Sunday, June 14, 2026
"by which, when you read, you may understand my knowledge in the mystery of Christ), 5 which in other ages was not made known to the sons of men, as it has now been revealed by the Spirit to His holy apostles and prophets: 6 that the Gentiles should be fellow heirs, of the same body, and partakers of His promise in Christ through the gospel," Ephesians 3:4-6
One of the greatest mysteries hidden through the ages was not merely that the Gentiles would be saved -- it was that they would become fellow heirs together in Jesus. Paul unveils the mystery “that the Gentiles should be fellow heirs, of the same body, and partakers of His promise in Messiah through the gospel.” (Ephesians 3:4-6) The Greek word Paul uses for “mystery” is mysterion -- not a puzzle to be solved, but a sacred secret now being revealed. In the ancient world, mysteries were revealed only to those who were brought to a deeper understanding. Paul is declaring that what was once concealed in shadow has now been unveiled openly: the nations were always inside God’s redemptive intention.
This was not the creation of a separate inheritance, nor the replacement of one people by another. Through the cross, the nations were brought into an inheritance they previously had no access to. Gentiles did not take someone else’s inheritance -- they were invited into promises God had already established.
The Hebrew concept of nachalah -- inheritance -- carries far more weight than a legal transfer of possessions. Nachalah meant identity, belonging, covenant, land, and generational destiny woven together. When Israel received their inheritance, they were not simply receiving territory; they were receiving confirmation of who they were before God. Paul is revealing that through Jesus, the nations are now brought into that same covenantal inheritance -- not a lesser portion, not an afterthought, but participation in what God promised from the beginning.
This was always embedded in the promise to Abraham. From the very beginning, God declared, “in you all the families of the earth shall be blessed.” The covenant was always moving outward toward the nations. The cross did not cancel Israel’s calling -- it opened access for the nations to join themselves to the covenant promises of God through the Messiah.
Paul uses the Greek word sugkleronoma -- “joint heirs together.” Syn means together with, and kleronomos means heir or inheritor. The picture is not secondary status or distant inclusion, but shared participation in the inheritance. Gentiles are not spiritual outsiders standing at the edge of the Kingdom -- they have been brought near and joined into what God promised from the beginning.
This is why Paul also says “same body” and “partakers together.” The Kingdom does not produce competing inheritances -- it produces a reconciled people sharing in the promises of God together through the Messiah. The inheritance remains covenantal, rooted in God’s promises, but now extended outward through Yeshua to all who believe.
This changes how we understand salvation. Salvation is not merely escape from judgment -- it is restoration into inheritance. Through Messiah, those once far off are now brought into the family, the promises, and the covenant purposes of God.
Brothers & Sisters, you are no longer standing outside the promise looking in. Through the cross, the nachalah has been opened to you -- not a fragment of it, not the leftovers of it, but access to the covenant inheritance God swore from the beginning. The same God who called Abraham beneath the stars made room for you in Jesus -- not as an afterthought, but as part of the mystery He intended to reveal all along. You have been brought near as fellow heirs. So walk like someone who belongs in the household of God. Stand firmly in the promises, embrace your covenant identity, and let your life testify that through Jesus, the door to inheritance has been opened wide to all those who will believe.
WHAT WAS HIDDEN HAS BEEN REVEALED -- AND IT INCLUDES YOU!
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