We are coming to the
end of our time together, and that means that there is a
very great deal in Ezekiel that we shall not be able to
consider. So this morning I suggest that we give our
attention to chapter forty-seven. As you know, this is
the chapter of the river. I think that this chapter is
well enough known by you that we shall not have to read
it right through. However, we ought to read the second
chapter of the Book of the Acts, because I feel that
Ezekiel forty-seven and Acts chapter two go together. The
second chapter of the Acts is the New Testament
fulfilment of what we have here in this chapter in
Ezekiel. But there is a passage of Scripture between
these two chapters, found in the seventh chapter of
John's Gospel, and we will read that. John, in chapter
seven:
Now on the last
day, the great day of the feast, Jesus stood and
cried out, saying, "If any man is thirsty, let
him come to Me and drink. He who believes in Me, as
the Scripture said, 'From his innermost being shall
flow rivers of living water.'" But this He spoke
of the Spirit, Whom those who believed in Him were to
receive; for the Spirit was not yet given, because
Jesus was not yet glorified (verses 37-39).
Now strict
interpretation demands that we observe one point, for
that which the Lord Jesus was referring to in John seven,
"the last day, the great day of the feast," was
not strictly what we have in Ezekiel forty-seven, but
related to the Feast of Tabernacles, and that takes us a
long way back before Ezekiel; it takes us back into the
life of Israel in the old days. You will remember that
the Feast of Tabernacles was the commemoration of
Israel's coming out of Egypt and living in tents in the
wilderness. We need not dwell with the details of that
feast because that is not our subject, but it was to that
that Jesus was referring.
Ezekiel forty-seven is
not a celebration of the Feast of Tabernacles, but there
are some common features which are in Ezekiel
forty-seven, John seven, and Acts two. We know that when
Jesus spoke those words He was in the temple at
Jerusalem. It was in the temple that the Feast of
Tabernacles was being celebrated, and at that time the
priest went down to the pool of Bethesda and brought
water back and poured it out over the threshold of the
temple. Jesus took hold of that and applied it to
Himself.
The
Source Of The River Is The Man Hidden In The
Sanctuary
Now the common feature
in these three places - Ezekiel, John, and Acts - is
this: the waters are flowing out from the House.
And then there is another common feature in these three
places: in the House, as we have seen, everything
related to the Man Glorified in the Throne. The Man
Glorified in the Throne governed everything. Now here in
John seven, John makes that comment. He said, "This
He spoke of the Spirit, Whom those who believed in Him
were to receive; for the Spirit was not yet given,
because Jesus was not yet glorified." So that
pointed on to the future when Jesus was Glorified.
Undoubtedly, that was fulfilled on the Day of Pentecost.
Jesus was Glorified and the waters came out from the
House. So, you see, we do have some common features in
these books.
Now we come to some
details of Ezekiel forty-seven, and to begin with, we
must note that this whole situation is one that sets
forth a condition in this dispensation. As we know, many
believe that all this belongs to the Millennium. Well,
the situation in this chapter is not a situation in the
Millennium. Neither does this fully correspond to the end
of the Book of the Revelation. It is true that in
Revelation we have the river flowing out from the Throne
of God and of the Lamb, and there are many features there
just like these features in Ezekiel. However, what we
have here in Ezekiel is neither in the Millennium nor in
the Coming Age, but it relates to the dispensation in
which we are living. As you see, in Ezekiel it is a
situation of need, it is a scene of death and disease.
These waters are to overcome death, and the leaves of
these trees are for medicine to heal disease; it is
a scene of great need. In the Millennium death will be
suspended for a time, and at the end of the Book of the
Revelation, death is no more. Here in Ezekiel death has
to be met and overcome. Here an unhealthy condition has
to be dealt with. It is important to realize that this
chapter in Ezekiel applies to the present dispensation.
Now let us take note of
a few other details. First, the Source of the river.
The Source of the river is somewhere hidden under the
threshold of the House. The Word says that the
waters issued from under the threshold of the House, they
came out from under the threshold. Perhaps we should
conclude that they came out of the threshold and moved
toward the side of the House, because it says that they
went down toward the east. This seems to have been the
movement. Now we shall come to that again in a minute.
For the moment, the waters issued from some secret place
under the House.
Now we know that the
Lord had said the Sanctuary was the place of His Throne
and the place of His Glory, the place where the Lord
dwelt. I think we are to conclude that the waters came
from there. Of course, this is all type and symbol. We
are not told exactly where the waters started, but we are
told that they came "out from under the
threshold." I think that we can conclude that
they started in the place of the Throne and the Glory,
and that is a hidden place in the presence of God, for we
know that God was hidden in the Sanctuary.
The Man in heaven is
hidden in the Sanctuary. He is the Heavenly
Mystery. He is on the Throne. He is
Glorified, and then the Spirit comes out from Him as in
that position and in that condition. We remember that
Jesus said, "afterward He would not manifest
Himself to the world, HE would manifest Himself to
witnesses whom He had chosen." After His
resurrection, He did not show Himself personally to the
world. So far as the world is concerned, Jesus has gone
right out. The world does not know of His personal
existence. He is a mystery to the world. He is an
unreality to the world because He has hidden Himself from
the world. He is hidden in Heaven. But there is a
manifestation of Himself, and that is in the Spirit of
Life which comes out from the Sanctuary. Christ is not
only personally in heaven, He is enshrined
within the heavenly Church.
For the world, in this
dispensation, Jesus is still a mystery and the Church is
a mystery. The Church is not understood, but this is the
mystery: "Christ in you, the hope of glory."
And perhaps you Bible students know that the literal
translation is: "Christ in the midst of you, the
hope of glory." Of course, Christ is in us
personally and individually, but the Word in Colossians
is "Christ in the midst of you" - the
Church is the context of those words. The mystery which
is great among the nations is Christ in the midst of the
Church. That is the hope of glory. So Paul said, "Unto
Him be the glory in the Church by Christ Jesus." The
world can only know the mystery by the Life which flows
out from the Church.
That is what happened
on the Day of Pentecost. By the river (the Spirit) which
came out from the Church, the world became aware that
Jesus is alive; Christ is the only Way in which the
mystery is made known. The waters come out from the
Sanctuary. That is what it says in Ezekiel 47:12: "because
the waters thereof issue out of the sanctuary." In
the Sanctuary, they are a mystery. The mystery is made
known when they come out of the House. This is all so
true to the teaching of the New Testament.
The
River (The Holy Spirit) Makes All Things New
So we see that the
first detail of the House is the Source of the river, and
then the second is that the waters flow toward the east.
It says there that the temple was toward the east. So the
waters moved by the south to the east. Now that is also
an interesting point! Why was the House built with its
gate toward the east? Why does everything look toward the
east, and why do these waters move toward the east? Well,
of course, the east is always the symbol for a new day.
The sun rises in the east, the world's day begins in the
east. Therefore, the east is the symbol of a new day,
and it is quite clear that this River meant a new day for
everything and everybody: it is that new day of the
Spirit to which the Lord Jesus referred. "But an
hour is coming, and now is when the true worshippers
shall worship the Father in spirit." When Jesus
was speaking about the coming of the Holy Spirit He said,
"In that day." How often He used those
words, "In THAT day," that is, the day
of the Spirit; that is, the new dispensation - the
dispensation of the Holy Spirit.
It is in this
dispensation that God is offering a new day to everyone.
Of course, it is new in many respects. All the old things
of that past generation are gone - the old things of
types and symbols, the old things of forms and
ceremonies. Those old things are passed away: "Behold,
all things have become new," and this is the
river that makes all things new. It is the day of the
Holy Spirit. So it flows toward the east, and the Spirit
brings in a New Day.
Then the next thing.
"Wheresoever the River cometh, everything
lives":
When the Man
went forth eastward with the line in His hand, He
measured a thousand cubits, and He caused me to pass
through the waters, waters that were to the ankles.
Again He measured a thousand, and caused me to pass
through the waters, waters that were to the knees.
Again He measured a thousand, and caused me to pass
through the waters, waters that were to the loins.
Afterward He measured a thousand; and it was a river
that I could not pass through; for the waters were
risen, waters to swim in, a river that could not be
passed through (verses 3-5; ASV).
This Man of brass
measured "a thousand cubits" four times. He
measured a thousand, and the waters were up to the
ankles. He measured another thousand, and they were up to
the knees. Another thousand and they were up to the
loins, and He measured another thousand and there were
waters to swim in, a river that could not be passed over.
Well, I think the symbolism is very simple. This sets
forth the progressive fullness of the Spirit, or the
progressive fullness of Christ. In the beginning there is
immense intrinsic potentiality. It may be small in
Jerusalem, it may be small at its beginning, but that is
only a comparative matter. Of course, it was a very great
thing that happened on the Day of Pentecost in Jerusalem,
but compared with what came afterward it is but small.
The beginning is small in comparison with all Judaea and
Samaria and the uttermost parts of the earth. But in that
small beginning, there are all the potentialities to meet
the whole world. The scope of this river increases. It
grows fuller and fuller and wider and wider, but what is
here in the waters is sufficient to meet all the need,
however great. The Spirit of Jesus is sufficient for all.
That is what it says, or that is what it means. There is
sufficiency in Christ ministered by the Spirit to meet
the greatest need. There is no need, however great, which
cannot be met by this river. It does not matter where the
river comes: "wheresoever the river cometh,
everything lives." If you study Ezekiel
forty-seven, you will see that there is no situation for
which these waters are not equal. And yet one must make a
reservation in that statement. It says later in the
chapter that there is something that will not be healed
but will be given over to salt. There is such a thing as
resisting the Holy Ghost. Judas did not come into the
good of the day of the Spirit; and that is in the New
Testament, this possibility of sinning against the Holy
Spirit. Where that is deliberately and persistently done,
then there is not Life but death. But provided there is
no deliberate and conscious refusal of the Spirit, the
Spirit is equal to every situation. How great is the
Spirit, He is altogether incomprehensible!
The
prophet said it was a river that could not be passed
through. This is something that is altogether impossible
to cope with. How true that is in Acts two. The coming of
the Spirit is likened to a mighty, rushing wind. The
Spirit came like that on the Day of Pentecost. This thing
cannot be managed by man. You cannot bring the Holy
Spirit within the compass of your ability. Ezekiel said:
"a river that could not be passed over."
This is too much for man. Oh, that we knew the Spirit
like this! And yet in principle, this is what the Spirit
does. He refuses to be tied up to our human
systems and our human measure. He refuses to be
limited to our natural man. He refuses to be
limited to our traditions and our prejudices. That is
what we find in the Book of the Acts. The Holy Spirit is
too much for the people in Jerusalem. He is too much for
Peter, and all Peter's prejudices. He is too much for
Herod the king. He is too much for everything that gets
in His Way - a River that you cannot control.
Now for
the Spirit to be like that, to be expressing Himself in
that way, two things are necessary; and this is
a very true principle. There will only be this fullness
and power of the Spirit if these two things exist. The
first is the absolute authority of the Throne, that is,
the absolute authority of the Man in the Throne. We have
said again and again that the Man in the Throne governs
everything. Everything in the whole Book comes under The
Man in the Throne. In the Book of the Acts, we see the
Man in the Throne governing everything. - It is the
absolute Lordship and Headship of Jesus Christ.
Now God
will not give His Spirit in fullness and in power to
something that does not correspond to His Mind. So this
thing is essential: the Man governing in the House.
Therefore, what this increasing measure says to us is
this: the Lord never desires to leave His people ankle
deep in the Spirit. It is not the Lord's Will that we
should have the Spirit and Life just up to our ankles,
neither is it His desire that we shall have the Spirit up
to our knees, nor yet up to our loins. The Lord's desire
is fullness, waters to swim in, but waters that are too
much for us.
Of course,
this is rather a terrible situation. I think that you
might detect in Ezekiel that he was a bit frightened. To
him, this was a terrible situation, and when it gets like
this, of course, it is terrible. - We want to keep our
feet on sure ground. - We do not want to be swept off our
feet; the Church wants to have its feet on this earth, to
be quite sure of its ground. Well, you know what that
means spiritually, but the Lord's thought is that we
should be swept right off our feet, that we should be
carried out into depths for which we have no
measure. Let us think about that. There are two little
words here, "a river that COULD NOT be passed
through." There is the great "could
not" of the Spirit. That "could not"
stands over all human capacity.
He
Caused Me To Go
The second
thing necessary for fullness is represented by the banks
and the trees. The banks of the river are referred to.
This is a river that is flowing between banks. It is not
just a flood spreading itself all over. This river is
running between banks. You know the Holy Spirit has a
way, He has a way that He will take, He has His Own Mind
as to which way He will take. If the Spirit says, "I
am going this way," it is no good our saying,
"Well, we are going another way." You have a
lot of that in the Book of the Acts. Paul spoke about
assaying to preach the Word in Bithynia, and going toward
Asia, but he said, "The Spirit of Jesus suffered
us not, " and it turned out that the Spirit was
going to Macedonia at that time. Now if Paul had gone to
Bithynia, or Asia, he would have gone away from the
Spirit. The Spirit was saying, "I am going this way
at this time. If you want to be with Me, you must come My
way." And that is what happened to Peter. The Spirit
was moving toward the Gentiles, but Peter wanted to go
his way. The Spirit said in effect, "If you want to
go with Me, you must go My way. I am not coming your way.
I am not coming the way of your tradition and your
prejudice. Today this is the way that I am taking."
And when Peter went that way, he found the Spirit in
greater fullness than he had ever known before.
I think
you see the principle. The banks represent a definitely
and clearly defined Way that the Spirit is taking.
He may change His direction from time to time. The River
may not be just one straight line, but it will always
flow between banks. The Spirit always knows exactly what
He is doing and what He is after. How important it is for
us to be in the banks with the Spirit!!
And then
we have the trees on either side of the river. Of course,
these trees in the New Testament are the living
witnesses. I suppose a passage which best sets that forth
is this one in Ephesians four:
And
he gave some to be apostles; and some, prophets; and
some, evangelists; and some, pastors and teachers;
for the perfecting of the saints, unto the work of
ministering, unto the building up of the body of
Christ; till we all attain unto the unity of the
faith, and of the knowledge of the Son of God, unto a
fullgrown man, unto the measure of the stature of the
fullness of Christ (ASV).
Here are
living witnesses on the banks of the river. Here are
those along the banks of the New Testament, and God has
had His trees all down the centuries. They are the
living witnesses bearing testimony to the fullness of
Life in Christ, leading on toward spiritual fullness, the
fullness of Christ.
There is a
rather interesting thing to note here in verse nine of
Ezekiel forty-seven: "And it shall come to pass,
that every living creature which swarmeth, in every place
whither the rivers come, shall live." I do not
know whether you have got a mark in your Chinese Bible
against that word, however, in the Hebrew it says,
"whither the two rivers come." It is in the
plural in the Hebrew, and my Bible gives me a reference
in the margin which says, "whither the two rivers
come." That is the Hebrew.
Now that
seems to upset everything, does it not? But I think
again, it is a symbol. Perhaps this river did divide into
two, but "two" in the Bible is the number of
adequate testimony. Wherever you find the number two, you
find sufficient testimony - "In the mouth of two
witnesses everything shall be established... Whatsoever
two of you shall agree... He sent them forth two by
two." You see, two is the number of sufficient
testimony. So what we have here by the Spirit is
sufficient testimony in the witnesses. So, you see, the
effect of it all is Life. Of course, I would like to say
a lot about that, but we must leave it. THE TEST
of everything is Life. THE TEST as to whether
Jesus is Lord is found in the Life. THE TEST as
to whether the House is in order will be in the Life. THE
TEST as to whether the spirit is having His way will
be the Life. The Life is the testimony. Thus the
testimony is this, that God has given unto us eternal
Life.
And so we
close for the time being. Ezekiel had been told to show
all this to the House of Israel. In order to show it all
to others, the prophet had to be caused to go that way
himself. You notice what Ezekiel said, "He
caused me to go." You and I must be caused to
go this way before we can show it to anyone else. This is
not just objective truth for teaching: this is the experience
of the servant of the Lord.