We are still occupied
with the preparations of the Lord's servant for his
ministry, and yesterday morning we were considering the
Throne above the firmament and the likeness of a Man upon
it. As you will remember, we concluded yesterday by
pointing out the importance to the servants of the Lord
of seeing that Throne - what it means to the Lord's
servants to recognize that there is a Throne, and that
there is a Man upon that Throne. We passed on into the
New Testament, and we saw that it was that that accounted
for everything in the first days: they were able to sing
and to pray and to preach and to suffer and to die
because they knew the Man was on the Throne! So that part
of the vision came first and was of very great importance
to Ezekiel. I
think you know what the name Ezekiel means; but if you do
not, let me tell you what it means: "God shall be my
strength." And Ezekiel had to have vision and
experience that made his own name true. All this that
Ezekiel was seeing was just establishing the meaning of
his own name, "God is my strength." We shall
only have strength as we see the Man on the Throne! That
is a very important thing for ministry.
So we come to the next
part of "the visions of God" which were the
preparation of the Lord's servant; that is, what was
directly under the firmament. And the first part of this
was "the four living ones," which are known to
us as the cherubims. And, of course, we do recognize that
these cherubims are symbols of spiritual things. And one
thing about them is this - that in different places they
are different in representation. For instance, here in
Ezekiel they have four wings; in Isaiah, they have six
wings. That is only to emphasize particular spiritual
principles, and you will notice that there are other
differences in the references to the cherubims. This
means that at one time, in one place, certain things are
emphasized. At another time, in another place, certain
other things are emphasized. It is the spiritual
principles which are to be taken note of., therefore, the
cherubims are symbols of spiritual realities. The
Bible right from the beginning to end is just full of
symbolism - things taken up by God to teach spiritual
truth.
Now then, we look at
these "four living ones." First we take account
of their number; their number is four. Everything about
them speaks of the number four. Each one of the four has
four likenesses, and there are four of them. They have
four wings. Their characteristic number is four; and as
you may know, four is the number of creation. If we want
to cover all the dimensions of the creation, they are
covered in the number four: north, south, east, and west
cover the whole world. There are the four seasons of the
year: spring, summer, autumn, and winter. In the Bible
the four winds are referred to, four winds as coming from
"the four corners of the earth" (Rev. 7:1). Now
we know that the world is not square, it does not have
four corners, but this is a symbolic way of speaking;
"the four corners of the earth" means the whole
world. It, therefore, represents the whole creation; it
is the number of creation. Keep that in mind as we move
on to the four likenesses of the cherubims.
You see, the cherubims
had four likenesses: the likeness of a man, the likeness
of a lion, the likeness of an ox, the likeness of an
eagle; and those four are representative of four parts of
the creation. The lion represents the wild creation, the
ox represents the domestic creation, the eagle represents
the flying creation, and the man represents the human
creation. All creation is represented here.
But then, what is the
spiritual symbolism? The lion is the symbol for royalty
and government. The ox is the symbol of service and
sacrifice. The eagle is the symbol of heavenliness and
mystery. And the man is the symbol for representation.
That is the spiritual symbolism.
We may ask, "What
is the meaning of all that?" In the first place, we
see that this is a symbolic representation of Christ. It
is Christ in His four-fold capacity. The Lion is
"the Lion that is from the tribe of Judah": -
out of Judah came the Ruler, so that the Lion is the
symbol of the government or royalty of the Lord Jesus.
You probably know that the Gospel by Matthew corresponds
to that. It is the Gospel of the King! The Ox is
the symbol of service and sacrifice, and again that is
the representation of the Lord Jesus as the servant of
Jehovah sacrificing Himself: - "the Son of Man did
not come to be served, but to serve, and to give His
life." The ox corresponds to the Gospel by Mark! It
is in the Gospel by Mark that, more than anywhere else,
Jesus is seen in service giving Himself. The Man
aspect of the cherubims is very clear, "the Son of
Man has come." That is the message of Luke, Jesus
the Man! And the Eagle, is the symbol of
heavenliness and mystery, and that is clearly seen in the
Gospel by John! The Lord Jesus so often in that gospel
speaks of His having "come down from
heaven," and yet there is a mystery about Him
that no one can understand. He is a Man, but He is more
than a Man. This is the eagle symbolism. So I think it is
quite clear by these references to see that the Lord
Jesus is represented by the cherubims.
The cherubims are
called "the living ones." In our translation, a
word is introduced that is not there in the original. In
the King James' translation, it is "living
creatures"; in another translation, it is
"living beasts," the four living beasts. Well,
of course, to begin with, man is not a beast; and an
eagle is not strictly a beast. However, those words,
creature and beast, are not in the original. What is here
in the original text is "the living ones,"
which is just the plural form of the word
"life." - It simply means the plurality of
"life." The key characteristic of the cherubims
was life: - "In Him was Life." What
was the life for? - The Life of the creation, Jesus Is
The Life of The Creation. Of course that is now the new
creation!
We go back to the first
appearance of the cherubims. Man has sinned, God has
cursed the race and the earth. He has driven man out of
the garden, in which there was "the tree of
Life"; and He has placed the cherubims at the gate
to guard the way of the tree of Life. What does all that
mean? The sinful and fallen creation can never have that
Life. That Life can only be had by "a new
creation." Between that which represents the fallen
creation and that which represents the unfallen creation
stands Christ as "The Door."
Christ says, "There is no life for that sinful
creation; there is only Life in a new creation." So
the cherubims stands between. Thus Christ always stands
between an old creation and a new. There is no Life
outside of Christ. There is only Life inside of Christ.
Christ as "The Life" stands at the door.
He says "No" to one creation, and "Yes"
to another. Well, I think we can say that the cherubims
represent Christ. They represent Christ as The Life.
Now it is also very
clear to see that the cherubims in relation to the Throne
affect the whole creation. The Throne is linked with the
creation - in creation and redemption. On the one side,
it relates to the creation; on the other side, it relates
to the redemption of the creation! God's Throne governs
those two things. The Chariot-Throne of God is linked
with God's creative and redemptive power. This Throne
says that God is concerned with the redemption of the
Creation. You notice that over the Throne there is
"a rainbow." The rainbow is the symbol of God's
covenant of redemption. You will find that rainbow again
in the Book of the Revelation, and presently we shall see
its connection in that book, but let us be quite sure of
what we have just said.
Here is the
Chariot-Throne of God! Underneath are the symbols of the
whole creation! The whole question is the question of
Life for the creation, but we have seen the tremendous
energies and power of those movements of the Throne! All
the energies and movements of God are in relation to a
new creation, a redeemed creation. So we see that the
Throne is moving in relation to Divine Purpose - the
Divine Purpose in creation. That movement is by way
of the Lord Jesus. That new creation is to have Him as
its King. That is by way of His service and His
sacrifice. That will be an expression of His Heavenly
Character, and it is all summed up in "a man after
My (God's Own) heart!"
In the fourth and fifth
chapters of the Book of the Revelation - a great
multitude of redeemed ones are displayed to the whole
universe; and when that comes to pass, the creation
itself shall be delivered. It will not be long before God
says: "I create new heavens and a new
earth... the former things are passed away."
(Isaiah 65:17a; Rev. 21:1, 4b; NASV; KJV). All
that is here in Ezekiel in principle. But here is a
very significant thing - in chapters four and five of
Revelation, you have the four living ones. In chapter
four, they are connected with the creation. The song in
chapter four is "For Thou didst create all
things, and because of Thy will they existed, and were
created." The living ones are there in
connection with that. The Divine purpose in creation -
"God created all things in Jesus Christ." The
living ones are a representation of Jesus Christ - King,
Sacrifice, Heavenly Man, that gives the meaning to the
creation. "All things were created in Him," and
the living ones are there in the presence of the song of
creation, but in a special way - now it is the song
of a new creation.
In chapter five of the
Book of the Revelation, another song is being sung, and
the living ones are there. This is the song of
redemption, "Thou... hast redeemed"; that is
the new song, and the living ones are there. The
purpose of creation in Christ Jesus - Jesus as The
Purpose of creation, and when the new creation is
secured, the living ones are there. It is a new creation
in Christ Jesus. The song of redemption is "Thou...
hast redeemed us," - and The Redemption
Is In Christ Jesus.
You see,
that takes us back to Ezekiel - the cherubims, in the
first place, are a representation of Christ. On the one
side, they are related to creation; on the other side,
they are related to redemption. And all these mighty
energies of God concentrated upon that. All the goings of
God are unto that. One creation has failed; God is going
to have a new creation. One representation of God has
failed; God is going to have a new representation. Israel
has failed as a representation of God, He will have His
Church. That is what comes out later in these prophecies.
Now I must leave it
there. That is only half of it. The other half is the
wheels, and I think we must leave that for this morning.
This is all not only interesting but very instructive. It
ought to help us to see one thing: The Throne of
heaven is concentrated upon a full and perfect
representation of the Lord's Mind. When we sum up
this whole section, we shall see more of what that means
for us. But it is a tremendous thing to be right in the
way of the goings of God! Not alongside of the goings of
God, not in some little bit of the goings of God, but
right in the full Way of the goings of God! That
is where we shall find the support of the Throne!