Christian Life is Together Life

Ephesians 6:21-24 May 25, 2025 Pastor Ricky Alcantar
Thesis The Christian life is meant to be a together life, not a solitary life, because God has made us his children and therefore one another's brothers and sisters.
Series
Ephesians
Type
Expository
Tone
pastoraldidacticcelebratory
Method
grammatical-historicalcanonicalapplicatory
What's in this sermon

The shape of the argument

32 units across exposition, application, illustration, theological claim, and conclusion. The pastor's argument is built from these moving parts.

Pastoral correction · unit #15
"Addresses the third objection: 'I don't have friends here.' Confesses the discomfort of being unknown in a room, then applies Ephesians' call to love and serve the saints. The reciprocal principle: if you want to be known, known others; if you want to be loved, love others."
Doctrinal loci· 8 surfaced
Ecclesiology · 14 Soteriology · 8 Pastoral Theology · 3 Christology · 2 Hamartiology · 2 Sanctification · 2 Theology Proper · 2 Bibliology · 1
Bible citations· 18
Ephesians 6:21-24 | Ephesians 2:13 | Ephesians 2:18 | Ephesians 2 | Ephesians 2:14-16 | Ephesians 6:23 | Ephesians 4 | Ephesians 6:21-22 | Acts 20 | Ephesians 6:23-24 | Ephesians 5:1 | Ephesians 3 | Ephesians 4:29 | John 3:16
Illustrations· 7
  1. personal story · unit #7 — Extended illustration of a trail runner pinned by a boulder and rescued by companions. The story serves as a cautionary tale about the danger of hiking alone, setting up the sermon's core metaphor: the Christian life is not meant to be lived alone.
  2. analogy · unit #10 — Illustrates Christ's substitutionary atonement with a family inheritance dispute resolved by one sibling's self-sacrifice. The analogy clarifies how Christ bore our estrangement so we could be reconciled to God—the debt-holder himself canceling the debt.
  3. personal story · unit #12 — Personal story of his parents' adoption of a Russian daughter. The moment the judge declared her their daughter, she became his sister—regardless of distance or prior relationship. The analogy clarifies that vertical reconciliation with God automatically creates horizontal sibling relationships among believers.
  4. personal story · unit #19 — Personal story of coffee with Tom Wilkins—a pastoral relationship spanning decades—illustrating the bittersweet joy of heart-level Christian friendship. The story demonstrates what it looks like when hearts are truly open in ministry together, not just transactionally connected.
  5. personal story · unit #22 — Illustrates growth together with a local example: friends who went through the church's discipleship curriculum and discovered new depth in long-standing relationships. Shows that intentional discipleship structures catalyze growth even among close friends.
  6. cultural reference · unit #26 — Illustrates the overflow of love with Fred Rogers's signature phrase, 'I like you just the way you are,' which he received from his grandfather and then gave to millions of children. The love received becomes the love given.
  7. historical example · unit #29 — Illustrates grace with the Rogers family Christmas tradition: a massive feast open to anyone in the community without requirement. The grace Fred received, he freely gave—refusing to commercialize his ministry later in life.
Theological claims· 4
  1. The Christian life is meant to be a together life, not a solitary life. unit #8
  2. Christian life together means our hearts are open to one another, not just fulfilling duties. unit #18
  3. Christian relationships are forged and strengthened by being on mission together—the mission and the team cannot be separated. unit #20
  4. Life together means growing together—leaders equip the saints for ministry, and everyone grows as they serve. unit #21
Quotations· 3
"I actually agree with you that the church is a pit of vipers, and you're welcome to slither on down anytime." — Mark Dever (unit #14)
"If you as a Christian ever find a perfect church, don't join it... because he would spoil it as soon as he joined it." — Charles Spurgeon (unit #14)
"I like you just the way you are." — Fred Rogers (unit #26)
Read it

Full transcript

42,250 characters 32 units ~47 min reading time

0 · Opens by acknowledging Memorial Day weekend and honoring military families and Gold Star families

Amen. Well, happy Memorial Day weekend if you have tomorrow off. I just want to say as well, this is— we are happy to have so many military families in our church, and we know we want to be mindful of the fact that there are Gold Star families in our city, those who have lost loved ones, those who have lost parents, uncles, aunts. And let's be mindful that many of the freedoms we enjoy this morning, that we are able to gather freely hear the Word of God preached come through sacrifices those before us have made. And so we are, we are very grateful for them.

1 · Transitions from Memorial Day acknowledgment to the sermon text and previews the summer preaching series

And it's a joy to be able to say these words in freedom, to please open your Bibles to Ephesians chapter 6, be able to open the Word of God together. As you turn to Ephesians chapter 6, I want to let you know where we're going next after we wrap up Ephesians today. We will be spending the summer on— with the Apostle Paul on his first missionary journey. And I want to tell you why we're doing that. Ephesians, we've really soaked in the grace of God, hopefully.

2 · Explains the rationale for the summer series: the grace absorbed from Ephesians should overflow into gospel witness

I hope that's the one big theme you've gotten through the entire book of Ephesians. And as a result of being soaked in the grace of God, we saw last week Paul begins to say, listen, the grace of God that's changed me and that's changed us, please pray that I'd be able to share that with others. And so that's what we wanna focus on in the summer, that the gospel that we've soaked in for the last 9 months, we would be able to share with others. And so our— as Alec mentioned, our simple goal is that everyone in the church learn to share their own testimony and, in brief, the gospel of Jesus Christ. And so please pray the Lord would inspire us and stir us up this summer as we gather.

3 · Announces the pastor's upcoming sabbatical and previews guest preachers

In addition, I want to let you know one travel note. Mid-June to mid-July, the elders have very kindly given me a 1-month study sabbatical. So I'll be out of the pulpit for a month or so in the middle of the summer. We're gonna have our team preaching as well as a few guests. I'm excited that our friend and Pastor Tom Wilkins, who's a longtime pastor here, is gonna be coming, bringing the word during that time, as well as our friend Alex Anchondo from Gracia Soberana in Ciudad Juárez.

4 · Completes the sabbatical announcement and transitions to the sermon text

They are gonna be— he's gonna be coming, giving us an update on what's going on in Latin America through their ministry, as well as bringing the word. So I think it's gonna be a wonderful time. We're gonna spend in the summer in God's Word together. Well, you should be in Ephesians 6:21. And as we wrap up this series, let's remember that every single part of Scripture, even greetings and goodbyes, is inspired by the Holy Spirit and it is the Word of God.

5 · Reads the sermon text aloud

Ephesians 6:21, "So that you also may know how I am and what I am doing," Tychicus, the beloved brother and faithful minister in the Lord, will tell you everything. I've sent him to you for this very purpose, that you may know how we are and that he may encourage your hearts. 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. This is God's Word.

Where this fits

Recent preaching context

The three sermons immediately preceding this one in the preaching schedule.

Apr 27, 2025
If you choose to make the words of God your constant companion through consistent meditation, you will flourish both in this life and in eternity because you will know and be known by God Himself.
Psalm 1
May 11, 2025
In Psalm 2, we find a King in whom there is no refuge from Him, but there is refuge in Him—and the way to blessing is to stop resisting His rule and embrace the renovating, smashing, recreating work He does in the hidden corners of our lives through His Word.
Psalm 2:1-12
May 18, 2025
Christians must answer God's call to action, service, and submission without demanding complete clarity beforehand, trusting that God will provide the strength and courage needed through His presence, proven ultimately in Christ.
Joshua 1:9
May 25 · This sermon
Christian Life is Together Life
The Christian life is meant to be a together life, not a solitary life, because God has made us his children and therefore one another's brothers and sisters.
Ephesians 6:21-24
Earlier in the corpus · May 21, 2023
A prior sermon on Ephesians 6:17-20
You preached this same passage — 17 Ephesians 6 citations in that earlier sermon. Worth re-reading before the next time this text comes around.
Take it further

Discuss · apply · pray

Small-group discussion

6 questions for your group this week

  1. When Paul closes his letter to the Ephesians, he sends Tychicus as a messenger to bring news and encouragement. What does Paul's decision to send a real person—rather than just writing more words on paper—tell us about what the Christian life requires?
    Ephesians 6:21-22
    → Can you think of a time when hearing something in person from a brother or sister made a difference that a text message or email couldn't?
  2. Paul prays that 'peace' and 'love with faith' would characterize the church at Ephesus (Ephesians 6:23). Based on what you heard about Ephesians 2:13-16 this week, how does Christ's work on the cross make that kind of peace possible between people who were formerly separated?
    Ephesians 2:13-16
  3. The sermon emphasized that 'Christian life together means our hearts are open to one another, not just fulfilling duties.' What's the difference between a church where people show up and do their roles, and a church where people's hearts are genuinely open to one another? Where do you see that difference most clearly?
  4. One of the applications was: 'Even if you don't feel like you need people, Scripture teaches you do—no body part thrives in isolation.' What makes it hard for you personally to believe or live like you actually need other believers? What would change if you accepted that as true?
    Ephesians 4
  5. Paul says 'grace be with all who love our Lord Jesus Christ with love incorruptible' (Ephesians 6:24). The sermon taught that grace overflows from God into the church and then into the community around us. Who in your life right now needs to experience the welcome and refuge of God's family through you and your church community?
    Ephesians 6:24
    → What would it look like to open your heart and your church's heart to them this week?
  6. The sermon claimed that 'Christian relationships are forged and strengthened by being on mission together—the mission and the team cannot be separated.' What mission is God calling your small group into together? How could serving together on that mission change the depth of your relationships with one another?
Draft · pending review
Daily readings · Monday–Friday

5-day reading plan

This week, we meditate on the four theological pillars Ricky established: that the Christian life is together by design, that togetherness requires open hearts, that mission binds us, and that growth happens corporately.

Monday Ephesians 2:13-16

Paul opens Ephesians 2 by reminding us that we who were far off have been brought near by Christ's blood. But notice—the reconciliation is not just vertical (us to God). In verse 14, Christ himself is our peace, breaking down the wall between us. The foundation of together life is not our effort or compatibility; it is Christ's blood that makes us family. We are one body because Christ made us one.

Tuesday Ephesians 4:29

Every word you speak either builds up or tears down the body. Paul's command here assumes we are in constant relational contact—words flow between us daily. But the measure is not mere politeness; it is whether our words are building grace into the person who hears them. Open hearts ask: Does my speech invite my brother or sister deeper into belonging? That posture of openness is what makes the body live.

Wednesday Acts 20:28-32

Paul addresses the Ephesian elders with tears, knowing false teachers will come. Notice what holds them together: not nostalgia or affection alone, but the shared work of shepherding the flock and guarding the gospel. They are bound by a common calling. When we serve together—in evangelism, in care, in proclamation—we are not just doing tasks side by side. We are being woven into one another's lives by the weight and joy of the work itself.

Thursday Ephesians 4:11-13

The gifts Christ gave to the church (apostles, prophets, pastors, teachers) exist for one purpose: to equip the saints for works of service and build up the body. This is not a passive reception. Growth happens when the equipped go out and serve, and then return changed, transformed by the work. We do not grow in isolation; we grow by being sent out and by the grace we receive when we return to the gathered body.

Friday Ephesians 2:18

In this one phrase—*through him we both have access in one Spirit to the Father*—Paul plants the deepest root of together life. We do not each have private access to God. We approach the throne together, in one Spirit, as one family. Isolation is a fiction. Even in your secret prayer, you pray in the communion of saints. This is why the church gathers, why you need people, why you were made for relationship: because your very worship is inseparable from theirs.

Draft · pending review
Pray together this week

A Prayer for Together Life

Father, we come before you grateful that you have made us your children through the blood of Christ, and in doing so, you have made us one another's brothers and sisters. You have reconciled us not only to yourself but to each other, breaking down the walls that once divided us and calling us into a family where we belong. We adore you for this gift—that we are never meant to walk alone, but always as part of your household, the church.

We confess that we often live as if the Christian life is meant to be solitary. We hold our hearts at a distance from one another, fulfilling our duties as a church but never truly opening ourselves to be known and to know others. We convince ourselves that we don't need people, that we can follow you alone, when your Word and your design teach us that no body part thrives in isolation. Forgive us for the lie we believe—that we are enough by ourselves.

But here is the good news: you have given us the gift of one another. Through Christ, you have reconciled us to yourself and to each other, and that peace, that love, that faith flows out from the cross into your church and through us into the community around us. We are not isolated believers—we are a family on mission together, growing together, healing together (Ephesians 2:13-16).

Father, give us the courage this week to open our hearts to one another—to seek to know and be known, to love and be loved. Help us to understand that we grow not in isolation but in community, as we serve alongside one another and equip one another for the work you have called us to do. Give us eyes to see the broken people around us and invite them into the welcome of your family. Make us a people whose life together reflects the reconciliation we have received in Christ.

We commit ourselves to you this week as a church family—not as isolated individuals, but as brothers and sisters bound together in the gospel, on mission together, growing together in grace. To you be the glory in the church and in Christ Jesus throughout all generations, forever and ever.

Draft · pending review
Sunday-evening family table

Together, Not Alone

For the parent

This sermon emphasizes that the Christian life is meant to be lived with others, not in isolation. Use this prompt to help your family think about one person or group they're doing life with—and why that matters. Listen for how your kids understand belonging.

Ricky talked about how no part of your body can do its job all by itself—your hand needs your arm, your eye needs your head. He said the church is like that too. Who is one person in our church family (or in our life) that we need? And what do they do that we couldn't do without them?
Works for ages 7+—younger kids can name a friend or family member; older kids can think about specific gifts and how people serve together
Draft · pending review
Couples · three questions over coffee

Growing Together in God's Family

  1. What did you hear in this sermon about what it means to belong to God's family—and how did that land in your heart?
  2. Where in our marriage have we drifted into living more as individuals than as brothers and sisters on mission together, and what would it look like to turn back toward that?
  3. What is one way you need your spouse to know and love you this week—and how can you invite them into that instead of carrying it alone?
Draft · pending review
Memory verse this week

Ephesians 2:14-16

For he himself is our peace, who has made us both one and has broken down in his flesh the barrier of the dividing wall, by abolishing the law of commandments expressed in ordinances, that he might create in himself one new man in place of the two, so making peace, and might reconcile us both to God in one body through the cross, thereby killing the hostility.

Why this verse: This verse establishes the theological foundation for the sermon's central claim: Christ's blood does not just reconcile us to God—it simultaneously makes us one another's brothers and sisters. Without understanding that reconciliation is both vertical and horizontal, the 'together life' remains aspirational rather than grounded in gospel reality.

Draft · pending review
Where this was preached

About the church

Cross of Grace Church
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# Cross of Grace Church

A church preaching expository sermons through the books of the Bible.

## Sermons
- [Choose Your Own Adventure (Psalm 1, 2025-04-27)](/CoGElPaso/sermons/2025/04/choose-your-own-adventure)
- [Chased By a Lion (Psalm 2:1-12, 2025-05-11)](/CoGElPaso/sermons/2025/05/chased-by-a-lion)
- [Answer the Call (Joshua 1:9, 2025-05-18)](/CoGElPaso/sermons/2025/05/answer-the-call)
- [Christian Life is Together Life (Ephesians 6:21-24, 2025-05-25)](/CoGElPaso/sermons/2025/05/christian-life-is-together-life)

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