Session 4 Bible Study Handout
Ephesians 1:15–23
Published April 19, 2026 · Updated April 19, 2026
This is the participant handout for this session of the Abide 101 · Ephesians Bible Study. It provides contextual background blocks for group discovery, the anchor passage in full, space for notes and reflection, and the reading assignment for the next session. The companion Facilitator Guide is available to session leaders.
ABIDE 101 — BIBLE STUDY
Session 4: The Literal Guardrail
Anchor Passage: Ephesians 1:15–23
Name: ___________________________________ Date: _______________
Scripture quoted from the Berean Standard Bible (BSB) unless otherwise noted.
This session, we slow down. The Literal Guardrail asks one simple question before anything else: what does the text actually say? Before we ask what it means, before we ask what it applies to our lives — we ask what is actually here. Today's passage is a prayer. Read it as one.
Anchor Passage — Ephesians 1:15–23 (BSB)
Read this aloud together before answering any questions.
15 For this reason, ever since I heard about your faith in the Lord Jesus and your love for all the saints, 16 I have not stopped giving thanks for you, remembering you in my prayers, 17 that the God of our Lord Jesus Christ, the glorious Father, may give you a spirit of wisdom and revelation in your knowledge of Him.
18 I ask that the eyes of your heart may be enlightened, so that you may know the hope of His calling, the riches of His glorious inheritance in the saints, 19 and the surpassing greatness of His power to us who believe. These are in accordance with the working of His mighty strength, 20 which He exerted in Christ when He raised Him from the dead and seated Him at His right hand in the heavenly realms, 21 far above all rule and authority, power and dominion, and every name that is named, not only in the present age but also in the one to come.
22 And God put everything under His feet and made Him head over everything for the church, 23 which is His body, the fullness of Him who fills all in all.
— Ephesians 1:15–23 (BSB)
What the Literal Guardrail Does
The Literal Guardrail is the first and most foundational principle of faithful Bible reading. It says: read the passage according to its plain meaning and its literary form. This does not mean reading mechanically or missing figures of speech. It means honoring what is actually there before deciding what it means. When Paul writes a prayer, we read it as a prayer. When he piles up four words for power, we notice the pileup instead of flattening it. The Literal Guardrail trains us to slow down, look carefully, and let the text speak before we do.
Word Study Cards
Did You Know? In verse 17, Paul prays for epignosis — a Greek word that means deep, full, experiential knowledge, not merely information about God. It comes from the root gnosis (knowledge) with the prefix epi added for intensity. Paul is not praying that the Ephesians would accumulate more Bible facts. He is praying that they would know God more deeply as a Person — the way you know someone you live with, not someone you have read about. Bible study that stays at the level of information misses Paul's actual goal.
Did You Know? (the four power words) Paul piles up four distinct Greek words in verses 19–20: dunamis (inherent power), energeia (active working energy), kratos (dominion and might), ischus (raw strength and capacity). No single word was enough. He is stretching the limits of human vocabulary to describe a power that overcame death itself. The Literal Guardrail shows us that this pileup is not careless repetition — it is intentional, reaching for what language can barely hold.
Observation Questions
What I noticed:
What I want to ask:
Who / What (Start Here)
- Who is praying, and who is he praying for?
- What two things has Paul heard about the Ephesian believers that prompted this prayer?
- What does Paul ask God to give the believers in verse 17?
- In verse 18, what unusual body part does Paul say needs to be "enlightened"?
- List the three things Paul wants the believers to know in verses 18–19.
(1) ________________________________________________________________________
(2) ________________________________________________________________________
(3) ________________________________________________________________________
Bridge Questions
What I noticed:
What I want to ask:
Application Question
Paul closes this section by describing Christ as head over "everything for the church." Many of the Ephesian believers came out of a world saturated with spiritual powers, Artemis worship, and the occult. Reading this literally — that the One who holds all authority exercises it on behalf of His people — what does this mean for how a believer today faces fears, spiritual pressure, or forces that feel overwhelming?
My response:
Assignment for Next Session
Before Session 5:
- Read the Lesson 5 article on the Contextual Guardrail
- Listen to the Lesson 5 podcast
- Read Ephesians 2:1–22 slowly — twice
- First read: for understanding
- Second read: look for what changed between the first half and the second half of the chapter
- Write one observation here so you remember to bring it:
My observation from Ephesians 2:1–22: