Among the
games that used to be played at parties there was one
like this. A large circle was formed by the company
present, and then someone began by whispering something
to the next person. This was passed on right round the
circle. The last person of the ring then had to say aloud
what he or she had received, or thought they had
received. It was then compared with the original
statement, and it was both amusing and amazing how the
thing had developed, lost its character, both by
addition, subtraction, or distortion. Often the original
could only with difficulty be recognised.
While Christianity is not a game, it has greatly suffered
in this way as it has passed down the generations through
the minds and lips of its vast circle of sponsors and
adherents. So much so that it is very difficult to
recognise the origin in what has emerged in course of
time. It therefore becomes necessary and of very great
importance to both ask and seek to answer the question:
What is it that we have come into in Christianity? The
object of these messages will be just to do that as
ability may be given by the Holy Spirit, the Spirit of TRUTH.
We shall begin on a wide basis and work from the
circumference to the centre. We know that the Bible is
divided into two main parts, or sections, the Old and the
New Testaments. That is not just a literary division. It
is truly a historical division, but it is much - very
much - more than that. Upon the difference represented by
that division hangs everything that God has said, and
wants us to know as to His eternal intention. It is just
there between the two Testaments, or halves, of the Bible
that the immense significance of our above title stands -
the Great Divide and the Great Transition. As we proceed,
we shall shortly come to point out that in that gap
between the Testaments stands nothing less than the Cross
of Jesus Christ.
The first section of the New Testament is that which
comprises the four "Gospels". Whatever
differences in likeness, context, presence and absences
there may be in the four, they all certainly have this in
common: they all lead up to the one climax, the Cross of
Christ. All that each has contained is shown to be
steadily and inexorably moving toward the Cross. From
what we learn later we understand that the Cross was
fixed in the counsels of God according to His
foreknowledge from the foundation of the world. What,
then, do we conclude from this climax of the Gospels, the
very first section of the New Testament? The Gospels
introduce the great Person of Jesus Christ. They proceed
with His works and His teaching, substantiated by His
life or character. All this comprises His mission, which
mission is to reveal God and God's purpose for man. The
place of the Cross as the inevitable and fixed climax to
the Gospels says one tremendous thing: it is that all
that revelation of God, in life, work, and teaching, can
only be made good for, and be entered into by man
through, the Cross of Jesus Christ, God's beloved Son. We
ought to place many marks of emphasis and exclamation at
the end of that statement. Read it again!
That, then, clearly and surely says that the Cross stands
right at the beginning of the New Testament, and that
again means that it stands between the two. If we just
put the figure of a cross there we shall see that its
arms stretch backward and forward. Then we should draw a
strong line right down the centre of the Cross. By this
figure we are enabled to understand the whole teaching of
the New Testament, or, in other words,
THE
TRUE MEANING AND NATURE OF CHRISTIANITY
That arm
with the backward aspect - up to the central line - says
FINISH, AN END. The arm with the forward aspect says ALL
THINGS NEW (i.e. different). On one side the Cross is the
closing of a door upon one whole historic system RELATED
TO GOD. On the other side the Cross - in the
resurrection of Christ - proclaims an open door to an
entirely new Divine economy. One side says 'No!
positively No!' The other side says 'Yes! definitely
Yes!'
Of course, what remains is for us to understand what it
is to which the No and the Yes apply. That will follow.
For the present we have to come to realise the inclusive
and emphatic FACT that there is a point in the
history of God's order at which there is an immense
dispensational divide and transition. We do not hesitate
to say that the confusion, weakness, frustration, and
failure which so much characterises Christendom is very
largely due to failure to realise, be really alive and
understanding as to this divide and transition! There is
a very real and true sense in which the New Testament is
entirely occupied with the business of making this divide
and transition clear. This will become evident as we
proceed. It can be rightly said that the New Testament is
built on two aspects expressed in two words, the
occurrence of which demands a lot of close study or
tracing. Both by actual use and by clear implication
these two words and aspects are numerous. These two words
- set over against each other - are "Not" and
"But". They respectively cover and embody two
comprehensive and entirely different systems in the
Divine economy, that is, in God's methods with man, and
the means employed by Him. They divide the two main
dispensations. All the main works of God are included in
those affords. As to his works and ways up to the Cross
the great "Not" applies. It says: 'Not SO
any longer.'
We shall at once proceed to note some of the main points
upon which the great divide and the great transition
rest. The first of these is:
THE
NO AND THE YES OF HUMANITY
The
fundamental statement is in John 1:12-13: "Children
of God... born, Not... but of God." This is enlarged
upon in chapter 3:3-12, and it runs in close connection
with all that is in this Gospel. It is pursued along many
lines, as we shall see. But before we follow this, may we
be reminded of one helpful matter. When John wrote this
Gospel he was an old man, probably very old. At the end -
or near the end - of his life he had been exiled and
imprisoned on the Isle of Patmos; for exactly how long we
do not know, but the point is that, with all of his
personal, intimate knowledge of the Lord Jesus, His
teaching, works, character, death, resurrection,
ascension, and the advent of the Holy Spirit, he had much
time for quiet detached meditation and thought. His
Gospel is the product of this, therefore every word and
statement is heavily loaded with much consideration and
communion with the Lord. We take it all as just written
statements, but we really should give something of the
same meditation to even the words employed by John; for,
as we have said, they are laden with eternal meaning.
Having said that, we return to the point at which we put
in that parenthesis. The "not" and the
"but" in its first application to mankind is
pursued along various lines. Those lines are:
(a) The title of the Son of God which is FOUNDATIONAL
to all that follows in this connection.
(b) The words which most conspicuously characterise this
Gospel.
(c) The "SIGNS" which John selected, or
was led to select, to illustrate and demonstrate the
particular object in view.
We begin with
THE
TITLE OF THE SON OF GOD
"In the beginning
was the WORD."
"The WORD was with God."
"The WORD was God."
"The WORD became flesh." (John 1:1,14)
It is not at all
necessary to enter the tortuous jungle of Greek
philosophical and mystical thought which is associated
with this word "Logos". Whatever help there may
be in its elucidation, let the scholars dig that out. The
simple facts are that it just means this IN THE BIBLE.
A word is the means of expressing something that is in
the mind, a thought expressed. Then (in this connection)
it is the mind or thought of God. The next element in the
word is that it is not abstract, but an act. God's word
in the Old Testament is God's act, it is a fiat. "In
the beginning God said... and it WAS."
"He spake, and it was DONE", etc., etc.
The next thing here is that the mind, the thought, the
expression thereof took PERSONAL form:
"Became flesh." The result - and note how this
connects with our present application of the divide and
transition - is that we have in Christ the personal
expression of the mind of God as to humanity; a kind of
manhood! A NEW kind of humanity; not only a
better, but a different from all other. This is THE
great significance of the Incarnation, a FUNDAMENTAL
difference. Humanity, yes; but different. Not in bodily
or physical appearance. Not in all human SOUL-sensibilities
and endowments; but deeper than body and soul, a spirit
begotten of God. "The (or an) ONLY begotten
of the Father" (John 1:14). The "only" is
unique. This is an unique humanity, not only an improved
specimen. The difference is in what follows, as we shall
see.
So, the first meaning of the "Not" and the
"But" relates to the title given to the Son of
God who became "Son of Man"; that is, a
different and unique human emanation and expression of
God's mind; an act of God. From there we proceed along
the line of
THE
DOMINANT WORDS USED BY JOHN
They are quite a
cluster, but for our immediate purpose we note these:
"Father", "Son", "Life",
"Light", "Truth", "To
know", "Believe", "Love".
"Father" occurs 116 times in this Gospel, MORE
THAN ANY OTHER WORD. It is therefore the background
of all that is here. The very term implies begetting;
emanation of those of like nature.
John was particularly dominated by this conception of
God. In his Letters as well as here he says much about
being begotten of God. The children of God are God's act
and their existence is the projecting of His WILL!
While they are the children of His love, they are not of
impulse, but calculated and preconsidered. The whole
conception of humanity was in the mind of God before
creation, humanity that now is. The Word - "God
manifest in the flesh" is the "But" over
against the "Not" in this respect. If Christ's
mission was - in the first place - to reveal the Father,
as it certainly was, then the Father is revealed in human
form in His children; initially, progressively, and
ultimately in all likeness, as John says in his Letter.
It is a NATURE that we refer to, not His deity. We
do not partake of THAT! It will be of great value
to the reader if he will trace this word
"Father" through John, AND STOP TO THINK
in each case.
From the "Father" we proceed to the
"Children" (John 1:12).
First, the fact is stated that Jesus gave it to some to
be children of God, and that He did this precisely on the
basis of receiving Him. Weigh that carefully!
Then it says that this relationship to God is a given
"right", prerogative, authority: "He gave
(them) the authority to become the children of God."
The word is 'exousia' and it has a legal meaning. It is
the rightful, legal, legitimate, authoritative status of
true children. These children inherit rights and claims
by their birth. (See all the New Testament teaching on
"heirs of God, joint-heirs with Jesus Christ";
the "Inheritance", etc.)
From there we are led on to the nature of this humanity,
these "children". It is here that the first
categorical "Not" "But" connects. The
great divide, the great contrast is so emphasised.
"Which were born (begotten)": Not -
(a) "Of
bloods" (plural),
(b) "The will of
the flesh,"
(c) "The will of
man."
"Bloods" in
the plural seems to mean the mingling of sexes, and there
may very well be a hidden reference to the birth of Jesus
which was not the mingling of the blood of Joseph and
Mary, but "of God". "The will of the
flesh", according to later New Testament teaching
(e.g. Romans 8:4-8, etc.) is the choice, the decision,
the energy of the natural man. So, "not of the will
[volition] of man".
This is a tremendous and categorical sweeping away of
everything but God's act in new birth. What an
'everything' that is in Christianity! "But of [out
from] God." Every TRUE child of God can say:
'I am God's act in the deepest reality of my being.' Not
by natural birth from earthly (even Christian) parents.
Not by the force or strength of any man's will, but God
did it! "Not" "But". There is a
divide in the race, a difference in the humanities.
From "A Witness
and a Testimony" July-August 1969, Vol. 47-4.