Really try to get to understand what the Christian life really
is. In the first place, to show that it is not a petty, small,
trivial thing to be a Christian. Hence our first evening was
occupied with the immense significance of the Christian life. Then
that it is not a superficial thing of passing, changing feelings,
sensations, emotions, impressions, but that it rests upon some
deep and radical changes in our very constitution. Thus our second
evening was occupied with what happens when we become Christians -
that is, what happens to us and in us. Then that it is not
something which is exhausted in its initial experience, however
wonderful and great that may be. It is not all limited to its
beginnings, but it is inexhaustible, it is boundless. So our third
evening was occupied with the Divine purpose and principles
governing the Christian life. And finally, it is not by any means
a matter of this life alone, be it short or be it long, but it
relates more to what follows, to the life to come. Hence this
evening we are to be concerned with the eternal prospect of the
Christian life: its relation to the eternal future.
We saw at the beginning that the Christian life is dated back to
eternity past; it is not something which just springs up in this
particular Christian era, as it is called, but that it was
designed by God in His eternal counsels. The New Testament has
quite a lot to say about that - and that that eternal Purpose and
design is pressing in to this special dispensation in a very
definite and particular way.
The past eternity is pressing and pressing up in this age in a
particular way. Now we are to see that the future eternity is also
pressing into this dispensation. The future eternity is governing
the present, is shaping the present, and explains the present. God
is not only working onward, really, the onward aspect of Divine
activities is our side of things. God is working backward;
His side of things is always backward to His full thought
in eternity past. He is bringing us on, but He is really bringing
us back.
Now to come to this matter of:
The Eternal Prospect of the Christian.
We have to realise - and there's so much of it, it's not
difficult to realise - that there is a very large
prospective element in the New Testament. That is, the New
Testament is always looking on. In the New Testament everything is
dominated by the ages to come. The conception was an eternal one,
not just a time one. And that conception is far, far too big to be
realised in fullness in any time. It is much bigger than all
time; it certainly, therefore, cannot be realised in any lifetime
of any person. It outbounds time. This is "from eternity to
eternity", and it requires timelessness for its full
realisation.
This, of course, explains a great deal. It explains the very
nature of the Christian life and of Christian service. A very big
factor in the ways of God with His people, with Christians, is
that of experience. God puts a great deal of value upon
experience. It's just when we are beginning to profit by
experience, the end comes, and others are beginning to profit by
our experience, that the end comes and we are called away, and all
the long and full and deep experience has really had no adequate
expression. And there is something about that, that would be a
problem if God puts so much value upon experience, and then when
we have got it we can't use it; it's like a contradiction. It
requires an extension somewhere, somehow, to make good all that
deep experience which God has taken so much pains to produce. It
explains God's ways with us in the path of deep and deepening
experience.
Then as to the work of God. Well, the work is difficult, it's
hard; the progress is all too slow. And though you may do much,
and fill your life, when you have had all the days that can be
allotted and have spent yourself to the last drop, what have you
done? What have you done, after all, what does it amount to, at
most? We have to say - little, comparatively little. There is so
much more to be done, and every successive generation of Christian
workers has the same story to tell. On we go, on we go, and we
never overtake, we never reach anything like fullness in this
life. Something more is required to make perfect both our
imperfect lives and our imperfect work.
And then another factor, which is not a small one, that God
seems (I put it this way, "seems") to be so much more
concerned with the worker than even with the work. This, of
course, creates the perplexities of Christian life and service. If
God were only concerned with our Christian work, well, He ought
never to allow us to be laid aside from it, especially either
repeatedly or for long periods, and He certainly ought not to
allow us to die "prematurely", as we would say. If the work is
everything, then He ought to keep us at full strength all our days
and extend our days to a full period; but He does not. So many of
His choicest people are not able to serve in the way in which
Christian service is thought of, be in action; and even those who
are fully in action are conscious that the real need, the
real need in the work of God is for their own deeper
knowledge of God Himself and that God is concerned with them very
largely, even more than He is with their work.
What does this say? If all that discipline, chastening, trial,
testing, all that we go through under the hand of God, is all that
just for now? Surely He is preparing people for something
more. People! He is concerned with men and with women - with people
- quite as much, if not more than with what they do for Him. This,
of course, will never be taken as an excuse for not working to our
full degree, but it is all a case for something more. There is
nothing perfect or complete while death remains. You'll
remember the argument about the priesthood of the Old Testament
which the apostle develops in the letter to the Hebrews. The
priest of the old dispensation could bring nothing to finality
because they died and had to hand on to another; and he
never brought anything to finality, he died and had to pass it on
to another; and so it went on. And the argument is that nothing
was made perfect because of death. But He - Jesus, our
High Priest - does, and has made things perfect, because He "ever
liveth". The principle, of course, is just this principle: that
while death remains nothing is completed or comes to finality. It
requires an endless life, the power of an endless life, to reach
fullness. That is clearly shown in the Scriptures.
You see, the picture of immortality which the Bible gives us, is
a very wonderful one, and one, of course, which we cannot
understand in our present order of things. The picture of
immortality which the Bible gives us is that of new
productions without the dying of the old. Our order at
present is that everything new comes out of the death that
precedes it. Trees, flowers, everything has to die to produce
something new. That's the order of this dispensation! The heart of
this dispensation is the great truth of Jesus Christ, the "corn of
wheat", falling into the ground and dying, that there
should be a production on a larger scale. That's the order of this
dispensation, but that is not the order of the coming eternity.
The picture of immortality there, as given in the Word, is trees,
yes! And new branches, new leaves, new fruit, and the old never
dies. The old never dies! Its fruit is brought to perfection
without any death at all. I think that's rather wonderful, don't
you?
And then when you come to the Word again regarding this
prospective factor and element, what a lot there is in the nature
of an urge and an imperative to utterness! All the time
the apostles are urging us, bringing upon us the weight of this
great imperative to go on - go on - go on! By
exhortation, by warning, they are constantly saying to us, "Go on
and ever on!" This urge and this imperative in relation to being
utter, utter for God, having no margin of life that is not burnt
up for God, and the point of that argument, that urge, and that
imperative, is the coming eternity. All that is in the light of
the afterward. Why be utter for God? Ah, the answer is to
be found afterward! We must, they say, we must be utter for God because
of what is going to follow, because this is not the end,
because there is that which, coming afterward, will show the
justification for having been utter for God.
Now, that leads us to the next thing in this connection:
The Comparative Element in Eternity.
There is (I think we agree) there is a prospective element in the
Christian life which occupies a great deal of the New Testament
all of which has to do with the Christian life. Cut out that
prospective element from the New Testament and see how much you
have got left, whether it be Gospels or Epistles. You won't have
very much left if you take that out. It's there and it's mightily
there. But in addition to it, there is what I am calling the
'comparative element' in relation to the coming eternity. And
again, there is in the New Testament such an element. What
I mean by the comparative element is this: that things are not all
going to be on one 'mass production' level hereafter. There are
going to be differences where the children of God are concerned,
and very great differences.
It was to this, of course, that the apostle was pointing when
writing to the Corinthians. Speaking about foundations and
superstructure, he said: "The foundation is laid. Now let every
man take heed how he build thereon. If any man build thereon wood,
hay, stubble, gold, silver, precious stones, every man's work
shall be tried by fire". And if, if, he implies, it's
wood, hay or stubble, it's all going up in smoke. And then he
brings in this tremendously forceful word: "If any man's work
suffer loss: but man may be saved; yet so as by fire." He may be
saved, yet so as by fire; that is, well, the man may just scrape
through, as a kind of emergency thing - just managing to get in,
as we say, 'by the skin of his teeth'. But everything's gone. The
argument surely is that is not what God intended. Over against
that we have a phrase like this: "For so an abundant entrance
shall be ministered unto you into the everlasting kingdom". On the
one hand the possibility of just getting in with your life and
nothing more; on the other hand, an abundant entrance into
the everlasting kingdom. You see, there are differences, there are
comparisons afterward.
What about those messages to the seven churches in Asia, which we
have at the beginning of the book of the Revelation? Now, I do not
agree that the people in those churches are only professers and
not true Christians. If you grant that, then you have got to face
this, that between Christian and Christian there's a difference,
and there are certain very distinct promises given to certain
Christians there. "To him that overcometh..." "to him that
overcometh..." "to him that overcometh will I grant..." See?
Surely logic implies: "If you don't, then you won't. If you don't
overcome, then you won't get what the Lord offers." There are
differences. I don't believe that this is a matter of loss of
salvation, but this is something more than just being saved,
getting in.
What is the nature of the difference or the differences? Some people
will say, "Well, of course, it's reward!" All right, let's leave at
that, it's reward if you like. But what reward do you want? What is
the reward that you're looking for? You want wealth? Is that the
kind of reward you want, riches? Well, a lot of people say it's
going to be without them. I don't think that can be looked upon as
the sort of thing that will bring us what we need, and really what
we want. Do you want honours? Do you want titles? Do you want an
armchair for all eternity? What is it you want by way of reward?
Let's put the question in another way: what does the New
Testament show to be the nature of the rewards if we're
going to hold to that word "reward"? And the answer is this, quite
clearly if you'd like to look again. The reward is vocational - it
is always vocational. "And His servants shall serve
Him; and they shall see His face". Service, without all that is
associated with service now, service to Him without limit, without
restraint, without opposition, without suffering. Service. To be
able to serve Him! Well, how does that appeal to you? I can think of
nothing that would be a greater joy than just to be able, without
all the straitness, and limitations, and difficulties of the work
now, to serve the Lord in fullness.
Now, that's where the New Testament puts its finger. It's
vocational! And this, it goes on to show, is a matter of
related positions, that is, positions in relation to the Lord -
different positions for service. Take one illustration, an
instance, from one of those messages to the churches. "To him that
overcometh, will I grant to sit with Me in My throne". "To sit
with Me in My throne..." there you have two ideas. One is a very close
relationship with the Lord, a very intimate nearness to Him; and
the other, royal service - call it what you will, it's the service
of the throne. Again, what's your conception of sitting with Him
in a throne? Let us put our mentality right about all these
things, thrones and what-not, don't get pictures of sitting on
golden or ivory thrones, and that sort of thing. It simply means union
with the Lord in the administration of His eternal
kingdom. That's the service! But that is said to be a
special gift to certain people - if you like, it's their reward.
But the point is that it is vocational, and it's a matter of
relationship to the Lord.
The final picture that we have in the New Testament, while being
so full of symbolism, is an embodiment of these spiritual
principles. It's the picture of the City. Now again get your mind
clear, and don't think of a literal city. It's only an
illustration, a figure, a symbol. This City undoubtedly is the
Church. Need I argue that? "The Jerusalem which is above... is the
mother of us all...". "Ye are come unto the heavenly
Jerusalem". "Ye are come..." we are not coming later on,
afterwards, but "Ye are come... to the heavenly
Jerusalem... to the church of the firstborn ones", identical:
Jerusalem - the Church. So that that City which is said to be the
new Jerusalem, coming down from God out of heaven, is the Church.
Now it is put into a particular and peculiar position, like a
city, and the idea of a city is that it is the administrative
centre. And then we are told that "the nations walk in the light
thereof". You see, there is something at the centre for
government, and there is much more that is not at the centre. Here
is proximity to the Lord, relationship with the Lord for eternal
vocation in an administrative way in His kingdom.
That, surely, is enough to bear out what I am trying to say, that
there is a comparative element in the eternity to come.
And that, that is the point of the urge and the
imperative, that is the force of the constraint: "Let us go on
unto full growth" - not looking back, but pressing on; with the
warnings - not that you lose your salvation, but, but, but there
are positions and there is a vocation to which you are called in
eternity; you may miss that - you may miss that. I think Paul saw
that in what he called "the on-high calling" he saw something of
this reigning life in the ages to come.
Now, with God, nothing is just official. God never appoints
officers in His Kingdom. It doesn't matter, they are not
politicians - officials politically in His Kingdom, neither are
they officially, officially ecclesiastical. With God, I repeat,
there is nothing just official. You know, God doesn't appoint
officers in His Church. God's principle of appointment is always,
always according to spiritual measure. God indicates those
who are even now in the Church where it is a spiritual thing,
where it is according to His mind - He indicates those who are to
have oversight as being men of spiritual measure; not selected,
chosen and voted in by popular vote or unpopular vote. But
according to spiritual measure, that's the principle of the New
Testament, and in the Kingdom it's like that. No one is going to
have any position just because they are appointed
officially to it. Not at all! Every position will be
according to our spiritual measure.
Hence again repeatedly:
"Let us go on to Full Growth"
And you know that connected with that phrase "full growth" (in
the Authorised Version 'perfection', an unfortunate translation)
full growth, it is always the measure of the stature of the
fullness of Christ. It's the measure of Christ! It's just
how much of Christ there is, how big we are according to the
standard of Christ. That is God's basis of appointment, it will always
be with God, it is now, and in the ages to come, it will always be
that vocation is settled upon how much of Christ there is in those
concerned. God's whole thought, as we saw at the beginning of
these meditations, is that Christ shall fill all things.
Now that explains our discipline, for our discipline now is our
training for then; and the nature of our discipline now is just to
increase the measure of Christ - as we have seen: decreasing the
measure of 'I', of ourselves, in every way; setting aside the one
man that occupies the place of Christ, and putting Christ in his
place. The one all-inclusive object of the Holy Spirit in this
dispensation is to make Christ everything, and to get as
much room for Christ as He possibly can - and where we are
concerned, as much as we will let Him have. Now, that
throws us back, of course, upon: are we, are we really going to be
utter? The measure of our utterness will be the measure of our usefulness
in the ages to come. It's going to be governed by spiritual
measure and by no other principle.
Some people find difficulty - a purely mental one - in
reconciling reward and grace. It is possible that some legalists
are coming back on me in their minds while I'm talking and saying,
"Oh, it's all of grace, and you're making it a work. After all,
it's all of grace!" Well, of course, you've got to, you've got to
somehow explain the place of rewards, haven't you? And how you
can't reconcile rewards and grace, but, but it's not so difficult
as all that. It's all of grace that we have a chance to be 'utter'
at all! It's all the grace of God that I can be a Christian and
that I can go on with the Lord, that I can serve the Lord a little
bit. It's all of grace. And if suffering is going to lead to
glory, and the measure of the glory is going to be according to
the suffering, then it will require all the grace of God for that.
You can never get outside of grace! And if ever there should come
a reward - if you like to visualise such a thing literally now, a
reward being offered, I tell you, dear friends, when we get to
that point of full understanding and knowledge of all the
forbearance and long-suffering and patience of the Lord, we fall
on our faces and say, "Oh, I can't take any reward - it's all of
Your grace!" It will be all of grace.
But then remember that grace is spoken of in more than one way in
the New Testament. There is grace which gives us access and
acceptance. "This grace wherein we stand..." all the favour of
God, without merit, that we are saved at all, that we belong to
the Lord. Yes, that's grace. But then grace is also spoken of as
strength - strength beyond salvation - what the Lord meant when He
said to Paul in the presence of his affliction and suffering: "My
grace is sufficient for thee: My strength is made perfect in
weakness". Grace is acceptance without merit, but grace is
strength to labour, serve and suffer. It's all grace, however you
look at it.
So now we have to focus down upon this: that there is a large place
in the New Testament for our meaning business with God. It's
not all willy-nilly: you believe, you accept Christ, and that's the
beginning, that's the end of it; you get everything now. Well,
there's this large place for what I call, "meaning business with
God". Here it is, all these entreaties, exhortations, beseechings,
which bear down upon this: don't leave anything to chance.
Don't leave anything to chance! Don't say, "Oh, well, this doesn't
matter very much, this won't hurt, there's not much wrong in this;
I've got salvation, and the grace of God will cover all these things
and imperfections. I can do this and that, and it won't make much
difference; God is a God of love..." The New Testament says, "Don't
take any risks." If it doesn't mean about your salvation ultimately,
it does mean about something. Something! The whole force of the Word
is: "Look here, you be utter!" and God doesn't make provision for
anything else.
You go all the way with the Lord, for it's that to which
you're called. The Lord has never said anything about, "Well, you
only need go so far, and I'll excuse you the rest." No, it's always
fullness that God keeps in view, and He's challenging all the
time, if we mean business, if we will mean business with God. There
will be no place, at last, for our boasting in our endurance, our
success, our utterness. Even though we pour ourselves out to the
last drop, at last we will be the worshippers - we will be the
worshippers, we shall be the ones who are down before Him most. The
most utter people are the ones who are most conscious of their
indebtedness to the Lord. It's like that.
And now, we must draw to a close. The great crisis which
determines everything, it's always there in the Scripture, always
kept in view: a great crisis: the coming of the Lord.
The Coming of the Lord
It's there, it's then, that everything will be determined, though
we may have passed on before He comes, the Word makes it perfectly
clear that that makes no difference - we'll be there when He
comes. We'll be there when He comes and those who are alive when
He comes will not get ahead of us. Together we'll be there, and so
we'll all be on the common footing and then it will be determined
what the future is going to be - just exactly what our place will
be, what our function will be. This is the big factor in the
prospective aspect of things, it's always that in view:
the prospect, always keeps the Lord's coming in view. When we are
saved, we receive a new hope, but when we are believers we find
that that hope becomes something very definite and concrete, and
it becomes, called in the New Testament, "The hope".
The hope, and the hope is related to the coming of the
Lord.
So that all the appeals, and all the warnings, and all the
entreaties are focused down to this: the Lord is coming, and at
His coming everything will be decided, everything will be settled.
Then the future eternity will be decided upon where we're
concerned. And you know all those appeals in the light of His
coming, for watchfulness, for being fully occupied till He comes,
being on full stretch, and serious warnings that if we're not,
something's going to happen - something's going to go wrong. I am
not putting this into any system of doctrine, crystallizing it
into any form of teaching; but these are the facts; pure, simple
facts. At the coming of the Lord, great decisions will take place,
and if we are not watching, if we are not
occupying, if we are not on full stretch, something's
going wrong. The Word makes that perfectly clear in various ways.
Something's going wrong! I put it like that, I mean that
something's going to be missed.
So we bring the eternity that is ahead right into the present,
and see that this is a tremendous motive. It gives a tremendous
motive to the Christian life. Oh, the life hereafter, "going to
Heaven" or however we may speak about it, is not something that is
just out there, in a kind of objective, detached way, and we are
looking forward to that day, waiting for that day to come. My dear
friends, that day has pressed right into the present! That day is
here now in all its implications! I have often put it like
this: there is little hope of our going to Heaven, if Heaven
hasn't already come to us! Our place then, at any rate, and our
vocation then, will depend very largely, if not our salvation,
upon the measure that Christ has in us in this life.
Well that, again, explains a lot of things, doesn't it? How the
Lord does press into a short time very often, a great deal
that produces a measure of Christ in a wonderful way: much
suffering, much suffering, much affliction, much trial. And you
can see the growth in grace. You discern the patience, the
forbearance, the kindness, the love of Christ coming out in this
suffering child of God. Why, there's preparation for glory,
there's preparation for service. It explains a lot! We can go
round it, and look at it from so many different standpoints, but
after all it amounts to this: the New Testament keeps the future
in view as the great governing thing for the present. The New
Testament says that it's going to make a difference in the
eternity to come just how far we have gone on with the Lord, and
how much room the Lord has gained in our lives now. It's going to
be different. It's going to be different and the New Testament
says the Lord is coming.
This is no time matter at all. You may die, it makes no
difference. You may live, it makes no difference. The Lord will
come in His own time, and then all will be decided. See, so many
people are interested in the second coming of Christ purely from
perhaps a prophetical standpoint - events and happenings in the
world and so on - and so few Christians are alive, fully alive, to
this fact that the coming of the Lord in the New Testament is always
brought to bear down upon this: your spiritual state! "He that really
hath this hope" not, "he that hath this prophetic interpretation
of the second coming", but "he that hath this hope
purifies himself"; he gets ready, gets ready. He seeks that his
state is all right, as well as his standing. It matters, it will
matter a very great deal.
So we must open the door wide in our Christian lives to that far
greater, far greater
life that is before us. At most this is a brief one, a small one,
but it's only the beginning and all its meanings are going to come
out then in fullness.
But will you hear the appeal? The Christian life, as we have
said, is a tremendous thing, an immense thing. We are called
with an
eternal calling, unto an eternal vocation. Here we
are just brought into relationship with the Lord, and then
are dealt with
by the Lord. We are allowed to serve the Lord, but, even
in our service we are in school, we are learning, more
than anything else. Don't you think that that really is how it
ought to be? Not just doing a thousand and one things, but learning
a lot. The school of experience... and it is all related to the
calling on-high, and the great vocation afterward.
The Lord move our hearts to be utter for Him, leave nothing to
chance whatever, take no risks, but like His servant Paul,
go for the highest prize, the fullest thing that the Lord ever
intended.