"And
he shewed me a river of water of life, bright as crystal,
proceeding out of the throne of God and of the Lamb,
in the midst of the street thereof" (Revelation
22:1-2)
Passing
from the general description of the holy city in
Revelation 21 the apostle John then said that he was
shown it as consisting of one single and central street,
with a river flowing down the centre of that street of
pure gold. The spiritual significance of the vision is
the perfect oneness of Christ as revealed in a beautiful
unity in which He has the central place. This is God's
masterpiece, this unity of the fellowship of the Spirit
which makes Christ and His members one. By means of this
city God plans to minister to the whole range of His
universe. The nations are to walk in its light and to
find health from the leaves of its tree of life. God
purposes to minister blessing to His universe from the
central position of the Church in which Christ is the
central Figure.
If this is so, then we must believe that this element of
oneness is a vital principle, and that even now the Lord
is working to produce and maintain it. Although the final
objective of God is future, it must surely cast its rays
upon the present. When the glorious city comes suddenly
into view it may seem to come 'out of the blue', but in
fact it will only represent the final emergence of that
which has been spiritually coming all the time. There is
a sense in which each one of us is sending up in advance
those spiritual values in Christ which are being
developed in us. When we follow the simile of the bride,
we think of the garments being prepared now, as some
excellency, some beauty, some virtue of Christ is woven
like a thread into the fabric of the bridal garments. We
will 'put on' Christ then because we are learning to put
Him on now. It seems that in a similar way, the material
of the heavenly city is being prepared now. It is true
that every part of it represents some aspect of Christ,
but once again it should be realised that these
expressions of Christ are to be formed in us now. The
consummation will be seen later, but the city is being
spiritually formed now.
What will be true ultimately concerning the eternal
vocation of the Church as the metropolis of God's new
universe, throws some light on what should be true here
and now. In eternity God's glory is to be ministered on a
basis of absolute unity. First of all this means oneness
with the Lord Himself. The Church can fulfill God's
eternal purpose only by oneness with the thoughts of God
as expressed in His Son. It is not enough to contemplate
a feature of divine unity as illustrated by the one
single street and the life-giving river flowing down the
middle of it; we need to ask ourselves what this implies
for us here on earth. Surely the implication is that
among God's people there should be that basic unity of
the Spirit which makes possible a free-flowing ministry
of life. There is no need to insist on a uniformity of
language or procedure. Even where this exists in outward
matters there can still be deep tensions of spirit and
dividedness of heart. And even where people differ in
unimportant matters there can still be that all-important
unity of fellowship in Christ. It is this unity which is
essential to the flow of the Spirit.
Satan himself lays emphasis on this point by his constant
strategic movement against the power and value of any
service for Christ by introducing divisions and seeking
to perpetuate them. He does not mind talk about oneness;
in some ways he does not so much object to doctrinal
agreement of an external nature; but he is set positively
and persistently against a deep-down inwrought oneness,
for he knows the powerful impact of such a testimony. So
the picture of the river flowing down the street is a
challenge to us all. It is, of course, a challenge to the
Church as a whole, since the unity of the Spirit is not
sectional but all-embracing. It follows, though, that the
practical impact of the challenge is felt at local levels
and in the assemblies where we are found. Is the river
flowing there? If not, is this lack due to basic
disunity? Are there many streets, side avenues and
private roads, instead of the King's highway?
The challenge finally confronts each individual, for the
Lord Jesus promised that the result of a vital faith in
Him would be the outflow of rivers of living water (John
7:38). So the initial unity must be that of our own
personal relationship with Christ. Before we begin to
consider our church, we need to examine our own lives and
to ask if those around us are finding refreshment and
life as the Spirit flows out from us to them. It is not
enough to meditate on the beauty of the golden street
with its crystal-clear river if we think of it only in
terms of future prospects and not of present fulfilment.
So while we gratefully enjoy John's prevision of eternal
glory, we do well to ask what it should mean for us here
and now.
John could say: "He showed me...". He was
reporting what he had himself seen. But is it not
relevant that each one of us, in reading and hearing the
Word, should be able gratefully to affirm: "He
showed me...". Just as John could hardly have
conceived these heavenly wonders if the Lord had not
first said to him: "Come, and I will show
you...", so we cannot appreciate the spiritual
significance of this matter until the Lord Himself has
revealed it to us. We should be able to say in all
humility, "He showed me...". But if this is
true, if we really have received revelation, then what we
have seen ought to have a tremendous practical effect
upon our lives. How can I rightly claim to have seen this
wonderful truth of spiritual fellowship if it does not
find practical expression in my life? How can I talk
about the holy city, the heavenly bride of the Lamb,
without any outworking of the principles in me now?
Surely the test of whether we have seen is to be found in
what happens to us and in us. I do not believe that there
can be an effective divine showing without there being
some result. It is surely most perilous to accumulate
teaching concerning holy truths, perhaps even to
disseminate that teaching, while all the time there is a
minimal outworking of them in our experience. The
teaching can do more harm than good, for it can deceive
people into imagining that they are in the good of things
just because they are informed about them. We must always
test our assumed knowledge by the practical effect which
it can be shown to produce.
In the last chapter of the Bible, as in the first, the
double emphasis is on the Spirit and on life. In Genesis
we are told that the very first indication of divine
activity was the brooding of the Spirit of God, and then
followed ever new and ever more wonderful expressions of
life. When we come to the last chapter of the Revelation
we find the Spirit with the bride calling: "... he
that is athirst let him come: he that will, let him take
of the water of life freely". So again we have the
Spirit and life. In a sense this is a key to the whole
Bible. In the Old Testament the Spirit is symbolised in
many ways, as water, fire, oil and so on, but always
related in some way or other to the matter of life. In
the New Testament this is much more clearly emphasised.
The last book, the book of consummation, has the Spirit
and life as its two most prominent features. It opens
with John's statement that he was in the Spirit on the
Lord's day, and then seven times over in the letters to
the churches, the call is for those who will listen to
what the Spirit has to say in the churches. Running right
alongside is the question of life. In the Spirit John saw
and heard the Living One, the Lord Jesus, in terms of
resurrection life. As the seven-fold fullness of the
Spirit is referred to, we realise that His lamps of fire
are directed to the churches in a quest for the one
supreme experience which should be theirs, even the
fullness of life. The real test of whether those
believers were moving towards the Church's goal was, Are
people meeting Christ through you? Is virtue flowing out
to others, as it did from the garments of our Lord? Our
very vocation here on earth is to be witnesses of His
life and to minister that life to others around us.
Individually and in our churches, we are meant to be life
centres.
One of the churches was told: "... thou hast a name
that thou livest, and thou art dead..." (Revelation
3:1-3). Names are no use to the Lord. Whether the name
sounds good, whether it is Scriptural, whether it has a
long tradition; these are of no interest to the Lord and
have no value in His sight unless His own life and love
are flowing out through us. And there can be no doubt
that this life expresses itself in oneness. If the Holy
Spirit is really having His way among the Lord's people,
they cannot be divided. In eternity there will be a
golden street. Even now may His love so triumph in us,
His people, that the river of life is freed to carry life
to the thirsty souls around us!
From
"Toward The Mark" Sep-Oct, 1975, Vol. 4-5.