D.A. Carson, ‘Partakers of the Age to Come’, in Richard D. Phillips and Gabriel N.E. Fluhrer (eds.), These Last Days: A Christian View of History (Phillipsburg: P&R Publishing, 2011), 89-106.
This essay by D.A. Carson, part of a collection devoted to eschatology, is available as a pdf here.
It reads as if it has its origins in a fairly informal oral delivery rather than being a technical, academic piece, but it’s a nice way in to an overview of the main contours of Ephesians.
After some comments about the dangers of over- and under-realised eschatologies, the essay falls into three main sections:
1. Partakers of the age to come – largely focused on Ephesians 1:3-14, showing the ‘Trinitarian grounding of our salvation’ (93).
2. How Paul prays – looking at Ephesians 1:15-23, particularly Paul’s prayer for hope and power.
3. How God provides – dealing with the rest of the letter under six points:
• God provides for partakers of the age to come in our utter transformation in anticipation of the end (2:1-10)
• God creates a new humanity in anticipation of the end (2:11-22)
• God provides for the partakers of the age to come in that he discloses his concealed purposes in anticipation of the end (3:1-13)
• God does more than we ask or imagine and thereby elicits prayer from us in anticipation of the end (3:14-21)
• God builds truth and unity into his body in anticipation of the end (4:1-6:9)
• God equips and arms his people in anticipation of the end (6:10-20)
3 comments:
excellent, thanks antony
but, the link is dead...
I’ve pasted the link in again.
Post a Comment