him of that which is his
by virtue of the fact that he both made it and bought it."
CONCLUSION
1. So we have the Holy Spirit as a "seal" and a "guarantee". What
should our reaction be?
2. For the third time (1:6,12,14), Paul says these blessings are "to
the praise of His glory"!
3. Thus our reaction should be the same as Paul as stated at the
beginning of this section...
a. "Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has
blessed us with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places
in Christ" - 1:3
b. I.e., to praise God!
Are you praising God for His wonderful grace and mercy? Later on, Paul
will tell us how we can "walk worthy of the calling with which you were
called" (Ep 4:1), but he sums it up very nicely in Ro 12:1-2...
"I beseech you therefore, brethren, by the mercies of God, that
ye present your bodies a living sacrifice, holy, acceptable unto
God, [which is] your reasonable service. And be not conformed
to this world: but be ye transformed by the renewing of your
mind, that ye may prove what [is] that good, and acceptable, and
perfect, will of God."
Executable Outlines, Copyright © Mark A. Copeland, 2011