by T. Austin-Sparks
Chapter 1 - The Situation and the Need
“To whom is the arm of the Lord revealed?”
“Behold, My Servant shall deal prudently, He
shall be exalted and extolled, and be very high. As many
were astonied at Thee; (His visage was so marred more
than any man, and His form more than the sons of men): So
shall He sprinkle many nations; the kings shall shut
their mouths at Him: for that which had not been told
them shall they see; and that which they had not heard
shall they consider.
Who hath believed our report? and to whom is the arm of
the Lord revealed? For He shall grow up before Him as a
tender plant, and as a root out of a dry ground: He hath
no form nor comeliness; and when we shall see Him, there
is no beauty that we should desire Him. He is despised
and rejected of men; a man of sorrows, and acquainted
with grief: and we hid as it were our faces from Him; He
was despised, and we esteemed Him not.
Surely He hath borne our griefs, and carried our sorrows:
yet we did esteem Him stricken, smitten of God, and
afflicted. But He was wounded for our transgressions, He
was bruised for our iniquities: the chastisement of our
peace was upon Him; and with His stripes we are healed.
All we like sheep have gone astray; we have turned every
one to his own way; and the Lord hath laid on Him the
iniquity of us all. He was oppressed, and He was
afflicted, yet He opened not His mouth: He is brought as
a lamb to the slaughter, and as a sheep before her
shearers is dumb, so He openeth not His mouth.
He was taken from prison and from judgment: and who shall
declare His generation? for He was cut off out of the
land of the living: for the transgression of My people
was He stricken. And He made His grave with the wicked,
and with the rich in His death; because He had done no
violence, neither was any deceit in His mouth. Yet it
pleased the Lord to bruise Him; He hath put Him to grief:
when Thou shalt make His soul an offering for sin, He
shall see His seed, He shall prolong His days, and the
pleasure of the Lord shall prosper in His hand.
He shall see of the travail of His soul, and shall be
satisfied: by His knowledge shall My righteous Servant
justify many; for He shall bear their iniquities.
Therefore will I divide Him a portion with the great, and
He shall divide the spoil with the strong; because He
hath poured out His soul unto death: and He was numbered
with the transgressors; and He bare the sin of many, and
made intercession for the transgressors” (Isaiah
52:13–53:12).
The Situation and the Need
The word ‘arm’ is used symbolically many
times in the Scriptures, to signify that upon which man
relies for strength and support. The arm represents the
person: sometimes the person is in weakness, and his arm
is described as being weak: sometimes it is in strength.
The arm is the symbol of the person, or sometimes of the
people or the nation, but always indicating the state of
strength or weakness. This phrase, therefore, “the
arm of the Lord”, when used in relation to men or
nations, implies the giving of His strength and support
to that which is according to His mind, the showing of
Himself in power on behalf of it.
To whom, then, will the Lord show Himself in power? To
whom will the Lord ‘make bare’ His arm (Is.
52:10)? “To whom hath the arm of the Lord been
revealed?”
Biblical Examples
Now, while in the Bible there are very many incidents
in which the arm of the Lord is shown, there are
particular occasions characterized by this phrase. For
instance, in the bringing of Israel out of Egypt we find
repeated reference to the baring of His arm, the
stretching forth of His arm. That incident is so often
referred to as being an outstanding occasion of the
Lord’s showing of His arm, the ‘lighting down
of His arm’ (Is. 30:30). To bring them out, the arm
of the Lord was ‘revealed’. If you read and
consider that whole story of God’s dealings with
Pharaoh and Egypt on behalf of His people, you find that
it is all gathered up in this: it was the revealing of
the arm of the Lord. Of course, it is but an illustration
—the emancipation of an elect people from the
kingdom of this world and of darkness; but, for that, the
arm of the Lord is revealed.
Again, take Israel’s deliverance from Babylon: that
was another occasion when the arm of the Lord was
revealed. How often was it so regarded: the arm of the
Lord, stretched out over Babylon, brought down her rulers
and overthrew her forces, in order to bring the people
back from captivity (Is. 43:14). And again, that was
symbolic—the recovery of a pure testimony amongst
the Lord’s people, a testimony that had been lost.
If the question is asked: “To whom hath the arm
of the Lord been revealed?” or in another
tense: ‘To whom will the arm of the Lord be
revealed?’—the answer is there: it is for
that purpose, in relation to that.
But it is in the raising of Jesus, and in His exaltation
to the right hand of the Majesty in the Heavens, that we
surely see the supreme example of the revealing of the
arm of the Lord. And in those succeeding early days of
the Church, how wonderful was this revealing of the arm
of the Lord! In the events narrated in those first
chapters of the Book of the Acts, we see His arm
stretched out again and again. When they were suffering
persecutions, a few met together for prayer, and they
prayed: “Grant unto Thy servants... boldness while
Thou stretchest forth Thy hand... and that signs and
wonders may be done...” (Acts 4:29–30). Herod
came under the impact of that arm; Saul of Tarsus came
under its same impact; many things happened, in many
places, because the Lord was revealing His arm.
And before we are at the end of the New Testament, the
whole of the nation of Israel has met the arm of the
Lord. It was revealed in the complete overthrow and
scattering of Israel as a nation, and so thorough was the
overthrow that her original integration has never yet
been recovered. More still—Rome unleashed all her
forces against the Lord and against His anointed, but met
the arm of the Lord, and was completely destroyed, ceased
to be an empire and a nation. These are just a few
examples in history of the revealing of the arm of the
Lord, in answer to this question: “To whom is
the arm of the Lord revealed?”
Common Features
Now you will notice that many of these instances have
certain features in common.
Firstly, there was the exalting of world powers against
God: the lifting up of the head on the part of the powers
of this world against the Lord and against His anointed.
Secondly, there was the involvement of the Lord’s
glory and the Lord’s purpose, through conditions of
weakness or apostasy amongst His own people. It was not
to the Lord’s glory to have Israel in Egypt. After
the covenant that the Lord had made with Abraham, Isaac
and Jacob, it was altogether contrary to the revealed
purpose of His heart, that He should have the sons of
Israel in bondage in Egypt, giving their strength to the
powers of evil. It was entirely contrary to the glory of
God to have Israel in Babylon; it was dishonouring to Him
and contrary to His revealed intention. How often it was
like that—that the Lord revealed His arm because of
a condition amongst His own people.
And then, thirdly, there was a cry from within on the
part of an instrument of intercession. There was Moses,
in touch with God right from the inside in relation to
that situation in Egypt; there was Daniel, and a few
others with him, right on the inside of the situation in
Babylon, crying to God; there were those prayer meetings
recorded in the Book of the Acts—the cry of the
elect to be avenged. This was a feature common to the
intervention of God again and again—a cry from the
inside.
Some questions arise in relation to all this in our own
day. Is there a situation in our time which corresponds
to these situations, in that threefold connection? Is
there a condition like that today? I think the answer is
obvious. Are world powers lifting up their heads against
the Lord? Was there ever a time when the throne of God
was more challenged by world powers than today? Is there
a condition in Christianity which brings much dishonour
to the Lord? Is the Lord’s true testimony today
involved in a spiritual state which is contrary to His
revealed mind? The answer again is self evident. It is
impossible in these days to move about this world without
meeting these two things and being almost overwhelmed by
them. The tremendous force of evil that is set against
God! You feel it, you meet it, it comes out at you
everywhere. And if that is distressing, without
exaggeration even more distressing is the state in
Christianity generally, which is such a contradiction to
what God has revealed as to His purpose. Sometimes you
are almost compelled to say that the greatest enemy of
Christianity is—Christianity. I am speaking, of
course, very generally. The honour and glory of God is
deeply involved today in a condition amongst His people
which is very dishonouring to Him. These two conditions
undoubtedly obtain today.
What about the third feature? Is there a cry from the
inside? It is difficult to say much about this—
perhaps Yes and No. There is a growing sense within the
heart of many children of God that things are not
right—a real sense that this is not what the Lord
meant; and there is, I believe, a cry deep down in many
hearts for some changing of the spiritual condition among
His people. With all the very general satisfaction with
so little, there is here and there a cry, even a
discerning and understanding cry, born of a conviction
that the Lord meant something other for His Church than
this. This could never answer to God’s standard! It
may be that this consciousness is stronger and its
expression greater than we are able to assess. The Lord
must have it, if He is to be able to do anything; but
even if it is only a Daniel and three or four others in
Babylon, that is enough for Him. I would lay great
emphasis upon this last point: the urgent need of a
deepened, strengthened cry to God. I come back to that
again presently.
Will the Lord Again Reveal His Arm?
These three things, then, surely do obtain today. Is
it not therefore time that the arm of the Lord should
once more be revealed? “To whom is the arm of
the Lord revealed?” Have we in the Scriptures
anything to justify an expectation that, at the end, the
arm of the Lord will again be revealed, as on these
former occasions? Is there something that would support
our prayer and our expectation? Surely there is much! For
instance, on the day of Pentecost Peter quoted from the
prophecies of Joel; but he broke off the prophecy before
he finished it. And the fulfilment of the prophecy on
that day also stopped at a certain point: it stopped at
the outpouring of the Spirit. Peter said: ‘This is
that which was spoken by the Prophet Joel’ (Acts
2:16). But Joel’s prophecy, from which Peter quoted
at some length, did not have its complete fulfilment on
that day. If you look again at Acts 2:19–21, you
will see that some mighty things were included in that
same prophecy, which were suspended on the Day of
Pentecost for a later day. Those things are held in
reserve for another time.
Again, you remember the incident when the Lord Jesus,
returning from the wilderness in the power of the Spirit,
went to Nazareth and entered into the synagogue on the
sabbath day (Luke 4:16–19). The roll was handed to
Him, and He opened it at Isaiah 61, and began to read.
But at a certain point, before He had finished the
prophecy, He stopped. At the words: “...the
acceptable year of the Lord”, He broke off, and sat
down. He did not finish with: “and the day of
vengeance of our God”; He left that part of the
prophecy unread. That is suspended; that has yet to be.
Then we have a passage such as Matthew 24, from verse 29
onwards, pointing to what will happen at the end, at the
day of the coming of the Lord. It is full of the marks of
the baring of the arm of the Lord, the intervention of
God at the end time. It is impressive, is it not, that
some of the statements in that passage are identical in
language with the remainder of Joel’s prophecy.
These things have not all been fulfilled yet; they are
suspended for a later day.
And what are we to say about the Book of the Revelation?
Whatever interpretation you accept of that Book,
historicist, futurist, or whatever it might be, you
cannot get away from the fact that it all focuses upon
the Day of the Coming of the Lord. It is full of
interventions of God—in the life of the Church, in
the life of the nations, and in the kingdom of darkness.
Yes, I think there is much in the Word that would justify
an expectation that, at the end, there is going to be a
very great revealing of the arm of the Lord.
The Need for the Revealing of The Arm of the Lord
(1) Among His Own People
Later, we are going to ask the question: What will be
the principles upon which the arm of the Lord will be
revealed, at any time, for any people, or against any
situation? For the moment we confine our attention to the
fact of the very great need for the revealing of the arm
of the Lord in our time. That need exists, firstly, very
strongly and urgently amongst the Lord’s own people.
Indeed, it becomes a personal and individual matter. It
is of very great consequence whether the Lord can stand
with each one of us, individually—stand alongside of
us with His power and with His might; show His arm on
behalf of you and of me, personally. It is of tremendous
importance whether the Lord can commit Himself to you and
me, and say, ‘I can be with that man, I can be with
that woman, with My strength. I can put My power
alongside of them.’
Again, it is a very important thing whether the Lord can
put His power behind us as local companies of His
people—whether He can stand with us in strength, and
say: ‘This is something I am going to look after;
this is something that I am going to defend; this is
something for which I am going to exercise My power: I am
with this; I am in this.’ That is an ultimate
question. What is the good of anything at all—all
our striving, all our teaching, all our expenditure of
time and energy—if the Lord is not with us, not free
to exercise His power, to show Himself mighty on our
behalf?
And what is true for the individual, and for the local
companies, is true for the people of God in this world.
For the entire people of God are involved in this world
situation, and nothing but the arm of the Lord can save
them. Only one thing can meet this present need and
situation amongst the Lord’s people, and that is,
that He should make bare His arm; that there should be
the ‘lighting down’ of His mighty arm.
(2) In the World
But if that is true in these three senses amongst His
own people, what about this world, this iniquitous, evil
world? Perhaps it is just there that we sometimes get
nearest to having our greatest controversy with the Lord.
I confess that, as I have moved over great ranges of this
world, and seen things, sometimes the question has arisen
in my own heart: ‘Oh Lord, how can You bear to allow
this to go on? How can You, being in the position that
You occupy, tolerate this?’ I am not exaggerating.
In a few hours from London I could show you something
that would so horrify you as to make you cry out,
‘Oh, God, bring this creation to an end soon!’
The evil, the suffering, is such that nothing but the arm
of the Lord can meet it.
This is a word for the hour, and we are going to ask this
question, and seek to answer it, as far as possible,
later. What are the principles upon which the arm of
the Lord will be revealed? For we must recognize
that that arm is, in a sense, governed; its baring is
conditional. There are times when the arm of the Lord is,
as it were, paralyzed; it is bound, it cannot move, it is
not free. It was the cry of the prophet that He was like
a bound man in the midst of His people, unable to move
(Jer. 14:9). There are principles, spiritual laws, which
govern the arm of the Lord. And whether it be our own
personal need of the arm, or the need in local companies,
or in the Church, or in the world, we must understand the
ground upon which the Lord will exercise the might of His
arm; the conditions upon which He will lift it, stretch
it out, and perform His mighty acts.
As I have said, I am not answering that question
immediately; that will come later. For the present I just
want to bring into view the whole matter of the need
of the arm of the Lord to be revealed. I want you to be
gripped afresh by that need. This word was exercising me
for many weeks, especially as I moved about in the Far
East: ‘Arm of the Lord, awake!’ (Is. 51:9). How
great is the need for the arm of the Lord in this many
sided world situation. It could be put in other ways: Oh,
that the Lord would do something—really do
something! If the Lord would bring upon His people in
these days a new sense of this need for the revealing of
His arm, and move us, firstly to send up a cry, and then
to get into line with those laws which govern the moving
of His arm, this message will have been worth while, of
very real consequence.
The Need for a Heart Cry
First of all, a cry against spiritual iniquity on this
earth. I would that I could tell you just a little of
what I have seen and heard resulting from the spiritual
iniquity that is at work in this world—the lives
stripped and rent and harassed; the families broken
up—oh, it is a terrible story. It is sheer,
diabolical evil—nothing but Satanic ingenuity and
cunning; and it is all concentrated upon ridding this
world of God, and of all that is of God, as represented
in men and women. It is utterly evil. The sorrow and the
suffering that we have met and touched day after day, and
that we know is still going on in parts of this world
today, is indescribable—utterly inhuman. Language
cannot express the devilish character of that which is at
work on the earth today. Oh, for a cry to Heaven that
will bring the Arm of the Lord against this spiritual
iniquity—for it is spiritual iniquity. I do
not think that man, even at his worst, could, if left to
himself, conceive these things.
Then, for a cry against the dishonour of the Lord in the
general spiritual state of those who bear the name
‘Christian’. There again is a terrible story.
Yes, the real difficulty for the Lord is amongst those
who take upon them that name ‘Christian’. There
needs to be a cry raised to Heaven against the dishonour
done to the Name of the Lord by that which is called the
‘Christian Church’.
And then, a cry against the too easy satisfaction that
goes with a superficial apprehension of the great purpose
of God. Again and again, my soul has been stirred with
anger at the superficial and easy going attitude that
prevails towards the great purpose of God. Here is
revealed this immense purpose of God ‘from eternity
to eternity’, and yet the attitude toward spiritual
things so often is: ‘Oh, well, a modicum is
sufficient.’ The most limited measure seems to be
all that is required to bring a great deal of
gratification. If you have any idea at all of the
greatness of God’s purpose, and give expression to
it, it is heart rending to find how it can be all carried
away by the most superficial, glamorous kind of
Christianity; as though this noisy, jazzy thing
corresponded in any way to that vast purpose of God
concerning His Son. It makes you indignant; it stirs you
to the depths. There needs to be a cry against that which
would become a substitute for, would usurp the place of,
God’s great purpose, in the hearts of His people.
When the Prophet Isaiah became oppressed with the evils
found among the people of God, Israel, and with the evil
in the nations outside, he cried with a great cry:
“Oh that Thou wouldest rend the heavens, that Thou
wouldest come down, that the mountains might flow down at
Thy presence.... When Thou didst terrible things which we
looked not for, Thou camest down...” (Is. 64:1,3).
“Oh that Thou wouldest rend the heavens”! You
have only to move about in this world, sensing things,
sizing things up, for that cry to be born in you. But ask
the Lord to put within you such a cry, to make you a part
of this ‘inside’ cry, for the glory of God in a
day like this. Ask Him to make you part of that essential
instrument and vessel, like the Daniel company, or
Esther, or Moses, or the ‘prayer meeting’ in
Jerusalem, or many other such vessels, that will reach
Heaven with a cry, and bring forth that Arm. For that is
a vital principle: “For this... will I be enquired
of by the house of Israel” (Ezek. 36:37). The Arm of
the Lord will not just ‘happen’; the Arm of the
Lord will only be revealed in response to something that
is crying to Him. “Shall not God avenge His elect,
that cry to Him day and night...? I say unto you, that He
will” (Luke 18:7–8). He will—but He must
have a crying elect.
The Lord make us like that. This is, I know, a solemn
word. But this is a day for being serious, a time for
facing the real situation, not just going on in a
fool’s paradise, as though all were well. God must
be reached with a cry in these days; I can only say this
out of very close touch with this great need. No one who
has seen something of conditions in the Far East could
help being stirred in this way, or come back other than
with this in their heart: Oh, that the people of God
would get to crying to God about this situation! I
therefore bring this emphasis at the outset, and
afterwards we may see something of the ground on which
the Lord will move.
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