From Glory To Glory - Watchman Nee
From Glory To Glory - Watchman Nee
WATCHMAN NEE
New York
Copyright ©1985
New York
ISBN 0-935008-64-0
PRINTED IN U.S.A.
TRANSLATOR’S PREFACE
The glory of the Lord is not only in His person, but also in His work. Though
glory is His dwelling, He divests himself of glory and takes up a humble fashion
as a man. He endures the shame of the cross for fallen mankind, and nowhere
does His moral glory shine brighter than on the cross. By means of His finished
work at Calvary, the Lord Jesus is able to bring many sons to glory (Heb. 2.10).
It is
His prayerful desire that we may behold His glory (see John 17.24).
And “we all, with unveiled face beholding as in a mirror the glory of the Lord,
are transformed into the same image from glory to glory,
even as from the Lord the Spirit” (2 Cor. 3.18).
In this present volume Watchman Nee interprets for us what is meant by the
phrase, “from glory to glory.” He begins with the name of Jehovah—the glorious
name of God—and shows that man’s only sin is falling short of God’s glory. Yet
God is so ready to forgive, although His forgiveness must be received by faith.
He then cites the case of David and Mephibosheth to illustrate the mercy of God.
The author further demonstrates the riches of God’s grace by reviewing with us
the salvation which comes through baptism, the food with which God provides
His own, and a believer’s value before God. By way of conclusion, He assures
us of the love of Christ which is ever available to us and exhorts us to have the
mind of Christ—which is indeed from glory to glory.
CONTENTS
1 Jehovah
Jehovah
children of Israel, and shall say unto them, The God of your fathers hath sent me
unto you; and they shall say to me, What is his name? what shall I say unto
them? And
hath sent me unto you. And God said moreover unto Moses, Thus shalt thou say
unto the children of Israel, Jehovah, the God of your fathers, the God of
Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob, hath sent me unto you: this is
my name for ever, and this is my memorial unto all generations. Go, and gather
the elders of Israel together, and say unto them, Jehovah, the God of your
fathers, the God of Abraham, of Isaac, and of Jacob, hath appeared unto me,
saying, I have surely visited you, and seen that which is done to you in Egypt:
and I have said, I will bring you up out of the affliction of Egypt unto the land of
the Canaanite, and the Hittite, and the Amorite, and the Perizzite, and the Hivite,
and the Jebusite, unto a land flowing with milk and honey. And they shall
hearken to thy voice: and thou shalt come, thou and the elders of Israel, unto the
king of Egypt, and ye shall say unto him, Jehovah, the God of the Hebrews, hath
met with us: and now let us go, we pray thee, three days’ journey into the
wilderness, that we may sacrifice to Jehovah our God. (Ex. 3.13-18)
Let us note that the names of God in the Bible are never used casually. Each time
a certain name is employed, it has its special meaning. So are the names of the
Lord Jesus in the New Testament; for example, none of the names such as Jesus
Christ, Christ Jesus, the Lord Jesus Christ, and so forth can be changed within
the context in which it appears. If we were to change Jesus Christ to Christ
Jesus, we might commit a doctrinal error. And such is the nature of the revealed
names of God that besides that of “God” itself He employs the name of
“Jehovah” to express His relationship with the children of Israel. What is the
distinction between God and Jehovah? By 8
looking at the way in which God uses His name to reveal His own self, we may
come to an understanding of these names.
2, we have the name “Jehovah God.” Why in the first instance is God used and
in the latter instance Jehovah God is used? Is it not strange that God had not
explained to anyone the meaning of this name?
Abraham knew it because God had told him that His name was Jehovah, but
Abraham did not know what it meant. Not until the time
Why is it that Genesis 1 only uses God, and not Jehovah God?
Genesis 2, however, centers on man, and hence the name “Jehovah God”
appears. Each time the term Jehovah God is used, it shows God’s relationship
with man. But each time the term God appears, it is to express His power as well
as His relationship towards creation.
“They that went in, went in male and female of all flesh, as God commanded
him: and Jehovah shut him in” (Gen. 7.16). Do you
notice the distinction here? All that went into the ark went in male and female
according to what God had commanded, but it was Jehovah who shut Noah into
the ark. Can these names be reversed?
No. He who commands is God, for command is related to the power of Deity.
Therefore the word “God” is used. But now man came into Jehovah
the ark, and so the record tells us that it was “Jehovah” who shut him inside
because the act of being shut in is expressive of the care of Deity.
“This day will Jehovah deliver thee into my hand; and I will smite thee, and take
thy head from off thee; and I will give the dead bodies of the host of the
Philistines this day unto the birds of the heavens, and to the wild beasts of the
earth; that all the earth may know that there is a God in Israel” (1 Sam. 17.46). It
says here that “Jehovah”
will deliver the enemy into my hand that all the earth may know that there is a
“God” in Israel. It does not say God will deliver an enemy into my hand that all
the earth may know “Jehovah.” Why? Because Jehovah is related to me. He
looks after me and delivers the enemy into my hand. But with respect to all the
earth—that is to say, to all the peoples outside the commonwealth of Israel—
God does not reveal himself to them as Jehovah, but only as God. “Jehovah” is
associated with those who are near to Him, whereas “God” is connected with the
rest of the people in causing them to know His power.
Jehoshaphat, that they said, It is the king of Israel. Therefore they turned about
to fight against him: but Jehoshaphat cried out, and Jehovah helped him; and
God moved them to depart from him” (2
moved his enemies to depart the scene was God. “Jehovah” helped Jehoshaphat
because the latter was close to God, but in relation to the enemies the name of
“God” was used since they had no
communication with the Creator.
“God” is the common name of Deity, whereas “Jehovah” is His intimate name.
The term God speaks of Deity’s power, while the term Jehovah speaks of Deity’s
love. The word God points to His creation, but the word Jehovah points to His
nearness. In Genesis 1
the name Jehovah is not used because this passage relates the story of 10
recorded how God and man have intimate relationship; therefore, the name
Jehovah God is employed. Why were not simply Jehovah and Jehovah God used
instead? Let me say that this proves that the
chapter 1. For Jehovah God is not only powerful but also approachable. In spite
of the fact that the name Jehovah is employed thereafter, it is still not explained
until the time of Exodus 3.14.
“I am Jehovah”
“God said unto Moses, I AM THAT I AM: and he said, Thus shalt thou say unto
the children of Israel, I AM hath sent me unto you.
And God said moreover unto Moses, Thus shalt thou say unto the children of
Israel, Jehovah, the God of your fathers, the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac,
and the God of Jacob, hath sent me unto you: this is my name for ever, and this
is my memorial unto all
generations” (Ex. 3.14,15). Moses had asked God: “Behold, when I come unto
the children of Israel, and shall say unto them, The God of your fathers hath sent
me unto you; and they shall say to me, What is his name? what shall I say unto
them?” And God had answered with this: “I AM THAT I AM [that is to say,
Jehovah] . . . hath sent me unto you”! The primary meaning of the name Jehovah
is “the self-existent One”—“He that is who He is, therefore the eternal I AM.”
“I AM”—“I AM THAT I AM!” Oh! Do we realize the
preciousness of that name? Do we truly know that “God is?” What He utters is
great, what He leaves unuttered is equally great. When He speaks fully it is
wonderful; when He speaks partially it is also wonderful. When He declares
plainly it is marvelous, but when He discloses hesitantly it is just as marvelous.
Here He does not fully reveal what He is; He merely says “I AM . . .” Hence the
meaning is Jehovah
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not complete. The “I AM” sent me. This is the revelation of God which Moses
received that day.
If God were to add “power” onto the name “ I AM,” then His revealed name
could not bespeak “love.” If He were to add “love”
onto “I AM,” then His name could also not bespeak of himself as
We may fill in what God left unsaid according to faith. If we have faith as well
as need, we may complete the “sentence-name” of “I AM” with whatever our
need is, and we shall be supplied by God. If, for example, we are in need of
comfort, then God can be to us as our comfort. If we are in need of refuge, He by
faith can become our refuge. If in need of a high tower, then by faith He is our
high tower.
Whatever be the need, we may fill that in by adding that to His name.
We have no doubt that we may fill in whatever we need. It is not unlike a
checkbook with an authorized signature already signed on every check and given
to us. We may fill in whatever amount we need, whether it is a thousand or ten
thousands of dollars. We simply fill in the amount of our need, because the
signature is already there.
How unfortunate that there are so many who do not really know who God is—so
many who do not realize what Jehovah can be to them!
Yet I see the breadth and length and height and depth of that name Jehovah! It
truly includes everything.
No wonder those who know God take His name as a strong tower into which the
righteous can run and are safe. Once we too have recognized this name, will we
not also say with David, “They that know thy name will put their trust in thee”
(Ps. 9.10)? The Old 12
great” (Ps. 25.11); “Save me, O God, by thy name” (Ps. 54.1); and,
“Deal thou with me, O Jehovah the Lord, for thy name’s sake” (Ps.
109.21). Therefore they could declare: “Through thy name will we tread them
under that rise up against us” (Ps. 44.5); “He guideth me
in the paths of righteousness for his name’s sake” (Ps. 23.3); and, “I will lift up
my hands in thy name” (Ps. 63.4). Therefore they could praise: “As is thy name,
O God, so is thy praise unto the ends of the
earth” (Ps. 48.10); and, “Sing unto God, sing praises to his name . . .
his name is Jehovah” (Ps. 68.4). God himself has declared: “I will set him on
high, because he hath known my name” (Ps. 91.14).
God’s name reveals himself. His very name is the foundation of our faith. We
will be able to do valiantly in God’s name if we can enter into the reality of His
name in the power of the Holy Spirit.
Some may consider Jehovah to be God’s revelation in the Old Testament and
therefore wonder if the New Testament people can enjoy the same benefits of
that name. We thank and praise God because the Old Testament Jehovah is also
the New Testament Jesus.
While on earth the Lord Jesus acknowledged himself to be the Jehovah of the
Old Testament: “Except ye believe that I AM, ye shall
die in your sins” (John 8.24). He told us here that He is the “I AM.”
Further on He also said this: “When ye have lifted up the Son of man, then shall
ye know that I AM” (v.28); and again: “Verily,
verily, I say unto you, Before Abraham was born, I AM” (v.58). He
clearly declared that He is Jehovah, and the Jews themselves understood it, for it
was because of this statement that “they took up stones . . . to cast at him” (v.59).
Let us rejoice, for our Lord Jesus is
the great I AM. HE IS! For our sakes, He is! He himself announces: I Jehovah
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am the life, I am the resurrection, I am the light of the world, I am the bread of
life, I am the good shepherd. We may receive all our supplies in the name of our
Lord Jesus—Jehovah the Savior! When we have His name, we have everything.
How we thank Him for giving His name to us.
Jehovah
“Go, and gather the elders of Israel together, and say unto them, Jehovah, the
God of your fathers, the God of Abraham, of Isaac, and of Jacob, hath appeared
unto me, saying, I have surely visited you, and seen that which is done to you in
Egypt: and I have said, I will bring you up out of the affliction of Egypt unto the
land of the Canaanite, . . . unto a land flowing with milk and honey” (Ex.
3.16,17). This name Jehovah was used especially during the period from the
Exodus to the entering in of Canaan. Throughout this time, this name was
frequently employed. Hence, from the day in which we are saved to the time in
which we inherit the kingdom—and however difficult our paths may be—
Jehovah is our great I AM. His name shall lead us to the end. The name Jehovah
is not God’s name relative to creation, but is His intimate name for the believers
in the wilderness. It enables us to pass through the wilderness and enter the
Promised Land.
Believers’ Responsibility
What is the effect of this name of Jehovah in relation to the children of Israel?
That they might take up their responsibility before God.
God will not argue, for if He does, who can answer Him? His reason is often
beyond our understanding, since He himself is the reason. Let us illustrate from
Scripture this that we have just said (all from Leviticus, except where noted):
14
Mine ordinances shall ye do, and my statutes shall ye keep, to walk therein: I am
Jehovah your God. (18.4)
Ye shall therefore keep my statutes, and mine ordinances; which if a man do, he
shall live in them: I am Jehovah. (18.5)
I am Jehovah. (18.6b)
I am Jehovah. (18.30b)
Speak unto all the congregation of the children of Israel, and say unto them, Ye
shall be holy; for I Jehovah your God am holy.
(19.2)
Turn ye not unto idols, nor make to yourselves molten gods: I am Jehovah your
God. (19.4)
Thou shalt not glean thy vineyard, neither shalt thou gather the fallen fruit of thy
vineyard; thou shalt leave them for the poor and for the sojourner: I am Jehovah
your God. (19.10)
Ye shall not swear by my name falsely, and profane the name of thy God: I am
Jehovah. (19.12)
Thou shalt not curse the deaf, nor put a stumbling block before the blind; but
thou shalt fear thy God: I am Jehovah.
(19.14)
Thou shalt not go up and down as a talebearer among thy people: neither shalt
thou stand against the blood of thy neighbor: I am Jehovah. (19.16)
Thou shalt not take vengeance, nor bear any grudge against the children of thy
people; but thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself. I am Jehovah. (19.18)
Ye shall not make any cuttings in your flesh for the dead, nor print any marks
upon you: I am Jehovah. (19.28)
Jehovah. (19.30)
Turn ye not unto them that have familiar spirits, nor unto the wizards; seek them
not out, to be defiled by them: I am Jehovah
Jehovah
15
Thou shalt rise up before the hoary head, and honor the face of the old man, and
thou shalt fear thy God: I am Jehovah.
(19.32)
The stranger that sojourneth with you shall be unto you as the home-born among
you, and thou shalt love him as thyself, for ye were sojourners in the land of
Egypt: I am Jehovah your God.
(19.34)
Ye shall observe all my statutes, and all mine ordinances, and do them: I am
Jehovah. (19.37)
Thou shalt take the Levites for me (I am Jehovah) instead of all the first-born
among the children of Israel; and the cattle of the Levites instead of all the
firstlings among the cattle of the children of Israel. (Num. 3.41)
Take the Levites instead of all the first-born among the children of Israel, and the
cattle of the Levites instead of their cattle; and the Levites shall be mine: I am
Jehovah. (Num. 3.45)
THAT I AM” shows us at least two reasons for His commands: (1) “I AM”—
that is to say, I am powerful, therefore you should not do anything. I am your
power, protection, holiness, righteousness and supply. Hence you have no need
to sin. You say you have passions and lusts in you, but Jehovah declares: “I am
righteousness and holiness.” So why must you sin? You say you have no money,
so you 16
(2) “I AM”—that is to say, I am not only your power and wisdom who loves you
dearly and has chosen you, I am also Jehovah your God who will chasten you if
you do evilly. So that, yes, the I AM is first of all powerful; but second of all, He
will judge. First, He is most powerful in being our righteousness and holiness;
but next, He will judge us according to His righteousness and holiness. When He
uses this name of Jehovah the—I AM THAT I AM—He does not
bother to explain the reason for His commandments. He simply tells His people,
“I am Jehovah.” I am Jehovah who brought you into Canaan. I am Jehovah,
therefore you must do or not do these various things.
“I am the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob”
“God said moreover unto Moses, Thus shalt thou say unto the children of Israel,
Jehovah, the God of your fathers, the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the
God of Jacob, hath sent me unto you: this is my name for ever, and this is my
memorial unto all
Here an additional explanation is being given. Who is this Jehovah your God?
He is the God of Abraham, of Isaac, and of Jacob. So far as God himself is
concerned, He is Jehovah, the I AM.
So far as men are concerned, though, Jehovah is the God of Abraham, of Isaac,
and of Jacob. On Deity’s side, He is God, He is Jehovah; this is what He has
revealed to men. On men’s side, God has revealed himself to Abraham, to Isaac,
and to Jacob; and this is to cause us to see what power He will manifest in our
lives just as He has manifested His power in those men.
Jehovah
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Why does God not declare himself as the God of Adam? For we know that
Abraham sinned even as Adam did. Why then did He not call himself the God of
Adam? Why did He not say the God of Abel, the seed of Adam? Why instead
did He call himself the God of Abraham, of Isaac, and of Jacob? Why according
to the flesh was our Lord Jesus presented in the New Testament as having been
born of the seed of Abraham? Why from among all men should God have called
himself the God of these three particular persons? Wherein lies the difference
between these three and other people? Well, apart from the fact that God had
covenanted with these three men, He takes them up as representative personages.
He chooses them to represent three types of men in the world.
How this fact has comforted many of us! Yet God is not only the God of the
ordinary men, He is also the God of the bad men: He is the God of Jacob too, for
in the Scriptures Jacob is pictured as one of the worst persons to be found in the
Old Testament.
Hence through these three persons, God is telling us that He is the God of
Abraham the best, the God of Isaac the ordinary, and the God of Jacob the worst.
He is the God of those with great faith, He is the God of the common people,
and He is also the God of the lowest of men such as thieves and prostitutes.
Suppose I am special like Abraham; then He is my God. Suppose I am ordinary
like Isaac, then He is also my God. And suppose from my mother’s womb I have
been bad like Jacob was in that I have striven with my brother; then 18
He is still my God. He has a way with the excellent, with the common, and with
the worst of humanity.
From that day in Exodus onward, God has always called himself by this
wonderful name without any change. Even when the Lord Jesus was about to
face death, He said this: “As touching the resurrection of the dead, have ye not
read that which was spoken unto you by God, saying, I am the God of Abraham,
and the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob? God is not the God of the dead, but
of
the living” (Matt. 22.31,32). Here our Lord adds one more meaning to that name.
When God calls himself by such a name, it reveals the fact that He is also the
God of resurrection. However excellent Abraham may be, he is subject to death
and decay; but God will cause him to be raised again from among the dead. As
common as Isaac is, he too will die and decay; yet God will also raise him. And
as bad as Jacob is, he also will die and decay; nonetheless, God will raise him up
too. In the realm of resurrection, all which belongs to the natural will pass away.
God is the God of the living, not of the dead. So that in the resurrection realm,
God is to be the God of these three men. This indicates to us Christians—and
whether we are naturally talented, ordinary, or bad—that we will all decay;
nevertheless, our God will re-create us and make us new in Him.
Though we are so different in the natural, God will eliminate all the differences
and be our God all the same. For what He looks at is not our natural endowment
but the life He has given us. According to the natural, there exist vast differences
among Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob; but in resurrection they all receive the same
life. God overlooks the natural and looks only at His work of grace. He is able to
dispense grace to totally different people and make them almost the same.
What is meant by resurrection? It means the natural has passed away and the
supernatural has come. Regardless the fact that some people are highly talented,
that some are rather ordinary, and that some are tricky and bad, God in His Son
can make all new. How Jehovah
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useless is the natural, only the supernatural is profitable. For the eyes of God are
focused on resurrection. And hence He can be the God of Abraham, of Isaac,
and of Jacob.
Memorial Forever
generations” (Ex. 3.15). This means “I eternally AM,” that “in Me is the yea.”
Here the name Jehovah bespeaks two things of note: (1) I am forever Jehovah.
As My name is, so shall I be for eternity. And (2) My memorial. Let Me be
remembered as Jehovah to all
generations. And I too will always remember I am Jehovah. Unless God forgets
He is Jehovah and we forget He is Jehovah, God stands forever as is to us, and
He will forever supply all our needs.
Hallelujah!
shalt not eat of it: for in the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die.
(Gen. 2.17)
with me, she gave me of the tree, and I did eat. (Gen.
3.12)
Esau said unto Jacob, Feed me, I pray thee, with that same red pottage; for I am
faint: therefore was his name called Edom.
(Gen. 25.30)
I will arise and go to my father, and will say unto him, Father, I have sinned
against heaven, and in thy sight. (Luke 15.18)
He that believeth on him is not judged: he that believeth not hath been judged
already, because he hath not believed on the name of the only begotten Son of
God. (John 3.18)
Let all the house of Israel therefore know assuredly, that God hath made him
both Lord and Christ, this Jesus whom ye crucified. Now when they heard this,
they were pricked in their heart, and said unto Peter and the rest of the apostles,
Brethren, what shall we do? And Peter said unto them, Repent ye, and be
baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ unto the remission of your
sins; and ye shall receive the gift of the Holy Spirit. (Acts 2.36-38)
Because that, knowing God, they glorified him not as God, neither gave thanks;
but became vain in their reasonings, and their senseless heart was darkened.
(Rom. 1.21)
Wherefore God gave them up in the lusts of their hearts unto uncleanness, that
their bodies should be dishonored among
For this cause God gave them up unto vile passions: for their women changed
the natural use into that which is against nature.
(Rom. 1.26)
22
And even as they refused to have God in their knowledge, God gave them up
unto a reprobate mind, to do those things which are not fitting. (Rom. 1.28)
3.10)
All have sinned, and fall short of the glory of God. (Rom 3.23)
What I want to emphatically present is the only sin in the Bible. It appears to be
quite strange that the way man looks at sin is totally different from the way God
looks at it. It is a pity today that in preaching the gospel, people often incorrectly
present the principle of sin. Man is in need of a Savior because he has sinned. If
there were no sin, there would be no need for a Savior. But what is the sin which
man has committed? The word sin is a generic term. You have your sin, and I
have mine. If we therefore do not commit the same sin, then why do we all need
the same Savior?
The Bible from the beginning to the end lays stress on but one sin.
You may not commit many other sins, but if you commit this one, you are
qualified indeed to descend to hell.
We may not commit adultery or gamble, but we doubtless have committed this
one sin—which is the lack of a proper relationship with God. There may be a
clean man or woman, but he or she has committed the sin of having a
controversy with God. We have all
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committed this same sin of having broken the proper relationship with God. We
are born sinners.
The inventory of sin is so massive that it is beyond counting. You may happen to
have not committed any of the numberless sins in the world, yet there is one sin
you cannot deny having committed—
which is, that you have broken off your relationship with God.
Without Christ today, you are indeed a sinner. What is sin? It is nothing less than
man standing in a position of being unable to commune with God. To sin is
basically to stand in a position opposed to God. Sin is more than murder or pride
or jealousy: it is having a controversy with God.
Let me use an illustration to show how important such sin is.
Suppose there is a man who is married and has children. He also has in his big
family parents, brothers, and sisters. He is working, and naturally he has his
colleagues where he works. He has in addition many relatives and friends. In his
own home he may be a good husband and father. At his work he may be most
diligent and faithful.
He is loyal to his friends and does good towards his relatives. In fact, he is good
in every respect. He does not smoke or drink; he tells no lie and is not jealous.
He keeps all the commonly accepted moral codes. He is a real gentleman.
Nonetheless, he has one peculiar aversion; he hates his parents. He is agreeable
with everybody else except with them. He is courteous to all save his parents. He
is easy on everyone but them. It can be said that he is moral and good to all, that
he has not committed any of the gross sins which other people usually have
done. Even so, he has committed a great sin—that of maintaining an improper
relationship with his parents. He has not committed sins commonly perpetrated,
yet he has committed this one grave sin of having a controversy with his parents.
Let me say that such is the position of the world of men today.
When asked if they are sinners, many will answer back, How have I sinned?
According to the human viewpoint, these who reply in such 24
fashion are no doubt gentlemanly, moral, and polite. They seem also to follow
their conscience well. Nevertheless, each of these people needs to be asked this
question: Has anything bad happened between you and God? True, you have
maintained a good relationship with friends and relatives, you are moral and
courteous, but what about your relationship with the heavenly Father? Keep in
mind that besides your wife, children, friends, and relatives, there is also God
above towards whom you must relate.
Hence, we may accurately say that man is a sinner for no other reason than his
having an improper relationship with God. It is not because he has killed people
or his conscience is too black that he is constituted a sinner; he is such basically
because he stands at enmity with God. He is a sinner because he has no spiritual
intercourse with God. Man can make excuses by saying he has not committed
this sin or that sin, but there is one particular sin which he must have committed.
We each may put forth excuses to explain away a hundred and one other sins,
but we cannot deny we have in fact committed this one sin. It is this sin that
makes you and me sinners.
Possibly you are a good member of your family. Neither would I ask if you are at
peace with your brothers. Perhaps you have indeed not sued any of them because
of some inheritance conflict. Nor would I ask you how you treat your colleagues
at work. Your colleagues may well in fact respect and think highly of you. And I
would not ask if you are a good citizen. Perhaps you are a very good one, for
you are loyal, submissive to authority, and faithful in paying taxes. But I would
ask you today if something is wrong in your relationship with God. What is your
relationship with Him? God will not ask you how you behave towards your wife,
brothers, and colleagues. He will not even ask you whether you have killed
someone or committed arson.
He will only ask you about your relationship with Him. You may not have
created many other problems present in the world, but if this
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The Bible teaches plainly concerning this sin. Let us be clear as to just exactly
how sin first entered this world. It did not enter in the form of murder, nor a lie
told by someone calling his wife his sister.
It did not enter the world by a man having taken another’s wife or having sent a
rival to the battlefront to die. Nor did it enter through fornication or gambling or
pride or jealousy. No, sin first entered the world quite simply by man having
eaten a piece of fruit.
“Of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil,” commanded God of Adam,
“thou shalt not eat of it: for in the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely
die” (Gen. 2.17). We will not touch upon the reason that lay behind God’s word
here. We will merely observe that man overturned what God had commanded. If
the Creator God
orders me not to eat, then I shall not eat; otherwise I contradict and oppose God.
Now as soon as Adam had eaten the forbidden fruit, he quickly hid himself
among the trees of the garden since he had placed himself in a posture of fearing
to see God. What, then, is sin?
It was doubtless sin for Cain to kill Abel; but before he had ever contemplated
killing Abel, sin had already been present. God did not reject Cain after he
murdered his brother; He had rejected him beforehand—when he had offered the
produce of the field. Cain was rejected because his relationship with God was
already wrong. Now he had actually thought of pleasing God when he decided to
offer up the produce of his field. He could be termed what is today commonly
known as being religious. Cain offered up the labor of his hands to God in order
to please Him. But he had failed to see that sin was already present in the world,
and that therefore the only position he could take would be to stand on the
ground of the blood. He was thus 26
rejected because he refused to stand on the ground of the blood. In other words,
Cain’s position was faulty.
We are all familiar with the story of the prodigal son in Luke 15.
What was the sin he committed? Many would say, Look, the younger son took
his share of his father’s property and wasted it in riotous living, and thus he later
became a prodigal. Let me say, however, that the day on which he received his
inheritance into his hands was when he became a prodigal, even though he was a
wealthy man at the moment. He became a prodigal not because he had failed,
wasted all his inheritance, and fallen into feeding swine. The moment he left his
father to go into a far country was the moment he became a prodigal.
When he stepped out of his father’s door, that was when he became a prodigal.
His one fault that made him a prodigal was to leave his father. Yet suppose this
younger son had become even more wealthy rather than poor abroad. Suppose
that instead of having five thousand, he now had ten thousand dollars. His father
could still not have said to him, Well done, good and faithful son. Even if he had
become ten times richer, the younger son still remained a prodigal.
Hence the problem today is not whether one has spent all, or has resorted to
feeding swine for a living, or has ended up hungry and in rags. The real problem
is, where are you? Is there something wrong in your relationship with the
heavenly Father? If you are in a far country, you must have become a prodigal
son also. But when the prodigal in the Biblical account came to his senses, he
did not plan to work hard and accumulate money so that he might turn from
beggar to rich man. What did he say to himself when he was inwardly
awakened? “I will arise and go to my father, and will say unto him, Father, I
have sinned against heaven, and in thy sight” (Luke 15.18).
He did not return just to satisfy his stomach with food and to have shoes and
clothes to wear. He said, “I will arise and go back to my father.”
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Had the younger son maintained a proper relationship with his father, he would
not have left at all. Whoever leaves one’s heavenly home is a prodigal son or
daughter. Whoever leaves the Father in heaven is a prodigal. But when in the
story the prodigal son returned home, he was to his father dead and now alive,
lost and now found.
Hence, let us see that you and I became sinners not because we had committed
so many different sins, but because we could not see God’s face. I do not say
these many sins are not sins with which we need to be concerned; I would only
say that not to have a proper relationship with God is the sin.
In the first three chapters of Romans, Paul shows us most plainly the
qualification of being a sinner. What makes one a sinner? How does he “earn his
degree”? The sin of a sinner is none other than having a problem with God.
Three times in the first chapter of Romans Paul mentions that “God gave them
up.” Let us look at each case.
“Because that, knowing God, they glorified him not as God, neither gave thanks;
but became vain in their reasonings, and their senseless heart was darkened”
(1.21). The “they” here points to men.
Men know that God is God and yet they do not treat Him as God.
They know He is God, but they do not glorify Him as God. All the many
different sins which appear are not the root of sin; these come from the one sin,
which is, that men do not respect God as God, and thus their reasoning becomes
vain and their senseless heart is darkened to commit all kinds of sin.
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“Wherefore God gave them up in the lusts of their hearts unto uncleanness, that
their bodies should be dishonored among
Because men have turned the glory of God into creature likenesses, God
therefore gives them up. Thus, they commit uncleannesses according to the lusts
of their hearts. Let us recognize that men’s first sin is not uncleanness according
to the lusts of their hearts, neither is it a dishonoring of their bodies. The first sin
which men commit is to be at odds with God. Allowing such a controversy to
occur, men naturally will subsequently commit all the other sins. Today we
consider lying, pride, jealousy, fornication, killing, and so forth to be heinous
sins. Actually these are but symptoms, not the disease itself.
Merely treating symptoms such as the treating of the head when there is a
headache and the foot when there is foot pain is not reckoned as the mark of a
good physician. A good physician will prescribe according to the cause of the
disease. And in the spiritual realm, the one disease men have is that of having a
problem with God himself.
“They exchanged the truth of God for a lie, and worshipped and served the
creature rather than the Creator, who is blessed for ever.
Amen” (1.25). This indicates that the farther away one is from God the worse the
relationship with God becomes.
“For this cause God gave them up unto vile passions: for their women changed
the natural use into that which is against nature”
(1.26). “For this cause” again continues on with what precedes it.
This is the second use of the phrase “gave up.” The sins mankind commits have
increased: “God gave them up unto vile passions.” All this is because they do
not honor the Creator. These sins are fruits, not the cause.
“And even as they refused to have God in their knowledge, God gave them up
unto a reprobate mind, to do those things which are not fitting” (1.28). This is
the third instance of the use of these two words
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“gave up.” Even more sins are to be committed, as is evident in the verses that
follow:
How do these numerous sins come about? All are due to the fact that men
“refuse to have God in their knowledge.” Men sin because they refuse to know
God. Men sin because they have problems with Him. Once the relationship
between man and God becomes
improper, all kinds of sins quickly follow.
Once again we see that the one and only sin of man is his having a problem with
God. The supreme question today is whether or not one’s relationship with God
is right. The first sin committed by the very first man was his eating fruit. There
was no killing, no lying, no pride, fornication, or jealousy. None of these sins
was present. Only one sin was committed—that of having an improper
relationship with God. And as a consequence God was forced to ask man,
“Where art thou?” (Gen. 3.9) So that today we do not stand on the original
ground, but stand on an improper ground since our relationship with God is
improper. And because of this, numberless sins end up being committed. Let us
never conclude that because we may have dealt with some small sins, we are
therefore somehow all right. Not so.
Let me ask you who suppose you are not a sinner, what is your relationship with
God? I do not ask what is your relationship with your brothers, wife, children,
friends, or colleagues. I merely ask what your relationship is with your Father.
Cain at the very outset was rejected by God because he stood on the wrong
ground. He was not rejected after he slew his brother; on the contrary, Cain slew
his 30
brother because he had already been rejected by God. On the other hand,
because Abel was accepted by God, he did not kill his brother Cain. Only those
who are accepted by God will not commit sin.
There was once a man—told of in the Bible—who fought with his brother even
while in his mother’s womb. He later became most cunning. He cheated his
father and father-in-law. Whatever was advantageous to him he did without
hesitation. His morality was tremendously low. Who was this man? Jacob, of
course. His brother Esau was rather candid. Though he had vowed to kill his
brother, nevertheless, when he saw his brother’s humility, he let him go. He was
indeed the better man of the two, yet God was not pleased with him. Bad as
Jacob was, he nonetheless had a proper relationship with God. Though his means
were deceitful, his aim was good. For he desired after the covenant which God
had made with Abraham and Isaac. He respected the birthright of the firstborn.
Abraham and Isaac had a right relationship with God because God had made
covenant with them. And Jacob sought for that too. Esau, on the other hand,
appeared to be a gentleman who was willing to let go of everything, but he had
lost contact with his God. He despised the relationship with God. He did not
appreciate his position before Him, and thus he was unable to receive the
inheritance (a type of the kingdom.) But Jacob, though deceitful, still had a
proper relationship with God.
Let me openly acknowledge one thing here, which is, that among the believers
there are many whose moral status falls behind that of worldly people. Yet I can
testify for such believers that their relationship with God is proper. To you who
are still unbelievers, let me say that you may be courteous and diligent, with
everybody praising you; but I need to ask you one question: what is your
relationship with God? Some believers may not morally be as high as you are,
yet they exceed you in one very important respect, which is, that their
relationship with God is right whereas yours is not. We believers can approach
God with boldness and without fear in our conscience. This is a most precious
gift. But can you who are still
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unbelievers claim the same gift today? You who are yet a sinner, ask yourself
this: “Do I have a problem with God? Can I see God’s face?
But let me remind you that this is only your physical condition. You should
instead think of your condition in the sight of God. The Bible lays stress on one
sin which all of us must deal with—the matter of our relationship with God; it
must be corrected.
(Rom. 3.10). All of us are sinners because not one of us seeks after God but
everyone has turned aside and become altogether
unprofitable. The cause for sin lies in our not seeking God nor knowing Him:
“all have sinned, and fall short of the glory of God”
(Rom. 3.23).
But God has come into this world. The Word has become flesh and has
tabernacled among men. God has manifested himself to the world in the person
of Jesus of Nazareth. Two thousand years ago God appeared in our midst. He has
been preached to us. And the question He will ask you today is this: what is your
relationship with this Jesus of Nazareth? Formerly we did not know what kind of
god is God; we had only a vague idea of Him. But now, thank God, He has come
into the world and has dwelt among us. He is not only God but also Man. He is
the Word become flesh. He was crucified to atone for our sins. Today, this Jesus
of Nazareth will ask you what your relationship with God is, what you think of
Him. And your attitude towards Jesus of Nazareth will be your attitude towards
God.
For this Jesus of Nazareth is the Word become flesh, He is God clothed with
flesh in order to dwell among men.
that of not believing in the Son of God: “He that believeth on him is not judged:
he that believeth not hath been judged already, because 32
he hath not believed on the name of the only begotten Son of God”
(John 3.18). Men are judged not because of killing or committing arson; they are
judged for but one reason—they do not believe in the name of the Son of God.
Not believing in the name of the Son of God is tantamount to not having a
proper relationship with God. The logic of the Bible is that the unbelievers are
judged because of their unbelieving. For God looks especially for this sin.
What is your attitude towards Christ today? This is what God will consider,
because Christ is the bridge that spans the distance between God and men. He is
Man as well as God. Today God dwells among us in Christ. Men’s attitude
towards Christ is their attitude towards God. Once as I shook hands with a friend
he said to me: “Let me take off my gloves first.” I replied, “That will be
unnecessary, since I shall really be holding your hand and not your gloves.”
Similarly, Christ is God, except that He is clothed with a human body, just like
the hand that has a glove over it. “He that hath seen me,” the Lord observed,
“hath seen the Father; . . . I am in the Father, and the
What the Bible shows us is that after the incarnation of the Lord, the one and
only sin which the Holy Spirit convicts people of is that of unbelief: “And he
[the Holy Spirit], when he is come, will convict the world in respect of sin, and
of righteousness, and of judgment: of sin, because they believe not on me
[Christ]” (John 16.8,9). Of sin
because they believe not, because they do not have a proper relationship with
Christ. The Holy Spirit convicts people not of their killing, perpetrating arson,
having pride or jealousy, but of their not having a right relationship with Christ.
Just here I must mention one thing to the believers. Today much preaching in the
church is faulty.
People have preached incorrectly not only concerning the Savior, redemption,
and salvation, they have also done so with respect to sin.
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their many sins! Actually there is but one sin which condemns people to hell—
that of not having a right relationship with Christ.
persuade men to cease killing, burning, despising, or envying, for even if they
should stop doing these things they will still perish and not have eternal life. In
hell there are countless people like these. In preaching the gospel one thing to
insist upon asking people is: is there anything wrong in your relationship with
Christ? As long as people do not have a proper relationship with Him, they
remain sinners in the sight of God.
This that I have been saying I know whereof I speak. How Satan attempts to
destroy the work of Christ by altering the Biblical emphasis on sin. Today people
look at these many fragmentary sins instead of at the root of sin. In so doing they
overturn the work of Christ and pursue psychological salvation which is merely
moral improvement and change of lifestyle, but not the receiving of life itself. A
wrong emphasis on sin will not save souls. Sin is that men do not have the right
relationship with God. The younger son was a prodigal because of his
controversy with his father. In like manner, if you have a problem with God the
Father, this is your sin. I sincerely hope all of us have a proper relationship with
God.
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“Let all the house of Israel therefore know assuredly, that God hath made him
both Lord and Christ, this Jesus whom ye crucified.
Now when they heard this, they were pricked in their heart, and said unto Peter
and the rest of the apostles, Brethren, what shall we do?
And Peter said unto them, Repent ye, and be baptized every one of you in the
name of Jesus Christ unto the remission of your sins; and ye shall receive the gift
of the Holy Spirit” (Acts 2.36-38). The first
work of the Holy Spirit on the day of Pentecost was to prick the heart of those
who heard. What had they heard? “God hath made him both Lord and Christ,
this Jesus whom ye crucified.” This meant that there was something wrong
between them and Christ and that they did not have a right relationship with
Him. They and God were at odds. God had established Christ as Savior, and they
had killed Him. But when they heard this, their hearts were pricked. Not because
of their strife with brothers, or their gambling, beating, murder, or arson, but
because of their not having a proper relationship with Christ.
“What shall we do?” they asked of Peter and the rest of the apostles. Let us
notice Peter’s answer here: “Repent ye, and be baptized every one of you in the
name of Jesus Christ.” He called them first to repent, then to be baptized.
What is repentance? In truth, they did need to repent. Yet let me ask, repent of
what? Does repentance point to our former killing but that now we are to kill no
more; does it refer to our previous acts of arson but that now we are to do so no
more, to our former lying but that now we are to lie no more, to our earlier pride
but that now we are to cease being proud anymore? Does repentance refer only
to this? No, to repent is to repent of our lack of a proper relationship with God.
To repent is to repent of only one thing, and that is, that formerly my relationship
with God was wrong, so now I repent.
Therefore, we find the apostle Paul declaring both to Jews and to Gentiles
“repentance toward God” (Acts 20.21).
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To be baptized means to come out of all these things—come out of the world,
come out of Adam. Yet how can we come out of the world and of Adam? The
only way is to die. And once dead, all is finished. Yesterday I read in the
newspaper about a man who asked to have his citizenship revoked. He had to get
the permission of the Ministry of the Interior before he could have his status
abolished. But when a person is dead, he is freed from all these things pertaining
to citizenship—he is freed from national conscription, taxation, the census, and
so forth. In like manner, baptism overturns our former position. To be baptized is
to acknowledge that when Christ died He took me to the cross with Him and I
was thus crucified also. To be crucified is the work of Christ; and to be baptized
is to testify to that work. To be buried in baptism is to write the final page in a
man’s old biography. Death is not the last thing, but burial by means of baptism
is: it is the final act: it concludes all that is in Adam.
Please keep ever in mind that the only sin which the Bible stresses is that of not
believing Christ. If you have not dealt with this sin by receiving Christ as your
Savior, you are doomed. With this sin dealt with, however, all the other
fragmentary sins can easily be resolved.
Without having this sin dealt with, and even if all the other sins are solved, you
will still go to hell. May God give us all a proper relationship with Christ. May
He constrain us to deal properly with this one sin. We thank God, for His view of
sin is quite different from ours. May we, like Him, also have the right emphasis
concerning sin.
sheep to atone for men’s sins. In the New Testament period, He appoints the
Lord Jesus—the Lamb of God—as the sin-offering, who then offered himself
once for all to obtain eternal redemption for men. In God’s view, the shed blood
of the Lord Jesus on the cross has completely solved the sin problem of the
world. But from humanity’s standpoint man still needs to add one ingredient—
faith.
Whoever believes that the blood of the Lord Jesus was shed for his sins, that one
is redeemed and the person’s trespasses are forgiven.
Anyone who disbelieves will perish and go to hell. But so far as atonement is
concerned, the work is already done. It is of God, originated by God, and is what
God wants to do. He does it by sacrificing His only begotten Son, a tremendous
price that God has paid. Hence, there is absolutely no question that God wants to
forgive sins and to provide for men the means of atonement. Are there any
sinners who are still afraid that their sins cannot be forgiven? God wants to
forgive such people. He delights in forgiving them, and He has already paid a
great price to forgive them.
God Is Able to Forgive All Sins
Whenever a sinner believes that the Lord Jesus shed His blood on the cross for
his sins, that person’s sins shall be forgiven at that very moment. If a believer is
overtaken in any trespass and sins, he will be forgiven if he honestly repents and
confesses his sin before God (1
John 1.9). For the blood price the Lord Jesus has paid is great enough to forgive
all sins and to cleanse all unrighteousness. So the way of forgiveness is open to
saints as well as sinners.
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On one occasion the Lord Jesus said to Peter that he must forgive seventy times
seven, which means he must keep on forgiving and forever forgiving as long as
his brother is willing to repent. Since the blessed Lord taught Peter such
gracious words, would He not himself put His own words into practice? Surely
God will forgive all who are sorry for their sins and who truly repent. He will
forgive them forever.
Many people think that sinning is like making an error in writing, and
forgiveness is like erasing that error which will nevertheless leave an indelible
mark. They do not realize that this is absolutely untrue in God’s forgiveness. The
blood of the Lord Jesus cleanses men’s sins. What is cleansing? Cleansing is a
process so perfect that it leaves no spot. Our sins are so washed away as though
we had never sinned and as though we were as holy as Christ himself.
“Come now, and let us reason together, saith Jehovah: though your sins be as
scarlet, they shall be as white as snow; though they be red like crimson, they
shall be as wool” (Is. 1.18). Look how white snow
and wool are, for there is not one speck of red. Accordingly, when God washes
away sins, He leaves no mark behind but cleanses purely and perfectly.
God’s Heart to Forgive Surpasses Our Heart for Forgiveness
What the father in Luke 15 did to the prodigal son enables us to know the
forgiving heart of our heavenly Father toward sinners.
While the prodigal son was yet on the way home, his father saw him afar off and
ran to meet him. The old man did not stroll slowly; he ran. His heart was so
eager after his son that walking was too slow for him. His legs had to move
quickly. Today God’s legs of
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forgiveness also run after every repentant sinner. How He longs to forgive man’s
sins as rapidly as possible. Did the prodigal run towards his father? No, he did
not. Judging from the movements of them both, we can readily see that the
father’s heart of forgiving surpasses the son’s heart for forgiveness. If we
continue observing how the father fell on his neck and kissed him repeatedly, we
shall understand what pleasure God the Father himself takes in a repentant
sinner. Though the son hated what he had done and felt guilty towards heaven
and his father, and continued confessing his sins to the father, the latter, out of
intense love for his son, was impatient to allow his son to finish his confession,
and therefore commanded instead that the servants fetch the best robe and put a
ring and shoes on the prodigal son (please note that there were less words of
confession recorded in verse 21 than in verses 18 and 19 because the father
broke in).
How precious to know that our heavenly Father’s love to forgive exceeds our
heart for forgiveness. He does not wait for us to cry three days and three nights,
confessing over and over again before He will forgive. Frequently we cry and
cry, confess and confess, beat ourselves black and blue—in order to be forgiven.
How we
misconstrue God’s heart, and in actuality we wound His heart. Let us realize that
He loves those whom He has bought with a price far more than we could ever
love ourselves. How He longs to forgive us, indeed He “runs” to forgive us. And
before we can even finish our confession, He has already forgiven us!
How often when your loved one in the family sins against you, you are anxious
to forgive. You will immediately forgive him if he is willing merely to apologize.
Truly, where there is love, there is the forgiving heart. If this is factual among
men, how much more this is the case with the heavenly Father, who is full of
mercy and compassion to eternally and completely forgive the sins of men.
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God sent the Lord Jesus to the earth to shed His blood on the cross for the sins of
the world that the problem of sin might be resolved.
All this speaks of the loving heart of God. But after the Lord Jesus had shed His
blood, God himself bore witness to Him, saying that all who believe shall have
their sins forgiven—that all who confess shall have their unrighteousness
cleansed. Have faith if you are a sinner, confess if you are a believer, and God
cannot but forgive your sins.
Otherwise, God would be unfaithful and unrighteous. Let me reverently ask how
the holy God could ever be unfaithful and unrighteous? Oh, this fact of sins
forgiven is something guaranteed!
Let us rejoice in God, for sin shall not reign over us. We are delivered from sin
and we are forgiven.
God’s truth has two sides. What has already been mentioned stresses the side of
grace which is true and guaranteed. As long as a person is kept in the grace of
God, he has nothing to fear regarding the matter of “sins forgiven.” Even so, if
anyone should think that he can waste the grace of God—that is to say, “Shall
we continue in sin, that grace may abound? ” (Rom. 6.1)—let him read the
following
sobering words: “Behold then the goodness and severity of God: toward them
that fell, severity; but toward thee, God’s goodness, if thou continue in his
goodness: otherwise thou also shalt be cut off”
(Rom. 11.22).
Some have dared to say: “I sin daily by hiding under the precious blood;” or, “I
sin in the daytime and confess before God in the evening to have my sins
forgiven. I go on sinning the next day, and keep on confessing the next evening
for forgiveness. Since the Lord Jesus taught Peter to forgive seventy times seven,
surely He will forgive me. And then, too, there are the words in 1 John 1.9 that,
God
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being faithful and righteous, He cannot but forgive my sins which I confess, for
Christ has already died on the cross for me.”
Thou fool, do you not know that the grace of God is to lead you to repentance
(see Rom. 2.4) and not to encourage you to sin? If you think you can waste the
precious blood, it shows that the precious blood has never washed away your so-
called “confessed” sins.
Let us answer this question with the word of God: “if we walk in the light, as he
is in the light, we have fellowship one with another, and the blood of Jesus his
Son cleanseth us from all sin” (1 John 1.7).
From this verse we learn that there is one condition and two consequences. From
the one condition there flows two consequences without failure. What is the
condition here? “If we walk in the light as he [God] is in the light.” This means
that if we Christians walk in the light, we are not walking in darkness, and
therefore we shall have works of light and not deeds of darkness. What kind of
light is this?
Or what degree of light is it? The light here corresponds to the words, “as he
[God] is in the light”; and according to verse 5, “God is light, and in him is no
darkness at all” (note that all other lights are mixed up with darkness).
the light.” If a Christian does not walk in the light, he will lose the benefit of
“fellowshipping one with another” as well as that of “the blood cleansing from
all sin.” And to reverse it, we may say that in order to have fellowship and
cleansing one must walk in the light; otherwise, there will be neither fellowship
nor cleansing.
For this reason, a Christian who sins is not able to fellowship freely with other
Christians on earth; rather, he will attempt to avoid them.
Let me warn you most solemnly that if you sin and walk in
darkness, you will not only lose fellowship with other believers but will also
miss the effectual cleansing of your sins by the precious blood before God. As
you lose the first consequence for not walking in the light, so you will forfeit the
second consequence also. You may confess your sins with your mouth, yet you
will not be cleansed by the precious blood. This is not, however, because the
precious blood has lost its cleansing power, but because your situation of not
walking in the light does not fulfill the condition for cleansing. For the condition
for cleansing is to “walk in the light,” but you continue to sin and to walk in
darkness; therefore the precious blood will not cleanse you. The precious blood
will only cleanse the sin of those who walk in the light.
Consequently, do not deceive yourselves. If you sin and fall and lose the
fellowship which is visible on earth, I fear you will also miss the cleansing of the
precious blood which is invisible in heaven. Let me warn you most earnestly that
if you refuse to deal with your sin with a truly sorrowful and repentant heart, you
will have to stand before the judgment seat of Christ to settle your account.
Hence, a confession of sin from the mouth without a corresponding deed of
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“walking in the light” and a heart truly sorrowful and repentant (Ps.
“walking in the light,” because this condition is often neglected by those who
have wasted the precious blood (in actuality the precious blood can never be
wasted by them)—though it is their only remedy.
This is why I want to stress this point. According to the Bible, for a believer to
receive forgiveness after having sinned, at least the following three conditions
must be present: (1) a broken and contrite
heart (Ps. 51.17); (2) a confession of our sins (1 John 1.9); and (3) a
walking in the light (1 John 1.7). If anyone should assume that he can sin daily
by hiding under the precious blood or that he can sin in the day and confess at
night, let me emphatically declare that there is no such thing. God will not be
mocked. Whenever one walks in
darkness, then he is not cleansed by the precious blood, for the blood cannot
serve as one’s shelter or refuge. If a person wishes to be cleansed by the precious
blood, he must first walk in the light and purpose to sin no more.
True confession must be in line with Paul’s observation when he wrote to the
previously “puffed up” and “glorying” Corinthian
believers (1 Cor. 5.2,6) that “ye were made sorry unto repentance; for ye were
made sorry after a godly sort. . . for godly sorrow worketh repentance unto
salvation, a repentance which bringeth no
fear, (5) longing, (6) zeal, and (7) avenging (see 2 Cor. 7.11). He
who exhibits these seven traits is truly confessing his sin. Otherwise, one’s
“confession” is merely of the lips, not of the heart. The mouth may confess the
sin, but the heart does not hate it. If so, then let me repeat that the precious blood
is not operative in such a person.
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Some keep on sinning because they have acquired a formula for forgiveness of
sin. He knows by heart 1 John 1.9 that “if we confess
our sins, he is faithful and righteous to forgive us our sins, and to cleanse us
from all unrighteousness.” He figures that since the Lord Jesus has shed His
precious blood for him, surely this precious blood is able to cleanse his sins. At
the same time, God, being faithful and righteous, will without fail forgive all his
sins and cleanse him from all unrighteousness if he but confesses his sins.
Having obtained this
“magic charm,” as it were, he can afford to be less careful, for has he not
achieved the way of forgiveness? Surely he can sin a little, if only he confesses
his sin as well. Yet how perilous is the position of such a person!
Once I heard of a brother A who opened a private letter of a brother B. And after
he looked into it, A confessed to B on this wise:
“It is not right, I know, to open and read another person’s letter, but I knew you
would forgive me, so I went ahead to open and read it.”
Now this illustrates how one deliberately sins upon his knowing the way of
forgiveness. Yet this is a falling into the snare of the devil.
Such a person has stumbled upon a hidden rock along the spiritual pathway. It is
a most perilous path to follow. May all who only know the formula of
forgiveness but who do not know as well the condition of “walking in the light”
fear and tremble lest they sin against God. Let me reiterate that the goodness and
grace of God
When people realize they have sinned and have then confessed either to God or
to men, their heart conditions may be quite different from each other. From my
personal observation, I have detected at least four different conditions of the
heart in people. Let us examine each of these in some detail.
45
(1) An uneasiness in one’s own conscience. After a person has sinned, his
conscience becomes uneasy and accuses him. By
confessing his sin, his conscience returns to peace and no longer accuses him. It
is permissible to confess sin due to the accusation of one’s conscience. But if one
confesses only for the sake of the peace of one’s conscience—for the sake of
stopping its accusing voice—
yet without seeing a deeper reason for confession (this deeper reason being to
cultivate a hatefulness of the sin itself), such confession is but a bribing of the
conscience. For conscience is the organ in us which tells us of our actual
condition. It accuses because sin is hateful. It persists in raising its voice against
sin. Now you are tired of its accusation and conceive of a way to stop its
accusation, but you fail to hate the sin that the conscience hates. What you pay
attention to is the accusing conscience and not the cause of its accusation, which
is sin. You do not hate sin, you are merely uneasy over the accusation of the
conscience. You do not deal with the root of the matter—sin; instead, you deal
with the accusation which comes out of the root—that is to say, the conscience.
With the result that you use the method of confession to bribe your conscience.
But God demands much more than that.
(2) A fear of an accusation by the other person’s conscience.
Sometimes you offend a person and regret what you did. Meanwhile you are
afraid this other person will hate you and accuse you of being wrong. In order to
appease his conscience and restore peace, you find an opportunity to confess to
him. You figure that if he forgives you, you will be reconciled to him. He will no
longer hate you and his conscience will not accuse you anymore. And if he will
not forgive you, then this becomes his problem before God (and not yours any
longer) and it will be to his disadvantage (“if ye forgive not men their trespasses,
neither will your Father forgive your trespasses”
[Matthew 6.15]). Such a mental attitude is not much different from the first heart
condition described above because what it deals with is not sin itself, but the
other person’s conscience. There is nothing wrong in our being reconciled with
other people, but a failure to hate 46
the sin itself is not the kind of heart condition which God requires in our dealing
with sin.
If your confession only flows out from the above two heart conditions, the
inevitable result will be an easiness to sin and an easiness to confess. You do not
sense in your heart that each time you sin against men you sin against God. You
do not feel the absolute necessity of the precious blood. You are only conscious
of your relationship with man. As long as you are reconciled with him you
reckon it is satisfactory enough. Yet you do not see the hatefulness of sin, nor do
you realize the seriousness of confession.
Moreover, you will not have a truly broken and contrite heart, and you do not
find it an embarrassing thing to confess your sin. To sum up, you look lightly
upon sin, and consequently you can easily sin again. You may sometimes even
commit the same sin as you are in the process of confessing it. May God give all
of us grace that we may see sin as He sees it.
words of 2 Corinthians 5.10 that “we must all be made manifest before the
judgment-seat of Christ; that each one may receive the things done in the body,
according to what he hath done, whether it be good or bad.” He knows of the
awaiting judgment before the judgment-seat of Christ. Not only his works will
be judged, his life will be judged also. Whatever has not been judged by
conscience under the illumination of the Holy Spirit and has not been cleansed
by the precious blood will be judged by the Lord in the days to come.
Hence he harbors fear in his heart. Since today’s sins will be judged in the future
anyway, it is most profitable to clear them up now than to be judged for them
later.
Now it is not wrong for you to confess with this kind of heart condition; as a
matter of fact, this is better than the above two conditions, since with respect to
just the first two, you are only related to men, but with respect to this third heart
condition you are
47
at least related to God. You confess your sins out of a fear of God.
Obviously, your confession has two sides: on the one hand, you confess to God;
on the other hand, you also confess to men (if you have sinned against them).
And upon confessing, you maintain a conscience without offense both towards
God and towards men. This is commendable, but it is still not the highest kind of
heart condition in confession.
(4) A seeing the uncleanness of sin. This is the kind of heart condition God truly
wants. And why? Because God has put His own life in us, and with this life, we
have a most holy nature (as holy a nature as God has). Sin is most unclean in the
sight of God, and it is absolutely incompatible to His holy nature. God gives His
holy life to us that we may hate sin as He hates it. If we allow this holy life to
grow in us, we will recognize the uncleanliness of sin. We will cry out as did
Madame Guyon, when she declared: “I would rather go to hell than to want to
sin.” The life of God in us is to manifest Christ.
The more manifested is the nature of Christ, the more hateful to us will sin
appear, and the farther apart from sin we shall become (see
Heb. 7.26). Let us look at sin as we do leprosy: the farther away we are from it
the more comfortable we become! All who have such an understanding of sin as
this will not sin easily. If confession is done with such a heart condition as this
fourth kind, that person will live a godly and holy life before God.
How can we develop a right knowledge of sin? This requires the enlightenment
of the Holy Spirit and our obedience to the light. We must reject all sins which
have been exposed by light. The Holy Spirit who moves in our spirit will reveal
to us the character of all sins. He will also cause our renewed mind to know how
most unclean sin is as well as cause our conscience to rise up and condemn sin
as sin. Meanwhile, our new life—the life of Christ—naturally 48
very nature (see 2 Peter 1.4). Let me simply point out that the Holy Spirit reveals
the reality of sin by the light of life∗ and according to the nature of God’s life in
us we obey the light and hate the sin which is revealed by the light.
Hence the more we obey the light, the brighter will the light shine within us, the
dirtier will the sin be manifested, and the stronger will be the animosity of our
hearts toward sin. It is similar to the way minute particles of dust which float in
the air and which are not usually visible become visible under the bright
sunlight. Hence one who abides in God’s strong light will condemn as sin those
things which others might not ever consider to be sin. Madame Guyon, for
example, repented of her former deeds of giving alms and asked for the
cleansing of the precious blood when, under the light of God, she finally
perceived that her former good deeds had been done out of her own good and
not out of the life of God. She therefore realized that they needed cleansing by
the blood. Like Madame Guyon, a person will become increasingly more
sensitive to sin, and one’s practical holiness will also be greatly increased.
We may say that just as the nature of one who belongs to Adam (that is, the
nature of an unregenerated person) inclines toward sin, so the nature of God in
one who belongs to Christ abhors and is repelled by sin. Aversion toward sin is
the natural expression of God’s nature in men. Such kind of heart condition is of
God and well-pleasing to God.
By our analyzing these four kinds of heart condition, I believe we can now easily
conclude that the first three are centered upon self
∗Let us take note of the words found in John 1.4 ("the life was the light of
men"). The life of Christ in men is the light of men. It is not something which is
outwardly visible, and therefore all who look for outside light are exposed to the
danger of deception.— Author
49
and are directly related to self-interest, whereas only the last one is centered
upon God and is of God. And those with this fourth kind of heart truly stand on
God’s side.
Recall how David confessed in Psalm 51.4, “Against thee, thee only, have I
sinned.” He did not say here that he had sinned against Uriah or against
Bathsheba (though obviously David had sinned against them as well). In contrast
to David’s heart, we find that Judas the betrayer of the Lord Jesus confessed his
sin to men and returned the money; but though Judas cleared up the matter with
men, he nevertheless remained a son of perdition. By my saying these things I do
not wish to be misunderstood as meaning that we should not confess to one
another, because confessing to one another is something right and Biblical for us
to do (see James 5.16). I only stress that it is more important to deal with God
than with men. We should never reverse the order. We must not put aside God
and the precious blood. It is essential to confess our sins before God, and it is 50
also essential that we not neglect clearing up matters with men. May God have
mercy upon us.
of his feet. He was five years old when the tidings came of Saul and Jonathan out
of Jezreel; and his nurse took him up, and fled: and it came to pass, as she made
haste to flee, that he fell, and became lame. And his name was Mephibosheth. (2
Sam. 4.4)
And David said, Is there yet any that is left of the house of Saul, that I may show
him kindness for Jonathan’s sake? And there was of the house of Saul a servant
whose name was Ziba, and they called him unto David; and the king said unto
him, Art thou Ziba? And he said, Thy servant is he. And the king said, Is there
not yet any of the house of Saul, that I may show the kindness of God unto him?
And Ziba said unto the king, Jonathan hath yet a son, who is lame of his feet.
And the king said unto him, Where is he? And Ziba said unto the king, Behold,
he is in the house of Machir the son of Ammiel, in Lodebar. Then king David
sent, and fetched him out of the house of Machir the son of Ammiel, from
Lodebar. And Mephibosheth, the son of Jonathan, the son of Saul, came unto
David, and fell on his face, and did obeisance. And David said, Mephibosheth.
And he answered, Behold, thy servant! And David said unto him, Fear not; for I
will surely show thee kindness for Jonathan thy father’s sake, and will restore
thee all the land of Saul thy father; and thou shalt eat bread at my table
continually. And he did obeisance, and said, What is thy servant, that thou
shouldest look upon such a dead dog as I am? Then the king called to Ziba,
Saul’s servant, and said unto him, All that pertained to Saul and to all his house
have I given unto thy master’s son. And thou shalt till the land for him, thou, and
thy sons, and thy servants; and thou shalt bring in the fruits, that thy master’s
son may have bread to eat: but Mephibosheth thy master’s son shall eat bread
alway at my table.
Now Ziba had fifteen sons and twenty servants. Then said Ziba unto the king,
According to all that my lord the king commandeth his servant, so shall thy
servant do. As for Mephibosheth, said the king, he shall eat at my table, as one
of the king’s sons. And Mephibosheth had a young son, whose name was Mica.
And all that dwelt in the house of Ziba were servants unto Mephibosheth.
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And when David was a little past the top of the ascent, behold, Ziba the servant
of Mephibosheth met him, with a couple of asses saddled, and upon them two
hundred loaves of bread, and a hundred of summer fruits, and a bottle of wine.
And the king said unto Ziba, What meanest thou by these? And Ziba said, The
asses are for the king’s household to ride on; and the bread and summer fruit for
the young men to eat; and the wine, that such as are faint in the wilderness may
drink. And the king said, And where is thy master’s son? And Ziba said unto the
king, Behold, he abideth at Jerusalem; for he said, Today will the house of Israel
restore me the kingdom of my father. Then said the king to Ziba, Behold, thine is
all that pertaineth unto Mephibosheth. And Ziba said, I do obeisance; let me find
favor in thy sight, my lord, O king. (2 Sam. 16.1-4)
And Mephibosheth the son of Saul came down to meet the king; and he had
neither dressed his feet, nor trimmed his beard, nor washed his clothes, from the
day the king departed until the day he came home in peace. And it came to pass,
when he was come to Jerusalem to meet the king, that the king said unto him,
Wherefore wentest not thou with me, Mephibosheth? And he answered, My lord,
O king, my servant deceived me: for thy servant said, I will saddle me an ass,
that I may ride thereon, and go with the king; because thy servant is lame. And
he hath slandered thy servant unto my lord the king; but my lord the king is as an
angel of God: do therefore what is good in thine eyes.
For all my father’s house were but dead men before my lord the king; yet didst
thou set thy servant among them that did eat at thine own table. What right
therefore have I yet that I should cry any more unto the king? And the king said
unto him, Why speakest thou any more of thy matters? I say, Thou and Ziba
divide the land. And Mephibosheth said unto the king, Yea, let him take all,
forasmuch as my lord the king is come in peace unto his own house. (2 Sam.
19.24-30)
But the king spared Mephibosheth, the son of Jonathan the son of Saul, because
of Jehovah’s oath that was between them, between David and Jonathan the son
of Saul. (2 Sam. 21.7)
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Let us observe a marvelous scene in the Old Testament: a lame child sat at the
king’s table. As a matter of fact, the New Testament is full of marvelous things
too—such as a harlot being saved, a robber being saved, a publican being saved,
and a Pharisee being saved. Here, however, we see that a lame child was saved.
Whenever we who have read the Scriptures think of friendship, we will most
likely mention David and Jonathan. Even in world literature, the story of David
and Jonathan is used as an illustration of friendly love. Yet the emphasis which I
would like us to focus on in this story of the lame child in 2 Samuel is on how
David treated Mephibosheth the son of Jonathan with kindness and not on how
Mephibosheth expressed his gratitude to David.
“Now Jonathan, Saul’s son, had a son that was lame of his feet.
He was five years old when the tidings came of Saul and Jonathan out of Jezreel;
and his nurse took him up, and fled: and it came to pass, as she made haste to
flee, that he fell, and became lame. And his name was Mephibosheth.” (4.4)
54
Because he hates God, he surmises that God also hates him. He knows he has
sinned, therefore he concludes that God hates him.
Mephibosheth may have reflected that David must hate him because his
grandfather Saul had been David’s arch enemy. David could not possibly love
him since he himself had no affection for David. In like manner do we think
about God. Would God ever love us since we have no affection for Him? Would
God ever love us since we hate Him? Permit me to say that God’s attitude is
absolutely opposite to yours. Mephibosheth had not the slightest idea of
receiving grace, yet he received abundant grace. And so will God treat us with
grace too.
“And David said, Is there yet any that is left of the house of Saul, that I may
show him kindness for Jonathan’s sake?” (v.5)
Today God is continually asking if there is any left of Adam towards whom He
can show kindness. David expressed kindness to Mephibosheth for the sake of
Jonathan. And God shows kindness to sinners for the sake of His Son Christ
Jesus. How men have erred in thinking that God hates them. They imagine they
have to do much good in order to turn God’s face towards them, to appease His
anger, and for Him to be pleased with them. But Mephibosheth had no position
whatsoever before David. Nor did David know him, for he only knew Jonathan,
Mephibosheth’s father. Yet for Jonathan’s sake, he would show kindness to his
son.
Now it was not due to any good which Mephibosheth did to earn David’s favor.
Mephibosheth received grace not because of himself but because of a third
person. So is it with a sinner before God. Some may fancy they have to do
something good first before they can court God’s pleasure; but the Bible tells us
God loves us without any cause. We have no position before Him and we should
not receive His care; nevertheless we too have a Jonathan, even Jesus Christ, and
for His sake God extends kindness to us. We are saved because
55
before God there is the Lord Jesus Christ. With Him we can come before the
presence of God.
In former days at the university, a student had been required to take two years of
preparatory studies before he could take the main courses; and at some medical
colleges three years of preparatory courses had been required. Let me tell you,
however, that no one needs to take any preparatory courses for his salvation.
How many conceive the idea that they have to prepare a little to restore God’s
heart. Not so! We do not need to do anything to court His pleasure.
Nowhere in the Scriptures is it said that God wants to be reconciled to us; it says
instead that we are to be reconciled to God! God loved us, so He gave His Son to
us. He did not give His Son to us in order that He might love us. Some people
speculate that fortunately for us the Lord Jesus has died so that God could love
us. Not at all, God first loved us, and therefore He gave His Son to us.
“And the king said, Is there not yet any of the house of Saul, that I may show the
kindness of God unto him? And Ziba said unto the king, Jonathan hath yet a son,
who is lame of his feet. And the king said unto him, Where is he? And Ziba said
unto the king, Behold, he is in the house of Machir the son of Ammiel, in
Lodebar” (vv.3,4).
“Lodebar” in Hebrew means “no pasture.” The world today is like Lodebar.
Lodebar could never make people full nor quench their thirst. It could not satisfy
men’s hearts. Let us recognize the fact that we human beings were created for
God, and not for ourselves. Those who have not returned to God will never be
satisfied.
You may have dreamed of a beautiful and restful future. But as time goes on,
what the world seems to promise cannot be cashed in.
It will disappoint you time and again until you finally realize what you have is
but a dream, a mirage, a land of no pasture. Do understand that a life without
God is an unsatisfied life. A life outside of God is never fulfilling. Mephibosheth
away from David 56
lived in a land without pasture; even so, a sinner away from God also lives in a
land of no pasture.
Lodebar” (v.5). Romans 3.11 declares that “there is none that seeketh
after God”; and Luke 19.10 records the fact that “the Son of man came to seek
and to save that which was lost.” Some people might conclude that at least we
“no good people” would surely seek after God, that surely the fallen would
search for Him. Yet the fact of the matter is that if God were to wait for us to
find him, we would never be saved because we would not and do not seek after
Him.
Mephibosheth did not have the courage to seek after David, since his grandfather
had been David’s enemy; nor had he the strength to make the search because he
was lame in his two feet. It was not Mephibosheth who sought after David, it
was David who sent and fetched Mephibosheth. Just so with us as unbelievers; it
is not that we seek after God, but that God sent His Son to seek us out and to
bring us back to himself.
The Bible makes clear that it is God who wants you, it is God who calls you, it is
God who sends people to tell you He wants you. “Say not in thy heart, Who shall
ascend into heaven? (that is, to bring Christ down): or, Who shall descend into
the abyss? (that is, to bring Christ up from the dead)” (Rom. 10.6,7). Here we are
told that no one can go up to heaven to ask the Lord to come and die for him, nor
is there anyone who can go down to hell to bring Christ up from the dead. This is
immediately followed by the statement: “The word is nigh thee, in thy mouth,
and in thy heart:…because if thou shalt confess with thy mouth Jesus as Lord,
and shalt believe in thy heart that God raised him from the dead, thou shalt be
saved” (10.8,9).
Like Mephibosheth, no one needs to do or spend anything, because the king
himself had sent and fetched for Mephibosheth. And so too
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with the Lord and sinners. If anyone is still unsaved today, it is not because God
does not save him, but because he resists His grace.
What did David say to Mephibosheth after sending for him? “And
Mephibosheth, the son of Jonathan, the son of Saul, came unto David, and fell
on his face, and did obeisance. And David said, Mephibosheth. And he
answered, Behold, thy servant!” (v.6) What a
Jonathan’s son, he did not say to him, “Who are you?” Neither did he say to him,
“Mephibosheth, the son of Jonathan, the son of Saul”; nor did he say,
“Mephibosheth, so you are here.” He merely said,
“Mephibosheth.” Just imagine, if you can, how David must have felt in his heart.
With what kind of tone did he utter that name? For behind this word was a
stirred-up heart which represents the heart of God towards you and me. To say
“Mephibosheth” expresses the fact that God does not hate you and me, but rather
that He wants us and loves us. Each time our name is called without any
additional word, it carries a deep meaning within it which heaven alone can
totally appreciate.
Magdalene mistook the Lord to be a gardener. The Lord did not answer with, “I
am not a gardener”; or with, “I have not taken His body away”; or with,
“Woman, how could you possibly carry the body?” He merely said, “Mary!” As
she heard this most familiar sound, she instantly responded with “Rabboni!” And
here we see David beholding the grandson of his archenemy, and he simply said,
“Mephibosheth.” This reflects the fact that in David’s heart there was no trace of
animosity but only fullness of compassion.
Unfortunately, Mephibosheth did not know David’s heart. When he came into
the presence of the king, his heart must have been beating hard because he was
to meet the ruler of Judah who might have him killed. And after he saw David
and heard him call
will towards him but only tender affection. Nevertheless, his fear was so deep
that he responded with, “Behold, thy servant.” Perhaps he figured that if he, a
grandson of the former king, would humble himself to be a slave, he might
please David’s heart and be spared from being killed. Yet let us all be assured of
the fact that no one can possibly earn God’s pleasure by his works as a servant.
Mephibosheth, “Fear not; for I will surely show thee kindness for Jonathan thy
father’s sake, and will restore thee all the land of Saul thy father; and thou shalt
eat bread at my table continually” (v.7). By
this we see that all is well. I wonder who among us truly knows that God loves
him? Some may have worked for the Lord many years but still do not know that
He loves them. If we truly know that God loves us, our lives will undergo a
tremendous change.
Wilbur Chapman happened to be in a certain city and stayed in a hotel room next
door to this very man. Having known him before, Mr. Chapman asked if the
story about his conversion were true.
Upon which he replied: “I indeed repented and believed in the Lord Jesus after
hearing Moody’s preaching. However, I need to add that when I was eighteen, I
had already come to know the Lord God. I myself had been a prodigal son in my
earlier youth. Unaccustomed to being shut in the house, I left home for a number
of years when I was only twelve years old. But in my adolescence, I became
seriously ill.
“My father treated me well, yet I regretted I had come home. This was because
my father was old, his hair was hoary, and he had
contracted a certain disease. Every day he forced himself despite his ill-health to
go out to work in order to exchange his labor for some bread to feed us. But the
income was so little that it was not enough to feed three people. I was truly sorry
that I had come home. I could not bear anymore to eat the bread which was
being earned at the expense of my father’s blood.
He said to me, ‘You are not well yet; why must you leave? As long as this home
has a piece of bread, there is always your share: as long as there is a piece of tile
on the roof, there is your share underneath it. Why must you go?’ But I was
determined to leave home. So he said to me, ‘My child, let me tell you, never in
my life have I thought of getting rich, but today because of you I wish that I were
rich, that I might have more money to keep you from wandering away from
home. We may get some help yet, so why must you go?’ However, I could not
but go because I could not bear anymore to eat the bread which was earned at the
cost of my father’s blood. Finally, my father said, ‘Child, may God bless you! I
may not see you today, but I hope to see you in heaven!’
“In sending me away, he walked with me for half a mile without saying
anything, and neither did I utter any word. After a mile, he was too tired to walk
farther. So at that point he said goodbye to me.
On that day, I realized how hard it was to leave home! After having taken two
steps, he turned and called me. With tears in his eyes, he took out of his pocket a
half dollar and gave it to me. He said, ‘This is for you.’ I knew what this half
dollar meant. I knew that all my father had in the world was bound up in this half
dollar. For the first time I realized how my father loved me! I stood there
watching my father going home. Although the day was raining and the air was
rather chilly, I felt great warmth in my heart. I sang all the way afterwards, My
father loves me!
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determined first of all to lessen the burden on my father: the very first dollar I
was to earn would be sent to him because he loved me.
Thereafter I was a changed person. This did not mean that my father had not
loved me before; it simply meant that at the time of my utmost destitution I
realized how he loved me. So one day I heard Mr. Moody preach, saying: ‘Many
people talk about the father’s prodigal son in Luke 15, but I will talk today about
the prodigal’s father.’ And I saw that that father was the same as my own father,
and therefore I believed and received Jesus as my Savior.”
Let me observe that I have known this God for quite a number of years now. I
know indeed what His heart is like. Do not conceive the thought of doing
anything to restore His heart’s pleasure towards you. Let me unequivocally
declare that He loves you and wills that you be saved. He has no need for you to
regain His heart. Many will say God has not told them He loves them; but please
look at the cross, and then you will know that He has loved you. The death
penalty of the cross is yours, but for the sake of love, God has caused the Lord
Jesus to die in your place.
What is love? Love is not mere word. As a matter of fact, the deepest love is
unspeakable. Recall how the prodigal son had prepared to say to his father,
“Father, I have sinned against heaven, and in thy sight: I am no more worthy to
be called thy son: make me as one of thy hired servants” (Luke 15.18,19). But
while he was yet
afar off, his father saw him and was deeply moved with compassion, and ran,
and fell on his neck, and kissed him. “Ran” is the word used in the story, and it
reflects how the father’s heart greatly desired to shorten the distance of sin.
When his father kissed him, the prodigal came to know his father’s heart. Yet his
father had not said, “I love you;” instead, his kiss told the prodigal of the father’s
heart. He was not able to finish his preconceived thought of saying, “Make me as
one of thy servants,” for his father’s heart had told him by this kiss that his father
indeed loved him.
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Please do not misunderstand God’s heart. Come to the foot of the cross. Jesus
has died for you; and by this is revealed to you God’s heart towards you. In
seeing the blood of the Lord Jesus, you know what love God has for you.
“Then the king called to Ziba, Saul’s servant, and said unto him, All that
pertained to Saul and to all his house have I given unto my master’s son. And
thou shalt till the land for him, thou, and thy sons, and thy servants; and thou
shalt bring in the fruits, that thy master’s son may have bread to eat: but
Mephibosheth thy master’s son shall eat bread alway at my table. . . . As for
Mephibosheth, said the king, he shall eat at my table, as one of the king’s sons”
(vv.9-11). How
marvelous that there is not one condition nor any command but all is promise.
Here nothing is said as to what one must do and how much.
It is all being given; and this is grace. If we understand God’s love, we cannot
but believe in Him.
Man’s Repentance
Probably some may ask that if a sinner will be saved merely by believing in
God, is there any need for repentance? Please do not reverse the order found in
the Bible. Many have the idea that they must possess some necessary
righteousness and goodness in order to gain God’s favor. But that is law, not
grace. How can you tell a shivering person to warm up before he comes to the
fire? You will instead say to him to come to the fire and get warmed up. The
Biblical order for us is not to stop sinning and then to believe, but to believe and
then to refrain from sinning. Mephibosheth was formerly full of fear, but after he
was graciously treated by David, he realized who he truly was. He said to the
king, “What is thy servant, that thou shouldest look upon such a dead dog as I
am?” (v.8)
I am reminded here of that statement in Romans which says, “not knowing that
the goodness of God leadeth thee to repentance” (Rom.
2.4). Upon knowing the goodness and love of God, one will just 62
naturally repent. When Mephibosheth came to the king, he hoped he could still
return to the land of no pasture. But after he had tasted grace, he prostrated
himself on the ground and repented. It was Mephibosheth who had erred,
therefore he needed to repent. David had not erred, so he had no need to repent.
God does not need to repent, but we do. Before Mephibosheth knew David loved
him, David loved him; after he knew David loved him, David still loved him. So
is God towards us. However, after we know the love of God, our mind and
concept will undergo a change. Come to God just as you are because He has
already loved you.
Perhaps some may raise this question: Salvation is indeed based on grace and
not on works, for God treats me just as David treated Mephibosheth; yet after
being saved, should I not do good? Why is it that I feel sometimes up and
sometimes down, sometimes good and sometimes bad? Before answering this
question, please read this verse: “So Mephibosheth dwelt in Jerusalem; for he
did eat continually at the king’s table. And he was lame in both his feet”
(v.13). The beginning of our salvation is grace, but so is the keeping of our
salvation to be grace also. The error many commit is in thinking that grace
begins our salvation but works maintain it thereafter. There is no such thing. We
should recognize that whatever is the condition before salvation is the condition
for preservation after salvation. I am saved through Jesus, and I am being kept to
the end also by Jesus. Though Mephibosheth dined often with the king at his
table, both his feet were still lame. If a person is only lame in one foot, he can
still leap about, but if lame in both feet he cannot move at all. Let us see that the
sitting at the king’s table is real, but so is the lameness of both feet real too. The
king will not have the lame man at his table merely for one day and then drive
him away if he should still be lame after a few days.
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Although your feet are lame, they are under the table. You can therefore eat
whatever is on the table. So why as it were put your feet on the table? Just
concentrate on the table, for what God has provided there is good, rich, sweet,
and nourishing. Eat to your heart’s satisfaction. Do not look at yourself, but look
at the riches which God has given you.
Every time we look at ourselves, we lose our peace. Human eyes are made to
look outside, not to look inside. Introspection is not our portion. Our eyes should
be fixed upon the Lord, and thus shall we be transformed from glory to glory
according to His image. If we turn to look at ourselves, we will be like
Mephibosheth seeing the lame feet. After we are saved, we receive a new life,
and the Holy Spirit dwells in us. We are a new creation. Nevertheless, the self
which comes from Adam never changes. That is why, when the saintly
Augustine was dying, he said this: “All the seeds of sin in the entire world are
within me.” As long as we are not freed from this body, our feet are yet lame.
Let us not turn back to look at ourselves, but keep looking at the abundant grace
which God has set on the table before us; and then shall our hearts be satisfied.
Several years have now passed. In the meantime David’s son Absalom had
rebelled, and David had been forced to flee Jerusalem.
When David was a little past the top of an ascent, Ziba, the servant of
Mephibosheth, came forth with a couple of asses saddled, and upon them sat two
hundred loaves of bread, a hundred clusters of raisins, a hundred of summer
fruits, and a bottle of wine. “And the king said unto Ziba, What meanest thou by
these? And Ziba said, The asses are for the king’s household to ride on; and the
bread and summer fruit for the young men to eat; and the wine, that such as are
faint in the wilderness may drink. And the king said, And where is thy master’s
son? And Ziba said unto the king, Behold, he abideth at Jerusalem; 64
for he said, Today will the house of Israel restore me the kingdom of my father.
Then said the king to Ziba, Behold, thine is all that
pertaineth unto Mephibosheth” (16.2-4a). Was all this true? By reading chapter
19 we shall know the truth of the matter.
After the rebellion of Absalom had been quelled, David returned to Jerusalem;
and Mephibosheth, the grandson of Saul, came down to meet the king. From the
day the king had departed until the day he had come home in peace,
Mephibosheth had restrained himself from doing three things: he had “neither
dressed his feet, nor trimmed his
beard, nor washed his clothes” (v.24). Can we perceive what this
means? This which we have just read is nothing less than the unveiling of the
heart of a widow in Mephibosheth! For in essence he is saying that the David
who treats me well is no longer here. And although no one comes to harm me, I
have already lost interest in the world. What is the sense of beautifying myself?
The king is not here; who, then, has the heart for any embellishment? The same
sentiments would be echoed in the hearts of some rare believers today. They
would say: We know how unworthy we are to be saved. This world has rejected
our Savior and has crucified Him, and therefore we now live here with a
widow’s heart. The reason we can deny the world is not because of the
unlovingness of the world but because our Lover is no longer here. Since all He
himself got from the world was a tomb, how can we, His beloved ones, love the
world? We feel the world is against us.
The heart of Mephibosheth was a widow’s heart. The king was not there, so he
lost interest in all things. A believer deep in the Lord once said, “Where Jesus is,
there is heaven. If Jesus is in hell, hell is heaven; if Jesus is not in heaven,
heaven is no longer heaven.” When I first heard this, I thought, how could this
be! But now, I can readily say this is indeed true. For previously we only thought
of the problem of sin, but now we ponder the Lord Jesus. Formerly we thought
of how to escape the penalty of hell, yet now we think of the
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Lord himself. Hence heaven is lovely because the Lord is there; but if the Lord
were in hell, hell would become lovely too!
When Mephibosheth came down to meet the king, he was asked by David why
he did not go with the king. His answer was:
My lord, O king, my servant deceived me: for thy servant said, I will saddle me
an ass, that I may ride thereon, and go with the king; because thy servant is
lame. And he hath slandered thy servant unto my lord the king; but my lord the
king is as an angel of God: do therefore what is good in thine eyes. For all my
father’s house were but dead men before my lord the king; yet didst thou set thy
servant among them that did eat at thine own table. What right therefore have I
yet that I should cry any more unto the king? (vv.26-28)
anything about bread and wine; he merely related the fact of being deceived. His
heart was satisfied with the safe return of the king; what did it matter if he had
earlier been abused?
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We realize that when a person tries to disclose his heart, it actually does not
depend on the words. For a love slave of the Lord, his heart is more than his
words can express. The deeper the love, the more mysterious it becomes. If you
truly love the Lord, you may preserve your purity in the midst of universal
opposition. On that day when we shall see the Lord face to face, we will not tell
Him how much we have forsaken for His sake because we will not talk about
ourselves.
Rather, we will say how regretful we are for not having loved Him more and
served Him more faithfully while on earth. At that time, we shall truly feel that
offering ten thousand worlds to Him would still be too small a gift for Him.
Apart from mentioning his having been deceived by his servant Ziba,
Mephibosheth said nothing else. For his heart was occupied with one thing only,
which was that his king David had come back.
Nothing else mattered anymore. He is satisfied with simply sitting at David’s
table. He does not need to explain nor ask for revenge. As long as the king was
back, Mephibosheth was satisfied.
“And the king said unto him, Why speakest thou any more of thy matters? I say,
Thou and Ziba divide the land. And Mephibosheth said unto the king, Yea, let
him take all, forasmuch as my lord the king is come in peace unto his own
house” (vv.29,30). Each time I read this word of Mephibosheth, I say, Amen!
What does it matter about my loss if the king has come back in peace? As long
as my Lord is gaining, my loss is nothing to me. The whole question for
Mephibosheth was whether he was peaceful, not whether that which David had
given him was still there!
“Though he slay me, yet will I trust in him” (Job 13.15 AV). On
Come heaven! Come hell!” Here was a hero of faith. His attitude was, “O Lord,
You will never mistreat me. Yet even if it is Your
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David’s own settlement of the matter was doubtless wrong, but our Lord will
never wrong us. Nonetheless, in being wrongly treated, Mephibosheth’s true
heart was manifested: “Yea, let him take all, forasmuch as my lord the king is
come in peace unto his own house.”
Here we see that God will save us to the point where we seek only His gain and
not our own. God’s gain or loss is real gain or loss; mine is nothing at all.
On one occasion I knew I should obey God, yet I just could not obey. Finally I
told Him, “Please do not yield, wait until I yield.” We ought to be the one who
yields, not God. He who has once captured my heart has it forever. My heart is
captured, and therefore my all is His. What is our expectation and pursuit before
God? Is it something for ourselves? or all for Him? May we hereafter reckon our
all to be His. May we seek only His gain as our satisfaction.
“But the king spared Mephibosheth, the son of Jonathan the son of Saul, because
of Jehovah’s oath that was between them, between David and Jonathan, the son
of Saul.” This verse speaks of the end of this lame child. We need to recall that
there was a famine in the days of David for three years. This famine was due to
Saul and his bloody house on the occasion when he had put to death the
Gibeonites. As atonement for this sin, the Gibeonites had asked that seven sons
of Saul be delivered up to them to be hanged. The first one to be delivered would
naturally have been Mephibosheth. But David spared him and delivered seven
other sons of Saul. Therefore Mephibosheth was never killed. This can serve to
illustrate how a saved person shall never perish. David never purposely treated
Mephibosheth wrongly, so will God ever treat us wrongly? If David 68
protected Mephibosheth from the beginning to the end, will not God keep us to
the end?
“I give unto them eternal life; and they shall never perish, and no one shall
snatch them out of my hand. My Father, who hath given them unto me, is greater
than all; and no one is able to snatch them
out of the Father’s hand” (John 10.28,29). These are two familiar verses. They
tell us so plainly that the reason none can snatch us away is because of “my hand
... the Father’s hand.” The hand of the Lord Jesus and the hand of the heavenly
Father hold us fast; who, then, can possibly snatch us from Their hands? There is
absolutely none. Some may think it is true that none can snatch us but that we
may escape ourselves. Whoever thinks that way betrays his
ignorance of the gospel. Will not a father who holds the hand of his child tighten
his grip when he sees a danger or when he notices the child himself is struggling
to get away?
she recited the words of John 10.28,29 to him. He insinuated that although these
words were true, she should not be too careless because the bigger the hand the
greater the hole through which she might slip away. Her reply was, “I will never
slip away because I am God’s little finger.” She really knew the Bible, for what
she said is true, since the Lord is the head and we are the members of His body.
We are joined to Him in Life. If a Christian can perish, then the body of Christ
will forever be short and never full. May all Christians shout hallelujah to the
Lord! Once saved, forever saved; therefore, give all to God.
face of the ground, and daughters were born unto them, that the sons of God saw
the daughters of men that they were fair; and they took them wives of all that
they
chose. And Jehovah said, My Spirit shall not strive with man for ever, for that he
also is flesh: yet shall his days be a hundred and twenty years. The Nephilim
were in the earth in those days, and also after that, when the sons of God came
in unto the daughters of men, and they bare children to them: the same were the
mighty men that were of old, the men of renown.
And Jehovah saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth, and that
every imagination of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually. And it
repented Jehovah that he had made man on the earth, and it grieved him at his
heart. And Jehovah said, I will destroy man whom I have created from the face
of the ground; both man and beast, and creeping things, and birds of the
heavens; for it repenteth me that I have made them. But Noah found favor in the
eyes of Jehovah. These are the generations of Noah. Noah was a righteous man,
and perfect in his generations: Noah walked with God. (Gen. 6.1-9)
God remembered Noah, and all the beasts, and all the cattle that were with him
in the ark. (Gen. 8.1a)
The ark rested in the seventh month, on the seventeenth day of the month, upon
the mountains of Ararat. And the waters decreased continually until the tenth
month: in the tenth month, on the first day of the month, were the tops of the
mountains seen.
(Gen. 8.4,5)
It came to pass in the six hundred and first year, in the first month, the first day
of the month, the waters were dried up from off the earth: and Noah removed the
covering of the ark, and looked, and, behold, the face of the ground was dried.
And in the second month, on the seven and twentieth day of the month, was the
earth dry. And God spake unto Noah, saying, Go forth from the ark, thou, and
thy wife, and thy sons, and thy sons’ wives with thee. Bring forth with thee every
living thing that is with thee of all flesh, both birds, and cattle, and every
creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth; that they may breed abundantly in
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earth, and be fruitful, and multiply upon the earth. And Noah went forth, and his
sons, and his wife, and his sons’ wives with him. (Gen. 8.13-18)
Noah builded an altar unto Jehovah, and took of every clean beast and of every
clean bird, and offered burnt offerings on the altar. And Jehovah smelled the
sweet savor; and Jehovah said in his heart, I will not again curse the ground any
more for man’s sake, for that the imagination of man’s heart is evil from his
youth; neither will I again smite any more everything living, as I
That aforetime were disobedient, when the longsuffering of God waited in the
days of Noah, while the ark was a preparing, wherein few, that is, eight souls,
were saved through water: which also after a true likeness doth now save you,
even baptism, not the putting away of the filth of the flesh, but the interrogation
of a good conscience toward God, through the resurrection of Jesus Christ. (1
Peter 3.20,21)
16.16a)
The story of Noah’s ark is familiar to all. What we would like to do is to learn
what the Bible really shows us in that story. In the matter of our salvation, the
Bible approaches it from several different angles: some of it speaks of our
position before God; some of it, of our acceptance by God; some, of our
communion with God; and some, of our position with the world. All this may
sound
for Adam and for his wife coats of skins, and clothed them” (v.21)—
expresses salvation. But what aspect of salvation does it represent? It pictures for
us how we human beings may be justified before God.
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Abel’s offering was accepted. This is because Cain offered what was of himself,
whereas Abel offered what was of God—even the lamb of atonement. All the
proper sacrifices mentioned in the Scriptures are a reflection of God’s
acceptance of us human beings. The story, for example, of the prodigal son
recorded in Luke 15 speaks of God’s
acceptance of sinners. The first chapter of Ephesians discloses how God accepts
us in the beloved Son (1.6 AV). Likewise, too, the fourth chapter of Genesis with
its narrative of Cain and Abel suggests this aspect of salvation, which is, God’s
acceptance of man.
Thus Genesis 3 expresses that facet of God’s salvation which the Bible
elsewhere calls justification; Genesis 4 speaks of God’s
The ark in Genesis 6 also expresses salvation, only it deals with an aspect
different from those of Genesis 3, 4 and 5. For it reflects the
Sin has its various aspects. That sin depicted for us in chapter 3 of
Genesis is a sin against God—both a sin before Him and a sin that is rebellious
against Him. Wherefore, in the very same chapter, we are told how such sin
before God needs to be covered by the coats of skins provided by God, so that
man can be justified before Him. The
sin told of in chapter 4 is likewise a sin against God, but it is also one against
man’s neighbor. Cain committed the sin of murdering his brother. He violated
the two greatest commandments of God: “Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with
all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy mind”; and, “thou shalt love
thy neighbor as thyself.” Such sin requires sacrifice to be offered by man to God
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as for him to be accepted. Even sin against man needs acceptance before God,
otherwise that sin shall remain. The sin of Genesis
chapter 5 is again different from the aforementioned sin since it tells of the sin of
forgetting God. For by this time people had largely disregarded God and walked
according to their own will. They ate their own meals and passed their days as
they desired. Only one person at that time—Enoch—walked with God. The
whole world was full of death because people did not want God. However, God
redeemed Enoch completely from this deadly world so that he should not see
death. Yet while the sin of chapter 5 was the sin of the
multitudes, the sin delineated in chapter 6 was a corporate sin. It was a sin which
was committed against God by the world of mankind as a
“kosmos”—as one grand organized entity. Hence the world was its
scope, and thus Genesis 6 tells of how the entire world system had sinned
against God.
At the inception of chapter 6 we discover that the fallen angels sinned together
with fallen men. The “sons of God” spoken of here were the fallen angels and
the “daughters of men” spoken of were the fallen men. Both had been created by
God and both had spirit. But when they joined themselves together to sin, the
world was bound to come to an end. Those who sinned in the first world were
angels in the heavenlies; those who sinned in the second world were men on the
earth. And when they sinned together, the end unquestionably was soon coming
to pass. Sinful angels and sinful men would shortly be judged by God. Now man
had become especially “flesh”—
Therefore, God would not strive with man forever. Formerly the Spirit of God
strove with man, but still man refused to hear the voice of God. Consequently,
He finally gave man up. In other words, man had become so corrupted that the
Spirit of God could not strive with him anymore, which meant that even the
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change him. As a result, the Holy Spirit drew back and let the world go through
judgment.
Please understand that your own flesh today is not any better than the flesh was
in Noah’s time. Unless we allow the flesh with its lusts and passions to be
crucified, then the Holy Spirit has no way to work in us either. As in Noah’s day,
the Holy Spirit will not attempt to persuade man to reform, for he is beyond
repair; He today can only try to convince man to be born again. The flesh can do
nothing except to sin; the regenerated of God alone can do any good.
If the world becomes full of sin, something must be done first before the Holy
Spirit can commence to work. That first thing is for God to send the Lord Jesus
to this world. Once man becomes a sinner, the Lord Jesus and not the Spirit must
come first. Should the Holy Spirit come first, He can do nothing. Only after the
Lord Jesus has the sinner judged will the Holy Spirit be able to work. Hence, the
first of the many parables found in Luke chapter 15 is that of the
shepherd—the Lord Jesus—seeking the lost sheep. The second parable is the
woman—the Holy Spirit—who sweeps the house to find the lost piece of silver.
Without the redemptive work of Christ, the Holy Spirit can do nothing. If the
work of Christ remains unfinished, the work of the Holy Spirit cannot
commence. But since the work of Christ is already done, the Holy Spirit is now
able to
“The end of all flesh is come before me; for the earth is filled with violence
through them; and, behold, I will destroy them with the earth” (Gen. 6.13). God
saw that the earth was filled with violence 74
and sins, that it was corrupted to the core. So, He declared that its end had come.
There was no other way but to bring all before Him to an end. God judged them
all and destroyed all flesh—both of men and of living things—by the universal
flood.
What many Christians fail to realize is the position of the world before God.
Today when the brothers and sisters are exhorted to be separated from the world,
it is almost as though it were as difficult as trying to snatch away a piece of
chocolate from a child’s mouth. It appears so hard because of the fact that
Christians do not discern the position the world has before God. Let us recognize
that salvation has not only its personal aspect but also its corporate aspect, just as
sin too has its corporate dimension as well as its personal dimension.
The people who crucified the Lord Jesus at Calvary were not only the Jews but
the whole world as well. Those at enmity with God at that time were not merely
Jews, they included all and everything that constituted the entire world system.
Let us take, for example, the enmity between two nations: is it something
personal or corporate? We of course know that this cannot be termed a personal
relationship. If some person in one of the two countries was to treat somebody in
the opposite country well, then this would be a personal relationship. But today
it is not a matter of being good or bad on the part of one or several individuals in
one country towards one or several individuals in the other, such as in the case of
a personal animosity emerging as a result of one person’s parents being killed by
one or several people from the enemy country; it is instead a matter of the whole
country standing as an enemy nation. It is a corporate antagonism between
country and country. So that here is not a speaking of one individual but a
speaking of the entire world system—including its organization, customs and
reputations—as the enemy of God. As long as you and I are part of that world
system, we are an enemy of God, from which we need to be delivered. And once
having seen this, you and I will not be found exhorting people to reform or
change, for we know that Saved
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all these are useless. In the eyes of God, the entire world system—the
“kosmos” itself—is corrupted. So that God is at enmity with the world, and the
world is at enmity with Him. All who love the world do not love God, and the
love of God cannot be in their hearts. All who befriend the world just naturally
become enemies of God. And this is precisely the way God perceives it.
Let me ask you, do you want to be delivered from hell, which is the lake of fire?
I believe we all desire to be delivered from such a destiny and to enter New
Jerusalem. Many expect to be saved and to go to heaven. And this aspect of
salvation is called, in the Bible, justification and acceptance by God. Yet there is
another aspect of salvation which Biblically can be termed deliverance from the
world.
Deliverance from the world actually goes hand in hand with deliverance from
the lake of fire.
The Bible tells us God found but one man, Noah. The first man Adam had been
corrupted and had come to his end. Nothing could be done with him. So God
found another man, and this second man was Noah. Noah was accepted by God,
and he served as a type of Christ.
Through him, God set up a way of salvation by which to save people from the
world. God ordered him to build an ark with gopher wood and bring all kinds of
living creatures, birds, cattle, creeping things—
each after its kind—to the ark. He then caused rain to fall upon the earth till the
whole earth was deluged. Who were the saved? Those who were delivered from
the world by staying in the ark. Those who were delivered from the world were
those delivered from the flood.
In like manner, therefore, whoever is delivered from the world is delivered from
the lake of fire. For it is not sinners who are going to hell but the people of the
world who are. Preachers often say sinners go to hell, but actually they should
say that the world goes to hell. As long as you are among those of the world, you
are destined to go to hell.
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Once I met a man on a boat. He asked me: “What kind of person is qualified for
hell?” My reply to him was: “People such as you should go to hell.” I said this to
him because all mankind must go to hell. To be saved means you are saved from
the perishing federation.
Although we are not all criminals we nonetheless are all sinners, for the Bible
says that all men are sinners. You and I may not commit a certain sin or violate
some special law, and therefore we are not criminals; yet all of us are sinners. To
be saved from the world is to be saved from the world which is under God’s
judgment.
At the time of the Deluge, Noah and living creatures—birds, cattle and creeping
things—were saved. Noah as well as the ark typify the Savior. But whereas
Noah is a type of the Son of God, the ark stands as a type of the Son of Man
because it is made of gopher wood, it thus representing the human nature of the
Lord Jesus. Those who were saved in the Deluge were manifested to be those
who were saved from the world. As all the fountains of the great deep were
broken up and the windows of heaven were opened, the whole world, and not
just some individuals, was condemned. Consequently, to be saved is to be saved
from the world federation. All who are in the Ark of God are saved, that is to
say, they are saved out of the world.
Today a saved person cannot be saved and yet remain in the world, even as no
one in Noah’s day could have had one foot in the ark and one foot in the world:
all who entered Noah’s ark were shut into the ark.
Since that day, therefore, it is impossible for a saved person to love the world on
the one hand and to love the Lord on the other.
Although you may do so stealthily, you are not permitted so to do by God. One
who believes in the Lord must wholly reject the world and not love it. Do not
fancy you can change things to make them less worldly, because salvation means
God has fundamentally already Saved
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taken you out of the world. And since you are outside the world, you ought,
accordingly, to live such a life. Now this which has just been said is something
quite different from exhorting people not to love the world. Countrymen of one
nation hate the people of an enemy country not because their faces were slapped
by their adversaries but because hostility exists between the two countries. And
such is now our problem.
As we have said, we are a people who have been delivered from the world. Yet
how are we delivered? God shows us that since the world is occupied by the
enemy and it thus opposes Him, He saves us out of it. He as it were “builds” an
ark in the person of His Son and brings people out of the world into His Ark. In
Noah’s day God caused all the living things upon the earth to die except for what
He kept both of men and living things in the ark through the death of the flood,
and then He released them to fill the new world. So that what is illustrated here
is that the old federal head Adam and all who were in Adam were rejected by
God, and only the new federal head Noah and all who were in Noah would
manifest new life with their seeds replenishing the entire earth.
Now those who were in the new earth of Noah’s day typify all who in the future
day shall inherit the new heaven and the new earth because they are in Christ.
The people who were in the ark represent the people of our day who are in
Christ. Accordingly, all who are in Christ are those who shall be in the future
new heaven and new earth.
Those who were outside the ark of Noah represent those people who are in
Adam, and therefore they are the people who will be judged by God in the
future. On the other hand, those who had entered the ark were brought through
the judgment of water and entered and filled the new earth. And this can explain
how Christ is to fill the future new heaven and new earth.
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It also speaks of the ascension of our Lord Jesus. As the ark rested upon the
mountains of Ararat, their tops were seen. It only awaited the moment for the
ground to become dry. Likewise, we are today resting on the mountains of
Ararat, having seen their peaks and waiting for the ground to dry. Because our
Lord has died, been resurrected, and has ascended, we wait until God has
finished His judgment upon the earth.
The Ark and Baptism
What we would like to focus on, however, is not this that we have briefly
touched upon above, but rather to lay stress on the matter of baptism. We have
seen what Noah did and how he and his family passed through death by entering
and remaining in the ark until they
inherited the new earth. In 1 Peter 3 we learn that the ark, in passing through
water, expresses the act of New Testament baptism. The waters of the Deluge
signify the water of baptism: “[who] that aforetime were disobedient, when the
longsuffering of God waited in the days of Noah, while the ark was a preparing,
wherein few, that is, eight souls, were saved through water: which also after a
true likeness doth now save you, even baptism, not the putting away of the filth
of the flesh, but the interrogation of a good conscience toward God, through the
resurrection of Jesus Christ” (vv.20,21).
How are we saved and what saves us? Baptism saves us. Are you surprised at
my saying this? Does baptism indeed save people? May I frankly tell you that
unless we are baptized we cannot be saved. For Peter likewise declared that the
baptism as typified by the flood saves us through the resurrection of Jesus Christ.
Mark 16.16a declares that
How we change Mark 16.16a to read: “He that believeth and is saved shall be
baptized.” The Bible, though, puts baptism before salvation. And thus we
become confused. Our view is that only the saved can be baptized. Yet the word
of God asserts that without Saved
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Please do not misunderstand the meaning of being saved through baptism. For
the Bible tells us of various aspects of salvation, not just one. Justification, for
example, is that aspect which emphasizes man’s position before God; the aspect
of God’s acceptance of man emphasizes the difference between the believing
ones and the sinners; forgiveness, the remission of our past transgressions; and
eternal life, the disparity between us and death. But the aspect of salvation as
represented by baptism emphasizes our relationship with the world. For
salvation speaks not merely of our escaping hell in the future; according to its
strictest interpretation, salvation points to our deliverance from the world today.
Who will know you are saved? Who will know you as being of Christ? You may
readily say you are saved, yet you are not able to open yourself up and expose
your faith to people. We as human beings are unable to see man’s inward faith.
Only God can see faith in man. He knows you are already justified, accepted by
Him, that your sins have been forgiven and you have received eternal life. But
men do not know all this. James asserts that men cannot see faith; they can only
see works. Hence the first work every Christian must do before men is to
undergo baptism.
The first act before God is to “believe,” but the first act before men is to be
“baptized.” To be baptized is to come out of the world and enter into Christ. It is
to come out of the house and enter the ark.
Baptism is a declaring—as Noah did in his day—that the judgment, wrath and
punishment of God have fallen on the world because it resists and rejects Him.
Baptism is also a declaring that we are not willing to be ranked among the
people of the world but will come out of them and enter the Ark that God has
prepared for us. Accordingly, baptism is not a ritual of having water sprinkled
upon us or of our being immersed. It is rather a declaration that there is no
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relationship between the world and us since you and I have been delivered from
the world.
The real meaning of baptism lies in the fact that we who formerly lived in the
world are now dead and shall never rise again because of the judgment which
Jesus Christ has suffered for us. Though physically we are in the water for but
one or two minutes, spiritually speaking, it means we shall never come up out of
the water again.
From the viewpoint of the world, we are hereafter separated forever from it. We
have no part with it. Our parents, wives and children are dearest to us. Yet if they
are dead, they will be put away. They will not be taken out of their graves and
kept in their house with the living. Similarly, in the eyes of the world, Christians
are looked upon as being dead and buried.
The world is composed of two sizeable federations: one is the men of the world,
the other is the saved ones in Christ. To be saved is to come out of the world
federation which opposes God, is sinful and unclean, and to enter into the Christ
federation. And therefore, we must be baptized, because baptism can save. (Of
course, one must first believe in the Lord; otherwise he cannot be saved).
According to
The Bible declares that all who believe have eternal life. This fact of spiritual life
is due to the blood of the Lord Jesus; and this is irrefutable. But to be saved from
the world is due to our entering into the Ark of God. And baptism serves as a
demonstration of the fact that we have indeed come out of the world federation.
Should someone ask you, for example, if you have really believed in the Lord,
you should say, “I truly do believe in the Lord Jesus, and through His blood my
sins are forgiven.” For the Scriptures declare Saved
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that “he that hath the Son hath the life” (1 John 5.12). You are very
clear about this. But suppose you lose your temper and fight with some brothers.
You may ask yourself after this incident whether you still believe and are saved.
Your answer comes forth in the strongest affirmative, you not having the
slightest doubt about it. Nevertheless, these brothers will doubt about your
salvation. How is it? Let me now observe that many people are most certainly
qualified to live in heaven but they are not qualified to live on earth. They are
able to live before God but not competent to live at home. Allow me to say,
therefore, that you should not permit people to baptize you merely on the ground
of your saying you believe. You ought to know what baptism truly expresses
before you are ever baptized. You ought to know you have been delivered from
the world, because baptism is that action which declares to the entire world that
you are no longer joined to it and are no longer standing with it because you
have been emancipated from it. Baptism declares that henceforth you and I stand
on the side of Christ.
I would consequently speak not merely to those who are yet to be baptized but to
all brothers and sisters in Christ: Today many of you have already been baptized.
Yet why were you baptized? Was it because baptism to you is only a church
procedure? Merely a church ritual? Or perhaps a command of the Bible? Or even
that it is an appropriate expression of a Christian? Or a matter of following what
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other Christians have done? In contrast to all these explanations, let us ever keep
in mind that basically baptism is a turning our backs towards the world and a
turning of our faces towards Christ. It is a leaving of the world federation and a
joining with the Christ federation. And between these two—between the world
and Christ—
there is no middle ground. For let us not forget that there was a door in Noah’s
ark. And that spiritually speaking, within the door is Christ but without the door
is the world. If you would see this at your baptism, you would have no need for
people to tell you how you must change a little here and change a little there. For
your leaving the world is not as though it were a pulling out of a hair or two
from your head, but a shaving off of all the hairs. Unfortunately, though, many
believers have not seen this.
We are often thinking of how we may change this world; but God’s intent is to
judge this world and give us a new one. No human ways such as religious
doctrine, literature, science, philosophy or ethical teaching can change this
world. God has shown us that in spite of the loveliness and enjoyment this world
gives, it nonetheless is His enemy. So that if you are still loving this world and
living according to the world, it is because you have hope that the world will
change. Yet God has no other way to deal with the world than to judge it.
judgment of the universal flood. In that day, God washed the world with water;
and in the future day He will burn it with fire. Are we today like Lot who
lingered in Sodom and Gomorrah which were ready to be burned? Or are we
those who are unmoved by the world’s blandishments. How sad that many are
like Lot’s wife living in and according to the world. Like her, are we the willing
inhabitants of the earth, or are we those who let everything of this world pass us
by because our expectation is the new heaven and the new earth where
righteousness dwells?
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“A light [a window] shalt thou make to the ark” (Gen. 6.16a). This
Hebrew word here translated as “light” is used 24 times throughout the Old
Testament, of which on 23 occasions it is translated as
“light” or “window.” So that the light spoken of here does not signify a small
amount of light but a fullness of light, which is to say that it bespeaks a living in
the Light of God.
“He That Believeth and Is Baptized Shall Be Saved”
At this point I would say a few words to the unsaved. You need to realize that we
humans cannot change the world. God will instead judge this world; such is
quite certain. How, then, can you prepare to escape God’s judgment? Please note
that the ark was pitched within and without with pitch. This word “pitch” in the
original is the same Hebrew word translated as “atonement.” Hence the word
“pitch”
betokens the atoning of sin; in other words, it signifies the covering of sin. The
pitching of the ark within and without with pitch speaks of the atonement made
by the Lord Jesus. Having the ark pitched within and without means that through
the atonement by the blood of Christ the lives inside the Ark of God—Christ
himself—are
preserved. Outside Noah’s ark—that is, in the world—was the flood, and all in
the world died of that flood. Inside it, however, the ark was dry and clean.
Spiritually speaking, today all our punishments have fallen on God’s Ark—
Christ—while none has fallen on us. Whoever looks for peace, forgiveness and
salvation has but one way to go: to walk into the divine Ark.
Although the world is full of the judgment of God, you who are believers should
know that Noah’s ark had been pitched within and without with pitch, which
today represents the redemptive work of Christ. And if you are in the Ark of
God, not a drop of God’s judgment on the world will fall on you. Suppose
someone in the ark of old—say, the wife of Japheth or Noah’s wife—had wept
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aloud, “What if the ark should leak or sink?” We would today laugh at her! Yet
let me ask you, If you consider the redemptive work of Christ to be real, if you
believe the Lord Jesus was crucified to redeem you, why, then, do you not dare
to say you are saved?—why are you still uneasy? For perhaps you too speculate,
What if the blood of the Lord Jesus should lose its effectiveness? What if the
divine Ark should leak? If this is your thinking, then I need to ask you if you
really do trust in the finished work of Christ.
Mr. Moody responded by observing that the Bible makes clear that
“he that believeth hath eternal life” (John 6.47), that “him that cometh to me I
will in no wise cast out” (John 6.37), that “he is able to save to the uttermost
them that draw near unto God through him”
(Heb.7.25). Moody used Scripture verses like these while he talked with the
man, but after two or three hours this man’s problem was still unresolved. He
insisted he truly believed in the Lord but that he was afraid of perdition. To
which Moody replied: “Now I am beginning to think you are like one of Noah’s
daughters-in-law who might have cried in the ark out of fear lest it leaked.”
Upon hearing this, the man retorted by saying: “Mister, there is no such thing,
for the ark is unleakable!” “But you are that very person,” said Moody,
“who cries in the ark of safety because you are afraid it may leak.”
The Lord Jesus is able to save to the very end all who approach God through
Him. There is no difference between the wise and the foolish. To be saved or to
remain unsaved depends on whether or not one is in God’s ark. It has nothing to
do with whether a person is most wise or most foolish, whether one is wealthy or
quite poor.
Those are not relevant issues at all because the one and only question is, are you
or are you not in God’s Ark of Refuge? Those who Saved
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depend on the work of Christ and enter the divine Ark are saved. As many lives
as there are today in the ark—that is, in Christ—exactly that many will be those
who are kept by God in the future.
If you want to be a real Christian, you must—like Noah and his family—be in
God’s ark and not on the ground. You cannot be saved by your works. But you
must tell the Lord, “Whatever is of the world is not mine, for I stand on Your
side.” Alas, many have believed in the Lord, yet they have not severed
themselves from whatever comes from the world. May you be faithful to what
you have done at baptism.
Finally, let us be clear that the water of baptism does not save, it is the death and
resurrection of the Lord Jesus which saves. Baptism is that which expresses our
salvation. The blood of the Lord Jesus saves us before God, and the water of
baptism saves us from the world.
They shall eat the flesh in that night, roast with fire, and unleavened bread; with
bitter herbs they shall eat it.
Eat not of it raw, nor boiled at all with water, but roast with fire; its head with its
legs and with the inwards thereof. (Ex. 12.8,9)
The whole congregation of the children of Israel murmured against Moses and
against Aaron in the wilderness: and the children of Israel said unto them,
Would that we had died by the hand of Jehovah in the land of Egypt, when we sat
by the flesh-pots, when we did eat bread to the full; for ye have brought us forth
into this wilderness, to kill this whole assembly with hunger.
Then said Jehovah unto Moses, Behold, I will rain bread from heaven for you;
and the people shall go out and gather a day’s portion every day, that I may
prove them, whether they will walk in my law, or not. (Ex. 16.2-4)
When the dew that lay was gone up, behold, upon the face of the wilderness a
small round thing, small as the hoarfrost on the ground. And when the children
of Israel saw it, they saith one to another, What is it? for they knew not what it
was. And Moses said unto them, It is the bread which Jehovah hath given you to
eat. This is the thing which Jehovah hath commanded. Gather ye of it every man
according to his eating; an omer a head, according to the number of your
persons, shall ye take it, every man for them that are in his tent. (Ex. 16.14-16)
All the congregation of the children of Israel journeyed from the wilderness of
Sin, by their journeys, according to the commandment of Jehovah, and
encamped in Rephidim: and there was no water for the people to drink.
Wherefore the people strove with Moses, and said, Give us water that we may
drink. And Moses said unto them, Why strive ye with me? wherefore do ye tempt
Jehovah? And the people thirsted there for water; and the people murmured
against Moses, and said, Wherefore hast thou brought us out of Egypt, to kill us
and our children and our cattle with thirst? And Moses cried unto Jehovah,
saying, What shall I do unto this people? they are almost ready to stone me. And
Jehovah said unto Moses, Pass on before the people, and take with thee of the
elders of Israel; and thy rod, wherewith thou 88
smotest the river, take in thy hand, and go. Behold, I will stand before thee there
upon the rock in Horeb; and thou shalt smite the rock, and there shall come
water out of it, that the people may drink. And Moses did so in the sight of the
elders of Israel. And he called the name of the place Massah, and Meribah,
because of the striving of the children of Israel, and because they tempted
Jehovah, saying, Is Jehovah among us, or not? (Ex. 17.1-7)
We remember the fish, which we did eat in Egypt for nought; the cucumbers, and
the melons, and the leeks, and the onions, and the garlic: but now our soul is
dried away; there is nothing at all save this manna to look upon. (Num. 11.5,6)
Today we would like to touch upon the subject of the food that the people of
God eat. In looking into the record of Exodus, we can see that there are three
kinds of food for God’s people: first, the flesh of the lamb which is mentioned in
chapter 12; second, the manna which is mentioned in chapter 16; and third, the
water which came out of
the rock told about in chapter 17. These were the kinds of food and drink with
which God provided the children of Israel. These were all necessary; none could
be missing. It would not have been well had they had the flesh of the lamb but
no manna and water; neither could they have lived with manna but no water.
With the flesh of the lamb plus the manna and the water, they were brought out
of Egypt, went through the wilderness, and entered Canaan.
The Flesh of the Lamb
Let us first consider the lamb. The Bible tells us explicitly that the lamb points to
our Lord Jesus. The children of Israel not only put the blood of the lamb on the
doorposts, they also ate its flesh. We not only have our sins borne by the Lamb
of God and thus escape perdition but we also accept Him to be our inner
strength. Hence we must accept Him as well as believe in Him.
We notice from the account given how the children of Israel were delivered from
the hand of the Destroyer by the placement of the
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blood of the lamb on the outside of the door and how they gained strength to
march out of Egypt through eating the flesh of the lamb.
Today some have indeed believed in the Lord, yet they do not have the strength
to forsake the world as typified in the Bible by Egypt.
This is because they have not taken the flesh of God’s Lamb into them. True, the
blood has already been put on the doorposts of their hearts, but they have no
strength to exit from worldly Egypt.
Accordingly, the strength to obey the Lord and to follow His way depends on
our eating flesh, not on the blood.
Exodus 12.8 informs us that the flesh of the lamb had to have been eaten on that
same night of the exit of God’s people out of Egypt. Though the word of God
plainly says this, the experience of many of God’s people nevertheless seems to
be different. You ask a person today if he has believed in the Lord and has had
his sins forgiven, and he may clearly and quickly give you an affirmative answer.
But if you were to ask again, Why, then, do you love the world so much?, he
might reply, “I do not have the strength to deny the world.” (Quite possibly for
him the scope of the world which he admires and cannot forsake is very limited,
it perhaps being only a few people or a few tens of dollars). Now the reason for
his inadequacy is due to his failure to eat the flesh “that very night” and thus be
delivered from the bondage of Egypt. The meaning of eating flesh is to accept
the Lord Jesus to our hearts to be our Savior. This will give us deliverance in our
practical daily living.
On the one hand, we may speak of other Christians as to why their lives have
undergone such a change and are so holy after they had believed in the Lord
Jesus, and on the other hand we may ask why it is that the world still has so
much attraction for us who have also believed. Let us clearly see that for a
believer to be delivered from the world the basis lies not in putting on the blood,
but in eating the flesh. All believers have put on the blood of God’s Lamb; what
differentiates them one from another is this eating of the flesh.
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How should the flesh be eaten? Verse 8 tells us that two things were to be taken
with the flesh of the lamb. First was the bitter herbs.
“Bitter herb” is not a name of a particular herb; this phrase merely describes the
taste of an herb. So that whatever herb was bitter was to be used. The word bitter
signifies that which is displeasing to the heart. And hence the spiritual meaning
here is for a person to repent of his past sins or faults. Second was the
unleavened bread.
According to the New Testament, in Paul’s first letter to the Corinthians, the
meaning of unleavened bread is the putting away of
sins (see 5.7,8). Thus, on the one hand there is to be the repenting of past
trespasses, and on the other hand there is to be the forsaking of present sinful
deeds. No one can hold on to sin with the one hand and hold on to God with the
other. All who in their hearts desire after Egypt are unable to exit from Egypt.
Hence the forsaking of present faults must accompany the repenting of past
mistakes. Without purging out the leaven, even the eating of the flesh of the
lamb will not get one out of Egypt.
How often we feel bad after having spoken a wrong word. Yet Satan will suggest
that we are wrong all the time. But we should say, I would rather stand on God’s
side and not be a companion of Satan; I will not mind my dignity but will
confess to whoever I have spoken the wrong word that I have been wrong. Such
a reaction is to treat the past with bitter herbs and to face the future with
unleavened bread, thus qualifying ourselves to eat the flesh of the lamb. The
reason the spiritual life of many believers makes no progress is because they are
not willing to repent and to put away their past sins. Whoever refuses to get rid
of their past sins but returns there instead can never advance in the spiritual
course.
Manna
Is it enough, though, to eat the flesh of the lamb? No, it is not enough. Yes, you
have come out of Egypt, but ahead of you you
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have the wilderness journey on which to travel. In the wilderness you need to eat
daily. The eating of the flesh of the lamb occurs but once because it typifies your
initial need of accepting the Lord Jesus as your Savior only once. For the
journey ahead, however, you need daily food to give you daily strength. We must
recognize the fact that we must have strength to meet the work, the events, the
affairs, and the battles of each day. What, then, is the food? In the New
Testament, John 6 tells us it is the Lord who is our Manna from heaven. Let me
ask you: since you have accepted the Lord Jesus as your Savior, how many times
have you experienced Him as your daily manna? This is most important. No one
expecting to survive physically can eat one meal and then eat no more. He must
eat daily.
Yet the same is true in the matter of our spiritual survival. No one can eat the
flesh of the lamb just once at Passover, and then eat no more. He must eat the
daily bread; otherwise, he will die in the wilderness of his spiritual journey,
never making any progress.
What is this daily food? Is it reading the Bible? It may look like it, but it is not.
Is it prayer? Again, it seems to be so, but still it is not. Is it waiting on the Lord?
No, it is not that either. All these are but means, the reality is the power of
Christ. Through these means we draw on that power. Why should we read the
Bible in the morning?
Is it merely to understand the Scriptures? If that is the only reason for our
morning reading, how pitiful we must be. We rise up early to read the Bible in
order to gain the power of Christ for the day’s living. Why do we get up in the
morning to spend half an hour or an hour in prayer? It is to draw nigh to God and
absorb the power of His life for our inner strength.
Let me illustrate this with a real case. There was a sister who served the Lord.
She was most afraid of water buffaloes and dogs; yet if anyone ever goes to the
villages to preach the gospel, he cannot avoid these two creatures. Now it so
happened that whenever this sister saw a fat, black water buffalo, she would
immediately flee.
Once, even, she was walking along a country road when all of a 92
sudden a few dogs barked at her from behind and a herd of water buffalo came
towards her at the front! She was frightened to death!
In trying to avoid the dogs, she met the buffaloes; and in attempting to avoid the
buffaloes, she had to face the dogs. And besides this, the road was quite narrow.
Being thus caught on the horns of a dilemma, she nearly fainted. But at that very
moment she prayed, “Lord, You are my life, give me strength.” With each step
she prayed that prayer, and she passed the twelve terrible water buffaloes safely.
Now that is what I would call absorbing the strength of the Lord!
answered, “I offer myself to God for Him to fill me.” This is indeed a most
excellent prayer to pray each morning of our lives.
Without such contact as this in the morning, where can the strength come for the
day? Hence reading the Bible is essential to gain Christ, prayer is also necessary
to absorb divine power. Yet what exactly is this action of absorbing power? It
can be likened to our taking of meals time and time again, thus assimilating in
our bodies the food we ingest that becomes our physical strength. So too is it in
relation to our spiritual strength; it must be renewed daily.
Sometimes our prayer is most sweet; and this is spiritual manna to our hearts. By
contacting God each day, we gain spiritual strength to travel one day’s journey.
Now the Bible also informs us that the manna of old was not to be left overnight
for the next day’s use. The spiritual lesson to be drawn from this is that each day
there must be a new meeting with God for new strength. We need to cultivate
this daily habit of gathering manna—that is, we must receive from God a daily
new message, a daily new influence, a daily new portion of Christ. This is a
good daily habit to have. We need to cultivate now the habit of gathering manna
and absorbing power. We recognize how futile it is if we only
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know the Bible but not Christ. Let us therefore seek after this precious
experience of knowing Christ as our Manna from heaven.
children of Israel murmured, saying: “We remember the fish, which we did eat in
Egypt for nought; the cucumbers, and the melons, and the leeks, and the onions,
and the garlic; but now our soul is dried away; there is nothing at all save this
manna to look upon.” One thing will always be certain: whenever we grow tired
of manna, the food of Egypt will appear before us. The leeks and onions and
garlics of Egypt are very strong in taste. In fact, all the food of Egypt had a
potent flavor. Things with strong flavor can always easily be recalled. How
strange that what the children of Israel remembered were these eatable things,
whereas they easily forgot the many afflictions in Egypt—such as the male
children having been thrown into the river, the making of bricks amidst harsh
conditions, and the cruel beatings perpetrated by their overseers. Many who fall
often forget the bitterness of sin, the bondage of Satan, and the struggle of the
past; they only recall how they could do anything they wanted to do before they
had believed in the Lord Jesus but that now they feel bound and miserable. In
one sense their memory is quite good because they remember a lot, yet their
memory is also poor in that they forget even their deliverance and salvation.
One reason why Christians cannot bear fruit is because they too easily forget
how they were initially rescued and saved. The fact of the matter is that it really
is not fatal to not have those smelly foods such as leeks and onions and garlic,
but it is vital to have the manna.
All who begin to grow weary of getting close to Christ have already thought of
Egypt and of the potent flavor of onions and garlic. For this reason, each
Christian must keep receiving his daily manna. It is simply not adequate to eat a
little manna solely on the Lord’s day or every three or five days as many
Christians seem to be doing. But if we touch the Lord day by day, we shall find
that such a touch is truly our strength.
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Eating the flesh of the lamb is the beginning of life, eating manna is the
maintenance of life to grow, and drinking water is to enjoy life.
The meaning of water lies in its power to awaken, to refresh, and to give
renewed strength. The flesh of the lamb gives us life, that is to say, Christ lives
in us. But the Christ who lives in us needs to be nourished by the Christ on the
throne in order to have the strength for the rest of the pilgrimage. However, if
there are only these two elements—flesh and manna—there can be no
enjoyment, and the Christian’s face will become long and he will pass the day
sadly just as did the children of Israel in complaining that their soul had dried up
because they had nothing to look upon save the manna. It is therefore essential to
have water for enjoyment.
How did the water make its appearance in the lives of God’s people of old?
According to Exodus 17.5, the first action was for
Moses to take up the old rod which the passage describes as the one
“the rod of God.” God’s description of the rod in these terms was for the purpose
of reminding the children of Israel about the earlier act of Moses in Egypt of
striking the river. When the water of Egypt was smitten by the rod of God, the
water turned into blood. And blood meant death. This for us today serves to
indicate that all the enjoyments and pleasures of Egypt were under the judgment
of God.
All the amusements of this present age, in fact, are but blood.
Perhaps in the eyes of the Egyptians many things were quite enjoyable, but to us
these things are but blood. For this reason, some complain that being a Christian
subjects a person to much bondage.
Does the Christian have things to enjoy? Certainly, yet their nature is different
from that of the things which the Egyptians enjoyed. And hence God had to
bring out the rod used back in Egypt.
We have already seen that life comes from Christ, and even the maintenance of
life is also of Christ. But where comes joy? Some
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mothers take their children as enjoyment. Our joy, though, comes from the
smitten rock. God said to Moses: “Behold, I will stand before thee there upon the
rock in Horeb [Horeb is one of the peaks in the wilderness of Sinai]; and thou
shalt smite the rock, and there shall come water out of it, that the people may
drink” (17.6). So that
the spiritual water we have flows from the Rock that is before God.
The smiting of the rock speaks of the death of Christ; and the water which flows
out has reference to the Holy Spirit. Hence our joy and enjoyment are all to be
found in the Holy Spirit. This joy more than compensates for any loss of ours.
Oftentimes in the dark days of our lives our knees may tremble and our hands
may hang down. There is nothing for us to enjoy. But at the very same time God
will give us joy which fully compensates all our loss.
The prophet Isaiah once spoke of our Lord as One who grew up before God as
“a root out of a dry ground” (53.2). What can this mean? A root cannot grow in
dry ground; consequently, this metaphor was used to show us that what the Lord
Jesus relied on when on this earth was God, for the world could not give Him
any supply. And so shall we who follow Christ also be in this world. To drink of
this world is to drink the blood of death; yet not to drink of this world is to
remain thirsty; but Christ is the Living Water that can quench all our thirst and
grant us full satisfaction.
Today God stands on the mount before the smitten Rock, and thus spiritual joy
for us is not something vague but is directly before us.
How great is our God! For indeed, many times before we end up weeping we
have already begun to smile and to laugh.
27.1-8
Several points are raised in this passage from Exodus 30: (1)
“Jehovah spake unto Moses, saying, When thou takest the sum of the children of
Israel, according to those that are numbered of them, then shall they give every
man a ransom for his soul unto Jehovah, when thou numberest them; that there
be no plague among them, when thou numberest them” (vv.11,12); (2) “This
they shall give, every
one that passeth over unto them that are numbered; half a shekel after the shekel
of the sanctuary . . . for an offering to Jehovah” (v.13); (3)
“ . . . them that are numbered, from twenty years old and upward,
shall give the offering of Jehovah” (v.14); and (4) “The rich shall not give more,
and the poor shall not give less, than the half shekel, when they give the offering
of Jehovah, to make atonement for your souls”
(v.15).
27: (1) “Jehovah spake unto Moses, saying, Speak unto the children of Israel,
and say unto them, When a man shall accomplish a vow, 98
the persons shall be for Jehovah by thy estimation” (vv.1,2); (2) “thy
estimation shall be of the male from twenty years old even unto sixty years old,
even thy estimation shall be fifty shekels of silver, after the shekel of the
sanctuary. And if it be a female, then thy estimation shall be thirty shekels. And
if it be from five years old even unto twenty years old, then thy estimation shall
be of the male twenty shekels, and for the female ten shekels. And if it be from a
month old even unto five years old, then thy estimation shall be of the male, five
shekels of silver, and for the female thy estimation shall be three shekels of
silver. And if it be from sixty years old and upward, if it be a male, then thy
estimation shall be fifteen shekels, and for the female ten shekels” (vv.3-7); and
(3) “if he be poorer than thy
estimation, then he shall be set before the priest, and the priest shall value him;
according to the ability of him that vowed shall the priest value him” (v.8).
Let us notice the vast differences which exist between these two passages. In the
Exodus segment all who were numbered—regardless whether male or female,
rich or poor—had to give half a shekel of silver, whereas in the Leviticus
segment the shekels given vary with the differences in age, sex, and possession.
Why are there such differences? It is because Exodus 30.11-16 speaks of ransom
money,
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Luke 10.35. Our Lord Jesus has already paid the two shillings for us.
And this amount is sufficient to enable us to stay in the inn (that is, to sojourn in
this world until the return of our Savior).
“Twenty years old” refers to the year of man’s accountability for himself. Hence
the teaching here is that all who are able to bear responsibility for themselves
must have the Son of God. With respect to the children of Israel, the year of
accountability was counted according to their physical age; in the dispensation
of saving grace, no one really knows what is the age of accountability. Some
may reach this age of responsibility when they are but seven or eight years old.
“The rich shall not give more, and the poor shall not give less.”
Since the precious blood of our Lord is the payment, there can be no
differentiation between the rich and the poor. Rich or poor may be applied to
man’s works. People cannot save themselves either by doing good or by doing
bad. All must present half a shekel. The salvation which the Lord has
accomplished can neither be added on to nor taken away from. All need to be
saved through the precious blood. It is called precious blood, because it is of
great value (1 Peter
1.19). The precious blood is a costly price, which our Lord Jesus himself has
paid for us.
estimation of a special vow was one hundred times more because some had to
give as much as fifty shekels (v.3). Why was there this vast difference? It is
because the Exodus passage speaks of salvation whereas the Leviticus passage
speaks of consecration.
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Consecration in this connection does not refer to how much I am willing to offer;
rather, it refers to how valuable God looks upon what I am willing to give. From
the standpoint of salvation, God reckons every one of us to be worth half a
shekel. No one is valued more than the other. Whether rich or poor, old or young
—all have the same value placed upon them by the Lord. What belongs to the
natural is all being set aside by God. What saves us is the Son of God. And no
one can add anything to or subtract from the Son of God. So that according to
grace, each one is as sinful before God as the other, and all have the same
ransom price. For Christ’s sake, God considers all of us of equal worth before
Him. He treasures us; He counts us valuable. But this value is to be found only
in His Son, and therefore the value we come into through salvation is the same
for each of us in God’s sight.
Nevertheless, this does not, in another sense, inhibit God from reckoning some
believers to be more valuable than others. Although all are equally saved and all
equally become children of God, some may be estimated to be of more value to
God than others because their consecration is more complete and their spiritual
usefulness is greater. Just here let us take note of these two important factors:
that of spiritual usefulness, and that of hearty consecration. It is for these two
reasons that God will reckon us as valuable. If a believer has spiritual usefulness
but is not consecrated, he has no other value before God than that which he
obtains through Christ. Yet if he is willing to offer himself with a pure heart, he
will have some additional value before God even though he may be only a
month to five years old. What is most terrible is for a believer to be worth not a
cent more than half a shekel before God: he has the ransom money of half a
shekel which guarantees him salvation, but he has nothing more to offer before
God.
Let us note that among the children of Israel, people were classified into four age
periods: from one month to five years old—
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twenty years old to sixty years old—adulthood; from sixty years old and above
—decline. In relation to the children of Israel, these were actual physical years;
but in relation to Christian believers, these point to the variations in spiritual
strength.
So far as salvation is concerned, all believers are valued the same; but so far as
consecration is concerned, it varies with the individual.
Each saved person ought to have some actual value. God’s estimation of one
month to five years old was either three shekels (for female) or five shekels (for
male). So that in spiritual terms, one who is newly saved should have at least a
little worth. And this value, let us keep in mind, comes from consecration.
Without consecration, a person is without actual value in God’s sight. The work
of the Holy Spirit in a saved person is to lead him to consecrate himself that he
may live for God. The age period of the five-year-olds to twenty-year-olds may
be applied spiritually to those young believers who are zealous and who also
have some spiritual experience. And the adulthood age period can be applicable
to those strong and experienced believers.
Let us note, though, that the Hebrew people sixty years old and above had their
estimation decreased. Yet it need not have been, for let us look at the case of
Caleb. Although he was far advanced in age, his strength remained as it had been
in his youth (see Joshua 14.11).
Furthermore, “they shall still bring forth fruit in old age,” says the psalmist;
“they shall be full of sap and green” (92.14). All this would indicate to us that
the matured age should be the best years. Our spiritual life need not become
aged. Unfortunately, however, there can be, and often is, decline in the latter
years. Do not incorrectly assume that the estimation we have before God today
will last forever. Our spiritual life in terms of value to the Lord has the
possibility of declining.
The value estimation for the ages from twenty years old to sixty years old was
higher than for any other period, and this class of 102
Because from twenty years old and upward they were able to go
forth to war (Num. 1.3). When God numbered the twelve tribes of
for a Christian who has believed the Lord for only one year to be more advanced
than he who has already believed for five years.
From this brief discussion we now know that Christians do differ in spiritual age.
There is a possibility for decline as well as for advance. Where are you at this
present moment?
“But if he be poorer than thy estimation, then he shall be set before the priest,
and the priest shall value him; according to the ability of him that vowed shall
the priest value him” (v.8). What does
this mean for today? According to our spiritual age, we ought to give such and
such; yet under the enlightenment of the Holy Spirit, we discover we have
nothing to match what we should give. In that case, we can only come to our
great high priest—the Lord Jesus—
confessing our inadequacy and asking Him to re-estimate us. We will have to
start afresh.
“the shekel of the sanctuary” (v.3). This meant that an Israelite was
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worth only that which God declared he was worth; and such was unquestionably
the most accurate estimation. Human estimation often erred, but the shekel of the
sanctuary was most exact. So that what God estimates concerning us believers
today is perfect.
We have already had given to us at great cost to the Lord Jesus half a shekel for
our initial salvation. Yet today we should inquire of God, saying, “O God, how
much more am I worth in your sight?”
accounted as sheep for the slaughter. Nay, in all these things we are more than
conquerors through him that
loved us. For I am persuaded, that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor
principalities, nor things present, nor things to come, nor powers, nor height,
nor depth, nor any other creation, shall be able to separate us from the love of
God, which is in Christ
The love of Christ constraineth us; because we thus judge, that one died for all,
therefore all died; and he died for all, that they that live should no longer live
unto themselves, but unto him who for their sakes died and rose again. (2 Cor.
5.14,15)
For this cause I bow my knees unto the Father, from whom every family in
heaven and on earth is named, that he would grant you, according to the riches
of his glory, that ye may be strengthened with power through his Spirit in the
inward man; that Christ may dwell in your hearts through faith; to the end that
ye, being rooted and grounded in love, may be strong to apprehend with all the
saints what is the breadth and length and height and depth, and to know the love
of Christ which passeth knowledge, that ye may be filled unto all the fulness of
God. (Eph.
3.14-19)
“the love of Christ.” Although the Bible speaks much on this theme, it most
distinctively mentions the love of Christ only these three times, while the rest
speak of the love of God. Yet the Bible makes clear to us that actually the love of
God is the love of Christ. For
although in Romans 8.35 it asks “Who shall separate us from the love of
Christ?” , in verse 39 of the same passage it concludes with the statement that
nothing “shall be able to separate us from the love of God.” So that the love of
God and the love of Christ are two in 106
You may have a hundred problems, yet the solution to all of them is the love of
Christ. Some believers may incur tribulation, some may encounter poverty, some
may meet with persecutions, and some may even suffer abject hunger. Yet,
should even nakedness or peril or sword or famine come our way, nothing can
separate us from the love of Christ because His love will solve all such
difficulties. When a person is gripped by the love of Christ, he is able to go
through what many people usually cannot undergo.
She pawned away all her belongings and she also owed her rent. Yet despite
such misery, she still maintained a smiling face. When did she smile? She smiled
whenever she saw her child of less than one year old. She smiled because of
love.
I treasure the word of Romans 8.37, which says: “Nay, in all these
things we are more than conquerors.” More than conquerors in all these things,
not outside all these things. Without these things coming to us, there would be no
need to conquer. Many think they can conquer if there is no tribulation, no
distress and no persecution.
But the word of God declares that we are more than conquerors in all these
things. It is the love of Christ that causes us to overcome tribulation, or anguish,
or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or peril, or sword. For the love of Christ
is the power that enables us to conquer all these things. All these things are
rather painful, nonetheless those who have tasted the love of Christ do not find
them so.
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This “love of Christ” mentioned here is for those who serve the Lord: “the love
of Christ constraineth us” who serve, said Paul
(v.14a). The word “constrain” in the Greek original has the idea in it
of something being washed away by the water. Hence the love of Christ can be
likened to the power of water washing you away.
David Livingstone once said that if people came to Africa for the sake of the
slave trade, could not and would not the love of Christ constrain a person to go
to Africa too? So, he himself went to Africa.
Due to that one man who was constrained by the love of Christ to lay down his
life, numberless people received divine life. Only the love of Christ can
constrain us. Love is something which cannot be displayed, yet all who have
tasted the sweetness of it cannot help but be washed away by its power.
“Because we thus judge, that one died for all, therefore all died; and he died for
all, that they that live should no longer live unto themselves, but unto him who
for their sakes died and rose again”
(vv.14b,15). The word “judge” means “conclude.” The love of Christ constrains
us as we make our judgment in two matters. One is, that Christ died for all. His
love and His death cannot be separated. We have the love of Christ because He
has died. And two is, that they who live should no longer live for themselves but
to Him who for their sakes died and rose again. This is the end, the conclusion to
the matter. Being constrained by the love of Christ, I cannot stand in my old
position and not live for Him.
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Unless you truly feel—as did Paul—that “woe is unto me, if I preach
not the gospel” (1 Cor. 9.16), it would be better if you did not
become a preacher. Unless necessity is laid upon you, people will not be
affected. In preaching the gospel, we must be washed away by the love of Christ.
I would not persuade all to be preachers, but I do insist that every believer must
witness for the Lord. Let me ask, have you ever told people of the love of
Christ? Have you ever felt the love of God burning within you so that you
cannot but speak of His love? May the love of Christ fill us today to constrain
us.
“For this cause I bow my knees unto the Father, . . . that Christ may dwell in
your hearts through faith; to the end that ye, being rooted and grounded in love,
may be strong to apprehend with all the saints what is the breadth and length and
height and depth, and to know the love of Christ which passeth knowledge, that
ye may be filled unto all the fulness of God” (vv.14,17-19). Here “the love of
Christ” mentioned is for a learner. Paul is a learned man who can hardly make a
grammatical error or compose an ungrammatical sentence. All his letters in the
New Testament are written in excellent
Christ, he commits a serious grammatical error. For he stops at the phrase “to
apprehend with all the saints” and suddenly writes down
“breadth and length and height and depth” (in the original, there is no
“what is”). It appears that there is no connection between the preceeding words
and the words that follow. This is indeed reflective
The Love of Christ
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of the true condition when speaking of the love of Christ. As Paul is writing up
to this point, he does not know how further to set down what is on his heart, so
he exclaims: “breadth and length and height and depth.” He cannot describe it.
Yet this provides a far better understanding to people than should a description
of the love of Christ be written down in the best of grammar and style.
Whenever we think upon the love of Christ, we are at a loss as to what to say, for
it appears that the mind is almost useless at that point!
“To know” means the same as “to apprehend.” The love of Christ is unknowable
and yet it is also knowable. Day by day we learn on this earth a little more
concerning the breadth and length and height and depth of the love of Christ.
Once, a preacher, while speaking experienced a kind of pressure within him so
that he could not say what he wanted to say. He asked the audience for prayer.
While people were praying, a black man prayed continually, “Precious Jesus!”
That preacher heard this prayer for over an hour.
“Precious Jesus!”
Being constrained by the love of Christ, we love Him though we have not seen
Him. By faith we know He is precious.
counting other better than himself; not looking each of you to his own things, but
each of you also to the things of others. Have this mind in you, which was also in
Christ Jesus: who, existing in the form of God, counted not the being on an
equality with God a thing to be grasped, but emptied himself, taking the form of
a servant, being made in the likeness of men; and being found in fashion as a
man, he humbled himself, becoming obedient even unto death, yea, the death of
the cross. Wherefore also God highly exalted him, and gave unto him the name
which is above every name; that in the name of Jesus every knee should bow, of
things in heaven and things on earth and things under the earth, and that every
tongue should confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father.
(Phil. 2.1-11)
For the past few weeks this portion of Scripture has been very much on my
heart. As a matter of fact, this passage is what we Christians must pay constant
attention to. Let us consider together this portion of God’s word for a few
minutes.
“If there is therefore any exhortation in Christ, if any consolation of love, if any
fellowship of the Spirit, if any tender mercies and compassions” (v.1). At a
glance this verse does not seem to inspire much thought, and many who read it
do not derive much from it. But let me say that this verse is most meaningful.
For the realization of the succeeding verses in our lives depends very much on
an understanding of this initial verse. These opening words of the passage may
be deemed the “soil” for all the other verses. A seed cannot be sown in the air
because it has nowhere to be rooted there.
It must be sown in soil deep and fertile enough for its growth. And that is why
this verse serves as the necessary soil for the following 112
verses. It furnishes the nutrients as well as the water for later growth.
Without this verse, then, the rest of this Scripture portion will be extremely
difficult to implement in our lives.
“If there is therefore any [thing] . . . in Christ.” These words of Paul are
exceedingly important. What he means is this: if there is any exhortation in
Christ, then we will naturally be of the same mind: if there is any consolation of
love in Christ, it will be easy for us to have the same love: if there is any
fellowship of the Holy Spirit and if there be any tender mercies, and
compassions in the heart, it will be possible to be of one accord and of one mind.
On the other hand, though, if there be no exhortation nor consolation of love nor
fellowship of the Spirit nor any tender mercies and compassions, then how can
there be the same mind, the same love, the same accord? In other words, if these
things are in Christ, the rest will just naturally follow; otherwise, nothing will be
possible.
Do you have any exhortation in Christ, any consolation of love, any fellowship
of the Spirit, any tender mercies, and compassions? If you lack these, then how
can you expect to practice the things mentioned in the verses that follow? But
once having the exhortation, consolation, fellowship, tender mercies, and
compassions in Christ, it is most easy for you to be of the same mind and of the
same love.
Paul lays out this first verse as the source, the foundation, and the
“fertilizer” or “nutrient.” If in the absence of this first verse Paul should set
about exhorting the brethren at Philippi to be of the same mind and of the same
love, to be of one accord and of one love, to be without faction or vainglory but
instead to be in lowliness of mind and to be looking after the things of others,
how would they respond to him? They would probably say something like this:
“Sir, as good as these things you have told us are, we cannot do them. Only
Christ can. Yet we do not have the power of Christ because we belong to the
world. How can we possibly achieve these things? We may
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indeed love the lovable, but we find it hard to love the unlovely. And I have my
own thought, and someone else has his own idea. So how can we be of one
mind?” It is for this reason that Paul prepared the way for the Philippian brethren
to enter into the reality of the succeeding verses by first laying down the
prerequisite condition in verse 1. In that verse he told them the secret: “If there is
any [thing]
... in Christ,” then all will be easy. In order to be full, food must be taken in; in
order to have strength, power needs to be supplied first.
A brother put it well when he observed: “People exhort others to put out
strength, but I advise them to put in strength.” How can strength be expended if
it is not first taken in? And that is exactly what this verse calls for. Paul shows us
that there is the necessary power in Christ. “In Christ”—Oh! how significant is
this phrase! For only in Him can we do all things. Outside of Christ, we are
sinners; but in Christ, we are saved. Outside of Christ, we are defeated; but in
Christ, we are victorious.
“Make full my joy, that ye be of the same mind, having the same love, being of
one accord, of one mind” (v.2). As a result of the
supply cited in the first verse, we can experience the reality of this second verse.
Because there is this source of power in Christ, therefore one mind can be a
reality here.
Can there be the same mind? the same love? Once I asked a
brother in Foochow the process whereby we two would be of the same mind.
Would it be necessary for me to change my mind to his or for him to change his
mind to mine? Now it might be possible with two persons, but what if there were
three people involved? How could two people’s minds be changed to the mind of
the third person? And supposing there were five or five hundred or a thousand
people involved, how could so many minds become the same? Yet according to
Paul it would appear to be very easy for all to arrive at the same mind. For the
apostle, it is simply as verse 5 suggests:
“Have this mind in you, which was also in Christ Jesus.” The solution to the
problem is not to be found in the formula whereby I 114
am to lay aside my mind in deference to yours nor by you laying aside your
mind in deference to mine. It is instead achieved by our placing the mind of
Christ in the midst and allowing both of us to be of the same mind with Him. If
every mind is to be of the same mind as Christ’s, then it is a matter of all of us
simply having the same mind in spite of the great number of people involved.
When we are attempting to undertake something, it is quite likely that you will
have your thought and I will have mine. Should you, then, submit to me, or
should it be that I must submit to you? Some people may think that perhaps the
other person should submit. But this is not God’s way. His way is to “have this
mind in you which was also in Christ Jesus.”
What loss it will be to God if any brother or sister should go astray and refuse to
obey the Lord! Were we of the same mind, it would give God joy—yea, much
joy; for here in this verse 2 Paul is
representing the Lord’s heart. The heart of the Lord will be full of joy if
believers are of one mind. A number of things can indeed gladden the Lord’s
heart, but the one accord of Christians will make Him full of joy. Winning souls
will give the Lord joy; victorious living will also give Him joy; but having one
mind will alone give Him great joy. Such oneness is internal as well as external.
God can so work in us that we are not only one in speech but also one in heart.
Some people’s oneness is merely in their mouths because their hearts are not
really one. Even though their hearts are so far apart, and their attitudes betray the
fact that they are not of one accord with other people, they can still declare they
are one. Such oneness is not that which is spoken of here. Only on the basis of
“if there is . . . in Christ” can there be any one-mindedness.
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the Lord, someone else becomes your goal. When two persons are at odds, for
example, you declare that you are for one of them. But this is wrong. You can
only stand on the Lord’s side, or else you will fall into factionalism.
of “an eternal weight of glory” (2 Cor. 4.17). Glory is weighty and substantial,
therefore it sinks to the bottom, not floating on the top.
Such weight of glory can only be seen by God. What is apparent and seen by
many people is something vainglorious. What does a person obtain from such
vainglory? Nothing but a lusting, for who can ever obtain that which is vain and
empty? All he can do is to lust continually after it.
Sometimes unfortunate strife occurs among brothers and sisters. If this is not due
to faction, then it usually is because of seeking after vainglory. Each desires to
be great; none is willing to give in.
Actually, desiring greatness will not make one great; there will always be
someone greater.
When one is being praised and honored he seems to be glorified, whereas in fact
his feet tread on floating clouds. We need to remember that all glories which
come from men are but vain glories.
Once a renowned English scholar wrote a famous novel. One day he was invited
to a feast by a duke. At the table, a woman of nobility profusely praised his
novel. The author stood up and said to the woman that she was not qualified to
praise his book. He considered her praise to be disgraceful. Who, then, is worthy
to praise us? Apart from our Lord, no one is worthy. When we are praised by
men, we have already been downgraded, so why should we lust after it? We will
not accept men’s praise nor seek for such praise if our mind is set on the future
and our heart seeks to hear the Lord say, “Well
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Not only should we, negatively, refrain from pursuing after vainglory, we should
also, positively, “in lowliness of mind count others better than ourselves.” What
is lowliness? Lowliness means reserving no place for oneself. He who reserves a
place for himself is never lowly in mind. He who claims he has authority and
deserves to get something is not humble. One may speak humbly, but he may not
be lowly in mind. It may come through the mouth, but it may not pass out of the
heart.
Where does lowliness of mind express itself? It is expressed through the attitude
of “counting others better than oneself.” Such is the unmistakable hallmark of
lowliness. How difficult it is to count others better than oneself! Once I met an
elderly believer who had served the Lord for many decades. A brother asked him
which was the most difficult of all Christian virtues. His answer was Philippians
2.3: “In lowliness of mind each counting other better than himself.”
Yes, indeed, it is exceedingly hard to have lowliness of mind. For what sin
turned the archangel Lucifer into Satan? Was it not pride?
He fell because he wanted to be equal with the Most High. What sin caused man
to become a sinner? Was it not also pride? Adam ate the forbidden fruit,
expecting to know good and evil as did God. He ate, and he fell terribly. Hence
humility is truly the hardest to attain to of all the virtues. Possibly no one on
earth has ever fully attained to it.
We can find people with ability or eloquence, but where can we find a truly
humble person?
How can we count the other person better than ourselves? One believer has said
it well: “See the old man in myself, and see the new man in the other.” If we
truly look at our natural life and perceive how corrupted we are, and then look at
the other person and discern how the grace of God has transformed him, we
cannot help but count the other better than ourselves. The believers in Rome
should receive help from Paul, yet Paul expected their help because their faith
was at that time being proclaimed throughout the entire world (Rom. 1.8).
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He expected to be comforted by the new work of God in their midst during his
anticipated visit with them in the future (1.12,13ff.).
“Not looking each of you to his own things, but each of you also
to the things of others” (v.4). This is something not easy to implement. Due to
my poor health in recent years, I have been unable to look after the things of
others very much. Frequently we feel we neither have time nor energy to take
care of our own things, so how can we possibly take care of others’ affairs. To
look after the things of others is truly a self-denying life. I once met a missionary
with the China Inland Mission. I asked her if she had ever seen Hudson Taylor in
person and what she felt was his distinctive characteristic. She replied that so far
as she knew, the one most 118
distinctive characteristic of the man was that whenever anyone went to see him,
he seemed to have nothing to do but to consider that person’s affairs as the most
important business at hand. Actually he wrote many letters and interviewed
numerous people each day. Yet he appeared as though he had only others’ affairs
to take care of.
This is truly self-denial. If our Lord were as cold and careless to others as we
are, where would we be today? Where would I be? Our Lord indeed cares only
for the things of others; for did He not die for us because we had sinned? Let us
therefore be taught by this profound example to care for the things of others.
“Have this mind in you, which was also in Christ Jesus” (v.5).
“Who, existing in the form of God, counted not the being on an equality with
God a thing to be grasped, but emptied himself, taking the form of a servant,
being made in the likeness of men” (vv.6,7).
How we dwell on having our lawful privileges. Nevertheless, our Lord observed
this: “Ye know that the rulers of the Gentiles lord it over them, and their great
ones exercise authority over them. Not so
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On the one hand Jesus said, “I and the Father are one” (John 10.30);
on the other hand He also said this: “the Father is greater than I”
(John 14.28). Is there any inherent gradation of power and authority between and
among the members in the Godhead? Certainly not.
And hence the consideration of greater or smaller here cannot have reference to
that which one is born with; rather, it is something that is willed or desired or
submitted to gladly. The Father sends the Son, and the Son sends the Spirit. And
such a submissive arrangement is according to the sublime humility to be found
in the Godhead.
“The form of a servant” are words which speak of the lowliness of our Lord;
“the likeness of men” is a phrase which signifies the human restriction our Lord
takes upon himself. The form of a servant is presented in contrast to the form of
God, while man is presented in contrast to God. God is not restricted by time and
space, by food and rest. The form of God is glorious, whereas the form of a
servant is lowly. The mind of Christ is therefore expressed in His willingness to
humble himself and to suffer restriction.
becoming obedient even unto death, yea, the death of the cross”
120
We Christians ought to be more loving and more at peace with one another. The
way described in verses 6-8 is truly the way of the cross. Any brother or sister
who has not learned to deny self, to lay down legal rights, and to humble himself
or herself among his or her equals, has never traveled along this way of the
cross. Once a missionary made a significant comment. A certain brother, she
observed, is always exhorting people to walk the way of the cross, to tread the
narrow way; yet I have noticed, she added, that he himself has not even stepped
through its gate! How true it is that unless we have denied ourselves, we have
not entered upon the way of the cross. How we wish to choose the way of the
cross, yet we fail to realize that it lies in the denying of self and in dying daily.
A sister in the Lord met a physician who was very active in the assembly. This
learned physician was knowledgeable in the word of God and eloquent in
preaching. Yet this sister one day told him, “Sir, you preach well, but you walk
wrongly.” “I preach the way of the cross,” replied the physician, “for we all need
to deny ourselves and take up the cross.” “Indeed,” said the sister; “but I notice
that you yourself have never died.” The physician humbly asked for help; and
the sister spoke to him quite frankly according to God’s word.
“After you left, I told God that I neither knew what the cross was, nor what the
way of the cross was, nor what denying self was. But, with my ignorance I offer
myself to You, Lord, and ask You to enable me to deny myself. Then, my
problem came. My wife began to oppose me. When I could no longer endure, I
heard a voice saying to me, Deny self and die to these things. Previously, I had
often spoken of the cross and of self-denial and of death to self, though I really
did not know when or where or how I should die to myself.
Now, however, I know how to make it work out in life; for whenever I now
speak on this matter, many people oppose me. Even my medical practice has
suffered. I now know that I need to die among my own contemporaries.”
121
Many know the truth and know they must deny self. But where are they to die?
As this physician discovered, they must begin to die to themselves among their
very contemporaries. We must die among people we daily see and touch. May
God bless us that we may fill the Lord’s heart with joy because we are “of the
same mind, having the same love, being of one accord, of one mind”—in Christ.
Document Outline
Main Menu
1. Jehovah
God and Jehovah
"I am Jehovah"
The Lord Jesus Is Jehovah
Jehovah
Believers' Responsibility
"I am the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob"
Memorial Forever
2. Man's Only Sin
3. Forgiveness and Confession
God Is Able to Forgive All Sins
God Forgives Forever
God's Forgiveness Leaves No Mark
God's Heart to Forgive Surpasses Our Heart for Forgiveness
God Cannot But Forgive
God's Grace of Forgiveness Is to Lead Us to Repentance
The Condition for a Christian to Be Forgiven
Four Kinds of Heart Condition in Confession
How to Cultivate the Right Knowledge of Sin
Confession Must Be Made to God First
4. David and Mephibosheth
Mephibosheth Was Lame (4.4)
David Dealt Kindly with Mephibosheth (9.1-13)
Man's Repentance
The Feet under the Table
Mephibosheth towards David (16.1-4, 19.24-30)
David Preserved Mephibosheth (21.7)
5. Saved Through Baptism
Several Expressions of Salvation
The Judgment of the Flood
The Salvation of the Ark
The Ark and Baptism
"He That Believeth and Is Baptized Shall Be Saved"
6. Food for God's People
The Flesh of the Lamb
Manna
The Water Out of the Rock
7. A Believer's Value Before God
The Value of Salvation
The Estimation of a Special Vow
8. The Love of Christ
One - The Love of Christ in Romans 8 Is for the Suffering Ones
Two - The Love of Christ in 2 Corinthians 5 Is for the Servants
Three - The Love of Christ in Ephesians 3 Is for the Learner
9. The Mind of Christ