by Theodore
Austin-Sparks
Chapter 1 - Living "Before the Lord" and
"Unto the Lord"
Chapter 2 - Heart-Revelation of "the Mystery"
The Mystery Known Only by Revelation
The Church Heavenly and Corporate
Chapter 3 - Subjection to Christ as Head
The Practical Application of Christ's Headship
Chapter 4 - Living "In the Heavenlies"
The Limiting Effect of Things 'On the Earth'
Only Spiritual Value Counts with God
Knowledge of Christ in Heaven the Measure of
Spiritual Value
Earthly Features Must Not Govern
Only Spiritual Values to Concern Us
"But Samuel ministered before the Lord, being a child... And
the child Samuel grew on, and increased in favour
both with the Lord, and also with men. And the child Samuel ministered unto the
Lord before Eli... And (Eli) said, What is the thing
that the Lord hath spoken unto thee? I pray thee, hide
it not from me... And Samuel grew, and the Lord was with him, and did let none
of his words fall to the ground. And all Israel from Dan even to Beersheba knew
that Samuel was established to be a prophet of the Lord. And
the Lord appeared again in Shiloh; for the Lord revealed himself to Samuel in
Shiloh by the word of the Lord" (1 Sam. 2:18, 26; 3:1, 17, 19-21).
Those
fragments serve to indicate the growth of Samuel, and bring us to the matter of
spiritual increase, enlargement, growth. The marks are
quite simple and yet quite fundamental.
"Samuel
ministered before the Lord, being a child." "Before
the Lord." Like Another even greater, he
grew up before the Lord, and it is of far greater importance than might be
suggested by the little fragment of three words. That is the first thing that
must be true of us - that our whole life is not lived before men but primarily
before the Lord; that there is always that about us which speaks of an inner
life before the Lord. When we are alone, shut in our room with the Lord, then
everything is very pure. We know quite well that there before Him there is no
deception, there is no feigning and pretending, there is no unreality. We know
quite well when we come into personal aloneness with the Lord that everything
artificial is stripped off. There we know that we are seen through, we are
thoroughly well known; we can put on no camouflage, no disguises, in the Lord's
presence. There we are what we are, and we know it, and we make no pretence about it. And this is something which has got to
be brought out in our lives when we come from the secret place with the Lord -
that everything is to be as it is there before Him, as transparent, as clear,
as true, as unfeigned as it is in His presence; no pretence,
no makeup, no unreality, no false ways. We cannot be on stilts or on a pedestal
in the Lord's presence. When we are with people we may put on a lot of things
to cover up, to make believe; we may become very artificial. Even when we are
praying in the presence of other people, we can be anything but natural. We are
so conscious of them, and begin to preach to them in our prayer. We do not do
that when we are alone with the Lord, we do not make up anything then. We are
right down on the very bedrock of what we are, a certain kind of naturalness;
we cannot be other than perfectly natural there. What we are as before the Lord
we have to be when we are with people in public life. It is important, it is
essential. You see, anything put on amongst people, anything artificial, is not
our measure at all; it is a false measure, and it may be holding us up in true
spiritual life and growth.
"Samuel
ministered before the Lord." We might well take that for every sphere and
every hour of life. "Whatsoever ye do, work heartily, as
unto the Lord, and not unto men" (Col. 3:23). God said to Abram,
"...walk before me..." That may be very simple in its terms, but it
is something which has to do with a ground work for spiritual growth. People who are like that will go on, will grow.
The
rest of the statement about Samuel is only fresh emphasis upon what that means
"being a child." The Lord Jesus Himself put His finger upon that on
one occasion. His disciples, grown men, were talking about big things, and high
place; He took a little child and set him in the midst and said, "Except
ye turn, and become as little children, ye shall in no wise enter into the
kingdom of heaven" (Matt. 18:3). 'This is the way to enlargement. You are
thinking about place, position, influence; you are thinking big thoughts; you
have big ideas; but this is the way to true greatness - a little child: no
assumptions, no pretensions.' "Samuel ministered before the Lord, being a
child"; and then, of course, you are not surprised that he "grew
on."
Then
the next thing - "Samuel ministered unto the Lord before Eli." If we
could put ourselves in Samuel's place, we should find that it was not easy for
him in those days. Remember, Hophni and Phineas,
Eli's two sons, were there. A most corrupt, base, iniquitous thing was
happening, for which eventually they were slain in the judgment of God - a
state of things utterly deplorable. Samuel might well have become a cynic, he
might have become bitter and sour and critical. It is very easy when things are
like that to be cynical, to be disgusted, and to have no interest in what we
are doing, even though we ourselves are in no way compromising with the evil.
If we must be in it, we simply do it because it is our job. Others involved in
it are wrong and corrupt; but the work has got to be done, so without any
interest at all, we just do it. But it seems that Samuel closed his eyes to a
very great deal, and just kept them on the Lord, and his attitude was: 'All
around me is very evil, very corrupt, but I am here for the Lord; I am not
doing this for the sake of these people, nor just for
the sake of keeping this thing going; I am here, in the midst of it all, for
the Lord.' Thus was his spirit kept free from sourness and bitterness and cynicism. "Unto the Lord."
He ministered not to Eli, and not to Hophni and
Phineas, and not to a mere procedure, to keep it going, but to the Lord.
Remember,
that is a secret of growth. We may all have reason to say: 'There is a good
deal around me that I do not agree with and which I am sure is contrary to what
the Lord would have; and a lot of people who are wrong and difficult around me,
even of those who are the Lord's. If I were to take account of them I should
give up and leave; but I am here to live unto the Lord, I am only doing it for
Him, and so I intend to stay where I am.' That is a way of growth. Eli was the
embodiment of the religious order of his time, he was in the place of authority
and for the time being had to be recognised as such,
and Samuel was submissive. He was not trying to oust Eli, nor to condemn him;
he was not all the time saying, 'This whole thing is wrong, I have no place for
Eli' - going about gossiping and spreading reports about Eli. It is so easy to
do that; because you find something wrong at headquarters, you can easily
become disaffected and critical. Samuel was submissive. Later, even when he did
not agree with the people's desire for a king, Samuel received commandment from
the Lord to go and anoint Saul, and he obeyed, and afterward did all that he
could to make it easy for Saul to do the right thing and to fulfil
his mission. Samuel did not accept Saul, but he did not get in his way; he did
not spread evil reports about him. He gave him a good chance. The attitude of
Samuel to Saul is wonderful. He has not accepted Saul, nevertheless he is
submissive for the time being to what has to be; and here before Eli, in a like
spirit, he takes the submissive and subject position
and ministers to the Lord. No wonder he grew.
You
will not grow if you are observing the faults and flaws and errors around you,
especially in people who are holding superior positions, and if you are talking
and spreading reports about them. The Lord will say, "If... thine eye be single, thy whole body shall be full of light.
But if thine eye be evil, thy whole body shall be
full of darkness" (Matt. 6:22,23). Beware of
getting an evil eye on someone - it will stop your own growth. Samuel did not
eye Eli thus; he left Eli with the Lord and himself went on with the Lord. Lay
such lessons to heart. Samuel ministered unto the Lord before Eli, in subjection
and in patience, waiting until the Lord took steps to deal with that very
difficult situation which must have been eating into Samuel's soul every day.
It is our spirit that matters - purity, simplicity, earnestness, reality. That
is what it means to grow, and to grow on.
"...making known unto us the mystery of his will..."
(Eph. 1:9).
"...how that by revelation was made known unto me the
mystery... my understanding in the mystery of Christ... to make all men see
what is the dispensation of the mystery which for ages hath been hid in
God" (Eph. 3:3,4,9).
"This mystery is great: but I speak in regard of Christ and
of the church" (Eph. 5:32).
"...that utterance may be given unto me in opening my mouth,
to make known with boldness the mystery of the gospel" (Eph. 6:19).
We
have traced through the letter to the Ephesians this characteristic word -
"mystery." What is its meaning?
It
has two sides. First of all, "mystery" means something that has been
kept hidden, that could not be recognised, clearly
seen or understood. It was a hidden matter - what we call a secret; and we are
told that God kept this secret, this mystery, hidden from all ages and
generations, but now He has made it known. Something which was hidden, a
mystery, has now been declared.
But
then there is the other side of this, which is perfectly clear also - that even
after the secret has been declared people cannot see
it unless God gives them illumination about it. Although this is the age in
which it is declared, it is still a mystery until God opens eyes and gives
illumination. Paul said "by revelation was made known unto me the
mystery"; "ye can perceive my understanding in the mystery"; so
that it is a matter of the mystery being explained or illumined to our hearts,
and it is in our coming to see it that we come to spiritual enlargement. We
move towards fulness by way of seeing "the
mystery."
The
word 'mystery' is used in several connections in the New Testament, but there
are two major connections. You may say that they include the others. Firstly,
there is the mystery of Christ. We read the phrase - "the mystery of the
gospel" - but that comes within this, that is a
part of the mystery of Christ. And secondly, there is the mystery of iniquity.
What does the mystery turn out to be when you look into the New Testament?
Well, in each case - the mystery of Christ and the mystery of iniquity - you
will find it is an incarnation of a great spiritual and supernatural being
entering into man form. That is perfectly clear and simple with regard to
Christ. God was in Christ - that is the mystery. In the days of His flesh, no
one understood that mystery, it was something hidden. They felt there was
something mysterious about Him, something that was different, 'other,'
superior. They could not get to the bottom of Him, as we say; they could not
quite understand Him. 'There is something about this Man we cannot understand.
He is different, He defeats all our attempts at
explanation. There is a mystery about Him.' "The world knew him not"
(John 1:10). It is the mystery of God in Christ, God appearing in the form of
man, God made in the likeness of man.
The
mystery of iniquity is the same thing - another supernatural, spiritual being
coming in man form; eventually Antichrist. The mystery of iniquity is that
there is something in humanity, and heading itself up into a
humanity, a man or men, which is not just man himself. There is
something about this that is evil, that is sinister,
uncanny. You cannot account for it on purely natural grounds. There is a
mystery about it. It is an incarnation of a spiritual and supernatural being
which is the mystery, whether it be of Christ, or
whether it be of Antichrist.
But
when you come to Christ, you find that the mystery is twofold. Firstly, it is
Himself, as we have said; God in Christ personally, so that Christ is God
incarnate. But then you find, by what has been revealed to and through Paul,
that Christ takes a Body; not a physical body, but a spiritual Body - "the
church which is his body" (Eph. 1:22-23); and the Church being His Body
again becomes the mystery of Christ; that is, here is God in Christ indwelling
a company of people, the elect, the Body of Christ; and the letter to the
Ephesians is particularly taken up with that aspect of Christ - that you have
here a body of people called the Church, in whom God in Christ dwells. There is
a mystery about this people, about this particular Church,
there is something here that is supernatural, something here that is spiritual.
It is not just a society of people called Christians, a number of people who
gather together in the Christian faith and believe certain doctrines. There is
something more than that about them. If only you knew it and could understand
it, in the deepest and innermost reality of their being they are supernatural;
they are not merely natural people, they are not earthly people. There is
something hidden within them which you cannot account for on any other ground,
and you have to say, 'It is God, it is the Lord.' When you meet these people,
when they are gathered together even in a small company, if you move in there
you find something extra to the people, something more than what they are; you
meet the Lord. There is a mystery about this, and the mystery of Christ of
which Paul is speaking here is not just the mystery of Christ personal, but it
is the mystery of Christ corporate, of Christ in His Body the Church.
So
Paul is speaking about that mystery, and he is saying, 'Now, this is a heavenly
thing, a 'spiritual' thing; this is not something that is on this earth, which
you can explain as you can explain other earthly things. This is something
heavenly, and you cannot explain that by earthly standards at all.'
That
is the statement of the fact, but of course that is the challenge to the
Church. Is the Church that? Just in so far as we are actually what we are
called to be, that is our spiritual measure. Spiritual measure is what we are
as to Christ, what Christ is in us.
Then
we come to this other point - it is not the fact that makes us grow; that is, it is not the truth of the Body as truth, the
facts stated about the Church as information, that brings us to spiritual
enlargement. We can see all this as in the Scriptures, and yet it may never
make any difference to us as to our spiritual measure, never result in
spiritual enlargement. There are a lot of people who have all the truth of the
mystery of Christ and the Church, all the truth of the Body of Christ, but they
are very small people. Many of them have it and are still living on Corinthian
ground where everything is very earthly and self-centred;
and many more are living on Galatian ground where all is very legal. In order
for it to mean spiritual enlargement, it has to be on what we will call
Ephesian ground.
What
is Ephesian ground? It is this. Paul says that there was revealed to him this
mystery; it was made known to him. And now he tells these people that he prays
for them. They are Christians, there is no doubt about that; but he says that
he prays for them "that the God of our Lord Jesus Christ the Father of
glory, may give unto you (Christians) a spirit of wisdom and revelation in the
knowledge of him; having the eyes of your heart enlightened, that ye may know
what is the hope of his calling, what the riches of the glory of his
inheritance in the saints, and what exceeding greatness of his power to us who
believe, according to that working of the strength of his might which he
wrought in Christ, when he raised him from the dead" (Eph. 1:17-20). All that has to do with the true, eternal vocation and destiny of
this Christ corporate. The knowledge of Him is
not the knowledge of Christ as a separate person. It is the knowledge of Christ
now in all that He means in a corporate way. That is the knowledge he prays
they may have; and having prayed thus for them he moves to the matter of
spiritual enlargement. He comes eventually to that great point in the fourth
chapter - "till we all attain... unto the measure of the stature of the fulness of Christ." How do you attain unto fulness? What is spiritual enlargement? It results from the
eyes of your heart being enlightened as to the true meaning and nature of
Christ as expressed in His Body the Church. The point is that you see it, that
it breaks on you by revelation. Then you are at once out of a Corinthian
position, out of a Galatian position, out of a merely earthly Church with its
ordinances, ceremonies, etc. You are in a heavenly position, and now you are
going to grow.
Even
at the risk of undue repetition - because of the importance of this matter let
me say again that the Apostle says as to himself, and as to those believers of
his own day, and as to us, that the way of spiritual enlargement is by the eyes
of the heart being enlightened. Paul would never have prayed for that, if it
were not the Lord's will that it should be so; and if it is His will, then we can have the eyes of our heart enlightened
to know in this way that Paul knew - by revelation.
Now,
reverting to what I said above concerning the true meaning and nature of the
Church, I wonder if you have noticed in "Romans,"
"Corinthians" and "Galatians" the connection of baptism? In
Romans 6 baptism results in walking in newness of life. "We were buried...
with him through baptism into death: that like as Christ was raised from the
dead through the glory of the Father, so we also might walk in newness of
life." That is very simple; that is the beginning; through the spiritual
meaning of baptism you simply walk in newness of life, you have a new life.
When you come from "Romans" into "Corinthians" you find
that union with Christ crucified means that the mixing up of the old life with
the new has to be dealt with; you have a new life, but, you must not mix the
old life in with it. So "Corinthians" teaches that you must live
altogether and only in the new life, and not bring in the old with it. See 2
Cor. 5. When you move into "Galatians," Paul says, "As many of
you as were baptized into Christ did put on Christ" (3:27). In
"Galatians," baptism is the putting on of the new man completely; and
to indicate that it is an advance upon the Corinthian position, he follows
immediately by saying "There can be neither Jew nor
Greek, there can be neither bond nor free, there can be no male and
female; for ye all are one man in Christ Jesus." You put on the new man.
The Corinthian divisions are ruled out; baptism in relation to the Galatian
position means that we know no man after the flesh. But still in
"Romans," "Corinthians," and "Galatians," it is
as though we were living as Christians in a new life unto the Lord here, on the earth.
You
come into "Ephesians" and you read - "God... even when we were
dead through our trespasses, made us alive together with Christ... and raised
us up with him, and made us to sit with him in the heavenlies in Christ
Jesus" (2:4-6), Now here, the 'us' is corporate. When you come into
"Ephesians" you come onto the ground of what I will call a corporate
baptism. It has an individual application, but "Ephesians" views the
Church as a whole as a baptized thing. It is as though this whole Body of
Christ, the Church, has corporately been baptized, and is no longer an earthly
thing at all; it is a heavenly Body. Everything here in this first half of the
Ephesian letter is corporate. It was the Church that was foreknown,
foreordained, predestinated. It only becomes an individual and personal matter
by personal challenge to us in relation to the whole, but it is the Church that
is in view, and 'we' who were quickened and raised are a corporate thing; so
that, in "Ephesians," baptism sees the
Church placed in the
heavenlies through death and Divine quickening and raising together with Christ.
It is something very much fuller than just individual Christian life. You may
be baptized as an individual, but you must recognize that God never thinks of
you just as an individual in that sense; He never regards you just as one
isolated person. He looks upon you from the standpoint of the whole Body and
says, 'When you were baptized, you were not only baptized as an individual; you
were baptized as part of the Church, and in your resurrection you are seen from
heaven in your relatedness to the Church.'
Therefore
the higher position of "Ephesians" is this - that now, being
quickened and raised together with Christ and seated in the heavenlies is a
matter of relatedness to other believers, and in that relatedness, you are
going to find your fulness. You are never going to
find spiritual enlargement just as an isolated, separate individual, but in
relation with other believers. "God setteth the
solitary in families" (Psa. 68:6), and there is no doubt about it, whether
or not you understand or accept the doctrine of it, you can prove very quickly
in experience that our spiritual enlargement does come by way of true spiritual
and heavenly relatedness with other believers. That is proved by the fact that
it is not always easy for Christians to live together for very long. It sounds
a terrible thing to say, but you have a lot of other factors to reckon with. If
you were ordinary people in this world, you might get on very well, but being Christians
you have to meet the whole force of Satan working upon any little bit of
natural life he can find. So he makes for difficulty between Christians that
they would not find if they were not in a heavenly position. They are meeting
forces in the heavenlies. There are the rub and friction and all the cross
currents that try to divide Christians but which do not try to divide other
people, because there is so much bound up with true spiritual oneness amongst
the Lord's people - so much for the Lord, and so much against Satan. Satan is
going to break up that spiritual oneness if he can. He knows what that means
for him, and the Lord knows what that means for Himself - and hence the special
and extra difficulties when it is a case of Christians living together,
especially for a long time.
Now
what is the upshot? When these difficulties arise we must say, 'It is evidently
necessary for me to get a new spiritual position, to get on top of this. If I
am not going to give it up and leave, I must come to some spiritual
enlargement; I have to know the Lord in a new way, to have more grace, love and
patience.' That is spiritual enlargement, and it comes by relatedness. (Of
course, that is only one way; there are many others by which spiritual
enlargement comes by relatedness.) If only we can keep
together in prayer, there is spiritual enlargement.
You
want spiritual enlargement? Recognize that your baptism is not only an
individual and personal thing but from God's standpoint of fulness
it is a corporate thing. You may in "Romans" be baptized individually
to walk in newness of life, but when you come to "Ephesians," it is
corporate; the Church was baptized, it is a baptized Church; a crucified and
risen Church, and a Church in the heavenlies that is of spiritual account; not
something here; and there you come into the realm of God's great fulness - "strong to apprehend with all the saints what is the breadth and length and
height and depth, and to know the love of Christ which passeth
knowledge, that ye may be filled unto all the fulness
of God" (Eph. 3:18-19). That is fulness, but notice, that is corporate.
We must ask the Lord in the terms of the Apostle's prayer that the eyes of our
hearts may be enlightened. When we see, it is done. What we need is to see,
that we may know the hope of His calling.
"In him dwelleth all the fulness of the Godhead bodily, and in him ye are made
full" (Col. 2:9-10).
"And he is the head of the body, the church: who is the
beginning, the firstborn from the dead; that in all things he might have the
preeminence" (Col. 1:18).
"Who is the head of all principality and power" (Col.
2:10).
"...not holding fast the Head, from whom all the body, being
supplied and knit together through the joints and bands, increaseth
with the increase of God" (Col. 2:19).
"...where there cannot be Greek and Jew, circumcision and uncircumcision, barbarian, Scythian, bondman, freeman; but
Christ is all, and in all" (Col. 3:11).
Colossians
1 is the greatest and most magnificent statement in the Bible concerning the
Lord Jesus, and, in a word, it sums up all things in Christ. It is a very
wonderful unveiling of the place which Christ occupies in relation to all
things, and of course that is the standpoint from which everything has to be
viewed as to the Lord Jesus - His relationship to all things; and what the
Apostle is seeking to make very clear, because of that which had arisen to call
forth this letter, is that Christ is at no point, in no way, second in God's
universe. He does not come in the slightest degree below the place of absolute
pre-eminence, however great might be the position accorded Him by those against
whom the Apostle was writing. They were quite prepared to say very good and
great and wonderful things about Him, and to accord
Him a very high place; and yet that place was less than absolute pre-eminence.
So the Apostle wrote this letter in the first place to reveal and declare that
the Lord Jesus is in every realm supreme.
You
notice the above passages touching upon His headship, and that headship is seen
in the several connections as complete. There are no two heads or three heads
in God's universe; only one head is possible, and Christ occupies that in every
realm. So it is stated here - "that in
all things he might have the
pre-eminence." You cannot get outside of that. When you say 'all,' that is
final. He is head over all things.
Chapter
2 brings us firstly to our position in that headship. Verses 9 and 10 are a
statement of our position. "In him dwelleth all
the fulness of the Godhead bodily, and in him ye are
made full." Now, that is a positional fulness.
That simply means that, by our being in Christ, we come into the place of fulness, and we are made to stand in the fulness of Christ; we are positioned there.
But
when you pass to verse 19 of Chapter 2, it is a matter of progress, progress in
the position and by reason of that relatedness. "Holding fast the Head,
from whom all the body, being supplied and knit together through the joints and
bands, increaseth with the increase of God."
"In him ye are made full," but in Him you have got to increase. That
is not a contradiction. Made full by reason of your position, but increasing in
that fulness by reason of your spiritual progress.
Progress is a matter of making good all that is in your position. We see in
Ephesians the correspondence between that letter and the book of Joshua. When
the people came into the land, they were in the land flowing with milk and
honey, they were in the place where all the fulness
dwelt, but they had to do something about it; and so we find that it was a
matter of making good all that was theirs, progressing in the fulness into which they had been placed positionally; and
that is exactly what is here. "Increaseth with the
increase of God" is a matter of going on in that position to appropriate,
apply and make ours the fulness which we have
inherited in Christ; or, to put it more closely to the figure of the Body and
the Head here in this letter, it is taking everything from the Head.
Now
the temptation which was being presented to these Colossian believers was to
let go of Christ as supreme, and the Apostle made it perfectly clear that to
let Christ's supreme position go was to let the fulness
go, and that only as they held fast, not simply to Christ personally - all
these people were prepared to hold fast to Christ and not to let Him go - but
also to Him as Head, and so recognized that everything came from the headship
of Christ, only so would they come experimentally to His fulness.
That
is a statement, but what it means is shown in Chapter 3 -
"If then ye were raised together with Christ, seek the things
that are above, where Christ is, seated on the right hand of God. Set your mind
on the things that are above, not on the things that are upon the earth. For ye died, and your life is hid with Christ in God. When
Christ who is our life, shall be manifested, then shall ye also with him be
manifested in glory."
That
is the practical application of headship. "Ye died" - that is
necessary to put Christ in His place. "Ye were raised together with
Christ" - not apart from Him; not leaving any
place for self-government, self-direction, self-sufficiency,
self-assertiveness, or any other expression of self at all. "Ye
died"; your own headship of your life died with you. All other governments
of your life died when you died. You died to all other authorities, to all
other rule; to every other kind of direction, government, headship in principle;
you died to all except to the headship of Christ; and, being raised, you were
raised with Christ. It is "together with Christ"; and now in
resurrection it is Christ Who is Head of the Body, the Church.
While
this has a personal and individual application, it is the Church which is in
view again. This elect body of people called the Church died to all other
governments, just as Israel were set aside and buried in Babylon. It was the
crucifixion - the death and the burial - of Israel when the captivity took
place. They were sent away, out of the place of covenant blessing, the place
where the Lord was, the place of the inheritance, the place where everything
had been provided for their very existence. They were sent right out of it and
were for that time dead and buried, simply because they had let in other
headships. Idolatry was the cause; that meant that another headship,
that of Satan mediately through the gods of
the nations round about, had taken God's place, and
God would not tolerate any other headship of any kind at all. So He slew them
and buried them in Babylon, and when there was a raising
from that grave of a company that came back, it was under the absolute headship
of the Lord, and that alone. That is the principle of it. It was a corporate
thing, a corporate resurrection, and under one head. From that time, whatever
Israel became, however they failed, never again was idolatry found among them.
There is that about it; it cured them of idolatry - that is, of another
headship. You see the principle.
Now
here it is the Church, an elect people, having died and been buried to all
other headships; and to be in the Church in resurrection carries with it that
which is not optional at all. It is not an option - whether we like it or not,
whether we will have it or not - it is an established thing, that you cannot be
truly in the meaning of the Body of Christ and have any
other government than the government of Christ, any other headship than the
headship of Christ. It is implicit in resurrection. So then, "If... ye
were raised together with Christ, seek the things that are above, where Christ
is, seated on the right hand of God." Here Christ as Head is seated at the
right hand of God. That means He has taken the seat of absolute authority. There
is nothing more to be done about this, nothing to be added to it. It is
finished, it is final. He sits down in the complete authority which is His. He
is on the Throne. And that is the position of the Church, and the Church in
every part has to be brought to that place where all direction, all government,
all decisions, are taken from the Head, everything is referred to the Head, the
whole life has to come right under the Head. There is to be no self-will, no
self-choice, no self-direction, nothing at all that comes
out from any other quarter. There is no division in the mind of God between our
natural will and the will of Satan - they are the same. Satan has put his very will into the fallen creation. It is a self-willed creation
working against God, and it comes from the devil. So everything now has to be
transferred to the Head and taken from the Head if there is going to be any
spiritual enlargement.
It
is practical. "Ye died"; "ye were raised"; "Christ who
is our life." Those are statements of fact, utter and absolute. Therefore
"seek the things that are above"; therefore "put to death your
members which are upon the earth... seeing that ye have put off the old man and
have put on the new man" (Col. 3:5-10). You see the things that are to be
put away because you put on the new man. It is a new position with a government
altogether in all matters, and a complete subjection to Him at every point.
That is the way to progress in the fulness to which
we have been brought positionally.
Reading: Eph. 1:3, 20; 2:6; 3:10; 6:12; 1:6, 9-10; 3:11, 21
In
meditating on the subject of spiritual enlargement as seen in Paul's epistles,
when we pass into this letter to the Ephesians we come into an entirely new
realm. It is like passing from one world into another. In 'Corinthians' we find
everything earthbound in a carnal and soulish way, and all the features which
we find there are due to an earthliness of Christian life. In 'Galatians' we
still find things earthbound, but this time in a religious way. When we pass
into 'Ephesians,' the earthly ties are severed. The one governing word is
"the heavenlies." It is a new realm with a new time factor. We have
passed out of the earthlies into the heavenlies, and out of time into eternity. We want to
understand as far as we can what that means.
We
can, of course, conclude at once that if our horizons are pressed back so far
and if that is our realm, it must surely mean spiritual enlargement. But how? If we want to interpret this word 'heavenlies' in a
practical way, we find the key in verse 3 of the first chapter of the letter -
"...hath blessed us with every spiritual blessing in the heavenlies in
Christ." It means that now, in this realm of the believer's life,
spiritual values are pre-eminent. That is easily seen by a comparison with the
two letters preceding. In 'Corinthians' spiritual values were not really
pre-eminent. Personal interests governed there. Everything was judged from the
standpoint of the advantage to the people concerned and of its effect upon them
here in this life on the earth. Even spiritual things were pulled down, spiritual gifts were dragged into the realm of display
with a view to making something of the people themselves.
In
the Galatian letter the same thing is true, but from the standpoint of
religion. All is brought down to earth. The Apostle put his finger upon the
heart of the matter when he said of the Judaizers who
were capturing the Galatian believers that they wanted to glory in their flesh
(Gal. 6:13); that is, that they might be able to count heads and say, 'See how
many converts we have! See how successful our movement is, how many people are
joining us!' And he sets that over against the offence of the Cross. The offence
of the Cross is that there is nothing to glory in in the flesh. All the
glorying in the flesh, even in a religious way, is removed by the Cross. There
is an earthliness even of religious life that wants to make of Christianity
something here, seen and sentient. It is earthliness in another form. It is an
earthly 'Church.'
So
here, when we come into the 'Ephesian' position, we are at once introduced to
the pre-eminence of spiritual values. That is what 'in the heavenlies' means -
how things are viewed from above; not what they look like and seem to be from
the earthly standpoint, not how we weigh and measure them down here on this
earth, but how they stand from heaven's viewpoint, how the ascended Lord looks
at them. That is what governs all the way through this letter, at every point -
spiritual value; not numbers, not what men call success, not all these things
which are of such importance to people here, but just that which weighs with
God; and that is spiritual value.
"Hath
blessed us with every spiritual blessing," or, more properly and
literally, "every blessing of the Spirit." We saw how Paul sought,
with both the Corinthians and the Galatians, to get them away to the place
where the Spirit was the great, dominant reality. Now here that realm is
brought fully into view, where the spiritual matters more than anything else.
So if we want spiritual enlargement, if we are really coming to that greater fulness, we shall have to forsake these earthly standards
and judgments and interests, and get to the place where, after all, nothing
matters but spiritual value. How far is a thing of value in the Lord's sight?
We may take it as settled that only spiritual value counts with God.
Christ
is in heaven. We must know Him now only in a spiritual way, and no longer after
the flesh. We do not know Him as men know one another on the earth. He truly
said, "The world beholdeth me no more; but ye
behold me" (John 14:19). For the moment, that raised a problem for His
disciples: they could not understand Him. They said "What is come to pass
that thou wilt manifest thyself unto us, and not unto the world?" They
came afterward to understand that perfectly well. Christ can be known truly now
only in a spiritual way; He is in heaven. So here again the great phrase is "in the heavenlies in
Christ"; that is, the great spiritual values are Christ known in a
spiritual way. Enlargement is a matter of knowing Christ. "Ye shall know
the truth and the truth shall make you free" (John 8:32). Paul tried to
make the Galatians see that. His epistles are full of the name 'Christ' - the
Galatian epistle as much as any.
Now,
the letter to the Ephesians begins - not only ends - with that: "...every
blessing of the Spirit in the heavenlies in Christ." That is, knowing
Christ in a spiritual way is the way of spiritual enlargement; there is no
other way in which we can truly know Him. So in 'Ephesians' we find this idea
of the spiritual. The Spirit and 'spiritual' occur frequently in this letter.
The earth touch, we have said, is severed. That earth touch seen in the
Corinthian letter meant divisions - "I am of Paul, I am of Apollos, I am of Peter": parties, circles, sects,
dividing the Body. That is the earthly aspect and the earth touch, and we
always come into the realm of divisions if we touch one another on the earth
level. In 'Corinthians' and in 'Galatians' it is - Jew and Greek, bond and
free, male and female (Gal. 3:28). That is the earth touch, the divisions of
the earthly life. But "in the heavenlies" there is no earth touch,
and that results in there being no earth man. Here in 'Ephesians' we come into
touch with the heavenly man, Christ, and then with the "one new man."
Here there is neither Jew nor Greek: it is not Jew and Greek brought together
in fellowship; here there are not bond and free; here there is nothing of those
divisions at all, but one new man in Christ. "He... made both one, and
brake down the middle wall of partition... that he might create in himself of
the two one new man" (Eph. 2:14). So that spirituality and heavenliness
mean that we meet all believers solely on the ground of Christ. We do not meet
them for what they are in themselves, nor on the ground of what their
connections are religiously - whether they belong to this or that, or do not
belong to this or that. Those things do not come into consideration at all. We
meet them on the ground of Christ, and the measure of our practical unity will
be the measure of Christ. We go as far as we can with the spiritual measure of
everyone; we make that the thing that governs.
Now,
if we are to deepen and increase in fellowship we must grow in spiritual
measure. Spiritual enlargement will result in the fuller expression of
fellowship. That is the teaching of this letter.
Spiritual
enlargement, then, is a matter of getting away from the old-man-level, 'the earthlies' in the Corinthian sense - and even religiously,
in the Galatian sense - to 'the heavenlies,' in this sense, that Christ known
in a spiritual way is the ground upon which we live. Other things do not govern
at all; it is the Lord Himself and the things that are spiritual which
predominate with us. That is heavenly ground. When we get there, we are
introduced to the realm of very considerable spiritual enlargement. There is so
much more, of course, in this letter, but that is just a beginning.
Well
now, what weighs with me most? Where am I living? Is it on this wretched,
earthly ground of people and things down here, or is it on the ground of
Christ? Is it spiritual life and spiritual values that matter? If we can get up
there and say truly, 'It does not matter one little bit to me how a thing
affects me personally; the question is - how much of the Lord is there in this?
How much can there be for Him? I am not influenced by people's relationships
down here; I take the higher ground of the heavenlies and meet them, not as
this, that or something else according to earthly designation, but I meet them
on the ground of Christ, the one new man.' On that level there is nothing to
impede spiritual enlargement. Spiritual measure is not a matter of anything
here, even for the Lord - its success, its support, its
maintenance - but just how much it is answering to the full thought of God in a
spiritual way. That is what counts, and that is heavenly ground. We know so
well that if people are more concerned with the maintenance of something for
the Lord on this earth - keeping it going, building it up, making it successful
- they are in a realm of spiritual limitation, and not until they are
completely lifted out of such considerations with the one question - How far is
this answering to the Lord's fully-revealed mind? - and
are governed by that alone, can there be real progress and spiritual
enlargement. Is it not true? And it is impressive that people who are really
tied up with some thing - some organization, some
piece of work, some society, some mission, some
institution - even though it be for God in all sincerity - if that is their
horizon, if that constitutes their world, they are limited spiritually. They go
just so far spiritually and no farther. They are bound by their own earthly
fences, the fences of that particular thing. Get away from things, out to the
vast range of God's eternal, timeless purpose, and you find all fences are down
and spiritual enlargement takes place. It is the only way.
So
we come back. What is the Lord after? - not just good
things for Himself, however good; He is after nothing less than that great
summing up of all things in Christ (Eph. 1:10).
Originally published
by Witness and Testimony Publishers in 1948-49
This
selection re-published by: