by T. Austin-Sparks
Chapter 8 - The "Mystery" Revealed
In the wonder and amazement of this unveiling we must be
clear as to its exact nature and meaning. To do this we
must put our finger upon key phrases which precisely
embody and define it. We have found the statement which
gives the ultimate and consummate issue: it is in
Ephesians one, verse ten. Can we find in that same Letter
a phrase which brings that end into history, that is, the
operation leading to that end? I think that we can. It is
a fragment in the section marked as verses thirteen to
twenty-two of chapter two: “one new man.” That
whole section is an enlargement of that fragment and it
should be carefully read as such. There have been hints
of this in other Letters of Paul, but here he gathers all
together, and not only so but—as we should expect if
his mind was ranging the “ages” and the secret
hidden in them—the whole Bible is comprehended.
As to other hints, we have such classic and impressive
instances as Romans five, verses twelve through nineteen.
Here the two generic and racial heads are set over
against one another—the “one man” Adam,
and the “one man” Christ; and the context shows
the significance of each. Another tremendous instance is
set in that chapter of amazing enlightenment, First
Corinthians fifteen. It is at verse forty-five: “The
first man Adam became a living soul. The last Adam became
a life-giving spirit” (see the immediate context).
In “Ephesians” the Apostle first refers to the
personal Christ, and then proceeds to the corporate
“one new man.” In an earlier passage both of
these aspects have been mentioned: First Corinthians
twelve, in verse three, “Jesus” and “Jesus
is Lord” is personally mentioned; in verse twelve
the phrase “so also is the Christ” (the article
is in the original) makes the members and the Head
identical for the practical purpose of expression
(context): “Now ye are the body of Christ”
(verse 27). The uniting is by the “One Spirit”
on Head and members.
It is in “Ephesians” that this “One new
man” is revealed fully. If this is “the mystery
hid from ages and generations,” although existent
all the time, we can now see, in the light of “the
making known,” how this has been the governing
concept all through the Bible, that is, Manhood according
to Christ.
At the beginning God said, “Let us make man”—
MAN. The Psalmist cried, “What is man?”—MAN?
In the Incarnation Christ’s favourite designation of
Himself was “Son of Man.” In redemption there
is “one mediator also between God and men, Himself
Man” (1 Tim. 2:5). In reconstitution there is the
Pattern “Second Man” (1 Cor. 15:47). In
exaltation and glory the Psalmist’s question is
answered in Jesus: “What is man?” (Psalm 8:4;
Heb. 2:6). In consummation there is “One new man”—Man.
There are foreshadowings in the Old Testament. Adam was
“a figure of Him that was to come” (Rom. 5:14).
“The man Moses” (Num. 12:3). David was
“a man after God’s heart” (Acts
13:22). These are only instances taken from many, and
their character or function bears respectively features
of Christ.
So, over all the Bible history, there is the shadow of a
Man, both individually and corporately. The Divine
concept of MAN governs all God’s ways: in creation,
Incarnation, mediation; in the Cross as setting aside one
type of man to make way for another; in the resurrection
as the New Man—the “firstborn from the dead”—
accredited; in the exaltation of Jesus as the New Man
instated; in the coming again of “The Son of Man”
to remove the remnants of Christ-rejecting humanity and
establishing the new order; in the Church in terms of
corporate manhood, the vessel and vehicle of Christ’s
completeness and manifestation. All this is what Paul saw
in “the face of Jesus.”
The Church itself is not the “Mystery” revealed
to Paul, but the Church as the Body of Christ—The
One New Man—in which all distinctions other than
Christ are non-existent; this was the revelation. It had
to be a revelation from heaven for such a rabid,
committed, fanatical Jew, with all his ancestry, descent,
“birth,” tradition, training and “blood”
to come genuinely to the place where he could say with
conviction ‘where there is neither Greek
nor Jew, etc.; where all walls of partition are broken
down; where there is neither circumcision nor
uncircumcision; where there are no “children”
and “dogs,” but “all are one in Christ
Jesus” (Greek: “One person in Christ
Jesus”—the gender is masculine).
How very much of the New Testament is illuminated in the
light of this “New Man” concept! Indeed, it
covers all of the meaning of true Christianity. It gives
the real meaning to the new birth (John 3). It explains
the Person and character and work of Christ. It is what
the Apostle meant when he said, “If any man is in
Christ, there is a new creation” (2 Cor. 5:17; R.V.
margin). And it explains those consummate words in Romans
eight and verse twenty-nine: “...foreordained to be
conformed to the image of His Son;” and Ephesians
one and verse five: “...foreordained unto adoption
as sons through Jesus Christ.” All this and much
more indicates what is the specific purpose, work and
nature of this present dispensation. The work in the
“groaning creation” is with a view to “the
manifestation of the sons of God” (Rom. 8:19–23).
Comprehensively, the Spirit of God Who ‘brooded upon
the face of the waters’ (Gen. 1:2) is now at work
upon a “new creation in Christ.” But with a
profound and significant difference. In the old creation
everything began and proceeded from the outside toward
the centre—Man. In the new creation everything
begins and proceeds from the inside, and the “outer
man,” the body, is the final phase of
redemption and new creation: “The redemption of our
body” (Rom. 8:23; 1 Cor. 15, etc.).
The work of the Spirit of God has four aspects in this
dispensation.
1. The securing of the new man. This is the evangelizing
and apprehending of the individuals. In evangelism the
ultimate purpose should ever be kept in mind, otherwise
there will be weakness in the “converts” due to
an inadequate motive.
2. Through the securing, the rebuilding of the new man.
In the old creation God built up the man—“formed
out of the dust of the earth.” (“The first...
is of the earth, earthy”—1 Cor. 15:47). In the
new creation God begins with the spirit of man, proceeds
to the soul and completes with the body. Everything in
the new creation is basically and essentially spiritual.
See First Corinthians, chapter two. The “inward man”
is the renewed —born anew—spirit of man, to be
“renewed day by day.” Here enters all the
teaching on the Holy Spirit and the believer’s life
in the Spirit, as having been “born of the Spirit,”
and “is spirit” (John 3:6).
3. Then follows all the discipline, training and growth
of the new man. The Spirit of God works to a Pattern—“the
image of His Son”; “until Christ be (fully)
formed in you” (Gal. 4:19); “God dealeth with
you as with sons” (Heb. 12:7). It is a long and hard
transition from the “old man” to the “new,”
but the end governs all God’s dealings and ways with
His own, namely the “image” or “likeness”
which was the primal concept in man’s creation.
“Let Us make man in Our image, after Our likeness”
(Gen. 1:26); “I shall be satisfied, when I awake,
with Thy likeness” (Ps. 17:15).
4. Then, finally and fully, the Spirit of God is working
to constitute the “one new man,” Christ
corporately expressed; “the body of Christ,”
“the fulness (complement) of Him”; “the
measure of the stature of Christ,” “the
fullgrown man.”
All this comes out at last in full and clear revelation
in that Letter of finality, “Ephesians.” It is
the Man concept from eternity to eternity, and that
concept has, like a shadow, been over all God’s
history with man and man’s history with God. Hidden
from their eyes in all the strange, inexplicable and
mysterious ways of God in individual men of faith and a
peculiar people and nation, it has now been revealed to
the sons of men, in Christ, that
“God having foreseen some better thing concerning us...
apart from us they should not be made perfect (complete)”
(Heb. 11:40).
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