The Key to Everything , by Norman Grubb
PART 1 - The Believer as
a Container for God’s Presence.
When I was in the
British army in World War I, God very plainly called me, though I'd planned
another career, to join a little independent missionary group just starting in Africa.
I wasn't there very long before I deeply felt my inadequacy.
It wasn't that I
was lukewarm for Jesus Christ; it wasn't that I had turned away from Him to
some other interest. I was a servant of His, and my whole interest was set on
introducing my brother Africans to Him.
The inadequacy I
felt in myself first of all was the need of love. I deeply felt, when I got
among them, that I just didn't have that love which bridges the gap. With that
went the need of faith — and with that the need of power. All of these were
linked together.
Response to the
Christian message in Central
Africa, like the United States, appears to be quite large. But I soon
found there was much more profession than possession. I began saying to myself, Are we
bringing the Africans anything really worthwhile? Are we just bringing a code of ethics? Or a
liturgy, or historic faith? Have we got something genuinely transforming to
transmit to others?
Then I made the
question personal, "Have I?"
As I asked these
questions, I discovered that when your ministry is disturbed, it tends also to
disturb your personal life. I found myself, as my wife well knew, irritable at
home in a way I hadn't been irritable — and critical of others to cover my own
failures.
As I doubted, asked
questions, and searched the Bible for some kind of an answer to my inadequacies, I
found some amazing answers. Some of them have shaken me considerably. They have
changed my whole viewpoint — and my experience.
I can't call them
revelations, because they are based on the revelation, witnessed to by the
Spirit.
To begin with, my
attitude was that God should improve me.
Well, I'm a servant
of Jesus Christ, I thought. I've been redeemed by His grace, I belong to Him. I
must ask God to make me a better servant of Jesus Christ.
I thought He should
channel in some love into my heart, some faith, some power, some holiness — and
improve me.
I had to learn
sharply that self-improvement is both a sin and an impossibility. It came as a
considerable shock.
But though my idea
of how God should answer my problem was completely wrong, my sense of
inadequacy was good. It sent me to the Bible. And my first discovery came as I
read one famous verse in the first letter of John: "God is love."
Suddenly the is
stuck out. What dawned on me went something like this: It doesn't say God has
love, but God is love. If some body has a thing, it isn't he himself. It's
something just attached to him, as if you've got a coat on or something in your
pocket. You just have it, and you can share it. But the Bible doesn't say God
has love, but God is love.
I Could Never
Love!
Love, therefore,
must not be a thing I can have. Love is exclusively a Person. God is love.
Therefore, there is no other pure, self-giving love in the universe beyond Him
Himself. Love is exclusively a characteristic of one Person only — and that's
not Norman Grubb.
That was a
deflation for me. I had thought I could have love imparted to me, channeled
into me, and I'd be more loving. But I suddenly found God saying, "You'll
never have one iota of love. I am love, and that's the end of it."
Love is a Person;
one Person only loving — and that's not I, and that's not you. God is love and,
therefore, love is God loving.
That set a new
trend of thought going. I began to relate this to my other need of power. And I
suddenly found a verse in the first chapter of I Corinthians where it says that
Christ is the power of God. Not Christ has the power, but He is the power.
Once again, I had
thought power was something which was given to me, and I'd be a powerful
servant of Jesus Christ. I suddenly found that power, also, is a Person. And
that person is not I but is exclusively Christ, Who is God; it doesn't matter
whether you call Him Father, Son or Holy Spirit.
Then I came to the
one thing every Christian claims to have. Every believing Christian accepts the
fact that he has eternal life. He takes it that he has a life which will go on
forever in Heaven. ("The gift of God is eternal life through Jesus Christ
our Lord.")
But I suddenly
found that eternal life is not something I can ever have — for Jesus did not
say, "I have the life to give you" — but, "I am the life."
Once again I had
found that something I had thought I had — eternal life — is one person only,
and that's not I. Jesus Christ is that "eternal life."
But where did I fit
into all this?
Finally I came to a
statement which gathered all together and finished off my investigations by its
absoluteness. The verse was Colossians 3:11, where it says of believers in Christ that
"Christ is all and in all."
Christ is all, not
Christ has all.
And if Christ is
all, what's left for me? Not much by my mathematics.
I had thought I was
somebody, and something or could get something. I found God had taken the lot.
Christ is all.
Then I got the
link. Christ is all and in all.
Then I saw for the
first time that the only reason for the existence of the entire creation is to
contain the Creator! Not to be something, but to contain Someone.
So there dawned a
very important truth. We humans naturally regard the human self as important. But
we've got the wrong ideas of the reason of the existence of the self.
An immense
distortion has come into the very warp and woof of humanity. It's the
distortion of the ego — of the self. Though we feel self to be important, all
of this showed me that self is extremely unimportant.
There is only one
Self in the universe who is really important. I would almost say there is only
one Self.
Why? Because
there's only one Person in the universe who ever said, "I Am."
God said that was
His name thousands of years ago when Moses asked what he should say when people
would ask, "What is the name of your God?" (Exodus 3:13, 14).
We are told that at
the end of the history of the universe it is God Who will be all in all. God
all in all! Then what's left? It's terrific.
Why We Exist
There is only one
Person, and the human creation is brought into a living relation ship with this
One, so that He can manifest Himself in His perfection of life and love through
us.
The whole creation
exists because Spirit must have a body in which to manifest Himself. As the
Scriptures say, "The whole earth is full of His glory." They say that
Christ ascended "that He might fill all things."
If He fills all
things, all things are containers of Him. Here is both the height and the
dangerous depth in humanity.
The height is
simply this: the rest of creation can contain manifestations of God; we can
contain God as a Person. A person cannot manifest himself as a person through
anything else than a person. You can't fellowship with a dog or a stone. You
can enjoy the marvels of the atom or of a precious stone, but you can't
fellowship with it. But I can fellowship with you because we are of the same makeup.
God can manifest
His marvels and His beauty through the flowers and trees. We can view them
through the microscope and telescope, and marvel—but we do not say,
"That's God."
The greatest
marvel, the greatest height of personality, is when we can look at a human
being and say, "God is there."
The depth, the
dangers, of humanity are that personality means freedom. Intelligent choice is
the essence of personality.
Therefore, God
appeared to be on the horns of a dilemma when He created people. (Of course, He
wasn't, for He knows His own business in the end.) But it appeared so because
the people He created could turn around and say, "Thank you very much, I
don't want You to live in me."
That's exactly what
happened.
We make self our
god, not God. We just naturally run our own lives. And that's our whole
trouble.
There isn't a
single problem in humanity except our self-reactions: not one.
The Devil is no
trouble. He was dealt with 2,000 years ago.
Your neighbor is
not your trouble.
Circumstances are
not your trouble.
The only trouble is
your reaction.
Distorted self,
self out of gear, is our problem.
Once we know how to
handle the human self and put it back where it belongs, we've found the key to
life.
That's what we're
going to examine.
PART 2 - You Simply
Receive.
Essentially from
eternity there has been only one Person.
This is difficult
to realize. Yet throughout the Word of God it is underlined.
God was before all:
He is the beginning and the end, the alpha and the omega.
He is love.
He is inconceivable
beauty.
He is the all.
If that is so, then
the link between Him and us, whom He has created, is the link between the One
and the means of manifesting or making known the One. In other words, our
relation to Him is that of containing Him in such a way that He may be
recognized.
That is why the
primary function of all creation, animate and inanimate, is receptivity. Your
basic function, and mine, is the same—simply to receive.
This is
demonstrated, silently, around us all the time. It's never better seen than in
the springtime.
If there were no
receptivity in the trees and flowers and shrubs, we should have a desert around
us. These things spring to life because of their quiet reception of the
sunlight and moisture poured on them. What they receive they utilize. But
utilization is secondary to reception.
In Biblical
language, we call this faith.
Better Seen Than
Said
But no finite
language can completely portray the infinite. So different illustrations are
necessary in order to complete the picture of our relation to Him.
Look at the number
of times the Bible calls us vessels. "We have this treasure in earthen
vessels that the excellency of the power may be of God, and not of us." We
are "vessels, sanctified, meet for the Master's use, prepared unto every
good work."
Now you see at once
the beauty of the illustration: a vessel is a hollow object made to contain something.
And God has made us vessels.
Of course, if God
makes us vessels, He fills us. God doesn't fool with His creation; if He made
anything to be filled, He must see to it that it gets filled.
This is our
receptivity. The whole function of the vessel is to receive something.
Now get this clear:
the vessel never be comes the liquid, nor the liquid the vessel. I add this
because we humans are so proud that there creeps into us the idea that we can
be deified. That is blasphemy. There is no such thing as self-deification,
except that of Satan, the pseudo-God, and what we share with him. The divine
can dwell in the human, but forever the human is the
human and the divine the divine. God has said, "I will not give my glory
to another."
That is the vital
importance of the vessel illustration: we are forever the container; He is that
which we contain. That relationship never changes. But there are other
illustrations which both Jesus and Paul used which give us an enlarged picture
of our position as receivers.
The famous one is
that used by Jesus when He likened Himself and ourselves to the vine and the
branches. Now we get a vital, active relationship. We begin to see that the
illustration of the vessel is only part of the truth. A vessel is a dead thing
and separate from that which is poured into it. From the vessel you might be
led to picture us as simply passive containers. But we're not.
So Jesus gave us
the vine and branches illustration. Through this our eyes are opened to the
secret of the universe union — the mystery of the universe: how two can be one
and yet remain two.
In this dimension,
infinite truth is always in the form of paradox. We never get beyond facts that
are seemingly contradictory to common sense. In this dimension we can never
fully comprehend truth through our senses. Our reason cannot teach it to us. We
have to live with opposites which don't meet, with facts that are, to our
understanding, not completely logical. It is good for us to recognize this, and
to learn to accept both sides—both ways of knowing—in their proper proportions.
This illustration
of the vine and the branches is one of those paradoxes. The living God, the
living Christ, and I actually become one person and function as one person.
Separation is impossible. It has disappeared. We function entirely and forever
and naturally as one person. And yet we remain two!
The Mystery We
Live In
Two in one; one in
two. We see the paradox in the vine and the branch illustration because, though
the vine and the branch make one, Jesus says that the branch must "abide
in the vine." Though the vine is the life and the branch the channel, yet
the branch does things. It utilizes the sap and produces leaf and flower and
fruit.
But its activity is
secondary to its receptivity. This is where we fail. We make activity a substitute
for receptivity. It is its outcome.
Paul gave us
another illustration: that of head and body. Head and body make one organism,
one life.
You can't divide
head and body. My name is Norman Grubb. But my head is not Norman and my body
Grubb! You can't divide the two.
The Bible tells us
the same thing. For instance, I Corinthians 12:12 speaks of the body of Christ
as being Christ. It says, "As the body [the body is, of course, the
believers joined to Christ] is one and hath many members, so also is
Christ." The body is called Christ—not the head.
We are part of a
vital organism which is an ascended, glorious, perfect Christ—the eternal Christ.
We are part of Him,
yet we remain, ourselves.
Self-Confidence
Is Not Security
In that relationship
we are all dependent. Exactly as the body is dependent on the head and the head
governs the body, so we forever remain the dependent member in the union.
And the union is
never safe until we know that.
So, until you have
a few good knocks on the head and discover your conceited self, you're not safe
to know the union. Maybe you've had plenty of knocks. They're the healthiest
thing we can have. We've got to be made safe and understanding for this
tremendous relationship.
He is the Lord. We
are the co-operators. We are receivers.
Basically every one
of us has regarded life as something we must live, although we are glad to have
the help and grace of God to assist us. Even though we are redeemed people,
without realizing our error, we rely mainly on our self-activity.
Basically, every
one of us has thought, "We're the people, let's get on with the
work."
That is the reason
for the long periods of training through which we read God took all His
servants in Bible times. Look at Moses. Few can equal his consecration. He
threw away a throne as "the son of Pharaoh's daughter," with all
"the treasures of Egypt" and "pleasures of sin for a
season." And he did all this for the mysterious Christ who had not even
come — for he "esteemed the reproach of Christ greater riches," the
record says.
Yet there was one
thing that Moses had not renounced. That was Moses.
"Learned in
all the wisdom of the Egyptians," highly trained, highly educated,
"mighty in word and deed," it says he thought the enslaved Israelites
would understand that he was their obvious deliverer, and he set out to deliver
them. Angered by an Egyptian maltreating one of his people, he beat and killed
him.
But Pharaoh sent
the police after him— and what did Moses do? All he had left was a good pair of
legs. So he ran.
A healthy body is
useful—but you need more than two good legs to carry you through life for God!
Moses had thought he could do the job; now he found he couldn't. He couldn't
find God because, until he had come to an end of himself, God was a distant
Person to him.
Unless you have
come to the bottom of self you don't know basically in a crisis just how to
find God. You can't find God when He's found you. He's just there. The Spirit
must teach you. You just say, "That's fine, Lord, carry on." You are
thoroughly natural.
I believe in being
thoroughly irreverent with God! That's putting it in extreme form, but what I
mean is that a great deal of our pious talk and reverent attitudes and language
is a cloak for insincerity. Men of God, God's familiars, God's friends, talk
back and forth with Him in plain language.
But Moses, like
every one of us, had to learn that you don't do God's work by self effort and
self-wisdom.
Unquenchable
Energy
Forty years later,
Moses saw what he had not been ready to see before. He saw a queer object where
he was tending sheep in the wilderness. It was a common bush on fire. But the
curious thing, as he watched it, was that it didn't go out.
That is where God
showed Moses what humanity is meant to be: a common bush aflame with God.
But a man must be
common first. Moses, in his own opinion, had been a very uncommon royal bush,
and God doesn't live in uncommon royal bushes. Then Moses saw this sight: God's
presence, God's word out of a common bush — and as the divine fire consumes the
bush, it refuels it. "The bush was not consumed."
That's exactly what
God does. The divine life keeps flowing in, as you give it out.
That is
receptivity: the key to true humanity. Then you move out into activity.
No one is active
like a Christian, because he is motivated by the divine resources, the divine
power, the divine Person. We've got to learn by our hard knocks to clear out of
the way and recognize. Another functioning; get His voice, His plans, His
resources. Then we come back into the situation as servant, not boss.
Once you have come
to understand that your basic function is a constant recognition of Another,
the whole of life is transformed.
It isn't a matter
of continually allowing Him to come into your life, because you have received
Him. But it is the recognition of Another.
Another is the
functioning one.
Another is the
Person who inspires the prayers and imparts the faith and thinks the thoughts
through our minds and expresses His compassion through our hearts and puts our
bodies into action.
Once you've seen
that, you see that He is the illimitable One.
Then you relax and
say, "This is what life is basically: Another living His life in me."
You've got your key
to everything.
Every problem
becomes an opportunity.
Every tough spot
becomes a chance to enjoy the luxury of seeing Him deliver us out of it.
And you welcome
such spots.
PART 3 - Your Other Self.
Normal humanity is
God-indwelt.
Humanity which is
not indwelt by Deity is subhuman. Can you offer proof of that, you say? Yes, I
can. I can give you proof from the only perfect human who has ever lived on
earth.
Jesus Christ was a
real human. (That's why I love to call Him Jesus, though He is the Lord
Jesus Christ.) He
was the Son of God, but if He called Himself the Son of God five times, He
called Himself Son of man fifty-five times. Which means He was a representative
man—one of us.
Notice what Jesus
said each time He was challenged on the source of His power to work miracles or
His authority to say what He did. Every time He answered, "The Son can do
nothing of Himself."
In other words, His
basic self-conscious-ness as a human was awareness of His nothingness in
Himself!
His statements
about the Father often puzzled the disciples. He would say, "I do what I
see the Father do," "as I hear, I judge," "My doctrine is
not Mine, but His that sent Me." They wondered whether He had some strange
means of communication with His "Father in heaven."
He revealed their
true meaning in what I think is the most important conversation ever recorded.
It was the first time in actual human words that the union of man and God is
revealed. It came in that last conversation at the supper table before He went
out to Gethsemane.
He kept saying He
was going to the Father, but the Spirit had not come; therefore, a normal human
could only understand outward relationships — one person here, another there,
each person separate from the other.
So when He talked
about the Father, the disciples thought He must be some Being way up in the
blue. Feeling desperate that Jesus was going to whom they knew not, Philip made
a commonsense request:
"Lord, show us
the Father and that will suffice us."
In other words,
"Open Heaven, and let us have one look at the One to whom You say You are
going."
Remember Jesus'
answer? He said, "Have I been so long with you, yet hast thou not known
Me, Philip? He that hath seen Me hath seen the Father. How sayest thou then,
'Show us the Father'?"
Now you might stop
with that statement and say, "Well, that's Deity. He meant that their
names were interchangeable — Father, Son and Spirit, and they could call Him
Father or Jesus."
But He didn't mean
that, for the next verse says this: "Believest thou not that I am in the
Father and the Father in Me? The words I speak unto you I speak not of Myself:
but the Father that dwelleth in Me, He doeth the works."
When Jesus said He
did what He saw the Father doing it was not that He had some telescopic view
into Heaven, but that as the Father in Him took Him into various situations and
faced Him with various needs He would know this was a call to action. As He saw
the Father moving into action, He took action. The action of faith.
The same was true
of the words He spoke. He was expressing the thoughts and words the Father
thought and spoke in Him.
So you see the
human nothingness and the divine union? Yet that doesn't mean that we do
nothing.
No one was more
active than Jesus Christ! But the activity was secondary to receptivity.
An outstanding
characteristic of the life of Jesus was His relaxed attitude. He was always
saying, "I have what the Father gives Me." Yet what words He spoke
and deeds He did!
You see, that
relaxed attitude is a normal human attitude-because a vessel hasn't anything
except the capacity to contain. So relax!
Two, But One
Someone may say,
"Well, Jesus Christ was a unique person. Can we say we're just like Jesus
Christ?"
Yes, you can.
The chapter ends as
Jesus says, "Arise, let us go hence." It appears to me that as they
moved from the supper table toward Gethsemane, He wanted to give one other illustration
to connect them up with what He had said of Himself and the Father. They passed
through a vineyard.
"See," He
said, "I have been the branch of My Father. He has been My vine; His sap
has been flowing through Me, and I have just been bearing the fruit.
"Now," He
said, "I am your vine and you are My branches. We are to have the same
union which I have had with the Father, and apart from Me ye can do
nothing."
Some years later,
as a passing remark in the midst of another subject, Paul made a marvelous
statement in I Corinthians 6:17 that reveals the nature of that union: "He
that is joined to the Lord is one spirit."
That's the real
self, and the basis for our union: one spirit, not two spirits. The very same
thing that Jesus said of Himself and the Father ("I and my Father are
one") Paul says of us.
A great many of our
confusions in life begin because we haven't discerned between soul and spirit.
The Bible analyzes the human personality into three parts (for everything is a
trinity). It speaks of "your whole spirit and soul and body" in I
Thessalonians 5:23.
Look at the order:
not body, soul and spirit—that's our order. God's order is spirit first:
"I pray God your whole spirit and soul and body be preserved
blameless."
To put it briefly,
spirit is the seat of ego; soul is the seat of the emotions and of reason.
Spirit is the ego,
the self. God is spirit and He is the first ego, the first self. We are
spirits, of whom He is the Father (Hebrews 12:9). He is the Creator of body and
soul, but the Father of spirits.
Down in that
center—the spirit—is where you know and love. Knowledge and love-mind and
heart-are the real self, the real person. That's where you irrevocably live.
Paul, in I
Corinthians 2:11, said, "What man knoweth the things of a man save the
spirit of man which is in him?" The knower inside us is our spirit.
For instance, we
Christians know Jesus Christ. How do you know Jesus Christ? I can't tell you.
Somehow you've come past the realm of just knowing about this Person called
Jesus Christ and He is real to you.
In the same way, a
person knows music, knows art, knows science.
I understand that,
you say. I'm at home with that. The knower just knows!
That isn't giving a
reason, is it? It's something intuitive inside you, and that's your spirit. .
That's different from reason.
But your soul is
more external. It is how you express your spirit.
Your mind (your
knowledge) expresses itself in reasons. But reasons can vary. They can be
influenced by all sorts of things.
Your heart
expresses itself through the affections, the emotions. That's where you feel.
But feelings can vary—quite apart from the set purposes of the heart. We say,
"I don't feel like this," or "I feel spiritually cold, or dead
or dry," and they are all illusions of the soul.
Neither reason nor
emotion is our real life, which is deep inside us.
Now, we live where
we love. That's what the Bible calls the heart. That's not the emotions; it's
the set of life, the choices, the purposes where one of the two spirits is
joined to us—the false spirit of self-love, called the spirit of error, who is
in us from birth—or the true spirit of self-giving, the Spirit of God, called
"the Spirit of truth," who replaces the false spirit in us by
redemption and rebirth.
We have to learn
how to discern between soul and spirit (Hebrews 4:12). We
have to refuse in our spirit, our real selves, to be dominated by the reactions
of the emotions or the reasons—our souls.
When we have
learned to discern and to discipline the reactions of the soul, then through
our reasons and our emotions we channel Christ, and are not moved by the reflex
action of the world coming back at us.
But how can I do
this? you say.
You can do this because
"He that is joined to the Lord is one spirit."
The Bible reveals
that God, who is spirit, is an invisible Person. He always expresses Himself
He expresses the
kind of Person He is through His Son; that's the soul of God. The soul of God
is Jesus Christ.
Visible-and
Invisible-Life
So with us, our
spirits are our invisible selves, and we have to have a form of expression. The
form of expression is the soul life.
And it's in our
soul life that we differ.
In the spirit we're
undifferentiated. You and I are exactly the same, eternally one person in the
Spirit. You and I are one unit.
I'm sorry for you,
but you've got to have me. Because we're all one!
But in our souls we
differ: you're very quick and I'm slow. One person is cautious, another person
is dashing. Variety is in our soul life-that is, in the emotions and the
reason. These are the varied expression of the inner spirit.
Now you may say in
your soul life—in your emotions or your reason—"l don't like that
person."
We have an affinity
with some people and not with others. We're just made like that.
But you have to
move back from your soul-affections (your emotions) to the inner spirit-love.
This business of
emotions is most important, because dozens of Christians live with their feet
dragging with a sense of condemnation and failure because they feel away from
God, or the feel cold, or they feel guilty, or they feel weak, and so on.
They haven't
discerned between the variable emotions of the soul and the unvarying reality
of spirit—where God's Spirit of love is eternally our other self in our spirit.
How can I be cold
when I've got that permanent fire within me-Jesus Christ?
Move back from your
soul-affections and say, "No, He's here."
How can I feel dry
when I have a permanent well of water inside me-Jesus Christ?
Not Emotion, But
Reality
You move back from
your affections, your emotions, to the real love-center—because "He that
is joined to the Lord is one spirit."
The other verse
that goes with that one, which I always think is so marvelous, is perhaps my
favorite in the Bible. It is Galatians 2:20, where Paul says, "I am
crucified with Christ
That's the old Paul
out.
Then he says,
"..... nevertheless, I live."
That's the new Paul
in Christ: a living, thinking, willing, feeling, battling human. A real person.
But listen: then he
corrects himself and adds, "Yet not I, but Christ liveth in me."
He could very
easily have said, "Nevertheless I live and Christ lives in me"—as if
Christ lived near him or close by him.
But you see, he
replaced self by Christ.
That's the point.
He said,
"Nevertheless, I live—excuse me, the real I isn't I at all, it is
Christ."
In other words,
your other self is Christ. It is not you, it's Christ. There are two selves
joined in one; and the other self is Christ.
That's why it's
indivisible. That's why it's ridiculous to look around or above and try to find
Christ.
You don't try to
find yourself, do you? Wherever you go, you are there, aren't you?
However you feel
about it, you can't escape your self.
And your other self
is Christ; you can't escape Him either!
I'm sorry if Christ
has to go where you go! But that's His business!
In the grace of
God, Jesus Christ tied Himself to us.
Isn't that amazing?
You can't escape Him.
Where you go, He
goes. He's your other self; He's not you.
You're you; He's
He.
You contain Him; He
motivates you. And you learn the habits of this abiding life.
He is the one who
lives it.
You are His means
of expressing Himself.
Motivation by Jesus
Christ; that's the eternal life which we who know Him have already begun!
Next we will need
to examine, understand and establish how this change of relationship has taken
place. How can it be when we are eternally separated from God by sin? How can
we have such a boldness, so that we can be free, happy, familiar, natural—not superduper
reverent—but ordinary, normal people: what God intends us to be?
PART 4 - Your New Spirit.
I believe in a
secular Christ. I do not believe in a religious Christ.
I believe one of
the whole difficulties of Christianity is we've put Christ in a special
building for a special occasion, with special forms of worship, special music,
special everything.
Cut the special
out; put your hands in your pocket and go in your old blue jeans. Christ is a
secular person.
If Christ is your
other self, Christ washes dishes.
If Christ is your
other self, He spanks the youngsters.
If Christ is your
other self, He handles the accounting machine and runs the business.
Christ, therefore,
is a very common per-son.
You're a very
common person—I assure you that. That's why I believe in a common
Christ—because He lives in common people!
Obviously, humanity
has become separated from God. Before I can live in the kind of familiarity
with God that He intends for me, I need to know the basis for that kind of a
relationship. I need to know my title. Once I am sure of my foundations I can
forget them and go ahead. Once I am sure of the road under my feet I can
proceed to walk confidently.
Road to
Familiarity
These are the
simple facts of revelation (and we can follow their logic, as well as their
tragedy and wonder):
What the Bible
calls sin is, in one phrase, independent self. The created self was made to
contain and express the Creator Self who is selfless love.
Instead, in the
person of Lucifer, probably the created being nearest to God Himself, a new and
horrible form of life came into existence: a created self who refused to
contain the selfless Self of God but chose to live for and by himself. Lucifer
was the sin-spirit, the spirit of self-love, self-seeking, and all the sins
known to man that proceed from that.
The history of the
creation of man in the Garden of Eden tells us what happened to our forefather.
He was created to contain God in a living union, which was symbolized for him
in the offer of "the tree of life in the midst of the garden."
But as a human
being with free choice, he could take another way—the way of self-love:
symbolized for him in the other tree in the midst of the garden—the tree of the
knowledge of good and evil.
Deceived by the
lying spirit of Satan, he received into himself the spirit of error rather than
the Spirit of truth, and became a child of the Devil. Since then the whole
human race is born with the spirit of self-centeredness in it. The Bible calls
it "the spirit that now worketh in the children of disobedience."
That we are all
born and live under that domination is obvious, for we are all by nature
egoists and self-lovers. Every breath we breathe, therefore, is sin—because
anything less than God's perfection is sin, and God's perfection is perfect
love. But such total love to God and our brother is totally impossible without
God who is love living in us.
Two Problems
Solved
What, then, has He
who is Love, and therefore must save, done to restore His lost humanity to
Himself?
He has taken flesh
Himself to start a new race. In the Person of His Son, Jesus, He came into
history as a man called "the last Adam," the Creator of the first.
Having lived a perfect life which the first Adam failed to live, He then
identified Himself totally with the fallen human race by dying for us. In that
death He was so identified with us all in God's sight that the Bible says,
"He made Him to be sin for us, who knew no sin. Thus, He died. In doing
so, the Bible reveals that He effected the two supreme deliverances that were
the two absolute necessities.
First, He solved
God's problem (or rather, God solved His own problem) by taking upon Himself
the curse of the broken law, and being made a curse for us. By the shedding of
His blood, His outpoured life, He became God's "mercy seat."
By this, God could
both be just and justify the ungodly, and pronounce all believers in Jesus
justified from all unrighteousness-for-given, cleansed, in His sight as if we
had committed no sin; "made the righteousness of God in Him." Broken
law has consequences. That is the nature of law. God, farseeing that we should
all be lawbreakers, foreordained His Son to be "the propitiation through
faith in His blood."
What God revealed
to be the necessary atonement for sin, He Himself suffered. What He suffered He
accepted. And His acceptance is our justification (as the Scripture says,
"raised again for our justification"). What is good enough for God is
good enough for us. "How much more shall the blood of Christ, who through
the eternal Spirit offered Himself without spot unto God, purge your conscience
from dead works to serve the living God?"
Secondly, Christ's
cross and resurrection solved our problem. For by this means He fully effected
the destruction of the old union of humanity to Satan and replaced it by the
new union to Himself.
Our problem is
simply that in our unredeemed life our inner self, our spirit, was united to
the self-loving spirit of Satan.
As a consequence,
we followed the desire of soul and body. When our bodies stimulated appetites
in us, we gratified them. When our souls stirred up pride or dislike of this or
hate of that or love of that—we just followed them.
We were governed by
our souls and bodies.
Replacement for
Soul Life
But when Christ
died, it says that "He died unto sin once." That means that in His
death, as our Representative, our last Adam, He became separated from the
sin-spirit which had invaded the human spirit—just as anybody in death is
separated from his spirit. And in His resurrection He was "made alive by
the Spirit."
In other words, the
Spirit of truth—God Himself—united Himself to that last Adam, and thus united
Himself to all who will accept their place by faith as participators in His
death and resurrection.
Here was the
beginning of the new and final creation, when the usurping person was cut off
from the possession he had deceitfully gained of the human spirit; when the
true Owner, the living God, replaced him in all who receive Jesus.
This is no Biblical
theory. This is the most tremendous and dynamic event in human history!
Here is our title
to union—to permanent familiarity—with God!
For example, use
this little illustration.
On Sunday morning
you say your duty is to go to church. But you get a blustery day, wind and
snow, and you don't feel like going. But you go anyway.
Why? Because down
inside you purpose to go. You say, "Oh, I don't feel like going, but I'm
going."
There you've got
the point. Now you have moved from soul to spirit, you see.
Reason is exactly
the same. Reason is the faculty by which we explain things and argue about them
and talk about them. Through these words I've tried to use my reason, which is
my soul life, to explain what I claim to know. I claim to know Jesus Christ; I
try to explain myself to you—that's my reason.
You see, reasons
can differ. That is why we can differ in our opinions and explanations—our soul
life—but be one in Christ-in our spirit life.
I've always been
one to dig into things. I took up philosophy just as a hobby and got my reason
thoroughly shaken. I said to myself, "I'm really not so sure that there is
a God at all. Yet," I said, "I know Him and love Him and have done so
for years—yet He may not be a living Person at all!"
My reason conveyed
doubts to me.
My spirit said,
"But I know Him!"
So do you know what
I came to? I said, "Well, if God is the big illusion, I'll be a little
illusion alongside Him. I love the 'Illusion,' that's all."
You see, I would
not be governed by my reason—my soul—because I had something deeper, more real.
Of course, in due
time, I came out more strongly confirmed in soul, or reason, as well as
spirit-knowledge. Doubts are the raw material of faith.
Have we got it
clear?
The consequence of
broken law which we must inevitably suffer, stated in most direct and terrible
fashion again and again in the words of Jesus and the writings of the apostles,
was borne by God Himself in the Person of His Son. If we ask, how can the blood
of any man atone for the sin of all, the answer is that this was the blood of
Deity made flesh.
The enslaved
condition of humanity, through the indwelling spirit of self-centered-ness,
with which every man is born, was ended at the cross!
Christ, as our
representative, died to that enslavement—that sin-spirit; and again as our
representative, was raised from the dead by "the Spirit of Him that raised
up Jesus from the dead."
Thus, this change
of union from the spirit of self-centeredness to the spirit of self-giving
becomes an actual, down-to~earth fact in the personality and experience of
every human being who, recognizing and admitting his need, receives Him as Lord
and Savior.
Your old spirit is
replaced by your new Spirit!
You were governed
by soul and body. Now, as a redeemed person, the Spirit—His Spirit in your
spirit—is master of soul and body.
You meet the
demands of the bodily senses, the varying emotions of the soul stimulated by
world, flesh or desire, with the affirmation of the indwelling Christ as Lord.
Soul and body
become the manifestation of Jesus Christ.
Here, indeed, is
the key to being a normal person—free, happy, familiar, natural—released from
the spirit of self-love into the boundless, creative outflowing energy of the
new governing Spirit that indwells you: His Spirit.
Here, indeed, is
the key to everything.