Reading:
2 Timothy 1:8-10
The Lord
Jesus was the embodiment of the incorruptible. Life and
incorruption were embodied in Him in terms of manhood, as
the true Man. We leave out of our present consideration
His Deity, for very God of very God leaves no room for
discussion or argument concerning incorruption. We will
consider Him in His capacity as Son of Man, by which He
makes the whole question and issue of the incorruptible a
human question.
Man, or manhood, is a big and specific thought of God.
The idea of Man, humanity, was born in the mind of God.
He is a peculiar creation intended for a special purpose.
When the writer of the letter to the Hebrews asserts that
"Not unto angels did he subject the world to
come", he proceeds to ask: "What is man?"
(Hebrews 2:5-6). 'Not unto angels... but man...'. This,
then, is not a matter which concerns angels and it is
certainly not a matter of abstract and unrelated ideas.
There is a testimony which has to be found in the
concrete expression of man and manhood. The Bible makes
it perfectly clear from beginning to end that the idea
connected with man or manhood is that of representation.
"In the image of God", in the likeness of God -
that is representation. The question running all through
the Bible is as to whether man does or does not fulfil
the purpose of his being, which is to represent God, to
express God.
Now man was made for incorruption, for incorruptible life
issuing eventually in his glorification. I am not going
to argue that from the Scripture, for those who know
their Bibles will be able to support the statement. But
man missed the purpose of his creation, he missed the
incorruptible life, by his disobedience and unbelief, by
his rebellion against God, his self-will, his pride. He
is no longer a candidate for glory in his natural
condition. Glory is not possible for man as he is found
outside of Christ. But Christ came, and in His coming
fulfilled a work by which the destiny and purpose of man
was recovered and secured. In Christ, incorruptible life
is recovered for man, for He was a Man who could not
be corrupted, and therefore corruption was kept out
of the very stream of His life. It was not possible that
He should see corruption even in the grave. "He whom
God raised up saw no corruption" (Acts 13:37). He
was incorruptible in His life and therefore triumphant
over corruption in His death. So Christ was constituted
of incorruptible characteristics, and we are now going to
ask what these were.
A
RELATIONSHIP ESTABLISHED BY THE HOLY SPIRIT
The first,
then, of these characteristics was His union with God as
His Father - a simple but most profound truth. We are
aware of how often He used that word: 'Father', and how
often He said: 'My Father' and then: 'The Father and I'.
His enemies saw the point; they were not slow to pick on
what they thought was blasphemy: "He makes Himself
equal with God" (John 5:18). That union between Him
and the Father was of such a kind that their relationship
was absolute and final. That relationship was established
by the Holy Spirit. I am speaking now of Christ as the
Son of Man. In His birth He was begotten of the Holy
Ghost. In His work, He functioned by reason of the
anointing of the Holy Spirit. His walk was always in and
by the Spirit. In His Cross, He offered Himself up by the
eternal Spirit. And we can complete the circle by saying
that it was through that eternal Spirit that He was
raised. The Holy Spirit initiated, maintained and
consummated that relationship with the Father. The union
with the Father was the governing thing in His whole
life. At every point, at all times, He referred and
deferred to God as His Father. All His works were out
from the Father: "The word which ye hear is not
mine, but the Father's who sent me" (John 14:24).
Everything for Him was out from the Father, by way of
this union, this oneness, and this was the occasion of
all the conflict in His life. It was the very point of
all the attack and assault of the enemy. The one thing
that the Evil One and all the evil powers were ever
focusing upon was this oneness and fellowship with the
Father, in order to try somehow to drive in a wedge, to
get that relationship ruptured. That is very significant.
If an enemy concentrates all his attention and all his
resources on any one point, it is clear that he regards
that as the point upon which the whole matter can be made
to collapse. It did not matter which method the enemy
used - whether open antagonism or friendly suggestion or
subtle subterfuge, or any other means - the point was to
try to get between the Father and the Son.
THE
EXPLANATION OF HIS SUFFERING
That union,
then, that relationship, was the explanation of all His
sufferings and testings - indeed of the whole ordeal of
His life. Would He, on any consideration, let go, violate
the principle of that union? To maintain and preserve it,
to adhere to it, was no small or light thing for Him. For
that one thing, the most terrible cost ever paid in the
history of the universe was paid, the cost of that dark
moment of the Cross when everything seemed lost. There
was not one glimmer of light, even from the Father's
face, while He was under that test. Yes, this was a
costly thing. There must have been some very great issue
involved in this union. There was nothing superficial
about it, but rather something infinitely great. What was
it?
PROVIDING
GOD WITH A PLACE
It can be
answered in one brief sentence. Primarily, it was the
issue of providing God with a place. God created the
first man in order that He might have a place in that man
and in all his seed; and not just a place, but the
place. In a sense God's place had been taken from Him.
God had been rejected and put out of His place with man.
He still remained sovereign Creator, of course. He still
remained Ruler and Lord, the original Owner, but there
was a difference. Let us look at it like this.
Here is a landlord. He builds a house and he is the owner
of that house. In kindness and friendliness he lets that
house to some people, and to begin with, the relationship
is quite a happy one, so happy that he is able to visit
the house and is welcomed and given a place in the
family; they are always glad to see him. But someone
comes along while he is not there and begins to say
things about him that are unworthy and that are
scandalous, defaming him and making evil suggestions
against him, with a view to getting him out of his place
in that home. This evil person succeeds so well that no
longer has he a place in the heart of that family. He is
still the landlord, the rightful owner, and all the law
is on his side, but there is a difference between being a
landlord with legal rights and a friend who has a place
in the family. That is what I mean. God lost His place.
He is still sovereign Owner of this universe. He is still
Lord, and one day He will assert His legal rights over
His creation. But do you think that is good enough?
Within His creation He wants to have a place.
There is all the difference between sovereignty and
fellowship. The union between Christ and His Father was
not the relationship of a sovereign and a subject. He did
not live that life and do that work under the sovereign
government of God. No, it was all on a different footing
from that. It was fellowship. God can do a lot of things
with us and through us in a sovereign way, but that is
never, never good enough for Him. He wants us in
fellowship; He wants a place, not as sovereign and
despot, but as Father. Father! That is the
significance of the word on the lips of the Lord Jesus.
He taught them to pray: 'Father'. The significance, then,
of the relationship between Christ and God as His Father
was that God had a place in the heart of a Man.
The Bible is occupied with that one concern; that is the
issue which arises all the way through. God is seeking to
have a place in the heart of man - somewhere where He can
be known in terms of fellowship, of love, in terms of a
delight to have Him. The Old Testament is full of that in
type and illustration. He seeks some place for His Name,
where His Name is loved, some place where He can meet men
on the ground of fellowship and love. The New Testament
brings that out into bold relief. Its beginnings contain
links between the Old and the New. Christ, as Son of Man,
is the inclusive link. Here again is the law of
incorruptibility. There is that which will go through to
eternity, something that Satan cannot destroy, something
that death cannot annul. There is something that is so
precious to God that it will appear again for ever. When
all that is capable of corruption has gone, the love
relationship as between Christ and His Father will abide.
Oh, what a difference there is between this and the kind
of relationship with God that exists in general!
This, of course, is clearly seen to be the idea of the
New Testament as to the individual. This is what God is
after with us all. It is just that - to have a place in
our hearts on the basis of love and fellowship. "My
Father will love him, and we will come unto him, and make
our abode with him" (John 14:23). That, too, is the
idea concerning the nucleus - that they, even the
little companies of the two and three, should give Him a
place. "Where two or three are gathered together in
my name, there am I" (Matthew 18:20) and: "I
come unto you" (John 14:18). And it is the New
Testament idea of the whole Church. What does the Church
mean in the divine thought? Just a place for God in love
relationship, in perfect fellowship. That is the idea of
the Church.
So, then, if Christ meant anything, He signified the
coming of God into this world in terms of fellowship. And
this is an eternal issue. If we could project ourselves
into the ages of the ages, the eternal hereafter, and see
the nature of things, as it will be then, we should find
it was just this: a perfect harmony between God and man,
so harmonious that it is all music. There is no discord,
no strain, no shadow; there is no suspicion, no
prejudice, no fear. All those things have gone with the
corruptible: it is the incorruptible which remains. And
in this first place the incorruptible is this -
fellowship with God. It is this kind of relationship. It
is an eternal issue.
THE
TEST OF EVERYTHING
Therefore
the test of everything for us will be: How much of God
came in by our having been here? That is a fairly
thorough-going test. It may sound very exacting, but it
is just this - how much of God came in by your and my
having been here? How much, afterward, will it be
possible for others to say: 'Well, through that life I
came to know God, I came to fellowship with God, to know
more of Him'?
Yes, that is testing and discriminating. The test of
everything, of all our teaching and all our labours, is
how much of it results in more of God - not more of
knowledge, not more of mental apprehension, but how much
more of God? As I have talked with others about the
life-work and teaching of certain men of God in the past,
we have agreed that even though there may have been
things in their teaching which we did not feel able to
accept, they themselves had left us a heritage, they have
given us a deposit of God. There is something of the Lord
that has come through them to us, and that is what marks
them out to us. It is not just that they were great
teachers, great organisers of Christian work, but that
somehow they have passed to us a deposit of God; God has
come through them to the enrichment and enlargement of
our lives.
That is the test of everything. For me, at least, it is a
searching test - one that I wonder whether I can face. Is
it going to be like that, that after all the speaking,
after all the teaching, there is a heritage of the Lord
Himself left behind? The teaching of the truths about the
Church as the House of God is important, but we need to
beware of putting the emphasis on the truth of the
thing, instead of the spiritual reality of how it works
out. This issue is this - that God comes in. His place is
provided, He is there. We have many meetings and other
Christian activities, but if they do not issue in the
people concerned having something more of the Lord
Himself, then the whole thing is futile. Yes, with all
our exact technique and the rest - if the Lord is not
found there, it is meaningless, valueless. All must be
related to this one issue, that of God having His own
rightful place. That is the incorruptible element.
This is what the apostle says in our Scripture: "Be
not ashamed... of the testimony of our Lord". What
is this testimony of our Lord? It is that He:
"annulled death, and brought life and incorruption
to light through the gospel". The testimony of our
Lord is His incorruptible life. In His life here on earth
the Lord Jesus provided a place for God, and there was no
place in His life for anything else. Oh, that we might be
like that! It will be that which will determine the
measure of the permanent, the eternal, the intrinsic
value of our lives.