by
T. Austin-Sparks
Chapter 2 - The Realisation of God's Plan
Readings: Hebrews 8. Ezekiel 40-47.
Let us - before we continue - just say a word about the purpose of
these messages. They are intended to serve this end: to "present
every man perfect in Christ." The deepest desire, the earnest prayer
behind the giving of them is that all who read may be led into the
fulness of the glory of God in Christ.
This is not to criticise the Church. It is not intended to uncover
faults. Whoever desires to accuse the Bride of the Lamb? Who wants,
in the joyful knowledge that the Lord sees His work as finished, to
reprove the poor earthly form of His Church? But because the glory
of the Bride is so unspeakably beautiful, because the calling of the
Church is beyond all expectation so mighty, because the Lord is
waiting and longing for the growth and the completion of His Body,
therefore, and therefore only, do we speak, with the earnest prayer
that it may please the Holy Spirit to raise up this testimony in the
hearts of all who read it, that it may be realised and carried
forward, and serve in the accomplishment of the eternal purposes of
our heavenly Father.
The typology; that is, the symbolic meaning, of the Old Testament,
is known. On the pages of the Old Testament the Holy Spirit speaks
of things which should have their fulfilment only in our time. But
everything is gathered up in the Person of our Lord Jesus Christ,
Who said Himself that the Old Testament was pointing to Him, and
represented Him.
If we keep that in view, then chapters 40-47 of the prophecy of
Ezekiel will get a new meaning for us; we shall recognise that these
are not merely things which were intended to serve the Jewish
nation, but their deep meaning is to show to the Church of God in a
clear way that everything in her midst has to be according to the
measure of Christ, Who alone is the foundation, content and
accomplishment of His Church. That is why everything in the Church
has to be brought back to the measure of Christ. And every
individual member of the Church should fulfil their measure
according to the measure of Christ.
It is remarkable that Ezekiel gives us exactly the day in which the
Lord brought him in spirit to Jerusalem in order to show him there
the Temple. It was in the tenth day of the first month.
This statement is very significant, because it calls to our
remembrance the day when the history of salvation for Israel began.
And as the vision of the Temple is bound up with the memory of the
slaying of the Passover lamb in Egypt, there is shown to us how
everything is turning around our Lord Jesus Christ. He is the One
Who works for His people's salvation by His Blood. He is the Temple
in which everything must serve His revelation. We are, therefore,
each time we come to an important fragment in the history of Israel,
brought back to the day in which the Passover lamb was slain, in
which an epoch in history of slavery was brought to an end, and an
age of liberty began.
The forty years of wandering in the wilderness was a sad time. We
see Israel in weakness. Outwardly it is separated from Egypt, but
Egypt is in its heart. The people murmur against God, quarrel with
their leaders, until judgment upon the fleshly minded generation is
inevitable, and all who once had gone out die in the wilderness,
except two.
With the passage through the Jordan a new section begins. In the
tenth day of the first month the people celebrate the Passover of
the Lord, after having received the circumcision, and by it
confirmed that they belonged to God, Who had delivered them out of
Egypt, and brought them into the land of promise.
In Nehemiah also the work of the building of the Temple begins in
the tenth day of the first month. So, in the book of Esther, where
the deliverance of the people out of the cunningness of Haman takes
place. And again in Ezekiel. Although the Gospel according to Mark
(Chapter 11:14) does not mention the specific day, nevertheless
everything which happens in these chapters is closely related to the
tenth day of the first month. In the cursing of the fig tree the
Lord is anticipating the judgment over unfruitful Israel. The
magnificent Temple which the Jews had before their eyes, stood in
contradistinction to the thoughts of God. The outward Temple was not
counting before God. Jesus was the Temple of God in this earth. With
His resurrection appears the new House, the spiritual House, of
which Peter speaks; the new Temple, about which Paul writes in the
letter to the Ephesians. But this Temple could only come into being
after Jesus Christ, as our Passover, had been slain; after that
which once had happened in the tenth day of the first month had
found its highest fulfilment in the death on the Cross of the Lamb
of God. A whole system of symbolic foreshadowings is come to an end.
A new world of spiritual realities is here. The history of the
Church which is seated with Christ in the heavenlies has now begun.
We see what a fulness of the thoughts of God is bound up with the
tenth day of the first month. And if we will become co-workers with
God, if we desire to be in fellowship with God's eternal purpose and
work in bearing fruit, then that which happened on the tenth day of
the first month must become the foundation of our life. We must
recognise our being crucified with Christ in His death. We must go
through the Jordan and enter into a life of victory which stands
under the direct leading of the Spirit. We must and we will seek to
know the thoughts of God which have found their expression in Christ
Jesus; because God's purpose and aim is set upon His House, a
spiritual Temple, His Church. It is that which is no longer linked
with this world, just as the Risen One does not belong to this
earth. The only relation the Church has to the world is by her
testimony that Jesus Christ is Lord. Thereupon God works. To bring
that into view is the concern of the Holy Spirit.
Much weakness comes from not having recognised that. Men have
brought their own ideas into that which is God's. That is why He
leaves the burden upon their shoulders. He lets them feel the
responsibility of such an action. He lets them find the means to do
what God alone can do. But the moment we set aside all that which is
of man, making room again that God alone can work, God comes in and
takes care of His work; but we have the wonderful and blessed
assurance that we are co-workers with God, His instruments, nothing
less nor more.
But that means that we have to be ready to go the way of the Cross.
We must have arrived there, where the natural history of man ceases
to be; in the tenth day of the first month, when the Lamb was set
apart, and from that time on, all salvation was found in His Blood
alone. When the Cross of our Lord Jesus Christ has become our Cross,
where we have been crucified with Him, a new thing can begin. The
Cross is the foundation for everything. Therefore Paul says: "We
preach Christ crucified... the power of God and the wisdom of God."
Readings: Matthew 21:33-40. 1 Peter 2:1-9.
Three things we have already seen:
1. God has a definite plan.
2. That plan is a mystery, hidden from ages.
3. That plan and purpose of God is gathered up in Christ Jesus, our
Lord.
Now we come to the fourth thing:
4. The realisation of His plan in His Church.
Jesus had said: "I will build My church." And from that time on He
began to tell His disciples that He must suffer the Cross. That shows us that the Church stands in closest relation to the
Cross. The Church has been actually the purpose and aim of the
coming of Jesus; but the Cross was the way to call her into being.
Nobody has such a right to interpret the word given to him as Peter
himself: "Thou art Peter, and upon this rock I will build My
church." The interpretation Peter gives of this word shows clearly
and unmistakably that it never came into his mind to regard himself
as the rock upon which the Lord wanted to build His Church. Firstly
Peter had not seen further than the Cross, and he shrank before the
thought that his Master should be treated in the same way as the
prophets of Israel had been treated before. He could not know that
the Cross was inevitable and necessary if, beyond the Cross, on the
ground of resurrection, established on "the living stone" the
Church, should come into being, made of living stones. But after the
resurrection of Jesus, Peter apprehended that inherence in a
wonderful way, and made it clear in these words: "To whom coming as
unto a living stone..."
Jesus as the Risen One is the Living Stone, the Foundation which has
been laid! That which is going to be built on that Foundation, as
the Temple of God must be according to its Foundation or, in other
words, only as we are risen with Christ can we constitute the
spiritual House of which Peter speaks. Only as separated from the
world, by being crucified thereto, can His Church be that Holy
Nation, the people of His own possession.
In order to understand that expression "holy nation" we must turn to
the parable which Jesus tells in the Gospel according to Matthew,
chapter 21. The husbandmen to whom the Lord had entrusted His
vineyard did not only rob Him of its fruit, not only beat and mock
His messengers, but they seized the Heir Himself and killed Him. The
vineyard is the Kingdom of God. It is taken from those who have
showed themselves unworthy of it, and is given to "
a nation
bringing forth the fruits thereof." That nation is the Church. She
has taken the place of Israel, and is commissioned to reveal in her
nature that which Israel had not been.
Balaam's prophecies in Numbers 21 and 24 reveal to us the special
nature of the Church as typified by Israel. The Church is a nation
outside all the nations. She is, although
in the world, yet
not
of the world. The New Testament does not know anything
of a national Church. The Church is supernational. She also is not
an organisation which would be subject to human opinions. She is His
Church in which the Lord reveals Himself as King. The shout of
victory is in her midst. She is a testimony to the power and glory
of the resurrection of her Lord. So it was as seen of God according
to Balaam's prophecies. Israel was in the eyes of God the most royal
nation. In the place of death in the midst of the wilderness it was
full of life, and was victorious because of the Lord.
Now the Church, which has taken the place of Israel, must be a
testimony to His life. But that she only can be if, separated by the
Cross from the world and gathered around the Cross and the Risen
One, she fulfils her testimony in
His power. Wherever the
Church has sought to link herself with the world, when she forgot
her unique importance, when uncrucified flesh and unsanctified human
ways rose up in her, her power was gone, her testimony was lost. The
purpose of the Church is to "show forth his praises." The fruit of
the Spirit must be found in her. That which Israel refused the Lord,
His Church must give Him, in richest fulness, in willing obedience;
and doing this, she realises the plan of God, and becomes the
instrument according to His will through which she reveals Jesus
Christ to the visible and the invisible world.
Reading: Ezekiel 40
If we would rightly understand the description of the temple in
Ezekiel, we must keep in view that it was the ministry of the
prophets to continually direct and lead back the people of Israel to
that which God, from the beginning, had in mind for His people. The
urge: "show the house to the house of Israel" has that purpose, to
direct the people through the image of the temple to that One Who is
the temple - Christ. It was to show the people again the measure of
God, and to help them to grow into the full purpose of God for His
people.
The purpose of God for His people, and that is now the Church of
Jesus Christ, is to lead them into the full measure of the stature
of Christ. For the whole Church, as well as the individual,
everything depends on our recognising and taking our place "in
Christ." We cannot emphasise enough that all our believing, all the
light and all the knowledge, are in the end, not only valueless, but
they increase the judgment for all those who are not really "in
Christ." For those who are in Christ Jesus, faith is life, and all
the light and all the knowledge serve now to the furtherance and
manifestation of that life. Our time is rich in theological
knowledge, but poor in resurrection life, without which there can be
neither testimony nor fruit for Jesus Christ.
Over ten times we find the expression "chamber" in chapter 40. All
the chambers are measured, and have their order and appointment
through God Himself. So there is brought before our eyes in an image
the purpose we have mentioned above, that we are appointed to be "in
Christ." Yes, when we look closer, that whole vision of the temple
is in the end nothing other than an unveiling of what it means to be
in Christ, because all these chambers speak of our abiding in
Christ, and of our ministry in Him. Levites and priests are
appointed to dwell in these chambers, and because the Church of the
New Testament is a priestly people, it is her destination and her
privilege to dwell in Christ. But each one has to take the place
appointed unto them. We all know that tendency to take the place of
another. The place and the position of another seems to us so often
much better than the corner in which we are called to work. If we do
not remain where the ministry is given us, if the flesh is rising up
in order to seek one's own satisfaction in another place, it brings
disorder into the House of God; and the testimony which should have
been raised through the oneness of the Spirit is destroyed.
Beloved, let us enter into rest in recognising and taking our place
in Christ. Let us be entirely surrendered to the Lord, that we may
know that the Lord Himself is working everything in us and through
us; then the peace of God will come into our hearts, with abiding
joy.
Abiding in Christ gives power to our lives. Our Lord could say of
Himself that He was abiding in the Father. He abode in the Father
because He did nothing out from Himself, because His whole life was
a life out from God. Therefore there was no unfruitful hour in His
life; therefore everything was so marvellously ordered and
fulfilled.
In that picture of the temple we further see how the priests and the
Levites received their portion in the temple. In the language of the
letter to the Ephesians this means: "God has blessed us with all
spiritual blessings in Christ." And in the letter to the
Philippians: "My God shall supply all your need according to his
riches in glory by Christ Jesus."
Not only our position and our ministry, but all our needs also are
supplied in Christ. To abide in Him does not only mean to take our
appointed place in order to work in rest, but also to live out of
the fulness, in order to accomplish all the duties of the daily life
in that capacity which is given us in Christ.
Beloved, Christ is not only the object of our thoughts, not only the
living contemplation of our hearts, Christ is our world. It is, as
it were, through the Cross of Calvary that we have gone out of the
world of things, and entered into the world of God, where that which
is Divine is drawing and filling us; where we walk in Christ and
live unto Him Who encompasses us on every side; so that we meet all
the temptations of this earthly side of things in His power and
stand against every opposition in His victory. That is the
experience of the Apostle, who exclaims: "I can do all things
through Christ which strengthened me."
Of all that which we have worked and done on this earth there
remains only that which is according to the Lord, that which we have
done in His power, according to His measure and in His time,
according to His commission and His will. And our place in the glory
ends on the measure in which we have grown into Christ, and He has
become manifest in us.
Another thing. The chambers of the temple remind us not only of our
position in Christ, the provision made for the priests in the
temple, of our fulness given us in Christ to meet every demand;
there is yet another factor which is significant. Let us take note
that the chambers in the temple are connected with each other. In
Christ Jesus we are closely united together. In Him there cannot and
must not exist any separation. It is the devil's purpose to destroy
this oneness of the Body of Jesus Christ. The testimony of Jesus
rests upon that, that we recognise our oneness in Him. "For by one
spirit we are baptised into one body." Jesus Christ as the Head has
received the anointing for all His members. In the anointing of the
one Holy Spirit we stand in one testimony for the truth of the one
Body and the one ministry, which can be no other than the
glorification of our Lord, Who wants to become everything in us,
that we too reveal His fulness in every part by mutual love and
fellowship.