Yesterday morning we
took a general view of this House which was shown to
Ezekiel. This morning we shall begin to consider it more
in detail. We are going to return to chapter forty,
verses three and four:
And He brought me thither, and, behold, there was a
Man, whose appearance was like the appearance of brass,
with a line of flax in His hand, and a measuring reed;
and He stood in the gate. And the Man said unto me, Son
of Man, behold with thine eyes, and hear with thine ears,
and set thine heart upon all that I shall shew thee; for
to the intent that I might shew them unto thee art thou
brought hither: declare all that thou seest to the house
of Israel. So
we take another look at this Man of brass. You will
remember that we noticed that the feet of the cherubims
were of brass, and the feet of the Lord Jesus in the
first chapter of the Revelation were of brass; and we
said that brass in the Bible is a symbol of righteous
judgment. This Man of brass stands at the gate, and that
means that there is no way in for the unrighteous man.
The man of the flesh cannot enter this gate. There is no
place for the flesh in this House. It is only the
Righteous Man who may come in here, and everything is
going to be measured by the Righteous Man.
Let us take a look at
the two instruments of measurement, and we note that
there are two instruments of measurement. There is
firstly the line of flax, and no measurement is given
unto it. We are not told how long that line was, but we
do know that it was used for the greater measurement.
When we come later to the river in chapter forty-seven,
it is not the rod but the line that is the instrument of
measurement; and we find that that river becomes too deep
for man. I think this clearly corresponds to what Paul
said in the Letter to the Ephesians. There he spoke of "the
love of Christ, which passes knowledge." We are
here in the presence of something that is far greater
than human measurement. If this Man does represent the
Holy Spirit, as we have said, there is no measuring the
Holy Spirit. The Holy Spirit is without measure. But
within that great fullness, there is the rod of
measurement. There is that which brings the great
fullness down to particular matters. So we have this
measuring reed. These are two ways of measuring. One is
what we may call the "measureless" Measure,
the Measure that has no limit. That is the great fullness
of the Spirit. The other is that which is brought down to
things in everyday life. This rod was used for all the
details of the House. Now I do not think it necessary to
stay with that. We only note that there are two means of
measuring. One, there is the great fullness of Christ;
the other is that that fullness is brought down to the
details of the House of God. I will just leave that with
you because there is a lot in that.
We must remember this,
that when we think of the fullness of the Spirit, or the
fullness of Christ, we must not forget that that is going
to be brought down to the details of our life. That is
made perfectly clear in the Letter to the Ephesians. The
first three chapters relate to the great fullness of
Christ, that Unmeasured Fullness. Chapter four begins in
this way: "I... beseech you to walk worthily of the
calling wherewith ye were called..." And then all
the details are mentioned, husbands and wives, wives and
husbands, masters and servants, servants and masters,
children and parents, parents and children. You see, the
Measuring Rod has come down to everyday life. We must not
think in these great terms without realizing that the
Lord is going to apply His measure to every
detail. It is so easy to have these great ideas about the
fullness of Christ, and to neglect the details. Every
little thing must be measured by the same Spirit that
measures the fullness of Christ. We must see that.
So here in Ezekiel is
this Man. Let that "Man" represent the Holy
Spirit, for the Holy Spirit is speaking about the vast
fullness of Christ and His House. The Holy Spirit is
speaking about the vast fullness of the Life which flows
out, and that same Holy Spirit comes to these very small
details. It is the same Spirit, and, while He speaks of
the greatness, He also points to the details. I do not
think that there would be any value in our looking at the
measurements of the rod. So we just pass on to the
instructions that were given to the prophet.
Notice in chapter
forty, verse four: "..The Man said unto me,
'Son of man,
BEHOLD with thine eyes,
and
HEAR with thine ears,
and
SET thine heart upon
all that I shall shew thee...
(Son of man),
DECLARE all that thou seest to the house of
Israel.'"
Notice these words: "behold,
hear, set thy heart, declare." Then, if you go
over to chapter forty-three in verse ten, you have
another part of the instructions: "Shew the
House to the House of Israel." Now let us think
about that for a minute.
Before we can present
anything to other people, we ourselves must first know
what we are going to present. The instructions to the
prophet were very particular: 'Behold with thine eyes,
hear with thine ears, and so on - i.e., give very careful
attention to this whole matter!" You must have a
very clearly defined apprehension of what you are going
to show to the people. You yourselves must see this
object. We ask again, what is that object? What is the
answer to this whole vision? In the first place,
undoubtedly the answer is found in the Incarnation. The
Incarnation is the key to everything here.
First of all, in the
Incarnation we have the Righteous Man, the Man according
to God, and He is the standard and the measure of
everything. "He is made unto us righteousness
from God." You will remember that that was said
at a time when things were out of order in the Church,
things were not according to the Lord's Mind, and so the
apostle said about Jesus, He is made unto us
Righteousness. Everything in the Church has got to be
measured according to Christ; that is, according to God's
standard as present in His Son. He is the Righteous One.
God hath appointed a day in which He will judge the world
in righteousness in the Man Whom He has appointed. Jesus
said that the Father had given Him authority to execute
judgment because He was the Son of Man. Here is the Man
of brass. The Son of Man is the Righteous One, and He
is God's standard of measurement. God measures
everything by Him. We shall have to come back to that
again later on, but we just note the meaning of the Man
of brass and His measuring reed.
You remember that the
natural man had intruded into the church at Corinth. The
apostle had to speak to Corinth much about the natural
man, the carnal man. He pointed out that this natural
man, carnal man, had no place in the realm of the things
of the Spirit. This "man receiveth not the things of
the Spirit... neither can he know them." And that is
what this Man of brass is doing, He is saying that only
the man according to Christ can behold and see and hear.
Only the spiritual man can come into this realm of the
things of the Spirit. I say that the natural and carnal
man had intruded into the church at Corinth, and you see
the method by which the apostle fought to put that right.
He said, "I determined to know nothing among you,
save Jesus Christ and Him crucified." Paul brought
in this Righteous Man to correct the things that were
unrighteous. By bringing in the Righteous Man, he put out
the unrighteous man. By bringing in the Man of the
Spirit, he put out the man of the flesh. That is exactly
the meaning of this Man of brass with His measuring rod,
so that first of all the object in view is Christ. He is
governing everything.
And then going with
that is "the Church, which is His Body." The
Church is called "the one new man." Paul said, "You
have PUT ON the new man." And so the Church is
measured according to Christ. Christ is the measure of
everything in the Church. Indeed, that is the only Church
that is known in heaven! The only Church that heaven
recognizes is that Church which is the Body of Christ,
that Church which is measured according to Christ.
Everything in that Church has to do with one thing only,
it is the measure of Christ. That is what we have in
Colossians and Ephesians, and in Philippians also. But
Colossians and Ephesians are particularly the letters
concerning the Church. In those letters measurement is
mentioned, "the measure of the stature of the
fullness of Christ"; "the breadth and length
and height and depth." You see, measurement is very
much there in these letters. But this measurement is in
the Church, and everything with the Spirit is just a
matter of how much of Christ there is.
Let us try to get free
of our technical idea of the Church. We know that the
Church is not a thing. It is not an institution. It is
not here or there as to geography. The Church is just
where it is as the measure of Christ. If there is more of
the measure of Christ in one place than another, then
there is more of the Church there. It is just the measure
of Christ that determines how much of the Church is
there. Do try to remember that it is spiritual measure,
which is the measure of Christ, that defines the Church.
If you ask the question, "What is the Church and
where is the Church?" - the answer is, "Where
Christ is"; and where Christ is most fully, there is
the Church more fully. We must recognize that the Church
is entirely measured according to this Man and can only
be seen by revelation of the Holy Spirit.
Now, if we have not
received "the spirit of wisdom and revelation,"
then we may talk about the Church, but we shall just see
the Church in some way that is not the Spirit's way of
seeing the Church. It requires the Holy Spirit to enable
us to see the Church. And when the Holy Spirit shows us
the Church, what shall we see? Shall we see something
that is called the Church? Shall we see a lot of people
who hold a certain doctrine about the Church? Shall we
see something in which a certain interpretation of Bible
teaching about the Church is held? Shall we see a
congregation of people who call themselves the Church?
Shall we see any of that? No! when the Holy Spirit opens
our eyes, we shall not see that. We shall see Christ. To
see Christ is to see the Church! and to have seen the
Church means that you have seen Christ. You see, Christ
is the Great Spiritual Order as well as the
Great Spiritual Person.
There is a great
heavenly system. Christ is the embodiment of that
Heavenly and Spiritual system. It is all a matter of what
Christ is. It is a matter of the Mind of Christ; that is,
what Christ thinks and how He views things. It is exactly
how Christ does things. You see, the Church is an
expression of a very comprehensive Person. That is how we
should consider the Life of Christ, as here to reveal
these great spiritual truths of heaven. It is a vast
heavenly system brought to us in the Person of God's Son.
It was when Paul saw
Christ that he began to see the Church. Those two things
went together; and the more he saw of Christ, the more he
understood the Church. That resulted in Paul giving us
this unique presentation of the Church. It is only Paul
who calls the Church "the Body of Christ"; and
because the Church is the Body of Christ, I am saying
that this can only be seen from a heavenly standpoint by
the revelation of the Holy Spirit.
"Behold...
Hear... Set Thine Heart"
So we come
to these instructions, "Son of man, behold with
thine eyes, and hear with thine ears, and set thine heart
upon all that I shall shew thee." What does that
mean in New Testament terms? Well, in the Letter to the
Ephesians the apostle prays that the Church may come to
"the knowledge of Him," that is, as you know,
in the original "the full knowledge of Him."
The Ephesian believers had a knowledge of the Lord; I
think they had a very large knowledge of the Lord. Paul
had been with them for two years, and he had said that he
had not shunned to declare unto them "the whole
counsel of God," so that they had received very much
teaching from Paul; and, yet, in the end he is praying
for them that they might be brought to the full knowledge
of Christ. And he explained that in his own prayer:
"that you may know what is the hope of His calling,
and what the riches of the glory of His inheritance in
the saints, and what the exceeding greatness of His
power." - "That you may KNOW." - "Son
of man, behold with thine eyes, and hear with thine ears
and set thy heart upon all that I will show you."
( Ezekiel 40:4 paraphrased) - So Paul says, "That I
may know Him." Right at the end of his life he is
still saying, "That I may know Him." - Son of
man, behold and hear, and set
thy heart! You cannot as servants of Christ show anything
to others until you yourselves have seen. Afterwards the
Man said to Ezekiel, "Shew the House to the House of
Israel," so that this new ministry to which Ezekiel
was called was a presenting, or revealing, of Christ. We
can put it in this way. In the first vision Ezekiel had
seen the Man on the throne, he had seen the Man in
heaven and now his last great vision was the Man in the
Church. He was seeing the Church now, and his
ministry at the end related to that, the presenting of
the fullness of Christ, and the Church which is the
fullness of Him that filleth all in all. - So the end of
that prayer of Paul is "to Him be the glory in the
Church and in Christ Jesus unto all the generations of
the age of the ages: Amen" (Greek Interlinear).
"Son
of man, shew the House to the House of Israel." What
will be the effect of that? This is the test as to
whether we have seen. You see, we can talk about the
Church as we have it in the New Testament, yet know
nothing about it. There was a time when I was doing Bible
teaching, and in those days I could give a very good
analysis and outline of the Letter to the Ephesians. It
was what was in the New Testament about the Church, and I
could present it. You see, I was talking about the Church
but I knew nothing about it. I had really not seen the
Church. All my knowledge of what the Bible taught made no
difference to me. What was the result of that? There was
very little spiritual value in that ministry. All that
ministry certainly did not create a revolution.
Now notice
what it says here, "Shew the House to the House of
Israel, that they may be ashamed of their ways, and may
keep My Word"; and if the effect of the ministry is
to have effect like that, we must have seen in the
Spirit. It will not have that effect if we have only seen
it in the letter. "The letter killeth, but the
Spirit maketh alive." The effect of a ministry of
revelation is quite positive; it has an effect upon
people.