by Theodore Austin-Sparks
Chapter 1 - The Cross of Christ: The Basis of a New
Creation
Chapter 2 - Christ in Heaven Our Sufficiency
Chapter 6 - Fellowship with God
Chapter 8 - "My Peace I Give Unto You"
Chapter 9 - The Meaning and Value of Sonship
Chapter 10 - The Secret Strength of Divine Purpose
The following
messages are a free translation of a series of addresses held at our
Motherhouse in October 1935 by T. Austin-Sparks.
We are very
thankful for the rich blessing, brought to wider circles of the Lord’s people,
through the ministry of our brother. Our great desire, in presenting these
addresses in printed form, is that the Lord may place them into the hands of
those whose heart is set upon Christ that He may become their All. We have
sought to retain, as much as possible, the original form of the messages —
spoken in English — which we ask our readers to bear in mind where certain ways
of expression are used.
May this little
volume contribute, according to the desire of the apostle, “to present every man perfect in Christ.”
Gümligen, Switzerland,
December 1935.
“And He that sits on the
throne said: Behold, I make all things new!” Rev. 21:5
..”.That He might create
in Himself of the two one new man...”
Eph. 2:15-16
“If any man is in Christ
he is a new creation.” 2 Cor. 5:14-17
..”.His body shall not
remain all night upon the tree... for he that is hanged is accursed
of God; that thou defile not thy land...” Deut. 21:23
..”.Whom they slew,
hanging Him on a tree...” Acts 10:39
“Christ... having become a curse for us...” Gal. 3:13
..”.The
Lamb that has been slain from the foundation of the world.” Rev. 13:8
..”.The glory which I
had with thee before the world was.” John 17:5
..”.By
the blood of an eternal covenant.”
Heb. 13:20-21
All these passages have a
relationship with one another, and are linked with the word: “Behold, I make
all things new.” We see in it God’s plan with three main phases.
The first phase is related
to the foreknowledge of God. Some of the passages we have read refer to
something which happened “before the world was.” Jesus said of Himself
that He had a glory with the Father “before the world was.” The Lamb had
been slain “from the foundation of the world.”
God saw, in His
foreknowledge, the need of a redemptive work, and laid the ground of a new
creation. He saw the end of the redemption in its consummation — fulfilled
through the Cross of our Lord Jesus Christ who was slain, according to God’s
purpose, from the foundation of the world; that is, before the ground of the
new creation was laid.
In Hebrews 13 we read of
the blood of “an eternal covenant.” That does not refer to a “future”
eternity. That word points to the past, a past as seen from our standpoint;
because for God the past and the future are alike: an eternal present time. But
the Word, being written for our sakes, and taking account of our limited realm,
wants to show us that in the foreknowledge of God the blood of an eternal
covenant was already set apart. Then this creation came into being. It appeared
out of the chaotic state of a judged world, and “it was very good.” After that came the fall. Through sin the evil one got the
upper hand and saw to it that the history of the world became one of darkness
and human misery. Now the creation is waiting for the redemption — “the
unveiling of the sons of God.”
This leads us to the second
phase of God’s purpose, the Cross of the Son of Man. In Him appears, at the
same time, the new creation. On the one hand the old creation was judged, and
came definitely to an end in Him as our Representative. In the death of our
Lord Jesus Christ, all have died. On the other hand He is the resurrection and
the life, “the firstborn from among the dead.” But this new creation is
not like the old one. The new heaven and the new earth are of a different
order. We now live “by faith and not by sight.” It is a spiritual world,
entirely new; new in an all-inclusive sense.
The third phase is
presented to us in the book of the Revelation, chapter 21: “Behold, I make
all things new.” That is the new creation in its consummation. It is a
spiritual creation as the ultimate outcome of the Cross of Christ. This
spiritual creation will take a form which is adequate to its nature: a new
heaven and a new earth.
These three phases of the
divine plan are very clear in God’s Word. But let us now turn to the central
thing, namely the fact that it is the Cross which is at the basis of the all
things to become new.
The Cross has two sides. It
represents the end of an old creation, and the coming in of a new one.
Shall we now see the point
from where God takes up His new work? Well, there was a moment in the Cross of
our Lord Jesus Christ when this whole creation was, so to speak, in ruin. Spiritually
we meet that which is told us at the beginning of the book of Genesis
concerning the state of the earth. We read: “The earth was waste and void;
and darkness was upon the face of the deep.” That was the result of a fall.
It meant judgment. When we come to the Cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, and see
again the darkness upon the earth which lasted until the ninth hour, and hear
Him cry: “My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?,” we understand what He meant when
He said: “Now is the judgment of this world.” In Him, the Son of Man,
God has brought the creation in its fallen state, and the whole work of the
devil under His judgment. God abandoned and rejected it in its Representative.
That terrific judgment fell upon one person. One man became the representative
of all.
Jesus Christ on the Cross
represents the whole creation under the judgment of God. God was visiting in
Him the sin of the whole world. The whole creation went down into death. God
cut the very light of His countenance from His Son. All the sin of this
creation, searched through the heart of one man. The answer to His cry: “Why
hast thou forsaken me” would be in effect: “Because of the sin of the world
which is upon You; because of the work of the devil,
who has to be destroyed.” The apostle Paul says: “One died for all,
therefore all died.” We know that in His Cross the whole world is put away.
“The old things are passed away.”
But we have to realize this
in our consciousness; we must see it. The natural mind cannot know it. The
wisdom of the natural is, according to James, inspired of the devil. We see a
devilish wisdom at work today. Only if God is giving us light can we see the
things in His light. Then we see what the natural man really is. We see the
Cross as the revelation of God’s wrath over our sinful nature. The Cross of
Calvary is the judgment over this sinful world. And because we belong, by
nature, to this world which God has abandoned, therefore the Cross of Jesus
Christ has to be registered in our lives; that what we are by nature has to
come under the judgment of the Cross. We have to repudiate ourselves
continually that our life may not come under the wrath of God. We dare not
serve God with that which He has rejected. God has rejected the wisdom of man.
He will not have it in His service, neither will He
have any other “abilities” from ourselves. God can only use that which comes
straight out from the new creation.
So we have to be very
careful. There is a constant need for heart-searching in this matter. How
easily something of the natural man creeps in. Again and again we want to serve
and do things — with our best intentions — where we can do nothing, where we
must do nothing, where God has to be doing all in us, where it has to be in the
strength of a new life to bring in a new ministry. There is a need to keep very
close to the Cross of Christ. The Holy Spirit must be allowed to keep this
natural man on the Cross that all things may be truly “out of God,” and not
from ourselves.
Is it not a terrible thing
that we can come under judgment even in the work of God? It is impossible to
live an acceptable life before God with resources which are under His curse,
with that which we produce, in the strength of our ability. In the book
of Deuteronomy we read that the body of him that is hanged upon the tree ‘shall
not remain all night upon the tree, but thou shalt surely bury him the same
day; for he that is hanged is accursed of God.” In
the letter to the Galatians Paul interprets this word in speaking of Christ, “having become a curse for us.” One hanging on
a tree overnight would pollute the whole land. Our Lord Jesus Christ, as the
Representative of the whole creation, would pollute the whole earth, if He
remains all night on the cross! There can be no more terrible thought in the Word
of God. How this unveils to us the awful condition of this creation which is
abandoned of God. It is so cursed that everything of the old nature, without
any reservation, is left, rejected and put away in Him who, as its
Representative, has become a curse for all.
If ever we see the
necessity of a new creation, the need of an absolute new creation, we see it
here. Everything must become new. The Word of God says: “Behold, I
make all things new! God has raised Jesus Christ from the dead. Again we
come to the book of Genesis. “The earth was waste and void; and darkness was
upon the face of the deep.” And God said, “Raised from the dead through
the glory of the Father!” God raised His Son from the dead. He brought Him
forth as “the firstborn from the dead.” It is a new creation which is
rising. In Christ we too are a new creation. It is true, without a doubt: “All
things are new.”
“But all things are of
God.” All things are become new. Our wisdom is a new wisdom. Our strength
is a new strength. Our heart is a new heart. Our capacities are new capacities.
All things are become new. It is Christ in us!
I realize in a new way that
we have to be very diligent to see to it that we do nothing out of our own
strength, that God is doing all. Looking into the work of my own mind there are
my own thoughts, there is the strength of my own desires, strong passions of
heart and will. But I ask the Lord to keep me in dread of myself, for this
whole creation, all of what I am in Adam, is cursed. It lies where God has
abandoned it. He cannot use it. Everything now must be of God.
I do want to urge upon you
to have more heart-searching in this matter. Oh, there is a wonderful new
creation with divine resources! There are marvelous possibilities, because they
are God’s possibilities for us. All things are possible from God’s side. Shall
we not take the place where all things are possible? We can be there where all
things are of God. HE is initiating things, HE is doing all. Let us reach out
to come into our God-appointed place in Christ — the fullness of God in Him.
Therefore we have to come to the Cross, and accept its implications from both
sides. We must see that awful side of the Cross of Jesus Christ — the curse of
the cross — that He was crucified for us, and we in Him. We dare not
bring anything of that old creation into the new life, for it would continually
come under God’s judgment. The day might come when all our work would have to
be burnt. There is a big difference between that which is done for the Lord, and that which is of the Lord in us. “He
that is hanged is accursed of God.” With Christ
we have hung upon the tree, and God has forsaken us in His Cross. But that is
not the end of all, but the beginning of a far bigger thing, something
altogether new. Let me say it again: we cannot come into the new thing unless
the old things are passed away. “Behold, I make all things new!”
May the Lord bring us there
where it can be said of us in truth: All things are new! And may He establish
us in it moment by moment. May the Cross be registered in every realm of our
lives, working in our spirit, soul and body, in mind, heart and will. May it operate in our words and works,
that all may be governed by His Cross, and a clear way made for the
glory of God, and the fullness of our Lord Jesus Christ.
Reading: Colossians 2
When waiting before the
Lord concerning these days of conference, it was borne on my heart that He
would have us be occupied with Christ in heaven as our Sufficiency.
Let us turn to some
passages of Scripture:
“Blessed be the God and
Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us with every spiritual
blessing in the heavenly places in Christ....” Eph. 1:3-4
..”.They drank of a
spiritual rock that followed them: and the rock was Christ.” 1 Cor. 10:1-4
“This is he that was in
the church in the wilderness with the angel... who received living oracles to
give unto us.” Acts 7:38
..”.Our sufficiency is
from God...” 2 Cor.
3:5
“But we have this
treasure in earthen vessels, that the exceeding
greatness of the power may be of God, and not from ourselves.” 2 Cor. 4:7
All these passages have to
do, in one way or another, with sufficiency. That sufficiency is bound up with
our Lord Jesus Christ. Now what occupies us here is touching a question about
which every Christian should be quite sure and clear as to its answer: What is
the supreme purpose which governs the life of a child of God? It is very
important that we should be able to answer that question. I believe the right
answer is: the supreme purpose of the life of the child of God is — to learn
Christ.
God has filled Christ with
all His fullness. In Him dwell all the riches of knowledge and wisdom. And that
fullness is for us. The apostle Paul makes this statement, saying, that we are
“blessed with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places in Christ.”
Thus our business as believers is to learn Christ to
come, in a living way, into the fullness of Jesus Christ. That governs
everything. Every dealing of God with His child is to
bring that one into a fuller knowledge of Christ. All the rest in our life will
be but the outcome and the result of that knowledge.
I have heard many people
say that the purpose of God, in having saved us, is that we should save others.
But this is only a part of God’s purpose. There can be no real service for the
Lord apart from a personal knowledge of the Lord. We can never lead anyone into
a knowledge which is not ours, neither can we lead
anyone further than we know Christ in a living way. So everything depends on
the measure of our knowledge of Jesus Christ.
If we live as long as
Methuselah we shall never exhaust the fullness of Jesus Christ. There is always
more to discover in Him. I therefore believe that our occupation in eternity
will be to know Christ more and more. Our life-purpose is to enter into the
sufficiency of all the fullness of Jesus Christ for us. If that is perfectly
clear the question will arise:
How
Can We Learn Christ?
Before we answer this
question let us first look at the background of that fullness and sufficiency
of Christ. It may startle you if I say that this background is a WILDERNESS. We
can only know the sufficiency of our Lord Jesus Christ if we are willing to go
into the wilderness.
Now, the wilderness has
always been the best place for spiritual education. You may think that there is
not much to be learnt in a wilderness. Nevertheless it is so; it is the best
place to learn heavenly things. It was so with Abraham; it was so in the case
of Moses; it was true with Israel. The wilderness had also a definite place in
the life of Paul. Whether we take it in a literal or a spiritual way, the fact is, that God’s people were, again and again, sent into the
wilderness. Many of us know what such a “wilderness” means.
When God puts His hand upon
a people, He always cuts them off from everything which is not of Himself; that
is, He cuts them off from the whole realm of their natural life, and puts them,
so to speak, outside of the world of nature. We see this in the case of the people
of Israel. Pharaoh was allowing them to go into the desert; he wanted them to
serve God in a half-hearted way: partly in Egypt and partly in the land. But
that could never serve God. God’s irreducible minimum was: not a hoof was to be
left behind. God’s people should be absolutely separated from Egypt. Therefore
the Red Sea came between His people and the Egyptians. God saw to it that they
remained in the wilderness until they had learnt their lesson. God had some
great lessons to teach them there. Israel’s sojourn in the wilderness had to
serve coming generations as an example. The dispensation of the church — yet
far away in the future — was to derive its instruction from them. In the
wilderness God laid down eternal principles. The things which happened to
Israel “were our examples.”
God cuts His people off
from the whole realm of nature. You know how little the natural man prevails in
the wilderness. It doesn’t matter how intellectual, how mighty the natural
resources are. It is not of much use in a wilderness. You may be an excellent
student, a splendid businessman or organizer, yet all this is not much good in
a wilderness. For a man who is planted down alone in the middle of a
wilderness, his own cleverness is not of much avail, his natural capacities
will not bring him very far.
So you see what matters.
When God gets us into His hand, He takes us right out of the realm of what we
are by nature. That is the meaning of the wilderness. God’s object is to make
Christ everything. So long as we can do things, so long as we have resources in
ourselves, we cannot know Jesus Christ. Christ will remain an unexplored realm
for us.
In the first letter to the
Corinthians we find some definite statements concerning Christ in the
wilderness. “They did all eat the same spiritual food, and drink the same
spiritual drink: for they drank of a spiritual rock that followed them; and the
rock was Christ.” Whenever Israel came into a new situation of need, the
thing which God did for them to meet that need was to give them an illustration
of Christ. If they needed food, heaven provided it. What they received was a
type of Christ. So they learned to know Christ in the wilderness as their food
and their drink. This is a great historic illustration for the church, that
Christ in heaven is her sufficiency.
What was true of Israel
historically was also true of Jesus Christ voluntarily. Christ accepted that
position of dependence for Himself. He chose to live entirely on heavenly
resources. Everything concerning Christ here on earth speaks of His poverty. He
had none of the riches of this world. He did not enjoy the advantages this
world could provide. He was born in a very poor home. Early in His life He had
to work for His livelihood. His life was right to the end straitened on the
natural side. But so He willed it to be. He chose to live on heavenly resources
rather than on earthly means. He fulfilled His whole ministry as out from
heavenly resources. We may see that more fully later.
The church, when wholly in
the hands of the Lord, will be led by the same way, and brought into that
dependence. All that which is of nature must cease, that she may learn that her
whole life is bound up with Christ in heaven, and all her resources are in Him
alone.
But it is just wonderful to
live in the heavenlies! it is a realm of constant
discoveries, of continuous wonder. Day by day we feel how impossible the things
are as seen from the natural standpoint. We know in ourselves that we cannot
meet situations and answer the need. Our nature is governed by this great, “I
cannot.” We see this in Paul’s life. He says of the natural man that he “cannot
know the things of God.” That is the reason why natural resources are of no
avail in the realm of divine things. But to be brought into the realization of
that fact is to be brought into a realm of wonderful experiences, a realm of
constant discoveries of how rich and full Christ is for us. Only those who realize
their own weakness and failure know what a wonderful strength and fullness there
is in Christ. In the course of time we come up against an impossible situation.
There is no strength in us to meet that need. We do not know how to get through
this thing. If we are left to ourselves we shall fail. But now we are entering
into a fresh experience. We are learning something we have never known before.
We see that the Lord has brought us into such a situation that we may discover
more of the resources of Christ. At the beginning we thought we were going to
break down; but in going on, in spite of all appearances, we slowly learn the
lessons of the wilderness, so that we get into a new inward position where we
can meet greater demands.
Thus we learn by experience
that the Lord is equal to every situation, that Christ has what we need.
Instead of being discouraged, we carry about a spirit of victory, although we
have not more strength in us than before. We are just as unable in ourselves as
we have ever been. But we begin to discover how capable the Lord is, how great
His fullness is in our emptiness. He is the Strength in our weakness,
He is the Wisdom for our foolishness. Our resources are no longer earthly resources, they are heavenly resources in Christ.
This was Paul’s experience
when he was in prison. Imagine being in his place! Cut off from temporal blessings,
his work in the churches apparently come to an end,
his liberty taken from him, in evident need physically and temporally. The
whole situation he was in was depressing. He was faced with an early execution.
And then he begins to write: “Blessed be the God
and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us with every spiritual
blessing in the heavenly places.” He is in the “wilderness,” yet he is
living on the basis of Christ. Therefore he is triumphant.
And because he has so learned
Christ, he has been able to be a blessing to an untold number of believers
right up to this day. When turning to his letters we receive ever fresh
blessings from its pages. The riches of Jesus Christ are flowing to us in
abundance through His servant Paul. Paul knew Christ. But there was a spiritual
wilderness in the background of that life, that is, a realm where nature cannot
help. Therefore he writes: “We have this treasure in vessels of fragile
clay....” That is the wilderness of our own nature — vessels of fragile
clay. “Our outward man is perishing.” Paul had learnt the
All-sufficiency of Christ for himself in the wilderness of the natural man.
So you see, the supreme business of a believer is to learn Christ.
That brings us into a position of spiritual power and fullness, which means to
live a life of victory and fruitfulness.
There are many who will not
have the wilderness. They work for the Lord in their own strength. Such people
do not know the Lord Jesus. They will not learn Christ. But if we will give to
the Lord His place in our life, it may be that He will bring us into a
wilderness that He may reveal Himself to us in His fullness, that we may learn
Christ and His sufficiency.
May the Lord use these
messages in order to show us our poverty, and reveal to us His fullness.
“Now it came to pass...
that, Jesus also having been baptized, and praying, the heaven was opened, and
the Holy Spirit descended in a bodily form, as a dove, upon Him.” Luke
3:21-22
..”.Ye shall receive
power, when the Holy Spirit is come upon you.” Acts 1:6-8
“And they were all
filled with the Holy Spirit.” Acts 1:6-8
“And ye have an
anointing from the Holy One, and ye know all things … The anointing which ye
received of Him abides in you.” 1 John 2:20, 27
The most important thing in
the believer’s life is to learn Christ. “In Him dwells all the
fullness of the Godhead bodily.” That fullness is for us, for: “In Him
we are made full.” And because Christ, as our fullness, is in the glory,
therefore Paul writes to the Ephesians: “Blessed be
the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us with every
spiritual blessing in the heavenly places.” That means we are blessed with every
spiritual blessing in our Lord Jesus Christ in the heavenlies. That implies
that our relationship with the Lord Jesus must be a heavenly relationship. Only
as we come into a heavenly union with Christ can we partake of these heavenly
blessings.
Now we have already seen
that there has to be a wilderness first in our lives before we can
experimentally know the all-sufficiency of Christ for us. Israel’s life in the
wilderness meant a complete separation from the old nature, and an utter
dependence upon resources outside of this earth. The wilderness in itself
provided nothing for them, and all their natural capacities were of no use in
such a place. But these conditions were just given to make the wilderness a
place of revelation where they had to learn Christ, in a special way, as their
sufficiency. Christ is the living Bread which came down from heaven. He is the
Water of Life. The ‘spiritual rock that followed them” was Christ.
Let us therefore emphasize
again that in order to know Jesus Christ in fullness we have to come to the
place where the world and all its natural resources cannot help us, and have to
be completely ruled out.
We have pointed out that
Jesus Christ Himself accepted that position - that He
voluntarily chose to live on a faith-basis. He chose to depend entirely on His
Father. He could do absolutely nothing without Him; He had nothing Himself but
was drawing everything from the Father. That is the more negative side of our
meditation. Now let us turn to the positive side.
What is the basis of a life
lived in a heavenly union with Christ, where all the resources have to be of a
heavenly nature? The answer is: That basis is the Holy Spirit.
When Israel was separated
from Egypt, and brought out into the wilderness, God gave them the pillar of
cloud by day, and the pillar of fire by night. That cloud is a type of the Holy
Spirit. The forty years in the wilderness typify that Israel’s life became
entirely governed by the Holy Spirit. When we come to the Lord Jesus we see the
reality of this, and how true it was in His case. When He stepped out into
public life, God separated Him for His special ministry. He came under the
anointing of the Holy Spirit (Luke 3:22). From that moment His whole life was
governed by the Holy Spirit (Heb. 9:14).
If we want to live a
heavenly life in the wilderness, the Holy Spirit is essential. He is given for
that very purpose. Through the Holy Spirit the same resources are at our
disposal upon which Christ, in the days of His flesh, had been living. It is
very important to recognize the fact that our Lord Jesus Christ voluntarily
accepted our position, and was fashioned like a man, taking the place of one
who is dependent on God for everything. If we do that, we shall rejoice to live
a life which is governed by the Holy Spirit, a life through which our Lord
Jesus Christ shall be glorified, even as He, living in the Father, glorified
the Father. This then is our relationship with Christ. The basis of a heavenly
life is the Holy Spirit. The Lord Jesus lived His life in the Holy Spirit. By
that Spirit He was doing His work. He moved continually, in all His ways, as
governed by the Holy Spirit. He refused to move or act under the influence of
man, or be pressed by circumstances. He only did that which the Holy Spirit
witnessed in Him. The secret of His triumphant life was the government of the
Holy Spirit.
Now what is true of the
Lord Jesus has to be true for us. It is the same Spirit which is anointing us.
We have come to see that this world is a wilderness. We are called to let go
our natural resources, and to live a life entirely out from God, in direct
communication with Him. In the things of God we cannot use natural resources.
Neither the world nor we in ourselves can produce
anything for God. But let us place the emphasis upon the positive side: the
Spirit of Anointing makes everything possible. The Holy Spirit, the Anointing
which we have received, brings us into oneness with Christ. Just as Christ was
one with the Father by the Spirit, so we are made one with Christ by the same
Spirit. This is a wonderful union! It means that the Lord Himself is doing the
work in us in order to work it out through us.
What we want to say is, that God Himself will do His work. It cannot be done
through our trying to do it. To ask Him to help us to do His work is a great
mistake. If it is the Lord’s work, then it is HE who is doing it. He never
gives His own work into our hands. The Lord does not give His work to you or to
me. We are but His employees, like the workman who uses his tools. A tool never
thinks out what it should do. It simply yields to the hand of its master. He
has the plan. He has the skill and the strength, and the tool is only
expressing what is in the mind of the workman. The responsibility lies with
HIM. The tool is only allowed to do what the master wants to do through his
instrument. Imagine an instrument getting up in the morning determined to do
this or that, hoping the master would help it. This is not the right attitude.
Let us think of the tool which takes this attitude and says: “Now Master, you
know what you will do. You have the plan. You know how you will work, and at
what time you will do it. I am here at your disposal. I am willing to serve you
in any way you please. I am altogether consecrated to you and your purpose. I
look to you concerning the work which lies before us. You must be the wisdom,
the strength and the power of endurance behind me. If I should become blunt you
can sharpen me again. Everything depends upon you, but I am one with you.”
This is a very simple
illustration of the truth. That was exactly the relationship of the Lord Jesus
with His Father. He said: “My Father works even until now, and I work.”
He only worked because His Father worked. He also said: “The works which the
Father has given me... the same works I do.” The link between Him and the
Father was the Holy Spirit. He brought about that marvelous oneness. Now we are
under the same anointing. That anointing is the guarantee for meeting every
need to which we are called, and to do it at the right time.
When we are under the
anointing, which brings us into oneness with our Lord Jesus Christ in the heavenlies, there is no need to get into a state of anxiety
concerning “our works.” The Holy Spirit will come in and show us where we have
to act as under the Lord’s commission, and where we have to stand back and wait
— in spite of apparent need and pressure which comes upon us — because the Lord’s
time has not yet come to meet that need.
“The anointing teaches
you concerning all things.” Has this not been true many a time in our
lives? For instance, a difficult situation arises, a problem has to be solved,
and we are asked to meet that need. Now we get worked up into a state of
anxiety, but all our thinking and planning is getting us nowhere. We cannot see
what we should do; we have no light. But when we have handed it over to the
Lord, when we put our confidence in Him, trusting Christ to be our wisdom and
strength, the light comes, and we are able to give the needed counsel, and
touch the vital points as we, in ourselves, would never be able to do. It just
comes by revelation. The experience is true: “In that hour it shall be told
you what to speak.” The Holy Spirit is given us that we may, through Him,
continually stand in unbroken and direct fellowship with our Lord in heaven.
Immediately we begin to work at things with our mind, and count upon our
resources, or look at circumstances, we take upon us a responsibility which is
beyond us, and which we cannot meet. The result is that we become anxious,
worried and fretful. We begin to ask other people to tell us what to do. We
look round for some help from outside, and thus enter more and more into the
realm of the natural world which, we know, cannot help us in heavenly things.
But if we abide under the anointing, we have the certainty that all we have to
do is but a part of a completed work.
How often
attempts were made upon the life of the Lord Jesus to destroy it. His life was beset with danger. He
had hardly stepped out into public ministry, and we see His murderers at work.
We are told that such an attempt was made when He went into the synagogue of
Nazareth. The people were offended by His words and led Him to the brow of the
hill of their town to cast Him over. But He went right through their midst out
of their hands, and their attempt failed. He could not be destroyed even one
day before His time because of the anointing. God had ordered His life to the
very “hour.” “No one takes my life from me, but I lay it down of myself.”
What is anointed and abiding under the anointing will complete the work. We too
can be assured to complete the work to which God has called us in life, and for
which He has appointed us in Christ. “We are his workmanship, created in
Christ Jesus for good works, which God afore prepared that we should walk in
them.” What a mighty comfort to know that it is the anointing, which takes
the full responsibility for the completion of our life! So we just have to
abide under the anointing.
The book of the Acts is a
wonderful demonstration of this very thing. Before the Lord left His disciples
He gave them this commission: “Go ye into all the
world....” But He added: “Tarry ye in the city, until ye be clothed with power from on high.” When the Spirit of
Anointing came upon them on the day of Pentecost, they had no desire to hold a
committee meeting and say: “Now we must organize our work. We must arrange to
collect money, and make plans how to run this thing well. It will be necessary
to think of all the emergencies which may arise.” No, the apostles were
delivered from all this. The anointing which they had received took charge of
it all. They did not have to think it out. They went to fulfill their
commission with great joy, and let the Holy Spirit see to all the emergencies.
He took the full responsibility for them. All they had to do was just to yield
in complete obedience to Him.
When the church came into
being they did not have to find fresh members for the church. They did not come
together to organize this or that, in order to build the church. The Holy
Spirit took full charge. We read: “The LORD added to them day by day those
that were saved.” But perhaps the other statement was even more important;
the Holy Spirit did not allow just anyone to join them. We read: “But of the
rest durst no man join himself to them.” It is
sometimes easier to bring people into the assembly — outwardly — than to get
them out again. But for that too the Holy Spirit took
full responsibility. That is an important factor. It is a grand position to be
in when, for all matters concerning the church and our calling, the Holy Spirit
is taking the responsibility.
But let us not forget that
such a position does provoke the enemy. Immediately after the anointing the
Lord met the enemy in the wilderness. The adversary does not care much where
the anointing is not working. But if you and I come under the anointing, if the
Holy Spirit is making Christ in the glory the Christ which is “the hope of
glory” in us, we shall become the object of the enemy’s hatred. If one can
say of believers that they are under the Anointing, truly they shall be hated
of the devil. He will do all that is in his power to destroy such instruments
of God. But the anointing also secures the victory. The Holy Spirit gives us
the victory.
But don’t forget that our
natural strength and the power of the Holy Spirit can never go together. It is
absolutely essential that the natural man is ruled out. Only when we know our
own weakness shall we be strong. Think of the apostle Paul when he said: “When
I am weak then am I strong.” So our natural wisdom and God’s wisdom cannot go
together. Therefore the wilderness is needed, and we have to say “yes” to God’s
dealings with us. We have to be willing to forsake our self-life and let go of
everything in order to come to the fullness of Christ. The fullness of the Holy
Spirit is the birthright of every child of God. He brings us into a heavenly
union with our exalted Head. In Him the heavenly resources are available for
us, because God has made our Lord Jesus Christ to be our fullness. Where the
Anointing abides it will be true again and again that: “God has blessed us
with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places in Christ.”
“Now unto Him that is
able to do exceeding abundantly above all that we ask or think, according to
the power that works in us, unto Him be the glory in
the church and in Christ Jesus unto all generations for ever and ever.”
“And thou shalt make a
veil... and the veil shall separate unto you between the holy place and the
most holy.” Ex. 26:31-36
“And behold, the veil of
the temple was rent in two from the top to the bottom...” Matt. 27:46-51
The object of our
meditation is: Jesus Christ in heaven as our Sufficiency. We have already seen
that our Lord Jesus” resources came from His Father when He was here on this
earth. He voluntarily lived in a state of absolute dependence on Him. He willed
it to be so. He refused to have anything in Himself. Everything He needed He
drew from heaven; He received it from above.
When we are in
resurrection-union with Christ, the Holy Spirit brings us into oneness with Him
who is in heaven for us. That means: all the resources upon which the Lord
Jesus lived are at our disposal. These resources were secret resources, that
is, they were unknown to the world. The people around Him were absolutely in the
dark as to the source of His power. There was a secret relationship between Him
and His Father which impressed them. They saw that there was something in the
background of His life, a mysterious power and knowledge, which was not
ordinary to man. He had a whole set of resources at His command which no one
possessed. He had a knowledge which was far beyond man’s understanding. And
because He lived a secret life, a life in His Father, His resources were
mysterious and wonderful to men.
If we live in heavenly union
with Jesus Christ by the Holy Spirit, the same resources are at our disposal.
Let us remind ourselves of the Word which is at the basis of our meditation: “The
Father of our Lord Jesus Christ has blessed us with every spiritual blessing in
the heavenlies in Christ.” That means that all the resources which are in
Christ are available for us. But we have to learn to live in such close
fellowship with Him as He lived with His Father in the days of His flesh.
Now let us look at some of
these secret resources and turn to Hebrews 9:3-4: “And after the second
veil, the tabernacle which is called the Holy of holies.” We have here the
tabernacle as it was in the earth, with its holy place and its
most holy. The holy place represented the earth. There we have the candlestick,
the altar of incense, and the table of showbread, pointing — in type — to the
Lord Jesus Christ. Now Jesus Christ has gone through the veil into the place of
future realities, where everything is Christ, Christ All and in all. Heaven is
open since Christ rent the veil. For the natural man heaven is closed. This
includes not only the heaven we may go to one day, but it represents a sphere,
the present realm of God’s activity, which we can share in union with Him.
We too, have an open
heaven. Paul says: “Our citizenship is in heaven!” If our walk on this
earth is to be a heavenly one, we must have an open heaven, for we are utterly
dependent upon heaven for spiritual blessing. The door of heaven is closed to
the natural man. Even a man like Nicodemus cannot see it, and even less enter
it.
Let us repeat that the “holy
place” of the tabernacle represents the earth, and the “most holy place”
heaven. In the one place we have the types of heavenly things. In the other was
God Himself. Between the two was the veil. Death would meet anyone who would go
through that veil into the most holy place, except by God’s special command.
The letter to the Hebrews
tells us further that that veil was a type of Christ’s flesh. There are two
sides in the person of our Lord Jesus Christ: an earthly side (towards the
earth) and a heavenly one (towards God). Between heaven and earth was the veil,
and Christ’s flesh was that veil. When Jesus Christ died on the cross the veil
in the temple was rent from the top to the bottom. Now the types gave place to
the reality. What was but suggestive, pointing to God, passed away, and man was
allowed to draw near to God. The flesh of our Lord Jesus Christ is speaking of
human limitation which formed a barrier between the realities of God and man.
If we look into the holy place of the tabernacle we have features and
illustrations of heavenly things because of man’s limitation.
The whole of the Old
Testament is giving us these object lessons, because man by nature cannot enter
into the realities of divine things. God could speak to man about heavenly
things only by way of earthly representations. He had to teach man like one
teaches a child, in giving him these pictures and parables of divine things.
That is the meaning of the “holy place.” No one was allowed to enter through
the veil, which separated the holy place from the most holy, and which were
types of earth and heaven.
Now Israel was to give by
its life an illustration, a pattern of the things of God. What happened to
Israel is a parable for us. Therefore Israel’s history is so significant for us
who, in the light of the New Testament, are now enabled to see in these Old
Testament types as divine realities.
Once a year, on the day of
the atonement, the veil was lifted. After many preparations the high priest was
allowed to enter into the “most holy place.” But it was only once a year and
then it was closed again. But the day of atonement
spoke of something deeper in the intentions of God. That day was pointing to
the fact that, according to God’s will, the veil was not to remain forever, but
there would be an atonement through which heaven was to be kept open for ever.
When Christ died on the
cross the veil was rent. What God had planned from before times eternal, was
accomplished in Him. Now the way to God is open for ever!
In Christ the rent veil opened the way. He had come in the flesh, as the Son of
God, to do that work which no one could do. In Christ risen there is no veil
anymore. As Son of Man He accepted our human limitation.
As Son of Man He was the representative MAN. But as Son of
God He was linked with heaven. In His person He was the veil of the
tabernacle. He stood between heaven and earth. He stood between man’s
limitation and God’s fullness, between the types and the realities. When He
lived among men, He spoke in parables of heavenly things, because of the
limitations of man who was unable to apprehend them. So He brought heavenly
things in earthly forms. He said: “If I told you earthly things and ye
believe not, how shall ye believe if I tell you heavenly things?” What He
meant was: “If I have put heavenly things in the form of earthly parables and
types, and you have not understood, how will you understand if I speak with you
in a heavenly language!”
Now all these limitations
are passed away. Christ is in truth “the way.” He has entered, through
the veil of His flesh, the innermost sanctuary, the most holy place, and opened
the way. It is Christ crucified who is the way for us into the immediate
presence of God.
And when He says: “I am the
truth,” it means: all that you see are but types and symbols serving as
pictures. They are not the heavenly things in themselves. HE is the reality of
all these things. In HIM we have the reality. The priests were occupied in the
tabernacle, year in year out, but their works were “dead” works which could
never lead to a living union with God. Now Christ said: “I am the life.”
Only in Christ there is life. The blood of goats and bulls and the life in that
blood was only a reminder, a type. No one but Christ can give life. HE is the
living reality.
Now we see heaven and earth
united in Christ risen and ascended. He is the
mediator. He is the ladder which Jacob saw in his dream, and upon which the
angels of God were ascending and descending. The Lord referred to that when
speaking to Nathanael, saying: “Ye shall see the heaven opened, and the
angels of God ascending and descending upon the Son of Man.” What was but a
type at Bethel has become a living reality in Christ. He is uniting heaven and
earth. In Him — in the two sides of His nature — God and man are brought
together, heaven and earth are united. He is the way, the only way of
communication for heaven and earth. Union with Christ means to live under an
open heaven, in the presence of God, and in all the reality of the new life.
The Holy Spirit is given us
on that ground. He came upon the Lord Jesus after His baptism in the Jordan.
The heavens were opened and the Holy Spirit descended upon Him. Now Christ risen means an open heaven. The Spirit of the Anointing
comes upon us because the crucified One is risen. He comes to us out of an open
heaven which the Son of God has opened for us.
But what was the value of
the anointing? It is to bring us unto a heavenly union with God. The Lord Jesus
said: “When he, the Spirit... is come, he shall guide you into all the
truth.” And John confirms this in saying: “The anointing which ye
received... teaches you concerning all things.”
That is represented by the angels ascending and descending. The Holy Spirit is
communicating with us, but Christ is the ladder, reaching from earth to heaven.
Where is that ladder? It is not in the world. The ladder is set up in our
hearts. It is Christ in our hearts. There is an open way from heaven in our
hearts, Christ Himself, leading us into the very presence of God. The Holy
Spirit moves in relation to Christ to bring us into communion with Christ, just
as Christ is in communion with His Father.
The all-sufficiency of
Christ is secured for us on that basis. We are in the heavenlies, because
Christ is in us. If joined to His person the limitations are gone. There is a
direct and immediate communion with God, and the Holy Spirit can reveal to us
heavenly things.
Thus we understand what it
means to receive everything directly from God in Christ. Christ in us means an
inward knowledge of God, a heart-relationship with Him. It is an inward life
from God, an inward power of God. But that is a mystery which the world does
not and cannot know. It cannot understand that our Lord Jesus was willing to
accept exactly the same basis of life with its limitation in which we live,
although without sin. Yet, in fellowship with His Father, He continually broke
through these limitations, and overcame them in drawing all His provision, all the
fullness from His Father alone. His sufficiency was in His Father.
So we are called to live,
by the Spirit, a life triumphant over all our weaknesses, a life where Christ
is everything, and where His victory is our victory. The work of the Cross is
finished. The veil is rent. The way is open.
Thus Christ risen in heaven means for us an open heaven where everything
is possible for us in Christ, that we may glorify Him. All things are given us
in Him. And it is the anointing which teaches us all things.
“As the Father has life
in Himself, even so gave He to the Son to have life in
Himself.” John 5:26
“In Him was life.”
John 1:4
“I live because of the
Father; so he that eats Me... shall live because of
Me.” John 6:57
“Thou gavest Him
authority over all flesh, that to all whom thou hast given Him, He should give
eternal life.” John 17:2
“And the witness is this, that God gave unto us eternal life, and this life is
in His Son.” 1 John 5:11
“I am the first and the
last, and the Living One; and I was dead, and behold, I am alive for evermore.”
Rev. 1:17-18
In the previous chapter we
dealt with the first resource we have in our Lord Jesus Christ, and we saw that
it is an open heaven. Now we come to the second resource: the possession of a
heavenly Life.
In the first portion of
Scripture we have read, the statement is made that the Father has given to the
Son to have Life in Himself, “in Him was Life.” The second passage in
John 1:4 shows us the outworking of that Life. “In Him was Life; and the
Life was the light of men.” The third passage brings before us the
relationship of that life to the Father. The Lord Jesus said: “I live
because of the Father.” This means that His life was based upon a special
relationship He had with the Father. The last portion in John 17:2 shows us
that He has authority to give Life. “Thou gavest him authority over all
flesh, that to all whom thou hast given him, he should give eternal Life.”
Now the giving forth of
that Life and the outworking of it in others is shown
us in 1 John 5:11-12, where we read: “And the witness is this, that God gave
unto us eternal Life, and this Life is in His Son. He that has the Son has the
Life.” Finally, Revelation 1 brings us to the place where that Life is
challenged and tested as to its reality. The Lord Jesus said: “I am the
first and the last, and the Living One; and I was dead, and behold, I am alive
for evermore, and I have the keys of death and of Hades.” In the Cross of
the Lord Jesus that Life was challenged. Hell had risen to quench that Life.
There was a terrific conflict with the forces of death. But the Life in Him
overcame death, because it was an indestructible Life. Death had no power over
that Life. Although He went down into the realm of death, He overcame death,
for “it was impossible that he should be holden of
it.” He has the keys of death and of Hades. Keys are the symbol of
authority. Now the Lord Jesus is in possession of them. That authority is based
upon eternal Life which, through Him, has conquered death.
We will now look at the
meaning of each of these verses, and consider them a little more closely.
Let us first note that the
Life in our Lord Jesus Christ was a distinguishing factor. It made Christ
unique among men. He was different from all the rest of God’s creation. It was
a life peculiar to Christ. In this sense it was possible to say of Him what
could not be said of any other being of the creation: that “in Him was Life.”
The Lord knew that there was a great difference between Him and others. Men were
conscious that there was something in Him which was altogether different to
them, and which they could not explain. That difference had nothing to do with
education or social position, because it did not belong to the natural realm.
It was of the spiritual realm, and could only be attributed to the Life which
was in Him. That divine Life energized His mind so that it was not only
superior to others, but different in its kind, although He always was a match
to others intellectually. The secret was spiritual vision. The greatest
religious authorities in Jerusalem tried to catch Him to lead Him into a trap.
But He always escaped them, because His mind was energized by the divine Life
ministered to Him by the divine Spirit. How often His adversaries stood before
Him dumbfounded! How often they wondered at His wisdom saying: “How knows
this man letters, having never learned.”
He was superior with regard
to both mind and heart. He was energized by that divine Life in His sympathy
and compassion which were greater than those of any man. His love was a
different love. He suffered much at the hands of men, but He never lost His
compassion. Even though He knew that Jerusalem was going to crucify Him, He
wept over the city saying: “Jerusalem, Jerusalem....” His heart was
moved with compassion and longsuffering towards His own. Did they themselves
not testify of Him: “He loved His own that were in the world and He loved
them unto the end.” Did they deserve such love? One of them denied Him. Yet
He never lost His compassion for them or for Peter. His heart and His
sympathies were maintained on the high level of His Father’s love.
As to His will, His actions
were energized by this Life from above, and as to His confidence He held on
through every trial. He never doubted His Father’s faithfulness.
It would take hours to
follow up the outworkings in the unique life and
nature of our Lord Jesus. During forty days after His resurrection, He sought
to establish His disciples in showing Himself alive by many infallible proofs,
eating and drinking with them. But the fiftieth day was the greatest day going
beyond facts, when He made Himself an inward reality to them. When the 50th day
came, “when the day of Pentecost was being fulfilled,” the risen Lord
came in order to dwell in the hearts of His disciples to be their Life, their
power; the new creation of God. Upon the basis of Christ in them they were
constituted His witnesses.
Ministry in the Spirit is a
testimony of Life. If our ministry is not a testimony, it is not a true ministry.
The heart of ministry is Christ in us, an expression of His resurrection. We
have to reveal Christ as the Life, for in Him was Life. When we thus minister
Christ, He will become manifest through us as light and liberty. The Lord said:
“Ye shall know the truth.” That is light. “And the truth shall make
you free.” That is liberty. Ministry is not a matter of words, but through
words an impartation of Christ. It is not information
about Christ, or beautiful addresses. Ministry is a showing forth of the Lord
Jesus, a manifestation of Christ through us, as the risen Lord.
That is the ministry of the
church. The assembly of the Lord is called to minister Life, and livingly
testify to that Life in them. When we gather together in the Name of the Lord
it ought to mean Life for us. Where the assembling of the Lord’s people is a
coming together in His Life, it always means a fresh energizing of His Life in
them, a renewing of strength. Our mind is quickened, the clouds are lifted, even the body comes into the good of the fullness of that
Life. Perhaps some of the Lord’s people come together at the end of a day,
physically tired, worn out or discouraged. If their coming together is in the
Spirit of Life which is in Christ Jesus, even their bodies will be quickened. They
will be renewed physically, mentally and spiritually, so that they can go away
from the gathering refreshed and full of joy, because they have met together in
Life. That is altogether different from just sitting in a meeting and listening
to a message. So often the ministry of the Word is left to the preacher, and
the people are waiting to get something from him, hoping it may be sufficiently
interesting to keep them awake. No one is contributing anything. There is no
laying hold of Christ’s Life unitedly. It is just the
same old business as ever, beginning with the hope of getting somewhere, and
ever ending in disappointment.
Now, the Lord knew that the
enemy would seek to hide the fact of His resurrection. He knew that the supreme
attack would rage around the assurance of His being alive among His own.
Therefore He tarried so long with them to establish in them the testimony of
His resurrection to make them His witnesses. But the means and methods of the
enemy are innumerable. One of his wiles is two-sided. Either he succeeds to
surround you with an atmosphere of spiritual death, where everything seems to
be utterly dead and faith is tried to become empty and unreal, or he brings in
a false life. He uses Scripture and seeks to stir up the emotions in a highly
strung atmosphere where a great psychical force is at work to produce miracles
similar to those of the Spirit; however, they are but lies and signs of
deception.
The only way of knowing
whether a thing is of God or not, is to ask ourselves: does this minister
Christ to us? What matters is not to stir up the emotions, but to see to it
that there is an increase of Christ. It is not to hold on to an experience, but
to have wrought into us an inward knowledge of Christ. The test of all is
whether Christ is ministered to us or not. How near is spiritual death! There
is a constant conflict going on around us against the risen Life of the Lord.
It is spiritual death against spiritual life. Death is the most persistent, the
last of all our enemies, “The last enemy that shall be abolished is death.”
We have to maintain our
faith in the fact that Jesus Christ is risen, that in
Him we have Life, a new Life, the very Life of God, eternal Life.
Then there is the
cooperation of faith. We have to make room for that Life in us. There is
nothing more fatal than a passive attitude, a state of introspection. Life is
active. Wherever we touch faith, there will and must be, active love. Faith is
always active, for love cannot be merely passive. It may not always be outward
activity. Sometimes that activity may just be an attitude of spirit, a waiting
state, which is holding on tenaciously, believing that God’s triumph is sure,
that His faithfulness cannot fail.
Our life is not something
merely abstract. It is the Life which is in Christ, a Life in fellowship with
Him. And because we are in touch with the living person of Christ, the same
resources of the invisible world are available for us upon which He was
drawing, “In Him was Life.” Therefore we are full of thanks and unspeakable
joy that “God gave unto us eternal Life, and that this Life is in His Son.”
May the Lord Himself teach
us the meaning and value of His resurrection Life as the secret spring of an
ever-flowing resource of our life.
“The Son can do nothing
of Himself, but what He sees the Father doing … For the Father loves the Son,
and shows Him all things that himself doeth... I can of myself do nothing...
because I seek not mine own will, but the will of Him that sent me.” John 5:19-20,
30
“When He, the Spirit of
truth, is come, He shall guide you into all the truth: for He shall not speak
from Himself; but what things soever He shall hear, these shall He speak.”
John 16:13
“The law of the Spirit
of life in Christ Jesus made me free from the law of sin and of death.”
Rom. 8:2
..”.He also called God
his own Father, making Himself equal with God... For as the Father raises the
dead and gives them life, even so the Son also gives life to whom
He will.” John 5:18, 21
May I, first of all, ask
you to carefully read and note these passages of Scripture.
You will see that there is a wonderful correspondence between the Father and
the Son, and the Son and the Father. That correspondence finds its expression
in the little phrase “even so.”
What is remarkable in a
peculiar way is the fact that the Lord Jesus puts the emphasis upon this: that
He can do nothing of Himself. If we allow the full weight of that statement to
come to our hearts, we shall see afresh what has occupied us at the beginning
of our considerations, that the Lord Jesus voluntarily accepted a position of
absolute dependence on His Father. He accepted a position of utter
self-emptying. The springs of His resources were not in Him, but in His Father.
“The Son can do nothing of Himself.” In His own
person there was no resource to do things. In effect He was saying: “The source
of everything is in the Father. I have to draw everything from the Father.
Without Him I can do absolutely nothing.” That is something tremendous for the
Son to say. It makes this secret fellowship and communion with the Father
tremendously vital! But the very need of this complete fellowship with the
Father was one of His secret resources.
Now, these are not only
facts, but we also see a great difference between Him and other men. The
natural man acts out from himself. The hallmark of the natural man is
self-sufficiency. He always finds the springs of his resources in himself. We
see that in Adam. At the beginning up to a certain point his resources were in
God. He drew his instruction and wisdom from God. Everything was from God. By
the way of obedience to God he was in fellowship with Him. But then came the
moment when he began to act out from himself. By a subtle insinuation of the
devil he began to reason out things for himself, until he became deceived by
his own will, and mistrust against God crept into his mind. He took things out
of God’s hands into his own hands. He ceased to draw his resources from God and
thought he could have them in himself. That is the attitude of the natural man
in Adam up to this day.
The natural man acts
according to his own natural wisdom. He seeks to reason out a situation,
weighing up things for and against it, and proceeding according to what he
thinks to be “common sense.” He directs his conduct by his own natural wisdom
and reason. For some people reason is the strongest part of themselves. The
source of things for them is in their own reason, and only what they think and
mean to understand has any value for them. All the rest does not count. With
others feelings are the strongest factor. According to what they feel they act.
But notice, as the natural
man develops in history, the end of this dispensation will produce a natural
man (humanity in its fallen state) developed to the utmost. There will be
dictators, supermen, acting from themselves. They will be a law to themselves,
without consulting others. What they feel, desire and reason out must be done.
That state of things will lead up to Antichrist. He will be a self-contained
man and represent the sum total of all that is natural — reason, desire, will.
He will not hold God in reverence, but will be bigger than God. In him the
human race will be represented in its fully developed fallen nature, turning
that whole race against God.
What is true of Antichrist
is true, in part, of every member of the human race. The natural man moves out
from himself, but the result is always death. If we project our own will, our
own desires, our own reason into things, however alive they may appear, the
result will be death. Only that which comes out from God is Life. In connection
with this the meaning of the word of the Lord Jesus is of primary importance:
“The Son can do nothing of Himself.” If others believe they can, the Son
cannot. Here is the tremendous difference between the Lord Jesus and ourselves. He can only move as from the Father. He can only
go if the Father leads Him.
Now, the occasion of these
words was the healing of the impotent man. The background of this incident
gives much light about its inner meaning. Here is a man, impotent for years. He
had tried for many years to get into the pool to find healing. But it was in
vain. He was utterly helpless. He knew that his help depended on another man.
How pathetic he is: “I have no man, when the water is troubled, to put me
into the pool!” His only hope was in another man. And having “no man,” one
day Jesus comes this way and asks him to rise. The impotent man did not argue
about this command and say: “I have tried it a thousand times, but I could not.
I have no strength in myself to do it.” He put his faith in Christ. What he
could not do in himself he did in the strength of another — Christ. Forsaking
his own self he put on Christ. And he found that his salvation was in that Other
Man. So, trusting Him he rose up. Christ had become his strength. That
is Life.
Now that incident throws
much light upon the whole chapter. The Jews objected against
this, because they were governed by outward laws. Their demand was the fulfillment
of the letter, the result of which was rather death than Life. “For the
letter kills, but the Spirit gives life.” The Jews would sooner leave the
man in helplessness until his death, than have the work of Christ instead of
the law. Christ was governed by an inward law which was the law of Life, and
therefore brought Life. He said: “My Father works, and I work... for what
things soever He doeth, these the Son also doeth in
like manner.” Here is a wonderful correspondence between the Father and the
Son, an inward law, a union in life with God, out of which are flowing the
works of God, and the manifestations of Life.
What was the law? The law
of the Jews consisted in “thou shalt” and “thou shalt not.” However the Jewish
law was against the healing on a Sabbath day, the Father was not against it. It
was the will of the Father, and the Lord Jesus was, in a mysterious way, recognizing
that the Father was working, that the Father did it, therefore He did it. It
was the law of an inward communication and fellowship with the Father
which moved the Lord Jesus to take action. He was not governed by the natural
mind, nor by the letter of the law; He did not try to
reason out what might be the will of the Father. It was the law of the Spirit
of life in Him which disclosed to Him the Father’s will, which gave to Him that
inward assurance of His acts and which resulted from an inward hearing and
seeing. He could say concerning His Father: “The Father that sent me, He has
borne witness of me. Ye have neither heard His voice at any time, nor seen His
form.” There is a mystery in that relationship between the Father and the
Son. The secret source of the power of the Son in that relationship is because
it was a relationship of Life by the Spirit.
Now the same relationship
holds good for us. In the letter to the Romans the apostle Paul says: “The
law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus made me free from the law of sin and
of death.” Free from the law of sin. Free from the law of death. It is the
freedom of a life in God through Christ.
May I ask you to just stop
a moment. Have you really seen this? Has it become an
inward reality to you? Do you really see that our relationship with the Lord
Jesus Christ is exactly on the same basis as His relationship was with His
Father here on earth? It is the relationship of a life in the Spirit.
Everything hangs upon that. It brings us into a new world. It marks the
difference between an outward acceptance of Christian truths and its doctrine,
and that which is Life revealed and wrought out by the Spirit. Our relationship
with Christ is based upon the Spirit of Life working in us.
Now let us just say a few
things as to the outworking of that relationship. It is a relationship by Life
and its testimony is Life. Notice how true it was in the case of the Lord
Jesus. It is significant how often He used the expression “My hour” in His
life. It clearly shows us how much His whole life was governed by His Father.
He was led in His actions and movements by God’s timing. Sometimes it was only
a matter of hours or minutes. But He knew no unfulfilled moments in His life.
Yet He was never in a hurry. Everything in His life was timed in a wonderful
way. Any time would not do for Him, neither all times. To try and accomplish
things out of God’s timing would mean death. When, at Cana, His mother came to
persuade Him to meet the need which had arisen, He only took action when “His
hour” had come, perhaps only a few minutes later. Again when His disciples sent
for Him to come to the help of Lazarus who was dangerously sick, or when His
brethren asked Him whether He was going up to Jerusalem to the feast with them.
He waited for the right time, for His Father’s commandment. In all these cases
we see the same restraint in Him. He was not following His own reasonings, but waited
for the time the Father had appointed. It was the same with the words He spoke.
Every word was from the Father and not from Himself. Timing, actions, words; everything
was governed by the Father. “My Father works — and I work.”
But how did He know the
Father’s will? It was not by the hearing of the natural ear, as if a voice had
continually come to Him to direct Him. Christ knew the Father’s will by the
Spirit of Life within. It was the fellowship of the one life in Him which
brought Him that inward knowledge of God’s will and God’s works. Divine Life is
not just a gift, a deposit, something to be stored away in us. This Life is a
working power in us. It is a divine direction given by the Spirit of Life
within. God rules and commands by those means. He reveals His will to us by the
Spirit of Life in us.
The Lord Jesus knew the
Father’s will by the quickening Spirit within. It is just as He said: “The
hour cometh and now is, when the dead shall hear the voice of the Son of God;
and they that hear shall live.” The Lord Jesus was not referring here to
the physically dead, but to the spiritually dead; neither was He referring to
an audible voice, but to the quickening Spirit within by which the voice of the
Son of God is heard. “The words that I have spoken unto you are spirit and
are life.” It is the power of God working within. God speaks to our hearts.
We have to learn to understand God’s speaking in us right from the beginning at
our new birth. There is a language of the Spirit, and we have to give heed to
that quickening movement of the Spirit of Life in us. The voice of the Son of
God is heard by the quickening Spirit within. It was so with the Lord. He had
that quickening by the Spirit of God in Himself. What
is true in His case has to be true for us. We have to be governed in the same
way. “As many as are led by the Spirit of God, these are sons of God.” Sonship
is by reason of our relationship with Him. The assurance of that sonship comes
by the Spirit bearing witness within our spirit, saying, “You are a child of
God.” It is the witness of Life in us. We know in our spirit that we are
children of God. We know it in spite of our sinfulness, our faults, our shortcomings. We are governed by the Spirit of Life
which is proceeding from Him.
Now, gathering up all we
have said, we see that this relationship, this fellowship with Christ, is
available for us on resurrection ground. Christ has brought us into this union
with Him in His Life. This demands three definite steps which are of primary
importance:
1. We definitely have to recognize
that this relationship with the Lord has to be in the Spirit of Life, that this
is a fact, that it is true. We have honestly and most definitely to recognize
that this relationship is that “Christ in us” is a fact, and that everything
has to be governed by the Spirit of Life.
2. There must be perfect obedience
to the Spirit’s law of Life in us. Obedience was the law of Christ’s life. He
was never influenced by men or circumstances. He did not allow men to dictate
His course because they said, “Do this or that; others do it also.” This was no
reason for Him why He should do something. He never put His decisions before
men, for He knew in His own heart what the Father wanted. He worked with God in
all things, not according to outward appearances, or what He heard from others,
but according to the Spirit of Life in Him. He lived in absolute dependence on
the Father, and complete obedience to all His will.
3. A walk in the Spirit is
essential. We must not live in the flesh. To live in the flesh means to do
things out from ourselves, to do our own will. But to walk in the Spirit is to
do all things as out from God, as governed by the Holy Spirit.
Finally, let us not forget
that this Life in the Spirit is a progressive, growing one. We do not know it
all at the beginning. We have to learn, and in learning we often make mistakes.
But as we are faithful and obedient to the Lord we shall be led step by step,
and learn how to walk in the Spirit. We have to learn by experience. But the more
we get to know the Lord Jesus, the more we enter into the fact of a complete
salvation of the fullness of glory in Him for us, the more that Life will grow
in us, and we shall walk in the light, and therefore in the liberty of the sons
of God.
That walk in the Spirit can
be a very wonderful thing in the background of our lives, as we increasingly
know the Spirit of Life in us — that secret relationship and fellowship with
Christ in Life.
“The bread of God is
that which comes down out of heaven, and gives life unto the world... I am come
down from heaven, not to do my own will, but the will of Him that sent me...
For this is the will of my Father, that every one that beholds the Son, and
believes on Him, should have eternal life... My flesh is meat indeed, and my
blood is drink indeed.” John 6:28-34, 38, 40, 53-58
“If any man wills to do
His will, he shall know of the teaching, whether it is of God, or whether I
speak from myself.” John 7:17
“My meat is to do the
will of Him that sent me, and to accomplish His work.” John 4:31-34
In that statement of our
Lord Jesus there are three things implied:
Firstly: the Lord Jesus has
a secret source of strength. “I have meat to eat that ye know not.”
Secondly: There is a
link between the will of God and LIFE. “My meat is to do the will of him
that sent me.” We remember that at this time the Lord Jesus was hungry and
very faint. He sat down at the well weary from His journey. When the disciples
came back from the town where they had bought food, they found Him remarkably
revived. They thought that somebody had brought Him some food. But the Lord
explained to them that the renewal of His life had come from doing His Father’s
will. That shows a close connection between the doing of the will of God and “Life.”
Thirdly: The link between
this is a divine purpose and the fulfillment of it. “My meat is to do
the will of Him that sent me, and to accomplish His work.” The Father’s
will represented a divine purpose, and the Lord Jesus
says that He was linked with that purpose. To accomplish that divine purpose
was a greater satisfaction to Him than earthly things. We can say that He found
His Life in doing the will of God.
Therefore, an important
factor for us is that obedience is the way to God’s fullness. It was so in the
case of the Lord Jesus. When He said: “For this is the will of my Father,
that every one that beholds the Son, and believeth on Him, should have eternal
life,” it clearly shows that union with Christ, according to God’s will,
means Life for us. Thus God’s will is in vital relationship and oneness with
the Son.
Now, food is taken for the
maintenance of our life. It satisfies our need, and serves for our development
and growth. But all this is related to the will of God. The doing of the will
of God is like taking food in order to live. When we do the will of God we are
taking what maintains our Life. Our need is satisfied. The spiritual growth is
maintained. The Lord Jesus said of Himself: “I live because of the Father,”
and “he that eats me shall live because of Me.”
The Lord Jesus lived by reason of His union with the Father. And we live by
reason of our union with the Son.
What is essential in that
union is obedience. Satan was out to destroy
the life of the Lord — the last Adam — by the same way he had succeeded to
destroy the first Adam: in getting him to disobey God. But the Lord Jesus met
the devil by appealing to the Word of God. Three times He said to him: “It
is written.” This maintained His life, and overcame the prince of darkness
and death.
Obedience towards the
revealed will of God means deliverance from death. That is what we mean by the
maintenance of our life. This attitude was true of the Son of God throughout
His life. Being obedient unto death, even the death of the Cross, He overcame
death. Therefore He is alive for evermore. So everything is bound up with
obedience in the matter of life. Immediately we withhold obedience to God, we
arrest the Life of the Lord in us, and make it impossible to go on. Obedience
is Life.
This spiritual meat is not
only maintaining our Life, it also increases our Life. It is leading us into
the fullness of Christ. We grow by taking that meat, and Life increases by
obedience. In Philippians 2 we are told that the Lord Jesus was obedient to the
Father to the uttermost, “wherefore also God highly exalted Him and gave
unto him the name which is above every name.” That is fullness resultant
from obedience. Every fresh act of obedience leads us into a greater fullness in
Christ, into spiritual enlargement. But disobedience brings limitation and
holds up the flow of Life.
This then, is the meaning
of spiritual food: the doing of His will, being obedient in all things. This
spiritual feeding is related to our union with Christ in His resurrection. It is
a living upon that which Christ is in death and resurrection. In the background
of John chapter 6 we have the Passover. In connection with what that means
spiritually, the Lord Jesus fed a great multitude. The Jews were about to eat
the Passover lamb. But before that took place we have here a hungry multitude,
and He — God’s Lamb — feeds them with bread saying: “I am the bread of life.”
He links that with the Passover, the Cross, the Lamb slain, saying
in effect: “I am yours. In my death and resurrection, that is, in ME you have
Life.” It is Christ imparted to us.
Now, there is a remarkable
clause in John 6:27, where the Lord says: “Work not for the food which
perishes, but for the food which abides unto eternal life, which the Son of man
shall give unto you: for Him the Father has sealed.” Those to whom the Lord
addressed this word knew quite well what He meant. They knew that they were not
allowed to take any lamb for the Passover. It had to be one without blemish.
Then every lamb had to be brought to the temple to be examined by the priests
as to its absolute perfection. And when it was according to the demanded
requirements the priests put the temple-seal upon it and it was slain.
Everybody knew what that seal meant. So the Lord Jesus took that familiar custom,
relating it to Himself saying: “Him has the
Father sealed.” Christ was going to give Himself to His people as one whom
the Father had declared absolutely perfect. He was giving Himself to be their
food that they might live through Him and walk in obedience to Him as He had
been obedient to His Father.
We too are “sealed” by
faith in our Lord Jesus Christ. The apostle Paul writes to the Ephesians that
they are “sealed with the Spirit of promise.” God knows them that are
His. We are His possession. We receive the Father’s seal as an earnest that He
has chosen us, that we are accepted in the Beloved One, that He has not
rejected us. We are accepted in Christ as perfect. That complete fellowship
with Christ implies nothing less than an utter abandonment to Him, a putting
aside of all which is personal, all self-will, so that we can say in truth: “I
am crucified with Christ. Christ lives in me.”
Meat and drink are a spiritual thing. It means abiding “in Christ” and is related to the doing of the Father’s will in
every part of our life. But the question which arises here is: Do we really
want to live? Remember, we only “live” in truth, if we accomplish the will of
our Lord, if we allow the Lord Jesus to be our Life, being perfectly obedient
to Him. Our will is a corrupted will. Personal desires are always corrupted. We
are flesh. But there has to be none of that “in Christ.” Sin has been dealt
with and judged in the Cross. There it was made manifest that Christ’s perfect
humanity was maintained and free from any corruption right to the end. Now that
perfect Lamb of God is given for us. We are allowed to receive Him, to abide in
Him. He who wholly accomplished the will of God will abide in us. Thereby we
grow. To eat His flesh and drink His blood means growing up into Him so that
His power in us becomes manifest. He will, and must, increase until we are
transformed into His likeness, until His image is seen in us.
Now, what is God’s purpose
for us? The Lord Jesus said that the will of the Father was “to accomplish
His work.” What was that work? Let us look once more at chapter 4 and the
need of that woman of Samaria. She did not know the true life. When she came to
the well she was in great need. Brought into a conversation with the Lord
concerning life, she eventually saw that Christ was the Life. “He that
believes on Me has eternal life.” And the woman
believed. When the disciples came back from the town they found the Lord Jesus
wonderfully renewed. He was fully satisfied, because He had accomplished the
will of the Father. What was that will? It was to give Life to all whom the
Father had given Him.
God’s work is to lead poor
souls to know the Life in Christ. When we fulfil our
ministry in being channels of Life to others, we shall soon discover that this
is more satisfying than anything else. If you have led a soul to Christ you
know what satisfaction means. To carry the divine Life to needy souls fills the
heart with such joy and satisfaction, that earthly desires fade away. Let us
seek to lead poor sinners to Christ, for when we are in that work we shall know
what true Life is, a life of perfect obedience to God, devoted to the Father’s
will. This was the law of Life of the Lord Jesus. This is the hidden Manna, the
secret sustenance of our life. Those who do not know the Lord know nothing of
this. But he who lives out of Christ knows that meat. He knows that to do the
will of God is Life. The more we are obedient to that divine will, the more the
rivers of His Life will flow in us. Let us seek that kind of meat which the
world does not know, but of which the Lord said: “My meat is to do the will
of Him that sent me, and to accomplish his work.”
“For we are His
workmanship, created in Christ for good works, which God afore prepared that we
should walk in them” (Eph. 2:10)
”Ye shall find rest unto
your souls.” Matt.
11:29-30
”The truth shall make
you free... If therefore the Son shall make you free, ye shall be free indeed.” John 8:32, 36
“Peace I leave with you;
my peace I give unto you.” John 14:27
“These things have I
spoken unto you that in me ye may have peace...” John 16:33
“Peace be unto you.” John 20:19, 21, 26
These passages give us the
key to another feature of the resources of Jesus Christ, namely, a secret rest
and liberty. The life of our Lord Jesus was marked by a peacefulness of spirit
and a real rest of heart. There is no doubt about that, although there was a
great deal in His life to make it otherwise. Often He was in storms, but very
rarely the storms were in Him. The demands upon Him were great. There was much
to be done. But He was never overwhelmed by it, never distressed. He went
through it all in peace and rest of heart. Someone remarked quite rightly that
it is never recorded in Scripture that the Lord Jesus ever ran. He was never
caught by shortness of time. His whole life was marked by rest and peace
within.
If we study this matter we
see that the Lord Jesus enjoyed that rest and peace in three realms. In these
three realms He was different to all men.
Firstly in the realm of
personal sin He had perfect rest. He was never distressed by the matter of
personal sin. His peace was never disturbed by sin within. There was no sin in
Him. He was often pressed to take a wrong course. But He never yielded to the
temptation. And because He was capable of suffering, He was tempted to spare
Himself. That temptation came one day through Peter — an attempt to turn Him
aside from the path of the Cross — when His disciple said to Him: “Be it far
from thee, Lord; this shall never be unto thee!” Because He was capable of
suffering He could be tempted by the enemy. It was a temptation from outside.
But it could not disturb His inward peace because He was abandoned to His
Father’s will. His loyalty to the Father frustrated the temptations. The secret
of His peace was His union with the Father.
Then there was the realm
of His own being and nature. Christ was a united
personality. His soul was a united soul, His mind was one mind. There were no
double reasonings in Him in conflict with each other. There was no conflict
between His own reason and that of His Father. His
heart too, was undivided. He did not have two sets of desires in war with each
other. Again, His will was one and steadfast. There was no conflict between His
will and the will of the Father.
All the temptations He went
through were to provoke Him to get away from His Father; to have desires,
reasonings, volition which were not altogether of His
Father. But such an attitude was out of question for Him. There was no
deviation in the least degree from His Father’s will. Behind it all was a
perfect faith in His Father and His faithfulness. When He suffered, it was
according to the will of God, and not because He was in conflict with His own
will. Suffering marked Him, but never distracted Him. There was no strain, no
inward controversy with God in His life. He was perfectly restful and
harmonious — a united personality.
Much of the lack of peace
in our lives comes from our lack of unity. We are in conflict with our own
reasoning, our desires, our will. We are torn in two
directions, disturbed because of things at war in us. So often we are like two
persons fighting each other, in a state of unrest. The same occurs in our
relationship with God. Our thoughts and desires are in conflict with God’s
thoughts and desires. How utterly different in the case of the Lord Jesus! He
knew the meaning of an inward peace.
The third realm in which
the Lord Jesus enjoyed perfect rest and liberty was the realm of legal
obligations. The law with its “thou
shalt” and “thou shalt not,” and
the countless things to be done and not to be done, all the regulations and
observations of the Mosaic law to the Jewish people,
was a great burden. To offend on one point of it was to be guilty of all. Then
there was the interpretation and application of the law by the Scribes and
Pharisees, to whom the Lord Jesus said: “Yea, ye bind heavy burdens and
grievous to be borne, and lay them on men’s shoulders.”
In that realm the Lord
Jesus was perfectly at rest. He was never in bondage to the law. He lived in
the accomplishment of the law with such assurance and certainty like none
other. Why was the law given? For what purpose? It was
for one purpose only: it was intended to secure God’s place and God’s rights. Now,
the main point of the law was against idolatry. Idolatry is very comprehensive.
It is the line along which the devil seeks to get his ends to rob God of His
place. Covetousness is idolatry, that is, wanting
things for oneself. Irreverence is idolatry; the worship is taken from God.
Lust, the gratification of the flesh, is taking God’s place. There are many
forms of idolatry. If you look at those “thou
shalt” and “thou shalt not,” you
will see that every one of them has to do with idolatry. It is taking God’s
place and rights.
Now God had His perfect
place and His rights in the Lord Jesus. He did not need the law because He
perfectly fulfilled the law in spirit. He was liberated from the law of works
by a higher law. His heart was perfectly at rest in the matter of legal
obligations. In Him the law was established in its deepest meaning. God’s place
and rights were fully secured in Christ.
In the letter to the
Hebrews we read much of rest. It is the rest in Christ. His rest has to
be our rest. I am not going to try to tell you that we must be sinlessly perfect, or that we can never sin again. But we
must recognize that the sin-question has to be dealt with first. All our sins
are put away in Christ. Jesus Christ has delivered us once and for all from
sin. “There is therefore now no condemnation to them that are in Christ
Jesus.” No condemnation! Why? Because Christ Himself has
dealt abidingly with the sin-question of the past, the present and the future.
All that which separated us from God because of sin is forgiven,
and we are placed by faith into a position of complete justification before
God. Even when we sin again there is forgiveness which abides. Our redemption
is an eternal redemption, for it is written: “If we confess our sins, He is
faithful and righteous to forgive us our sins, and to cleanse us from all
unrighteousness,” and “the blood of Jesus His Son cleanses us (keeps on
cleansing) from all sin.” It is now a matter of our union with Him. If we
abide in that union with Christ we need not be under condemnation for five
minutes. If, when we have failed, we recognize and confess our sins, they will
be forgiven us. So the ground of inward peace and liberty is in Christ. We are
delivered through Christ, and in Him. We have to take the word in Romans 8
seriously. We have to stand on it full of joy: “There is therefore now no
condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus. For the law of the Spirit of
life in Christ Jesus made me free from the law of sin and of death.” That
is a condition resulting from a position. “IN CHRIST” there is
liberty, there is no condemnation. Just as Christ abode in the Father and had
perfect peace as to sin, so we - abiding in Christ - can have perfect peace. It
is not the peace from sin extricated from us, but the peace resulting from the
continuation of the cleansing virtue of the Blood.
But how do we get
experimentally over our divided nature into such a
oneness, such a rest, such a peace? The way is just this: as the Lord Jesus
gains the upper hand in our hearts, we become more and more one with Him. As we
more and more surrender to Him, all the conflict of mind, heart and will
ceases. Christ’s attitude was absolute abandonment to the Father. He was
holding back nothing, ready to do all His will. There was no conflict about it.
His whole being was one with the Father. As we let go the self-life, letting
Christ get the mastery in us, He brings to an end all the inward conflict. A
heart wholly the Lord’s is a heart at rest, a heart
conformed to the image of Christ. The Lord said: “Take my yoke upon you,”
that is, “Be perfectly one with Me.” A yoke makes two
beings into one. That is why it was forbidden in the Old Testament to use an
unequal yoke, to put an ass and an ox under one yoke, for these two were
entirely different beings. The yoke would tear and hurt them. But we are
allowed to be under one yoke with the Lord
Jesus. The yoke speaks of oneness, fellowship, being governed by one will. Thus
we find rest unto our souls.
Then as to the peace in the
realm of the law, the question concerning the keeping of the sabbath
did not trouble the Lord Jesus in the least. God had His perfect place and
rights in Him, although the rulers of the people brought the law continually
against Him. Every day and every hour of His life belonged to His God, to His
Father. He completely fulfilled the law in Spirit. The Pharisees demanded the
keeping of the outward form, the letter, and in doing so they sinned against
the Spirit of the Sabbath. There are many Christians who are under the law and
therefore in bondage. The way out of this bondage is Christ. You never need
worry about the Sabbath day if Christ is LORD in your hearts. The law was given
to secure God’s place and rights for Him. If Christ is Lord in our lives we do
that. Every day is a Sabbath day for those whose Lord is Christ! If we are
living in the true spiritual meaning of the law we need not worry about the
outward form, the letter. We may be wrong as to the letter, and yet be right
before God. What matters is the spiritual meaning — the Life — our union with
God, allowing Him to work in us. Christ violated the Sabbath according to the
letter, but no one in the whole universe fulfilled the law so
perfectly as He did. He said: “Ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall
make you free.” Christ is the truth, and transcends the mere letter. If
Christ is dwelling in us we can live in His rest and peace. Thus sin shall have
no power over us. We need not worry about ourselves; we need not be afraid to
fall short in our daily life.
Christ is our peace. Christ
is our rest. Rest and liberty always mean strength. If we are without rest we
are without effectiveness. Christ is our sufficiency, for all our resources are
in Him.
May the Lord lead us into
His own peace!
“No one knows the Son,
save the Father; neither doth any know the Father, save the Son...” Matt. 11:27
“No man has seen God at
any time; the only begotten Son, who is in the bosom of the Father, He has
declared Him... And I have seen, and have borne witness that this is the Son of
God.” John 1:18, 34
“He that believeth not
has been judged already, because he has not believed on the name of the only
begotten Son of God... The Father loves the Son... he that believeth on the Son
has eternal life.”
John 3:18, 35-36
“The Father loves the
Son... the Son also gives life to whom He will.” John 5:20-21
“Dost thou believe on
the Son of God?” John 9:35-37
“This sickness is not
unto death, but for the glory of God, that the Son of God may be glorified thereby.”
John 11:4
”Glorify thy Son, that
the Son may glorify thee.” John 11:4
”...That they may know
the mystery of God, Christ, in whom are all the treasures of wisdom and
knowledge hidden”
Col. 2:2-3
“Beloved, now are we
children of God...” 1 John 3:1-2
“The Spirit himself
bears witness with our spirit, that we are children of God … delivered … into
the liberty of the glory of the children of God.” Rom. 8:16,21
”...That ye may become
blameless and harmless, children of God without blemish...” Phil. 2:15
”...Having foreordained
us unto adoption as sons through Jesus Christ unto himself...” Eph. 1:5
Continuing in our
meditations on Christ in the glory as our sufficiency, we now come to another
feature of His resources which is related to sonship.
In the first place let us
note that there is a difference between the titles of our Lord Jesus Christ as
Son of Man and Son of God. They embrace two aspects of truth and work.
As Son of God the Lord
Jesus represents that side of truth in which God Himself was manifested in
flesh. After the fall God never again entrusted His work to man. “God was in
Christ.” Christ was Immanuel, God is with us. The title Son of Man
shows us another side of Christ: God is recovering in the form of man and for
man what he has lost. It means God has come down to this earth as man; He has
identified Himself with man in order to redeem him. But that title ‘son of Man”
goes far beyond the ordinary human level. Our Lord Jesus Christ stands far
above all other men in His nature. He is the Son of Man from heaven, or, as the
Scriptures say, “who is in heaven.” That could not be said of any other
man. They all were from the earth. Christ alone was from heaven as “the only begotten Son.” It is important
to understand the meaning of this.
The Lord Jesus was not
altogether the only begotten Son. That expression has nothing to do with
begetting, for the Scriptures tell us that every believer is begotten of God.
Now it does not mean that. That expression has to do with the kind of birth.
The Lord Jesus was uniquely begotten;
He was the only one of this kind. He stood alone as such. All of us have been
begotten through the Word of Christ and the Spirit. But all of us are sinners
by nature, because “that which is born of the flesh is flesh.” Therefore
Paul says of us who are “in Christ”
that “the body is dead because of sin; but the spirit is life because of
righteousness.” Over against that the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ in
flesh was something unique. There was no sin in Him who had come in the likeness
of sinful flesh. The Son of God was once for all and in a unique way born. That
is the meaning of “the only begotten Son.” He is the Son of Man out from
heaven. Both His titles are divine and belong to heaven. As Son of Man and Son
of God He is different from all other men. We must not separate these two
titles.
As to the practical
application, a very great deal is being bound up with the fact that the Lord
Jesus was the Son of God. Notice how often the Lord Jesus refers to His
sonship, how much depended upon that for Him. It meant everything to Him. If He
had not known it He would have been without the main
strength which characterized His life. He lived triumphantly and worked
mightily and effectively, because He knew that He was in that essential relationship
with His Father.
Let us be diligent that we
too derive our strength from the living knowledge that we are, through our Lord
Jesus Christ, sons of God. The very fact that He was the Son of God brought to
Him a wonderful strength which made Him superior to all other men, in position
as well as a person. It was a right kind of superiority, and marked by deepest
humility. He could truly say of Himself: “I am meek and lowly in heart.”
Yet there was a wonderful strength and dignity about Him. Despised of men, with
no earthly estate, He could lift up His head like a king. The consciousness
that He possessed what no man had was without any self-assertiveness. It saved
Him from an “inferiority complex” which is never a sign of humility. He knew
that He had a mission from above. He had a perfect right to stand up among men.
He could meet them all, poor and rich, because He knew that God had sent Him.
And men recognized that strength in Him. They were conscious of a dignity and a
power which was about Him that compelled them to say of Him that He was
speaking “as having authority and not as the scribes.” He had perfect
confidence in what He said and the way He took. The explanation is found on the
ground of who He was. “I am come down from heaven.” It was sonship which
gave Him this strength — that wonderful relationship He had with His Father.
Now the spiritual value of
that divine sonship is ours. This does not mean that there has to be any pride
or conceit. We have to be like He was, meek among men, lowly in heart and
unassuming. There has to be no self-assertiveness, yet we must have the
strength of the Son of God. We ought never to have anything apologetic about
our testimony. We are sons of God. John says: “Behold what manner of love
the Father has bestowed upon us, that we should be
called children of God; and we are.” It is the affirmation of a fact. “Now
we are the children of God.” Let us stand upon that fact. What a strength would be ours if we truly recognized the position
we have as sons before God through our Lord Jesus Christ! “The Father loves
the Son.” That holds true for all the children of God. Sonship is based
upon the Father’s special love. “The Father knows the Son.” We too are
known of Him. The world knows us not. It may look at us as a very poor
specimen, but it knew Him not. But the Father knows and loves His children.
That is our strength.
Then again let us note that
sonship is basic to resurrection (Rom. 1:4). The whole creation is waiting for
the revealing of the sons of God, because it was created for them. But it is
now subject to vanity and put into severe limitation. For when Adam (who was
the crown of God’s creation) fell, the whole creation fell with him and sonship
was suspended. Consequently the whole creation suffers. It is groaning and in
travail until now, waiting for the manifestation of the sons of God. But when
the sons of God are revealed, then the creation too will be delivered from the
curse of sin and of death, and brought into glory. Thus there are high
privileges bound up with sonship. The whole creation is depending upon us. The
whole universe is waiting for the manifestation of the sons of God. How could
we overlook the tremendous meaning and vocation of our sonship? Whatever we are
among men, there are tremendous possibilities bound up with us for the world.
It is unspeakably great and has nothing to do with self-importance. For God has willed it so that everything in this universe should
depend upon us and our sonship. We are born of God in order to be
conformed into the likeness of the Son of God. Growing up into Him we are
allowed to enter into the high position of a heavenly calling which is
appointed for the sons of God.
Now sonship is the basis of
God’s activity. The position and vocation of sonship has nothing to do with an “official”
appointment. God’s dealings with us are not on an official ground; it is not
because we have taken up some Christian work, or go by a certain name which
represents a special office, that God is interested in us. To be ministers or
Christian workers does not imply that God is especially working through us. God’s
dealings with us are based upon our relationship with Him as children of God.
He is dealing with us as with sons. It is a spiritual thing not an official
matter. Ministry, therefore, results from a special relationship to God. The
real work of God depends on our spiritual relationship with Him, and the value
of our service is in proportion to our union with God.
Only those who are
absolutely one with God can take responsibilities for Him. Whatever we may call
ourselves, however great may be our activity for the Lord, God does not take
account of that. It is no use coming to Him and saying: “Now Lord, You know
that I am engaged in this work, and therefore I want You
to help me in this.” That is no reason why He should help us. God stands by His
children and only works with them on the basis of an inward relationship. Some
person who is not in an “official” position may be far more useful to the Lord
than many who have an official ministry and position. What matters is not our
spiritual knowledge or official ministry, but our secret relationship with God.
God fits us spiritually for His service and upholds our sonship, not our
office. He will see to our position if we see to our relationship with Him.
God called Israel His
firstborn. He stood by His people on the basis of that sonship. Therefore
Israel could take an important and significant position among the nations. It
was the chosen vessel of God’s testimony in the earth. But the day came when it
ceased to go on with God as His firstborn. Its inward relationship to God
became merely an outward form and God had to withdraw from His people and send
them into captivity. It would have been useless if Israel had turned to the
Lord with this complaint “Why are You dealing with us
in such a way? Are we not Your representative among
the nations?” God’s answer would have been: “The official position is nothing
to Me. I cannot help you as long as your relationship
to Me is not right, as long as you are not in that
which your sonship means and demands.” You see our position and vocation is in
relation to sonship. For that very reason the Lord Jesus put the emphasis upon
sonship. He never said that the Father loved the ministry He had come to fulfill
on this earth. But He said: “The Father loves the Son.” Position and
vocation have to be based upon sonship. Without sonship they are worthless
before God.
What is the purpose of
sonship? It is to bring us into a place of spiritual responsibility. God never
puts responsibilities upon “official people,” but upon sons. Therefore He has
to train us as children in order to develop sonship in us, to bring us there
where we can take responsibilities for God. He seeks to bring us to a state of
spiritual maturity, to full growth. This cannot be done in some Bible school,
or by putting people “into the ministry.” God never works on an official side.
Oh yes, God does take us into His school. He can also take us into His school
in some training institute. And it is a blessed thing if He does it. But God’s
school is something very different from mere scholarly activity. His Word says:
“My son, regard not lightly the chastening of the Lord, nor faint when thou
art reproved of Him; for whom the Lord loves He chastens, and scourges every
son whom He receives.” Note this word “whom He receives.” The exact meaning
in the Greek is not “receives,” but “whom He positions” or places. It is a
matter of position. God is seeking to develop a state in us where He can trust
us. When God is dealing with us, there is behind it a wonderful assurance that
He is going to put His trust in us. He is bringing us into a position of trust.
We do not just want to be servants, bits of a machine, but sons who have become
one with the Father, and in whose hands He can put spiritual responsibilities.
When we truly recognize this, we begin to understand why God is dealing with us
as He does. But because God is in it we know that the end is sure. He will
bring His children through.
The fact of His sonship
gave to the Lord Jesus perfect assurance as to the ultimate issue and
accomplishment of His life. It carried Him far, although He knew that the Cross
was immediately ahead, and He was going to be killed. He ministered here for
three and a half years, and then all His earthly life came to an end. How did
He face it? He regarded it as something to come and to pass, but it made no
difference to Him and His relationship to the Father. His sufferings were just
a tunnel to go through, and then to come out into the light to go on for all
eternity, because He was the Son of God. Death was a mere incident for Him, for
His sonship was indestructible, eternal. He knew that His work did not finish
on the Cross, but was going on, on the ground of resurrection for all eternity.
He was not just living for this little space of time. Thus He derived His
strength from the fact of sonship.
Are we saying this
is the end of all? Do we take the trials of this earthly life as something
incidental which are passing, and which make no difference to us and our inward
state? We should be aware that if we go through the grave (if the Lord
tarries), it is but a passing through into enlargement. We shall have a service
and a glorious future in the ages to come. “His servants shall serve Him;
and they shall see His face.” This knowledge of sonship carried the Lord
Jesus through the darkness of the Cross in triumph. His last word was “Father.” It would have been otherwise
if the Cross had been the end of all. His disciples thought that all had come
to an end. But later they understood that it meant something more than that. It
was the beginning of a new thing — sonship was in view. In the case of the Lord
Jesus that position of sonship brought a mighty assurance to Him as to the
issue of things. Behind it was the strength of a death-conquering eternal life.
That assurance holds good
for us too. If we look at our Lord Jesus in the glory our questions will be
solved. What God is after is the consummation of sonship. Sonship is the basis
upon which the Father gives all His fullness, which makes all things possible
for us. “For the Father loves the Son, and shows Him all things, that He
does Himself.” The Lord Jesus knew that “the Father had given all things
into His hands, and that He came forth from God.”
Look again at the letter to
the Hebrews where we are told that the whole inheritance is given in relation
to sonship. The Father’s fullness is included in sonship. It may be that we
have not much here on earth. Certainly the Lord Jesus had not much in the way
of earthly goods, but He could say: “In my Father’s house are many mansions.”
And what a house of fullness this is! He knew that He was heir of all things.
What is included in this inheritance? Paul writes to the Colossians that “in
Him dwells all the fullness of the Godhead bodily.” What does that mean for
us? Just this, that “in Him we are made full.”
In Colossians chapter 1 we
read that all the fullness of the universe was created in Christ and unto
Christ, the Son of God’s love. And in chapter 2 we see the place we have in
Him. The sons are sharing the fullness of the Son. Now there is given us a
foretaste of this, for we have received of His fullness grace upon grace. “Though
now ye see Him not, yet believing, ye rejoice with joy unspeakable and full of
glory.” What is that glory? It is the day of His appearing. Something of
the coming glory is shining into our hearts now, for we believe in Him. Faith
brings the future glory into present enjoyment. Faith in Christ in heaven
brings joy to our hearts. We derive our strength from that union with Christ in
the glory, in being one with Him, as He is one with the Father. Out from Him
and our fellowship with Him flows His fullness to us.
What a privilege and joy to
know that we are sons of God through Jesus Christ our Lord; that we have become
fellow-heirs of the glory which the Father has given to His Son! There is a
fullness of strength in the knowledge of sonship. Let us seek to live
continually in the consciousness of that fact that we are sons of God.
“Behold what manner of
love the Father has bestowed upon us, that we should
be called children of God; and we are.”
When here
on earth, the Lord Jesus had His life continually in heaven. He never took things for granted, but
maintained a life all of faith. He triumphed over the situations here on
earth in the power of faith and by prayer. Prayer had a very large place in His
life. He continually drew from His heavenly resources the needed strength and
means to accomplish His work for the glory of the Father. It was a faith
activity in relation to His Father, and it was necessary for Him. How much more
should we live on this basis of faith and prayer in union with Him!
Now let us consider the last
of these secret resources of Christ — the strength of a divine purpose.
The Lord Jesus was
conscious that He was bound up with an eternal and universal purpose. In
Matthew 16:18 we read that He said, in view of that purpose: “I will build
my church, and the gates of Hades shall not prevail against it.” Let us
understand the force and significance of that statement.
The Lord Jesus knew that He
was on the way to the Cross. Immediately after the great declaration of Peter
concerning Christ as the Son of the living God, the Lord Jesus began to speak
to His disciples of the Cross, showing them that He must go to Jerusalem and
suffer. Now in the face of this there is that deliberate statement of the Lord:
“I will build my church.” It clearly shows that the purpose of Christ’s
life cannot be defeated through death. The Cross cannot destroy it. He said in
effect: “I am going to be crucified, but I am come to build my church, and I
shall build it. The purpose I have come for cannot be interfered with; the
Cross cannot hinder it.” Here we see a definite purpose which characterized His
life, and which was mightier than death. Yes, He even added: “and the gates
of Hades shall not prevail against it.” All the forces of darkness cannot
prevent the purpose of His life, for it is bound up with eternity, with a power
that death and hell cannot withstand.
Let us note the emphatic
marks of that purpose in the following passages of Scripture:
“My meat is to do the
will of Him that sent Me, and to accomplish His work.”
John 4:34
”The Father that sent
Him... he that... believeth Him that sent Me.”
John 5:23-24
”...That sent Me... the Father that sent Me.” John 5:30, 37
There are other verses
which express in a similar way that definite purpose such as:
“I am come that they may
have life, and may have it abundantly.”
“The Son of Man is come
to seek and to save that which was lost.”
In all these references we recognize
a special mission. Behind the coming of the Lord Jesus into this world we see a
definite, predetermined purpose. He did not only come for some enterprise or
campaign. He was not starting a movement. Everything in His life was in
relation to a divine purpose. There was a definite plan in the eternal counsels
of God “before the foundation of the world,” which the Lord Jesus came
to fulfill. That is why it could not be frustrated. Even the gates of hell
could not prevail against it.
In the life of the Lord
Jesus there was nothing merely incidental. Everything had a definite purpose.
Therefore the prophet Isaiah called Him “the servant of the Lord.” How
often the Lord Jesus said with regard to His mission: “I must.” There is something imperative in His words: “I must
work the works of Him that sent me.” It speaks of a total absence of
anything indefinite.
The gospel according to
Mark is characterized by definiteness, showing the Lord Jesus as the Servant of
the Lord. The word peculiar to Mark is ‘straight away.” It occurs some forty
times in the gospel, showing how the servant should be. If we are here for the
Lord and His service, we have no time to lose. Our whole heart has to be
devoted to Him, and our life marked by purpose in obedience to Him. Our
attitude, in relation to Him, has to always be ‘straight away.”
So the Lord Jesus derived
much strength from this knowledge of purpose with which His life was bound up.
There is no doubt that we too shall get strength from that sense of purpose,
that consciousness of a divine vocation which is ours. That is why the enemy
always tries to discourage us. He seeks to raise questions and doubts in our
hearts as to the reaching of the goal, telling us that our labour is in vain.
If he succeeds to rob us of that sense of purpose in our life, to make us doubt
with regard to our testimony, our work, or the value of the suffering we have to
go through, we shall lose our strength and the enemy will get the upper hand.
Jesus Christ was maintained
in God’s strength all the way through, because He was dominated by the sense of
His mission, because He kept firm His purpose. If we hold fast the purpose of
our life, if we keep in view our heavenly calling, we too shall be maintained
in strength. But if we try to fulfill some ambition of our own, if we carry out
our own programs, if we keep some movement going, there will be no divine
resources available for us. In order to be maintained in strength it is
essential that we know that we are in the purpose of God. Our service must
always be the result of a divine purpose. It is of the greatest importance for
us to realize that we have a place in God’s plan. We have to deny ourselves. In
God’s purpose there is no room for personal interests. “To them that love
God,” to them whose heart is taken up with God and the fulfillment of His
purpose, “all things work together for good, even to them that are called
according to his purpose.” That is a definite statement showing believers
are called into a divine purpose. We have got to know as definitely as the Lord
Jesus knew, that we are in God’s purpose.
Paul speaks in his letters
repeatedly of those who are called “according to His purpose.” In
Ephesians 3:10-11 we have one of these definite statements: “that now unto
the principalities and powers in the heavenly places might be made known
through the church the manifold wisdom of God, according to the eternal purpose.”
We might think of it in the future tense, but it clearly says “now.” God is
doing something now in His church which is teaching principalities and powers.
We are surrounded by unseen intelligences who are watching God’s dealings with
us. They are watching the experiences we have to go through, and which are
bound up with God’s eternal purpose. What is that purpose? It is that we should
be conformed to the image of His Son. In Jer. 18:2-3 we read: “Arise, and go
down to the potter’s house, and there I will cause thee to hear my words... and
behold, he was making a work on the wheels.” Principalities and powers
have, so to speak, come down to the potter’s house and they watch. What is that
vessel in the hands of the potter? It is the church. But the heavenly Potter is
not satisfied with His vessel. He has to break it and form a new one. Now the
clay is on the wheel, and there have to be all kinds of divine dealings and
workings, and these unseen intelligences are watching how the heavenly Potter
is forming us. We are that clay, and sometimes we feel the pressure of the
Potter’s hands, and the cuttings, whilst He is shaping His church. But all our
trials and our sufferings, all our perplexities are only God’s way to bring us
to the goal. All His dealings have an effect upon us, and bring about a change
in us. And the higher intelligences see it and wonder at God’s wisdom at how
Christ is being formed in us more and more.
That is our calling. So
long as we are in line with God’s purpose His work can go on in us. What
matters is not first of all our activity. God is more concerned with what is
done in us than what we do for Him. He often reaches His end with us much
better when we are in a state of inactivity than in times of much work. The
hand of the Potter was upon Moses when he was in the wilderness where he could
not do much. During forty years he was just looking after a few sheep. That is
not very grand. No doubt he wondered sometimes to what purpose he was there,
whether his life had any value. But principalities and powers saw something and
wondered at God’s wisdom. God knew how to equip this man, how to get His way in
that life. That is true in the case of many a servant of God. God is working
for good, He is shaping His vessel. There is wisdom in all His dealings with
us. But we have to see to it that we have no plans or personal ambitions of our
own. The clay has to be completely in His hands. If we are really here for God,
we can be assured that He will reach His end, that He may work out His purpose
in us. And there we shall find strength.
Are you sure you are in the
great purpose of God? Everybody has some part in it. Paul, when speaking of the
church, illustrates it thus: “that all the body is fitly framed and knit
together through that which every joint supplies.”
No part of the body is without function. Each and every one has to be in God’s
purpose. Some parts may be very small, they nevertheless are equally important.
We have to remember that God has called us for a purpose which will be realized
as we abandon ourselves to Him. Whatever it may be to which He has called us,
let us be ready and do it. A Holy Spirit possessed life is always marked by
purpose. Nothing can be lost in such a life; let us not believe in mere
generalities. That is not good enough. There is something far more definite in
God’s thoughts for our lives. Let us abandon all personal desires, and be
filled with the Spirit of urgency — ‘straight away.” Those who know that they
are called of God, and who definitely recognize the purpose of their life, will
be wholly given up to it. Such no longer have any interest for the things of
this earth. They have no time to lose. They must buy up their time.
Now our life is bound up
with our Lord Jesus Christ in the glory. God’s eternal purpose reigns over us
with universal dimensions, as vast as that domain of principalities and powers
in the heavenlies. The church of Jesus Christ is entrusted with a tremendous,
unfathomable plan of God. To know this means strength. To know this keeps us not
only calm in times of perplexity and trial through which God is working out His
plan, but it also fills us with that peace and joy, which — as the Lord said —
the world cannot take away from us.
We are in the great purpose
of God, called with a heavenly calling. There is nothing incidental about our
lives. Our time is fixed by God. We are in God’s appointments. His purpose is
not yet completed. The coming of Christ on this earth was only the first stage
of it, but since Christ is in heaven there is now a fuller outworking of His
purpose concerning the church. So let us recognize in all things the will of
our heavenly Father, in putting our trust in Him, and let us look to the goal
in Spirit, believing that we shall reach it by His grace.
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