But Ye Are Come Unto Mount Zion
by
T. Austin-Sparks
Chapter 2 - A New Israel
Lord, not as a part of our program but from our
very hearts we say, “Break Thou the bread of life to
me.” Thou art the Bread of Life. Give us of Thyself
this morning. May there be a true ministration of Christ
in this hour. Send Thy Spirit, Lord, in a new way to us.
Open our eyes that we may see Thee. Lord, answer this
prayer for Thine Own Name’s Sake, Amen.
In the Letter to the Hebrews, at chapter one, let us
again read verses one and part of two: “God,
having of old time spoken unto the fathers in the
prophets by divers portions and in divers manners, hath
at the end of these days spoken unto us in His Son, Whom
He appointed Heir of all things....” And the
peril running immediately alongside of our reading of
those words is the peril of familiarity. What I mean is
this, that after more than sixty years of being actively
in ministry of the Word, therefore closely acquainted
with the Scriptures, these words are more alive and more
meaningful today than ever. So it ought to be. My trouble
is that I have not long enough to live with these words
and with this letter.
In a certain sense, you ought not to know your Bible. You
ought, and we ought, to be coming to the Bible every time
as though we did not know it, and it ought to be to us
like that, something which we really, after all, do not
know. I cannot convey to you my own sensing of this. I
can only make a statement like that, as to how it ought
to be. The trouble is, the difficulty is, to convey that
sense of immensity, vitality, urgency that is present
with me in this Letter to the Hebrews. It must come to
you in that way and that is why we pray: “Oh,
send Thy Spirit, Lord, now unto me that He may touch mine
eyes and make me see beyond the sacred page.”
Beyond the sacred page—that is where we have to see.
We see the letter, we see the page, we see the words, we
know them. They are so familiar, but it is something in
the beyond, beyond the actual writing, that we have got
to see. The Lord help us this morning.
Now having repeated those words at the beginning of this
letter, I trust that you have already grasped the
significance of the introductory words which are really a
comprehending of the whole letter or the truth that is in
this Letter to the Hebrews. I trust you have seen the two
things that comprehend this letter. In times past, there
have been fragments, pieces, portions, bits, aspects, but
now all that and much more is gathered up together, is
comprehended, is brought together in completeness. There
are no more different portions, no more different times,
no more different ways, but now there is one time, one
way, one all “comprehensiveness.” It is all
here. Fulness is reached, and this is the other time, the
subsequent time, the ultimate time of fulness,
completeness.
So this Letter to the Hebrews, brings us the ultimate
fulness of all things in the Son, not only comprehending,
not only fulness, but finality. This is the ultimate, the
end, there is nothing beyond this. It is the end of all
God’s speaking. God, Who did speak in those many
different ways, forms, methods, has now spoken fully and
finally, there is nothing beyond. We ought to be
impressed with that.
I do not know what you are looking for, what you are
expecting, what you are praying for, but God has given
all that you could ever ask or pray for. It is present,
it is now. He has no more revelation to give, only of
what He has given. Revelation, now and henceforth, is not
new truth, it is only light on The Truth.
Now I want you to go over to chapter twelve of this
letter, just to pick out again our governing words.
Remember what we said yesterday about the two
all-inclusive, governing words which are running right
through the New Testament? Chapter twelve, verse
eighteen: “For ye are not come....”—Then
what? Verse twenty-two: “But ye are come....”
Not—But. Here in verses 18 through 21, you
have a comprehending of all that has been. It is very
comprehensive; and all that is ruled out, finalized, with
this word “not.” Then with verse
twenty-two, there is the introduction of another great
order of things, wonderful, beyond our fathoming.
I am not exaggerating, dear friends, when I say that we
could spend a whole year on verses twenty-two and onward.
The fulness and profundity is so great because it
comprehends the Bible. It is this great divide between
the “not” and the “but”;
and as I said beginning yesterday, we are at this time
concerned with what we have come to in the advent of
Christ and His Cross. What we have come to, what we are.
I wonder if you will ask this simple question, “What
are you?” I wonder what your answer or answers would
be. Perhaps you would say, “Well, I am a child of
God. Well, I am a Christian.” Oh, the answers would
be manifold. So now, this morning, as the Lord enables, I
want to focus on what we are.God’s
Intervention: a Divine Act
Here then in chapter twelve within these verses is the
great, great divide between the “Not”
and the “But” as concentrated in this
one letter. Other letters are very far reaching, very
great and comprehensive; but in this letter, the
particular meaning is that all that lies on the two sides
of the Cross is concentrated in this letter called the
Letter to the Hebrews.
Now you will notice [and I am not dealing with the detail
of these verses, only with the general statement], under
the not—“ye are not come to...”—under
that “not,” you have the constituting
of the former Israel. You are taken to Sinai, and at
Sinai the former Israel was constituted a nation. They
were a people, a rabble, a multitude before, and a mixed
multitude at that; but now here at Sinai, they are
constituted the ancient Israel, the former Israel. They
were Hebrews made into Israel. First Hebrews, Jews, now
Israel as a nation. I know the name Israel goes back
before that as to the person. It goes back to
Jacob’s new name and his family, but here they are
constituted as a nation out from the nations, separate
from the nations, distinct among the nations, a nation
called collectively Israel.
This is something new in history, something new among the
nations, something new in this world on this earth. It is
a new beginning of God,—God’s act, God’s
doing. I need only to take time to quote the Scriptures:
“I have chosen you,” says the Lord.
“You are My people,” implying,
“You are the result of My action in history.”
The first word in this Book of Hebrews is “God,”
and that word always stands right at the head of every
new movement of God. What does it say in Genesis? “In
the beginning God...”—God in action at the
beginning. It is God taking the initiative; and this
people Israel is the result of Divine intervention in the
history of this world with a Divine action, God’s
Own prerogative, wholly, completely, uniquely of Himself.
God in creation, a new beginning, that is the Old.
Then you come to the New, and the New opens with the
Gospel by John: “In the beginning was the Word,
and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.”—“In
the beginning God”!—But this is another
new movement. “A new creation” is here
indicated, pinpointed, and it is described. “In
the beginning God created... man” (Genesis 1:1,
26). But here in John a new humanity, mankind, is brought
into view under a “Not” and a “But.”
“Which were born, not of bloods, nor of the will
of the flesh, nor of the will of man, but of God.”
“Not of bloods”? In the Greek text,
“bloods” is in the plural. Why is it
in the plural? All right, we will not assay to tackle our
liberal theologians, but the Holy Spirit is always very
exact and correct, and the Holy Spirit causes it to be
put in a way that you almost overlook it, so that you are
hardly struck by it, and He puts it this way, “not
of bloods,” not of Joseph and Mary. That is the
mingling of bloods, is it not?! That is the ordinary,
natural mankind, the mingling of bloods, two sexes.
“Not of bloods”—this is a direct
application to the virgin birth. Not of all that (two
sexes), “but of God”!
As the people of God, we are not born that way. You are
never born a Christian. You are never born naturally a
child of God. You never inherit Divine life by natural
birth. Well, that goes without saying, but we are “born
of God.” We are God’s act! It is
God’s act to produce a new mankind, a new and
different humanity never produced by the will of man,
never produced along natural lines at all, “but of
God” a new humanity, a spiritual race. Not a natural
race at all, but a spiritual race.
So then, what is the implication both of this letter,
comprehensively, and of the New Testament, as a whole.
What is it?—a new Israel, that is what this letter
is saying to Hebrews: not those Hebrews of history, a new
Israel has come in.
I think you ought to note, if you have not, it is a very
simple thing, of course, everybody should be familiar
with it; but I am very glad to notice that in a late
translation and interpretation of the Bible called
“The Amplified,” I am very glad and happy to
note that wherever the name “Christ”
is mentioned in the New Testament, this Amplified links
the name and word “Christ” with “Messiah.”
It puts them together: they are one because, as you know,
“Messiah” is the Hebrew of which “Christ”
is only the Greek, meaning the same, “The
Lord’s Anointed.” Keep that in mind. The
Christ is the Messiah. The Messiah in the history of
Hebrew mentality, concept and expectation, the Messiah of
the old Israel is the Christ of a new Israel. One name,
same name, same meaning, but carried over now; and so
wherever you read the word “Christ” in
your New Testament, do not forget the hyphen, say “Christ-Messiah.”
It is most impressive as you read that version: every
time you come on the mention of “Christ”
and then it says, “Messiah.” Do you
see the meaning? Do you see the significance? Do you see
what this is driving at? It is a new Israel because this
is, shall we say, a “new” Messiah? Is that
quite correct? It is the One Messiah, it is the old
Messiah; and here this letter is saying that all of the
old Israel’s hopes, expectations, conceptions, of
their coming Messiah—all they ever had associated
with that name of the Coming Messiah, is taken up in
Christ, comprehended in Christ. He comprehends and
fulfills it and goes beyond their conception; and, as we
shall see, beyond their acceptance.
Well, it is a new Israel, not that one of their limited,
narrow, exclusive conception, mentality, or even
expectations. It is much, much greater and much bigger
than all that which the old Israel ever hoped for, looked
for, prayed for, expected. It is much bigger indeed, and
we will come back to that in a minute. It is a new Israel
beginning with the [and I must use the word, though it is
not quite right] “new” Messiah, the Christ, the
“Christos,” the Anointed One.
Now this, as we have said, is a new act of God. A new act
of God is the Messiah, the Christ, and a new act
of God is the new Israel; and there are two governing,
dominating features and factors in this new Israel as the
act of God. There are two aspects. One is the
Resurrection of Christ, God’s act, God’s
unique act, for the Resurrection is God’s specific,
peculiar act in history. It is the act of God. God raised
Him! God raised Him! This is not resuscitation: this is
resurrection; and, of course, God saw to it that there
was no doubt whatsoever that He died, that He was dead.
So far as He, as a man, was concerned, He was dead and
buried. And if you are in the grave for three days and
three nights, you have pretty good ground to conclude
that that person is dead. All right! No resuscitation, no
breathilizing, no! nothing of that. He is dead. He died,
and now only God... only God and the intervention of God
can make for anything further. He is God’s Act, in
His Resurrection.
But then, the other aspect of this act of God is
Pentecost. Pentecost was God’s act. God did it! It
is the intervention of God by the Third Person of the
Trinity, the intervention of God in history to bring as
from death this new race. I do wish that all people who
are so interested in this word “Pentecost”
would recognize really what Pentecost was. They limit it
to this and that and something else. The Lord save us
from this restricted conception. Pentecost is the act of
God in bringing to birth a new, altogether new, humanity.
It is God producing a new kind of humanity, unique,
different. It is God’s act! Resurrection and
Pentecost are one thing as God’s act, firstly in the
One Son and then in the sons to be. That is all very
simple I know, but I am working on toward my object.
The Growing
Light:—Increasing Understanding of this New
Dispensation
Now then, you come back to your New Testament, and
especially to begin with the Book of the Acts; and what
have you in the Book of the Acts? The gradual dawning
upon the apostles (yes, upon the apostles) and then upon
the believers of what has happened, of what the meaning
of Christ was. It is dawning, it is the faint rays
seemingly of a new day just coming up over the horizon
and shooting across the sky, and in their consciousness
there is something happening. Notice, in the beginning,
they still continue to go up to the temple, in the
ordinances of the temple, the ritual of the temple, the
time of prayer at the temple. They are still going up,
but something is happening, something is spreading over
their sky, and that fades out. It fades out. They are
losing that attachment. They are losing that mentality.
They are meeting in homes, they are meeting wherever they
can: they are not meeting in the temple any longer. No,
it is not a sudden thing that happened so that they can
make a sudden break. I say it is the dawning of the
meaning of a new day. It is so real, so clear; they do
not put it into any system of teaching and say, “You
must come out of that denomination. You must come out of
that system. You must leave that order of things.”
No, it is just happening. Something is happening, and
they are finding themselves out. And note this that I am
going to say: first of all, it is not a physical
separation. No, first of all, it is an inward spiritual
separation. I will put it this way, they find themselves
out before they are out. They find that they no longer
belong. No one has ever told them that they must leave
their denomination, their church, their mission, their
organization. No, something has happened inside.
You know, in the old creation, God commenced from the
outside: in the new, always from the inside, and in this
spiritual dispensation it is that you just find yourself
somewhere, perhaps where you never intended to be. Peter
never intended to be in the house of Cornelius. He
quarreled and argued with the Lord about the house of
Cornelius, “No, Lord, not so.” All right,
Peter, what has happened to you? Do you not know what has
happened to you? You are going to know, and Peter does
come to know. He will write later on about the spiritual
house of God. Do you see what I mean? Something has
dawned, has broken. It is a new day, and the dawn has
come in, and the light is growing, growing. That is the
first movement.
Dear friends, do take hold of this. This is an organic
thing. It is a movement of life within. It is not legal,
“Ye must” or “Ye must
not.”—“You must leave this and leave that
in order to come to God’s fulness.” It is not
that at all. I say, stay there until you cannot for your
very life’s sake, for your very walk with God, for
your very knowledge of the Holy Spirit within. Stay,
stay. “Come out-ism” is a dangerous thing. That
is not how it was. It was from the inside. It is the way
of the Holy Spirit, the initiative of God, the act of
God, the dawning of a new awareness that “Something
is happening to me because it is happening in me.” I
know what that means. I have had crises like that. I have
had crises like that when I knew that something had
happened to create a divide, and “Now, Lord, what am
I to do? If I take action, look what will happen.”
And so I stuck and on a false pretext went on. At the end
of some months, I found myself like this—I was not
in it. “No, that is not where I am finding the Lord.
That is not where life is,” and I have gone back to
the Lord and I have said, “Lord, what am I to
do?” He said, “So many months ago, I took you
out in spirit. Now perhaps you will have to follow in
body.” Oh, do not put a teaching on that. Do not
take hold of that and crystallize it into a doctrine. It
is a spiritual movement because this is a spiritual
dispensation.
That commenced, as I have said, at the beginning of the
Book of the Acts, and before you are through with that
book, what will you find? You will find that the light
has been growing and growing; and you will find in the
letters that are compassed by that book the growing
revelation of what? The growing revelation of what has
happened, of what the meaning of the resurrection of
Christ and the advent of the Holy Spirit really meant. It
is a growing revelation not of some new thing, as a
thing, but of what was at the beginning, at the root of
things.
So God is moving (so to speak) backward, in order to move
onward; and you have this growing revelation under these
two words, “Not—But.”—This
is an inward thing: “Not—But.”
The Day is moving on. It will come to its glorious
consummation when what happened at the beginning is found
in the consummation of the “New Jerusalem,
coming down from above”—the sum of this
new thing that happened with the coming of the Lord
Jesus. And we will be coming back to that in Hebrews
later on. But you are marking the way, the growing light,
transforming the mentality.
Oh, I have the New Testament, all of it, in mind as I am
speaking. The growing Light—increasing the
understanding of what this new dispensation means: the
light within growing. You will have many, many exact
statements in the growing light which has grown from the
day when Paul first had Christ revealed in him. Paul did
not have it all at once. As he says, it was “the
growing light.” It was growing all the time, and he
will say presently: “The Jerusalem which is
beneath is in bondage. Cast out the bondwoman.”
Not that Jerusalem, “but the Jerusalem which is
above is our mother.” You see the language and
what it means?!
Remember what the Letter to the Galatians is about? Is it
not along this line of contrast between the “not”
and the “but”: “For in Christ
Jesus neither circumcision availeth anything, nor
uncircumcision, but a new creation.” And is it
not impressive that right at the end of that letter, in
Galatians 6:16, Paul uses this significant phrase: “the
Israel of God,” the whole Israel of God, the
new Israel? Yes, and that throws light upon the whole
letter. You see, one Israel is gone, the old Israel is
gone. That is the argument of the letter, and that is why
Paul got into such trouble. That is why this letter is
such a battleground. That Israel no more, but now another
with its Jerusalem headquarters above, its birthplace
above, a new Israel entirely. Dear friends, this is a
very vital point in our consideration, or in what the
Lord is trying to say to us—we must recognize the
new dimensions of God in this that has now come in on the
“But” side.
What was the tragedy of the old Israel? Of course, the
tragedy of the old Israel, finally, is their dismissal.
Their dismissal: “The kingdom of God shall be
taken away from you, and shall be given to a nation
bringing forth the fruits thereof.” That
happened! and it stands today. The kingdom of heaven
taken away—not for that Israel, but for another! The
tragedy of Israel is that they are dismissed from the
dispensation, or the dispensational movement of God. This
has lasted for two thousand years. How many more years we
do not know, probably, not so long, but you leave that
alone.
Here I am going to upset a lot of you: you leave Israel
alone for the time being. You will only get into terrible
confusion if you get down on this earth with an earth
touch in these things. Some of us have lived through
things,—we remember the Kaiser (forgive me, that is
not an attack upon any nation or people) but we do
remember him going to Jerusalem and having a new door
broken into the wall of Jerusalem so that he never went
in through any of the old gates of that city. No, but
because of who he thought he was, a new gate must be
broken in the wall for him. And some people fitted that
into prophecy and said, “Therefore, the Kaiser is...
the Messiah!?” All right, was he? And when General
Allenby entered Jerusalem and brought the Turkish rule to
an end, the prophetic school laid hold of it, brought it
down to earth and said, “The end of the time of the
Gentiles has come.” How long ago was that? Was it
the end? And then there was a dear man of God who got
caught up in this kind of thing and went from Belgium to
Rome to see Mussolini to say to him, “You are the
last Cæsar to reconstitute the Roman Empire.”
Whereupon Mussolini had a great statue made of himself as
the last Cæsar and put a great relief map of the revived
Roman Empire with ten kingdoms behind his statue. The
last Cæsar of the revived Roman Empire? Need we say
anymore? You see, you go on like that and it leads to
confusion if you come down onto this earth. Leave it
alone and see what God is doing, and God is doing a
spiritual thing, not a temporal thing.
I could take an hour to enlarge upon that last phrase,
“not a temporal thing.” Do you see, in the
sovereign activities of God, that now He is confounding
and confusing and breaking down all temporal
representations of His heavenly kingdom?! Men are trying
to set up local churches after New Testament order. You
have never had more confusion in local churches than you
have today. They are trying to set up things, constitute
things, Christian movements, Christian institutions,
Christian organizations, and they are all in confusion
and do not know what to do with one another. You may
think that is an exaggeration, but you see what I mean?
—God is breathing upon every temporal representation
in order to have a spiritual expression of Christ! That
is the heart of what we are saying, and that is what is
here.
Now I was saying, we must recognize the spiritual
dimensions of this that has come in with Christ and this
into which we have come. The spiritual dimensions are
diverted from Israel’s tragedy, because
Israel’s tragedy is that of being set aside in this
dispensation. But why? Have you ever wondered why Israel
has been set aside? The answer is in one
word—exclusive-ism. “We are the people. Truth
begins and ends with us. You will never be able to get
anywhere with God if you are not circumcised. Except ye
be circumcised, ye cannot be saved. The nations are dogs,
are dirt. [Poor Jonah, poor Jonah was caught in this.] We
are the people. We are the beginning and the end of all
God’s Word. You have got to come on to our ground,
be on our ground, or you are out.” Dear friends, you
never will be on God’s ground if you do not come up
out of that.
Exclusive-ism—God never meant that when He took
Israel out of the nations, made them a distinct people,
constituted them His Own peculiar people. He never meant
that. He only meant to plant them in the nations to show
the nations what a God He is, WHAT A GREAT GOD HE IS; and
this startled and stunned Jonah that God could ever think
in mercy upon anybody outside of Israel, that God could
ever think in mercy upon Nineveh.
And so you have this exclusive-ism all the way through,
and that is the trouble in the New Testament with the
Lord Jesus: it is the exclusive-ism of Judaism, that is
the battleground. The battle in the life of the Apostle
Paul was that. He was hammering at this brick wall of
Jewish exclusive-ism, and all his sufferings are because
of that.
This new Israel is so much greater than the old because
Christ, this Messiah, is so much greater than their
conception of a Messiah. We have got to recognize the
immense dimensions of the new Israel and resist
exclusive-ism where Christ is concerned, as we would
resist a plague. I am not talking about fundamental
truths and the personality of Christ; I am talking about
the greatness of this One Who is introduced in Hebrews:
“God, ...hath at the end of these days spoken in
His Son, Whom He appointed Heir of...” an
exclusive party? —No, “of all things.”
That is Paul’s great word all the way through:
“all things, ...all things, ...all things,”
and in the end, “to sum up all things in Christ.”
And if I need to safeguard, I am not talking about
universalism. I am talking about God’s ultimate
realm and sphere where it will be nothing but Christ. The
rest will be outside altogether; wherever that outside
is, it will be outside and not inside. “For
without...”—that is the last word of
Revelation, “For without are the dogs, (and
so on), and everyone loving and making a lie.”
That is false, that is out, that is gone.
The Meaning of Sonship:
Superior Is Christ
Now, what is the governing concept here in this letter
right at the beginning? It is that God hath spoken at the
end of these times “in Son.” There is
no article—“in Son.” What is the
meaning of Son or sonship?—Always fulness. Always
fulness! The fulness of the Father is in the Son,
Divinely conceived. The Son is the fulness of the Father:
the Firstborn is the fulness and takes up all that is of
and in the Father. Fulness! Then, as we have said,
sonship is finality, finality; and then as to this
letter, as to the whole revelation of sonship as here
revealed, explained through this letter, and in the first
chapters particularly, superiority! Using that
word in its right sense, superiority. Do you notice the
superiority of this Son, “appointed Heir of all
things”? Do you also notice the catalogue here
of things?
SUPERIOR to Moses. Superior to Joshua. If Joshua
had brought them into the rest, there would be no more:
he did not, therefore, he never reached finality. This
One, this Son, superior to Moses, superior to Joshua.
SUPERIOR to angels. To angels? Yes, superior to
angels, and think of the angelic ministries right through
the Bible, their ministries, visitations, deliverances,
activities. One angel in one night by a breath of his
nostrils wiping out a whole, mighty army that was
besieging Jerusalem, one angel. Think of all that was
mediated by angels. This letter is arguing about the
angels who ministered the old covenant. Yes, this Son is
superior to angels.
SUPERIOR to Aaron and all his system and economy
of priesthood. All that system comes under the “not.”
The tabernacle that was. This letter says there was a
tabernacle. Past tense. There was a tabernacle and there
was a Holy of Holies and there was a Holy Place. Superior
is Christ to all that, and what a place it had.
SUPERIOR to the old covenant, and this letter
deals with the old covenant and “the days come,”
quoting Jeremiah 31:31, “...the days come, saith
the Lord, that I will make a new covenant.”
This letter has a lot to say about the new covenant.
SUPERIOR to all the sacrifices, millions upon
millions of sacrifices slain through the generations, and
the river and ocean of blood of those sacrifices
immeasurable, covering centuries. How vast! One Sacrifice
only, One Shedding of Blood only, Superior to
the whole lot, Superior to the hundreds of years
of sacrifices and blood shedding, and this One Single
Sacrifice, Shedding of Blood, Superior to the whole
lot.
NOT—BUT. This is what we have come to, and this is
the substance of the Letter to the Hebrews. How great
then is sonship in Christ! How much vaster than any
traditional or historical expression, representation,
system, order, economy.—This is what we have come to
in Christ!
The Quest of Right Standing
with God
Now I must close somewhere, but first let me ask: what
is the consummate issue of all this? Can we bring all
that we have said, and all that can be said, and could be
said down to one, inclusive, comprehensive issue? We can,
and although I do not know about you (you may have doubts
as I have about some translations, new translations of
the New Testament), but I do thank God for this
Amplified. I do, because at this very point it has
helped.
You see, I have studied theology. I have studied
Christian doctrine. I know the doctrines of grace. I know
the Letter to the Romans. I think I do: at any rate, I am
fairly well-acquainted with what is there and of what the
theologians and the doctrinaires have said about it. And
when you mention the Letter to the Romans, of course,
Luther and all the rest spring into view with their
phrase “justified by faith,”—“righteousness...
by faith.” Oh, I tell you, friends, theology
strikes me cold. It may not you. It may mean more to you,
but to me as one who has had to deal with all this
theology and doctrine and system of Christianity in its
doctrines, and so on, it is awfully wearisome. Theology
is a very wearisome thing, you know, (a deadly thing, I
think) but here this Amplified version has come to my
rescue.
When I heard and read the word “righteousness,”
what did it mean? Well, in the Old Testament, the symbol
of righteousness is brass. Brass? Oh, how hard is brass,
how cold is brass, I am not interested in
“brass.” Are you following what I mean? And
that is what that word came to mean to me, even in the
New Testament. Oh, a glorious teaching, but I am not
talking about the teaching, I am talking about the
phraseology, the terminology. What is it that is
represented there? Now here my Amplified version has
rescued me. Oh, I am basking in the sunlight of this,
every day now rejoicing in this. What does it say?
Wherever that word “righteousness” or
“justified” occurs in the
“Amplified New Testament,” you have: “Right
standing with God.”—“Right
standing with God.” Dismiss your theology. That
is it.
Right standing with God has been the quest of humanity
from the beginning. It does not matter where you go in
the darkest heathenism, amongst the most ignorant,
unenlightened realms of humanity, right through all the
strata, the one thing, whether man will put it into words
or not, whether it is in his phraseology or vocabulary,
the one thing deep down in every human creature is to be
in right standing with God. All these heathen rites,
sacrifices, rituals, after all, they are trying to find a
place of right standing with, well, they say
“God,” even though they have no right
conception of Who God is or what God is. “Whom
therefore ye ignorantly worship,” said Paul,
“Him (THE UNKNOWN GOD), declare I unto you.”
I remember very early in my Christian life I tackled a
monumental book, Professor Edward Caird’s
“History of Religion and the Greek
Philosophists.” [Do not tackle that, I nearly
“spun round.”] But in this magnum opus, Caird
concentrated it all into one statement: “There is
not a human being on this earth, of any race whatever,
who does not have a consciousness of standing in relation
to some supreme object of worship whom he calls
god.” Is that true? Of course it is. Every person
has a consciousness of standing in relation to a supreme
object of reverence, and he calls that object
“god.” He does not know anything about that
object, but he just calls it god. Now then, here we are,
the quest of humanity all through history, whether or not
man has greater or lesser enlightenment and
understanding, whether man has little, none, or much
enlightenment and understanding, the quest within is to
be on good terms with this object called God, to be in
right standing with God.
Now we ought to start all over again with the beginning
of Hebrews. Here is the One, the Son, and the great thing
about this Son, the glorious thing about this Son is that
He is in right standing with God. All this other in the
past was an attempt to get in right standing with God,
and it never did, it was a failure. But here is the Son,
first of all, inclusively, comprehensively, the Beloved
of the Father, the Beloved Son. “My Beloved Son.”
Dear ones, could you have terms that more gloriously
express right standing with God?! Think on that. Dwell on
that. And then the letter goes on to say, “bringing
many sons to glory”; and all the rest of the
letter, which we leave now, is the way of right standing
with God in the Son.
Glorious letter! How great! comprehensive! wonderful!
this letter is, and that is only the fringe of it. We
will get more into it later if the Lord wills, but I
think you have really got enough for the time being. The
Lord help us, we pray...
Oh, send Thy Spirit, Lord, now unto me, unto each
one, that He may touch our eyes, make us see, make us
see. Oh Lord, that the result of this hour in Thy Word
would be, might be, that this people will really be able
to say, not mentally but in the heart, “I have seen
the Lord, I have in some new, more wonderful way seen
God’s Son, seen what God is doing,” and that we
are able, Lord, to understand now what we
are—God’s new and final Israel. Teach us more
of what that means, but set Thy seal upon this time.
Now, Lord, there is a little interval, and immediately
when this is closed now, these people are going to turn
and talk about all sorts of things. Save us, Lord: the
whole value of this can go in five minutes if we are not
very watchful in setting a seal against our lips, having
the door of our heart kept. Lord, help us for we are not
here just for meetings and messages: we are here for life
crises. You precipitate them, Lord, for Thy Name’s
Sake, Amen.
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