That enlargement through
straitening is an abiding law of the Kingdom of the
Heavens in this age is a well-known truth. Its
implications are various and its instances are numerous.
One of its too oft-unrecognized implications is that efforts
at enlargement in a really spiritual realm only
result in an artificial inflation, with all the weakness,
unsatisfactoriness, and instability of all that is not
spiritually real. True development is not the work of
man, of his ingenuity, acumen, efficiency, resource,
drive, cleverness, or enthusiasm. The very law of which
we are speaking has its strength and vindication in the
fact that God begins at zero. When, humanly speaking,
there has remained no hope and it has been fully
recognized that only God could do the necessary thing, it
has often been proved that that was just the situation
that He had been taking pains to bring about.
''He hangeth the world
upon nothing" is an abiding principle from the
standpoint of the natural man. It is always a salutary
thing for the Lord's servants to pass their eye over the
Scriptures and review the zeros of man and the
intervention of God at that point. Such a survey must
ever lead to a recognition that God is speaking in all
ages in the terms of the Cross, and that there,
all-inclusively and forever, has been established the
Divine law that the ''flesh profiteth nothing''; that the
''natural'' (Greek: soulical) man ''cannot'' in the
things of God; that the first Adam species and race has
been wound up and finished. That is the comprehensive ''
first Adam'' zero, and at that point an entirely new
order is instituted; and this is one in which God is
personally resident and dominant by His Spirit.
Henceforth for all Divine purposes the indispensable
condition is a new creation, a ''Last Adam'' personally
and corporately.
Surely it is a
justifiable inquiry to make as to whether the above
qualification is the one supreme consideration in all
choices and appointments in the service of God.
In our missionary boards
and directorates what has been the basis of membership?
Has it been missionary interest on the part of Christian
men, plus business ability, financial resource, circle of
influence, a name that obtains confidence? In our church
councils and committees, has it been by popular vote
governed by any one or more of human considerations? In
our methods has it been thought that an efficient
organization, machinery, plant, ''interest'' would secure
the end?
Or has it honestly and
truly been that, all other things given a secondary
place, the Lord needs first of all such as, being full of
the Holy Ghost and faith, know above all things what
''prayer and fasting'' mean? When in the primitive and
free method of the first days the Spirit said, ''Separate
Me Barnabas and Saul for the work whereunto I have called
them'', it is a blessed thing to realize that it was not
said to such as were living in comparative ease and
comfort, or whose occasional or second business it was to
attend to these things, but to such as "ministering
to the Lord and fasting'' were experimentally sharing the
great spiritual cost which would fall to those who would
be sent forth. It is so easy to issue instructions, give
orders, make plans, manipulate lives, pass decisions,
when these do not immediately involve those who do so in
the spiritual cost and anguish and conflict. We think
that no one ought ever to be in such a position who has
not gone just as far in the cost and sacrifice, and who
is not just as fully abandoned with all that he has, as
those who go forth ''for the sake of the Name''. The
Lord's ways are equal, and any inequality is
unrighteousness, and ties the hands of blessing. The Holy
Spirit is free to take the initiative only in so far as
the holy constituents of that Name are the foundation of
the purpose, policy, methods, means, motives, and lives
of such as are associated with holy things. This is
abundantly established in all the Scriptures. Sometimes
this Divine principle is demonstrated by the reaction to
its violation in the breaking forth of judgment;
sometimes in reverses and defeats; sometimes in
stagnation and arrest; sometimes in the abortion and
miscarriage of labours.
In the New Testament we
can find nothing which corresponds to the later and more
modern Missionary Society. Then the Church was an
organism which, by the very nature of its life-energy,
was reproductive. For it is an essential and inherent
characteristic of life that it reproduces. That which
does not reproduce is an end in itself. But there is all
the difference between reproduction by life and
multiplication by imitation, as in either mass production
or serial production. The Lord's intention was that
everything should be Church-wise, not society-,
organization-, or ''mission''-wise.
The Church declined, and
for many years it almost ceased to be a worldwide
reproductive organism. Only in very limited ways and in
remote quarters did any reproductive vitality function.
Then there came the missionary renaissance, and because
the Church was both out of order and out of position, the
Lord blessed and used the secondary means of
''Missions''. He has indeed used and blessed this means,
and through it has brought home to the Church its
responsibility. But while we would attribute everything
to this means that should be recognized, and it is not a
little, we are bound to recognize that it has severe
limitations and is responsible in the long run for much
that defeats its own ends. It is now an open question
whether there is any future in such countries as India,
China, etc., for the professional missionary and organized
missions. The days for taking in something
systematized from another country may well be numbered.
Indeed, we know positively that there is a movement in
such lands to eject and exclude professional missionary
work and workers. The day is coming, if it has not
already dawned, when it will be just by means of people
living as people - living people - with a
passion for Christ among these nations that reproduction
will take place spiritually. That in itself will be but a
return to the original position.
But we were speaking of
the Church. It began in Jerusalem, and while its
representative members went and deliberately preached in
other places, certain features have to be observed. The
scattering of believers (mainly by means of persecution -
a Divine providence) paved the way for the reproduction
of the Church in what has been called ''The Spontaneous
Expansion of the Church'' (Roland Allen). It was the
expulsion of life, not the conceiving of a ''plan'',
''movement'', ''enterprise'', etc. Neither was it a
missionary committee in the Church, or Council, Board,
etc., apart from the local church. As the churches
multiplied, so they in turn each became a direct evangelizing
instrument, so that Paul could speak of those who were
with him thus: ''Whether any inquire of... our brethren,
they are the apostles of the churches'' (II Cor. 8:23).
There is no denying the fact that where there has been
the closest approximation to this original basis, there
has been, and is, the widest expansion and the best
taught and spiritually strongest churches.
The fact is that while,
because of the Church's failure, God owned and used a
secondary means, He has never abandoned His original and
primary thought, and with that thought He has irrevocably
and inseparably bound up spiritual fullness. All other
and lesser ways must stop short, and after reaching a
certain point find that limitation, spiritually,
characterizes the work and its results. Many other things
may also indicate that all is not well. We can perhaps
best explain all this by looking at the reason why
Church-wise is God's primary and ultimate way.
Everyone will agree that
in the intention of God everything appertains to His Son,
our Lord Jesus Christ. ''It was the good pleasure of the
Father that in Him should all the fullness dwell'' (Col.
1:19). ''God hath summed up all things in Christ'' (Eph.
1:10). ''That in all things He might have the
preeminence'' (Col. 1:18) . . . . When God' s end is
reached, Christ will be all in all, and ''fill all
things''.
But while Christ retains
His own personal and individual identity, He has bound up
with Himself in organic oneness His Church, which is
''His Body''. As the personality is hidden within the
physical body, and gives that body its true character,
its distinctive character, and the personality of the
being is its mystic but real value, so Christ is linked
with, and the very reality of, the Church. This
Church-Body was ''chosen in Him before the foundation of
the world'' (Eph. 1:4). It is ''elect according to the
foreknowledge of God the Father'' (I Pet. 1:2). For it
He gave Himself (Eph. 5:25-26). God purchased it with
His own Blood (Acts 20:28). It is ''the fullness
(completion) of Him that filleth all in all'' ( Eph
1:23).
We are thus made to see
that all God's interests in His Son are Body-wise and
therefore of a corporate nature. He sent Saul of Tarsus
into Damascus to get the answer to his inquiry through
the Church. Later He ratified his apostleship and sent
him to it in and by the Church. The laying on of hands in
both instances was an act of identification with the
Body; firstly in union, and secondly in ministry. Nothing
in those days was personal, independent, or separate from
the Church. Everything was on Body-ground.
This eliminated personal
authority as such. This ever and always found the Holy
Spirit ready to judge, direct, and empower. Elders were
only representative members of the Body. They were not
officials or ecclesiastics. Theirs was a spiritual
function for which they had to be ''full of the Holy
Ghost''. This "Body" consciousness was a great
reality and meant a very great deal in every situation.
In serious crises - physical, circumstantial, spiritual,
and temporal - it meant that need was registered in the
Church and prayer was made. Those concerned acknowledged
that the crises were triumphantly negotiated and passed
because of the cooperation of the Church.
Evangelization was not
just the salvation of so many individuals or the
establishment of so many churches. It was the increase of
the measure in which Christ was, and is, present in this
world. It was ''the building up of the Body of Christ'' -
''the completion of Him''. It is because things have
been, and are, things in themselves - evangelization,
''soul-winning'', ''church''-building, teaching, etc. -
that so much limitation exists, and after so many
centuries the world is so little touched and Christians
are so unsatisfactory.
WE ARE CONVINCED THAT
A NEW HEAVENLY APPREHENSION OF THE CHURCH AS THE BODY OF
CHRIST, WITH WHAT THAT IMPLIES AND DEMANDS, IN THE
REVELATION AND POWER OF THE HOLY SPIRIT, IS ABSOLUTELY
ESSENTIAL TO THE SOLUTION OF THE GROWINGLY FELT NEED IN
THE SPIRITUAL LIFE OF CHRISTIANS.
The missionary problem,
and many another problems, can only be so solved; but it
can and will be solved thus.
There is very much
prayer being made, and appeal being pressed for revival.
It is said and believed that if there should take place a
mighty outpouring of the Holy Spirit upon the people of
God, all our difficulties would be overcome, our defects
and deficiencies made good, our mistakes transcended, and
so on. Reference is made to such events in past times and
the inferences or conclusions drawn. We would be far from
denying the truth of this as to the actual period of its
duration, but we do feel that a too superficial deduction
or conclusion results in a delaying or staying of what
God is really seeking.
What have been called
revivals have really, in the Divine intention, and in
their very essence, been reformations. The high tides of
spiritual life have invariably had the effect of making
ridiculous many of the things of which the Church was
proud, making puerile many things formerly considered
essential, ruling out many things prevailing, and
generally upsetting the accepted and established system
of things. Barriers have gone down; secondary things have
been removed from primary place. Indeed the whole
standard of estimates has been changed and turned about.
This is true not only with regard to great ''revival''
times, but also in times when the Lord's people of all
connections and complexions have met on purely spiritual
ground, as at great conventions.
Now the point is this.
If the Spirit of God so either ignores or transcends so
much that marks the Christian system, and makes it as
though it counts so little (and the Holy Spirit never
compromises on what is vital and really of God), does it
not mean that He calls for a reconsideration of very much
that obtains? There are several ways of putting this. For
instance: The nearer the earth and its temporal life
Christendom has got, the more and greater have such
things as ritual had a place... Formality and such like
externals have always been the marks of low and poor
spiritual conditions, and the measure of importance given
to them is always an index to spiritual measure. On the
other hand, a deep, strong, pure spiritual state has
always been marked by simplicity. History
proves this beyond a doubt, and tides of the Spirit are
outstanding evidence of it. One thing is patent: it is
that in such times the Holy Spirit does not revive and
stimulate these religious things; He very largely
negatives them. Does it not, then, become necessary for
us to see and take note of the effect of a Holy Spirit
movement, and by His works does not the Lord call for
some adjustment in this matter?
Our present point is
that we have very much evidence borne by the Spirit of
God in true spiritual movements that He has weighed this
whole matter as it now exists and has written it off as
not only unimportant but definitely obstructive and
limiting. We can reason both ways. To get away from the
lesser things we need a mighty visitation of the Spirit
of God; this, and this only, will do it. Most people
agree to this, and we have heard very much said along
this line. What has always perplexed us is that while
things of this kind have been so repeatedly and strongly
stated, the implication seems never to have registered
itself with sufficient strength as to result in practical
adjustments. So, on the other hand, if we seriously faced
the things which the Spirit of God has again and again
ruled out when He has had His way, would not the way be
opened for a more permanent high level of
spiritual life, fullness, and effectiveness?
Is not reformation an
essential part of revival? Does not the Lord call for
certain drastic adjustments before He can ''open the
windows of heaven''? Are we able to agree that what is
needed is not so much a ''visitation'' of God in a
passing wave of revival, but a reformation which will
make possible a new level of life for, at least, a long
time to come?
IS THERE NEED FOR A NEW
REFORMATION NOW?
If so, what is the
nature of that reformation?
I. Evangelical
Christianity has very largely become resolved into a
crystallized and set system of doctrines. Those doctrines
are the Deity of Christ, His Atoning Death, His Bodily
Resurrection, His Ascension and Exaltation, and,
with some variations as to time and manner, His Personal
Return; the Person of the Holy Spirit; the inspiration
and absolute authority of the Bible, etc. These things
are rightly and truly basic and governing, and must be
maintained in purity and fullness. But when we have said
all that could and should be said for them, we are far
from having solved the problem of the Church's spiritual
life and power. Orthodoxy and ''soundness'' never was the
sign of spiritual life. Indeed ''Fundamentalism'' as such
can be as cold, hard, cruel, bitter, dead, and ugly as
the Inquisition, and it often is so. Its weapons are
often completely carnal, and it does not hesitate to
resort to physical force. This may be its extreme form,
but even where these truths are held without these
particular features, there is more often than otherwise a
rigid legalism resulting in hardness, suspicion,
prejudice, and exclusiveness of spirit. Many divisions
have followed, not the faithful stand for the truth, but
some enforcing of some aspect of a particular truth -
hair-splitting. The doctrines of Christianity have become
something in themselves, and because this is so a host of
unhappy, unholy, and unnecessary elements have gained a
strong place in Christianity. Christianity is not
necessarily or inevitably established when the sum of its
doctrines or tenets is enunciated and assented to. Here
'the letter may kill' rather than make alive.
II. Evangelical
Christianity has become a system of denominations, sects,
and sectional organizations. In fairness and
righteousness, we must remember that many of these had an
honourable beginning. As to denominations, in not a few
cases it was a conscientious stand for some particular
doctrine, doctrines, or form of expression, costing very
heavily, that brought these into being. And so with many
other institutions, movements, missions, and
organizations; some divergence from the truth, or some
failure in the responsibility, obligation, and purpose to
which Christianity is committed resulted in the rising up
of these specific and varied activities. It is no small
history of devotion, heroism, sacrifice, and service. The
story can fill a library. We take nothing from it. That
is not our object. What we are saying is that many of
these things have now become so largely something in
themselves and are often ends in themselves. It is
the thing with which so many are bound up; and
here again all the unhappy elements, rivalries,
jealousies, competitions, suspicions, etc., have their
occasion. The effect of much of this is to make organized
Christianity the enemy of Christianity, and a menace to
the real work of the Spirit of God.
III. A peril is
discernible very early in the Church's life. It was in
the nature of, on the one side, a giving preeminence to
one side or direction of Christian interest; and, of
course, on the other side, suspicion or reservation where
this preeminence was not recognized. For instance, there
was a strong Jewish strain in the Church and the
tendency, at least, was to give preeminence to preaching
the Gospel to the Jews. When the Gentiles came
increasingly into the picture, these reservations and
suspicions became almost acute, even between apostles.
The Holy Spirit, who fortunately had a large enough place
and way then, was able to negotiate this dangerous
passage and resolve it into a unity. But the tendency has
persisted, and with the lowering and lessening of
spiritual life, the peril has passed into an actuality,
and an established one at that. Evangelization of the
unsaved has become something in itself, and often ends
with itself. There is often no vision beyond this. If
there are Christians who are not exclusively or
primarily engaged in evangelistic work, they are
often regarded with suspicion and reservation, even
worse. Frequently the evangelist has no room for, or
interest in, what is beyond the work of saving souls.
''Man looketh on the
outward appearance; God looketh on the heart''... fairly
sums up the governing standard of so very much in
Christianity. ''Man looketh on the outward.'' How things
appear and appeal; how things impress and carry weight;
how things attract and secure support; how things imply
success and obtain influence. In this direction there is
room for all the publicity, commercialism, competition,
vainglory, display, and much more with which we have
become familiar in Christian work. It is sad to see how
many things the Church must have when its
spiritual life is low. And it is very joyous to note how
little is necessary and how many things are absent when
spiritual life is high .
What is the nature of
the needed reformation? In a sentence, it is all that
which is bound up with a new and dominating conception of
God's purposes, object, and method. When we ask what that
is, the answer is a MAN! We are taken by the full
revelation in the Scriptures right back into the Divine
counsels before times eternal. There we are allowed to
see the resolve that this universe should ultimately be
centered in and governed by a Man. But not just
officially, as by selection, choice, appointment
arbitrarily. The determination was governed by character,
type, nature. It would be a certain kind of man. He would
embody all the Divine features, manifest them, and
determine all values by that standard alone. That Man
would eventually have ''all things'' gathered into and
summed up in Himself on the basis of His nature. He would
also "fill all things" in the same way. Thus,
not by an institution, organization, movement, scheme,
would God reach His end, but by an organic being. One of
the supreme necessities of the Church is to either
recover or have given a new and mighty realization of the
significance of Christ in God' s universe. Everything
hangs upon our apprehension of Him.
But when we have said
this we have not said all. The fuller and further
revelation of Scripture shows that in those same Eternal
Divine Counsels the fullness and completeness of that Man
was to be realized in a corporate way, so that eventually
God' s universe would be centered in a ''One New Man'';
universal and countless, yet one and individual in the
sense that He would indwell all, and He is one and indivisible.
This corporate entity called ''His Body'' was
''foreordained to be conformed to the image of His (God'
s) Son, so that He might be the firstborn among many
brethren'' (Rom. 8:29). This sets forth God's object, and
shows His method. The Divine object is not an
institution, a religion, a dogma, a fraternity, an
organization, a system of doctrines, a set of works and
activities. It is a spiritual man, an organic spiritual
body .
Now, to resolve into one
issue all that has been stated and indicated, what does
it amount to? Just this: if Christ in His personal
significance and in His corporate expression were really
dominantly and overwhelmingly present to the eye and
heart of the Church, on the one hand numerous things
which now limit, hinder, retard, weaken, and defeat the
Church would fall away and just cease to have any place
of government; and on the other hand there would be the
effects, if not the event, of "Pentecost"; i.e.
life, power, victory, fullness, and great joy with real
fruitfulness. What we need, we repeat, is not the
transient event of ''Pentecost'' but the abiding effects;
not only revival but reformation.
Whenever and wherever by
a new revealing of Himself, His purpose and method, the
Lord has secured those who have moved out on to the
ground of Christ only and in fullness, they have
always had to meet a great and painful cost. Usually it
has been their own brethren in Christ who have exacted
it. Fake charges of "forming a new sect''; ''seeking
a name for themselves''; "dividing the people of
God''; becoming ''extreme''; ''thinking they only are
right''; etc., have been leveled at them, and they have
been ''cast out''. The truth is that, in many cases, they
have only taken the ground which everybody knows is the
ground of spiritual fullness; where questions of ''church
connection'' and orders, etc., are never raised, where
such things as joining something or conforming to a
special teaching or practice are never mentioned, but
''Christ is all and in all''; and the one concern has
been that He should have what is His ground and way of
continuous increase .
How difficult it is for
organized Christianity to believe that anything very much
of real value can go on without machinery, publicity, and
all the framework of organized work! May it not be well
to pause and consider whether God's mightiest and most
fruitful works in nature and in grace are not done
hiddenly, quietly, utobtrusively, and in many cases, done
before anyone knows about it? What of the resurrection of
nature every springtime? The law of God's highest work is
the biological - the law of life; it is organic.
First published by Witness and Testimony Publishers in 1929. This version from Emmanuel Church, Tulsa, OK. Note the book of the same name.