The phrase
"in the Spirit" occurs several times in the
book of the Revelation. It represents the way of escape
for the Lord's people from the oppression of the earthly
conditions which surround and beset them. John, being so
oppressed on the island of Patmos, found deliverance from
earth's limitations into the much larger realm of things
as they are in heaven. The book of the Revelation shows,
as perhaps few other books of the Bible do, how real and
absolute is heaven's government. In the matter of the
whole Church (represented by the seven churches), the
nations, the great world systems (represented religiously
by Babylon and politically by the Beast), and even to the
hidden warfare with spiritual evil, it was made clear to
John, and so to us all, that it is really the heavens
which rule.
Emerging from this truth of heaven's absolute dominion is
that fact that through the adversities and sufferings of
His people, God is providing a fruitful ministry of
spiritual fullness and wealth.
So heaven came in on Patmos, and turned what would have
been misery and crippling limitation into something
tremendously fruitful for the Church throughout many
generations. There can be no question as to the untold
value of John's ministry which resulted from this
Revelation of Jesus Christ.
What was true in the case of John himself is revealed to
be also the case for many of the Lord's servants. Those
of us who have even a small experience of being shut up
and hemmed in by difficult circumstances will perhaps
realise a little of what the great apostle must have
felt. He had so much spiritual wealth; he was the sole
survivor of the apostles; he could realise how greatly
the churches needed him; and yet he was, banished to a
lonely island, cut off from all opportunity either of
fellowship or service. In some way Paul before him had
gone through a similar circumstance in his Roman
imprisonment, and could also at times have felt
singularly frustrated as to useful service to Christ. Yet
how much poorer the Church would have been without his
'prison epistles'. So he and John had this in common,
that the seeming limitation of being prisoners for Christ
had produced unlimited spiritual helpfulness to many
generations of Christians.
It may well be that what was true of them will be found
to be valid for the whole Church. The vision at the end
of this book is of a Church of such vast measurements
that its dimensions seem to have been grossly
exaggerated. The simple implication is that heaven will
have overruled the earthly trials and tribulations of
God's suffering saints and made out of them a fruitful
means of dispensing Christ's riches to the whole universe
for all eternity. This is the significance of being
"in the Spirit".
From
"Toward The Mark" Nov-Dec 1972, Vol. 1-6