Now we come back again
to the prophecies of Ezekiel. There is a large section of
this book with which we shall not be able to deal in
detail, so we must find some comprehensive way of dealing
with it simply. I think that way will be by looking at
the three different titles by which Ezekiel was called.
Perhaps you have noticed that in these prophecies Ezekiel
has three different titles, and these three titles gather
into themselves this large section of the book - (1)
"Son of man," (2) "a watchman," (3)
"I am your sign." "Son Of
Man."
The first of these
three titles is "Son of man." Look at chapters
two and three:
And
He said unto me, Son of man... (2:1);
And He said unto me, Son of man... (2:3);
And He said unto me, Son of man... (3:1);
And He said unto me, Son of man... (3:3).
And so it goes on right
through the book. That is one of the main titles of the
prophet. Perhaps you would like to go right through the
book and note how many times "Son of man"
occurs.
We note then, at the
beginning, that this title was peculiar to the Prophet
Ezekiel. No other prophet is called by this name in the
same way. It marks out Ezekiel in a special way. Now we
know that the Lord Jesus chose as His favorite title for
Himself, "The Son of Man," but we must not
think of Ezekiel in the same way. Ezekiel was unique
among the prophets in this title, but Jesus as The
Son of Man was unique among all men. So let us be
careful not to confuse the two titles "Son of
man" and "THE SON OF MAN."
If there is any relationship or similarity, it is in the
function, and not in the person. That is the matter that
we shall now consider.
We have seen that on
the Throne above it there was the likeness as of a man,
and we have seen that the predominant feature of the
cherubims was the man. Therefore, we take note of this
place of man in this book; it is a special idea. We also
know that man means representation and speech for God.
Man is not only a person, he is a Divine idea. There is a
man upon the Throne, and while that man is a person, he
is not only a person, he is a Divine idea. The idea
in God's Mind in creating man was that he should
represent God. "Let Us make man after Our Own
image, in Our Own likeness." Man is God's fullest
thought, and God's final thought.
In the creation God
ended with man, and He headed all things up into man.
When God has reached such a man, He pronounces His
verdict and takes His rest. When He has the man according
to His intentions, then He says about everything,
"It is very good"; and then God takes His rest.
God finds His rest when He has His man
according to His Mind.
However, that is not
the end of everything. At that point God looks for
reproduction. He says to that man: "Be fruitful,
and multiply, and replenish the earth." And the
law of creation was that everything should reproduce
"after its own kind." Things were never
intended to change their form, but everything was given a
definite and distinct form. It was a kind of creation,
and everything was to reproduce after its kind.
You see, God has made
man, and before man has fallen, God says, "Be
fruitful, and multiply." God's idea was that
unfallen man should multiply, and that unfallen man
should fill the earth. But we know that man fell, and the
earth was filled with a kind of man that God never
intended. Therefore, God put a limit to his life; He
fixed the number of his years so that man should not go
on indefinitely. I think you see from this that God's
idea is a man according to His Own Mind. In a full way,
the Lord Jesus was that; therefore, He is "The
Son Of Man," and in a sense we can say He was
the ONLY Son of Man.
So, the principle of
manhood is taken up for the people of God, and that is
where Ezekiel comes in. It is not the person, but the
function; it is the principle, so that "Son of
man" speaks of two things. It means bringing into
view God's original thought and pattern. That was a
principle that the Lord was wanting to have realized in
Israel. Israel is a man in God's eyes, but in this book
of Ezekiel Israel is not the man that God intended. In
this book Israel is a man which has been marred, and God
is moving along the principle of manhood to recover that
idea in Israel. Later we shall find that He was unable to
do it in Israel as a whole, and He therefore sought to
realize it in the remnant. However, the Old Testament
closes with this idea as a complete failure in Israel.
When we move into the
New Testament, we find ourselves in the presence of the
one new man, that is, the corporate man which is the
Church. But we are not going on to that this morning, we
are just with the principle. In principle, "Son of
man" means speaking in relation to an original
thought and pattern of God. You have got to recognize
that as the key to the whole of these prophecies. What is
it all about? What does this whole book mean in all its
parts? Well, this title "Son of man" is
scattered right over the whole book, and it means that
the governing thought of God is this conception of man
according to God's Mind. If God sends this collective man
into captivity, it means that that man cannot stand
before Him any longer. God must have another kind of man.
The great illustration of that, of course, is the valley
of dry bones - bringing up out of the grave of Babylon a
new man with a new heart, and a new
spirit.
Now I think that is
enough to indicate the meaning of this title. God is
moving for the recovery of His original thought. That
thought has been lost. This is what Paul meant in
speaking to Timothy as the "man of God." His
appeal to Timothy was, "O man of God"; that is,
God's man - that is what God is after.
We must take this up as
to our ministry, and that brings us to this: What are we
here for? What is the meaning of our ministry and our
work? It is that God may have this corporate man
according to His Own Mind. That is the meaning of
Ephesians, chapter four:
Until
we all attain to the unity of the faith, and of the
knowledge of the Son of God, to a mature man, to
the measure of the stature which belongs to the
fullness of Christ.
God is working towards
this corporate man. We must remember that God's idea is
man. I would emphasize that because so many seem
to think that God's idea is some organization, some
institution, some thing that is called the Church, a way
of doing things, a certain teaching - a whole system -
and God is not after that. God is not after the Church
just as the Church. The object of the Church in God's
Mind is that it should be an expression of Christ!
The Church is the Body of Christ. It is not a system of
teaching. It is not a special form of practice. It is
a Man, and it is Christ in corporate expression! We
shall come to that later in this book of Ezekiel, but we
take up this principle. It is a very important thing for
us to recognize the corporate Man!
So this man-principle
speaks of three things. First of all, a presentation -
God presents His idea, and then a representation of
something that expresses that which is presented, and
then a declaration, a preaching concerning that. The
thing is presented as a Divine thought, and then the
thing is represented in a Body, and out of that comes the
message.
Now, brethren, have you
got those three things? First there is the vision, the
Man is presented. You see the Man in the Throne. You get
God's idea. God's idea is manhood, manhood of a certain
character. From that God has a representation of this
something which embodies the idea, and then when God has
got that which embodies the idea, there is a message. We
must not put it in the other order, preaching it first.
We must first of all have seen it, and then there must be
an expression of it. There must be that to which we can
point and say, "This is it." The message must
come out of something that actually exists according to
God's Mind.
I think I need not stay
with that any longer, but, you see, that applies firstly
to Christ. You must first of all have seen the Lord, and
then that must have produced something in you so that it
is not only objective and abstract, but the Lord has done
something in you as you have seen. And then out of that
comes your ministry.
The same applies to the
Church. First there must be a revealing of the Church,
and then there must be a representation of the Church,
and out of that exists a definite expression of the
Church - the message goes out. It is almost impossible to
preach the truth unless there is something behind it. It
is essential that we are able to say, "This thing
works, and I can show you where it works." That will
become very clear when we come to our next consideration
in Ezekiel, but I do hope that you have got hold of this
first idea, the principle in this first title, "Son
of man." There is a very great deal of the Mind of
God in that title.
"A
Watchman"
Now we go to the second
title of Ezekiel. In chapter three, at verse seventeen,
it says, "Son of man, I have made thee a
watchman unto the house of Israel.
"And the
word of the Lord came to me saying, Son of man, speak
to the sons of your people, and say to them, 'If I
bring a sword upon a land, and the people of the land
take one man from among them and make him their
watchman; and he sees the sword coming upon the land,
and he blows on the trumpet and warns the people,
then he who hears the sound of the trumpet and does
not take warning, and a sword comes and takes him
away, his blood will be on his own head. He heard the
sound of the trumpet, but did not take warning; his
blood will be on himself. But had he taken warning,
he would have delivered his life. But if the watchman
sees the sword coming and does not blow the trumpet,
and the people are not warned, and a sword comes and
takes a person from them, he is taken away in his
iniquity; but his blood I will require from the
watchman's hand' Now as for you, son of man, I have
appointed you a watchman for the house of Israel; so
you will hear a message from My mouth, and give them
warning from Me" (Eze. 33:1-7).
The second title of
Ezekiel is "a watchman." This
idea is not peculiar to Ezekiel. We have the watchman in
other prophets, or, shall we say, we have the function of
the watchman in other prophets. Habakkuk 2:1 says,
"I will stand upon my watch": that is a
function of the watchman. In Isaiah 21:11 we have,
"Watchman, what of the night?" So again we have
the function, but no one else was exactly called a
watchman except Ezekiel. And as you have noticed, that
title was applied to him at the beginning of his
ministry, and later at his recommission.
Now this title and this
function need not keep us very long. We just ask
ourselves the question, "What is the function of a
watchman?" First of all, the function of the
watchman is to know and to declare the time. That was
always an idea associated with the watchman. Right down
to modern times that is true. I do not know whether it is
true in China, or in other parts of the world, but until
quite recently it was true in Great Britain. In the
country places, the watchman went around at certain times
of the night and blew his trumpet or rang his bell and
shouted the time. He would ring his bell and shout,
"It is five o'clock of the morning." That idea
is in Isaiah, chapter 21. Someone is asking the time,
"Watchman, what is the time?" And the watchman
answers, "The morning cometh, and also the
night." The first thing about a watchman is that
he must know the time - he must know what time it is in
the purpose and work of God.
You know there are a
lot of people who are very mixed-up on this matter. They
are trying to do a lot of things out of time. There are
some people who are confused in the dispensations over
this. In this dispensation, God is doing a special thing.
There is one particular thing that marks this
dispensation in the purpose of God, and it is of the
greatest importance that you and I know what it is that
belongs to this dispensation.
There are all sorts of
systems of teaching which have nothing to do with the
purpose of this dispensation. They are very interesting,
there may be some truth in them, but they are not right
in line with God's specific purpose for this
dispensation. I am not going to take your time this
morning to illustrate what I mean, even though I could
tell you of different systems of truth which have taken
people right off the line of God's specific purpose for
now. It is not always a question of how much truth or how
much error there is in it. The real question is, "Is
that what God is seeking now, in this dispensation?"
Now you can usually detect the fault by one thing - has
that something to do with this earth now? If it has, then
that is not what God is doing in this dispensation. God
is not concerned with doing something on this earth, in
this dispensation, but He is taking out of the nations a
people for His Name. He is building something in
heaven in this dispensation. Whether it is
Israel, or anything else, that is not God's concern in
this dispensation; and anything which has wholly to do
with this earth does not belong to this dispensation.
That is why the Lord Jesus left this earth and went to
heaven. This dispensation is characterized by a
Heavenly thing, and not an earthly thing. That is a
major test of everything.
Now, of course, I could
spend a lot of time in speaking about what God is seeking
in this dispensation. That will come later in the Book of
Ezekiel. This morning we are just underlining this truth:
a watchman's first business is to know the time, and then
to give a very clear message as to what the time is. If
his note is not clear and distinct, people will not know
what the hour is. I do ask you, brethren, to go and think
much about that. The whole matter of how much the Lord is
with you will depend upon how much you are with the Lord
in the purpose of the hour. If you are trying to do
something that God does not want done at this time, you
are wasting your time, and you are wasting your strength.
So, then, the function of the watchman is to be eyes
for the people of God.
And then the second
thing is to discern what the situation is and what it
will lead to. All this is contained in this
description of the watchman's word which the Lord gave to
Ezekiel. The watchman is looking out, he sees certain
things, and he discerns what those things imply. He sees
that those certain things mean something evil for the
Lord's people - these are signs that there is evil
coming. If these things are not guarded against, the
result will be death. That is what is here in the
description of what the watchman saw. And then on the
other side, he sees the Way of Life; and
he is able to say, "Now that is the way of death,
and that is the Way of Life." But
the watchman has to be familiar with what is in the Way
of Life and what is in the way of death. So
he has to discern the situation and recognize the way in
which things are going. It is a very big responsibility.
We are all called to be watchmen, and we must have an
unmistakable message. We must understand the things that
mean death for the Church.
"I
Am Your Sign"
This brings us to our
third and final title of Ezekiel: "I am your
sign." In the Book of Ezekiel, all the things that
the Lord commanded the prophet to do are gathered into
that title. You look at chapter four, and you see the
strange things that the Lord commanded Ezekiel to do.
HE commanded
him to take a tile and to draw on it a picture of
Jerusalem, a picture of Jerusalem as in siege. And then
Ezekiel was told to lie on his left side for 390 days,
and then to lie on his right side for 40 days, and then
to uncover his arm before all the people, and then the
Lord said that HE would put bands upon him so
that he could not move, and HE would make his
tongue cleave to the roof of his mouth so that he could
not speak, and then Ezekiel was told that he must become
a baker and he must make enough bread to last 390 days.
And then Ezekiel was told to take a sharp razor, to shave
his head of all his hair, and then to weigh the hair in
balances.
These are all strange
things, and Ezekiel was to do all these things in the
sight of all the people.
Then when you get well
on into the book, you come to that very sad thing. In
chapter 24 Ezekiel's wife dies, and he is not allowed to
mourn for her. He is to just go on as though nothing had
happened, and everybody would look at him and would say,
"This is a scandalous thing; the fellow does not
care, although his wife has died." Ezekiel goes on
just as though nothing had happened.
What is all the meaning
of this? It is all gathered into this title: "I am
your sign." We will just gather it up in this way: it
means that the message of Ezekiel was first of all
wrought into his own experience. He was taken
through the message before he gave it. The things that he
was to say were already wrought in his own life. I do not
say we are to have Ezekiel's experience literally, but
the whole point is this: the messenger must be a personal
embodiment of his message! It must not just be things
that we say, it must be things that have been wrought
into our own life. Ezekiel did not just give a message,
Ezekiel was the message; and when the people looked at
him, they SAW the message.
Now see what a big
principle that introduces. John put it in this way:
"We speak that we do know and testify that which we
have seen and that which our hands have handled."
There must not be any gap between the teacher and his
message. The teacher and the message must be one thing.
Our position must not be one of just doctrine or theory,
our teaching must be ourselves. The message must be seen
in our history, it must be seen in our experience. This
will, of course, explain a lot as to the Lord's dealings
with us. If the Lord really gets hold of us, HE
will not let us just give out theories. The message will
be born out of DEEP experience.
We take three
illustrations. Peter's commission was "to shepherd
the flock," and in his letters he speaks much about
that. He speaks of "The Shepherd"; and he
speaks of the elders and says, "...shepherd the
flock over which the Lord has given you
responsibility." What is the key feature of a true
shepherd? If we take the Lord as the Example, the key
feature of a true shepherd is that he lays down his
own soul for the sheep. Notice, I have chosen the
word soul. That is the word that the Lord Jesus
used. HE spoke about the disciples laying down
their souls. Now Peter had a very strong and big soul.
You know what the soul is, and Peter had a big one of
those, and Peter's great life lesson was how to lay down
his own soul. If the soul is the mind and the feelings
and the will, we can see what a big one Peter had. Peter
had a mind of his own; he had a will of his own; and he
had feelings of his own; and he was always pushing these
things to the forefront. Peter's life was in the hard
school of having to learn how to lay down his soul. You
know enough about the whole life of Peter as we have it
in the New Testament to show you how true that was. Peter
was not a professional shepherd - he had had the
principle of the shepherd wrought right into his very
being.
Pass on to the Apostle
Paul. Paul's great ministry was concerning the Church as
the Body of Christ. The principles of the Body of Christ
are relatedness, dependence, interdependence,
heavenliness, spirituality. Now did not Paul have to have
those things wrought into him?! When you remember Saul of
Tarsus, you have the very embodiment of independence,
personal action, and earthliness, and unspirituality.
Saul of Tarsus had no sense of dependence, of
relatedness, but see how the Lord took him in hand, and
right from the point on the Damascus Road, all the way
through, he was having to learn these lessons.
Now Paul was a sign for
the dispensation. You think about that! We know the
purpose of this dispensation: it is the Church which is
His Body. That is not just an idea or a teaching, that is
a practical reality. That revelation came to the
dispensation through the Apostle Paul, and, therefore, it
had to be wrought right into the very constitution of
Paul. ALL independence had to be destroyed, ALL
unrelatedness had to be removed, ALL earthly
expectations had to be taken away. Paul had to have his
whole life constituted on the basis of the message that
was given to him. He was a sign to the dispensation. That
is why we make so much of Paul.
And now, what about
John? What was John's particular message? The ministry of
John particularly related to life. That is the
big word of John through all his writings. John became
the embodiment of that principle of life triumphant over
death. When all of the apostles had long been gone to the
Lord, John is still going on. He outlived all the others,
not because he had an easier time than the others. John
suffered with the others, and at last John died as others
had died; but here is a testimony to Divine Life in
spirit, mind, and body. The point is that John
really, personally represented the message that he gave.
Peter, Paul, and John could also say: "I am your
sign."
Brothers and sisters,
you and I have got to be able to say the same. People
must be seeing in us the message and not only hearing it
from our lips. They must be seeing that the message is
true in our history and experience.