There are two titles or
designations of the Church, which are, to my mind,
supreme amongst the designations. The first is
"Christ": "For as the body is one, and
hath many members, and all the members of that one body,
being many, are one body: so also is Christ" (1
Corinthians 12:12). That seems to be the very highest
designation of the Church. The other is "the new
man." Both of these are represented by the other
designation, "the Church which is His Body." In
the sense in which Paul meant it, the Body is the Christ
corporately presented. Again, it is the "one new
man." In those two designations
"Christ" and the "one new man"
we have the whole idea of representation, and that is set
forth as supremely a corporate thing.
There is one Body, and
we are members one of another; and the importance of the
individual has to be subjected to the importance of the
whole Body. The importance of the individual is subjected
in the Body to the Body. It is what the Apostle is
leading to when, by the grace of God given to him, he
exhorts every man not to think more highly of himself
than he ought to think, because we are members one of
another. The individual importance must not stand out
from, or in, the Body as something over the Body
something in itself. There is an importance of the
individual member, as the Apostle makes perfectly
clear... and great importance; but that importance of the
individual is not to protrude.
That brings us to
another very vital aspect of the great truth of the Body
of Christ, as presented in the Word of God, and that is
the Holy Spirit and the order in the Body. You cannot
read these writings of Paul (Romans through Philemon)
by the Holy Spirit in the light of facts as you see
them, or of conditions as you meet them, without being
rendered well-nigh breathless. It is an astonishing
understanding that Paul has concerning the Body. You have
only to stand back from these things as you read them,
and feel this is either something amazing, or else
impossible. Many have surrendered to the latter
conclusion. You are sufficiently aware of, and alive to,
the importance of this matter. This is not just a
presentation of teaching about great themes, great ideas;
this has to do with Gods ultimate purpose
represented in this universe an expression of God
in Man-form. That is our destiny, that is what we have
our being for; and we miss our destiny unless we
recognize this. We have no adequate knowledge and
understanding of what God is doing, and why He is dealing
with us as He is, until we see this purpose of God in our
being conformed to the image of His Son, the producing in
this universe of a corporate Man which is Christ in full
expression.
Firstly, the Body grows
and makes increase through order. Paul makes that
perfectly clear. It is as the Body is fitly framed that
it grows. It makes increase with the increase of God.
That is on the basis of being fitly framed and of every
joint working in its due measure. Growth and increase,
therefore, are by means of this order. We hardly need
turn again to the analogy of the physical body, which is
presented to the mind of the Apostle as he writes about
the Body of Christ. It is quite true that there is no
growth in the body no development unless
there is an ordered state in the body... what he calls a
fit framing. It is wonderful how the Lord has created
things in the physical world so that their position is
best suited to their purpose. Conceive of any other order
in the arrangement of our members, and see how we should
be handicapped. We do not want to be humorous, but rather
to simplify this matter and get the principle home. But
supposing your thumbs were on the other side of your
hands and you had to work in that way... And get hold of
everything on the outside. Get anything that is freakish,
and see at once how limitation arises.
Now the Lord has an
order which, if recognized and if functioning, leads to
the greatest measure of increase it is itself
determined to realize the goal of God; and we can no more
realize Gods goal without Gods order than we
can realize the physical possibilities of our bodies with
a body disordered. The inclusive factor in this order is
the Headship of Christ... and, of course, our holding it:
"holding the Head, from which all the body by joints
and bands having nourishment ministered, and knit
together, increaseth with the increase of God." The
Headship of Christ and our holding that, is the inclusive
factor. Every faculty is centered in Him as Head. No part
of a body can function if the head is severed from the
body or in any way separated in the sense of function.
Get in between the head and the body in any way by a
nervous disorder or a fracture, and the whole body is out
of order and incapable of functioning. Everything is
gathered up into the head. Thus the Headship of Christ
becomes essential to the order of His Body, the Church.
Now we must take up the
whole matter of the individual function of the members.
We have not to take up the matter of our own function in
the first place as to what it is. That is not the
first consideration. Our relatedness to others is
likewise not a thing of which we are to make a mental
problem. The first thing that we have to do is to be
subject to Christ; and when the individual is subject to
Christ, that individual is by the Holy Spirit brought
into a proper function and relationship with every other
expression of Christ. Harmony comes in that way. It is
spontaneous.
Secondly, the members of
Christ are functioning parts of Christ. That follows from
our being one spirit, as joined to the Lord. Let us get
rid of the physical idea altogether and recognize how
that the Body of Christ is the uniting of renewed spirits
indwelt by the Holy Spirit. It is not the uniting of so
many physical bodies and calling them the Church. That is
merely a congregation. It is what we are together in
spirit that makes us the Church. Congregations do not
make a Church. The Church is spiritual... because it is
the union of spirits. We are not talking about something
physical, but about the spiritual Body, the Church.
"But he that is joined unto the Lord is one
spirit" (1 Corinthians 6:17). That is the nature of
union, and that is the nature of the membership of the
Body. Membership of Christ is something other than our
physical relatedness. What a lot of notions we have to
get rid of.
If we have our names put
down on a certain Church roll, we say we have joined the
Church. Membership of the Church is membership of Christ
by union with Him in our spirits, and that union is
brought about by Christs indwelling our spirits.
The next thing that Paul will teach us is that there must
be a mutual recognition of the Body of Christ:
"...to every man that is among you, not to think of
himself more highly than he ought to think" (Romans
12:3). If he does that, he will be setting other members
at naught... or in a place less than should be occupied
by them. It does a great deal of harm to the Body of
Christ when one member dominates the situation. Mutual
subjection to, and recognition of, one another represents
what the Lord would have.
Further, there must be a
ministering of Christ to one another. We have something
of Christ a faculty of Christ for ministering
Christ; that is, a measure of Christ to be ministered by
us... and our business is to minister Christ to one
another. In that way the Body grows. Is not Christ our
Life... and can we not, as functioning in Christ,
minister Life His Life to one another?
Surely we can. That is what we are called to. Thus the
Body grows. Oh, that the Lord will enable us to be
greater ministers of Life His Life to one
another, and not of death.