by T. Austin-Sparks
Chapter 5 - The House Not Made With Hands
"Whose voice then shook the earth: but now he
hath promised, saying, Yet once more will I make to
tremble not the earth only, but also the heaven. And this
word, Yet once more, signifieth the removing of those
things that are shaken, as of things that have been made,
that those things which are not shaken may remain.
Wherefore, receiving a kingdom that cannot be shaken, let
us have grace, whereby we may offer service well-pleasing
to God with reverence and awe" (Hebrews
12:26-28).
There is a sense in which those three verses summarize
this letter, and indicate precisely the object of the
letter. The statement about the 'things which can be
shaken' covers the whole ground of the typology and
earthly representation of heavenly things in the Mosaic
system. The 'things which cannot be shaken' are the
spiritual meaning of those things, that to which they
point and embody as abiding spiritual and heavenly
realities. The Apostle is saying that a shaking is about
to take place, and the result of that shaking will be
that all those things will be displaced, upset and
overturned, and that system will be disintegrated.
That, to some extent, fixes the time of the writing of
this letter as being prior to the destruction of
Jerusalem. The Temple and all its service was going on at
the time, but the writer knew that ere long that whole
system would be shaken to its foundation and collapse,
and would be broken to pieces. That took place shortly
after with the destruction of Jerusalem. The probability
is that this letter was written about the year A.D. 64,
and the destruction of Jerusalem took place in the year
A.D. 70. These very Jewish believers to whom this letter
was written probably lived to that day and saw the
fulfilment of this prophecy. As they were inclined to go
back from Christ, in all the spiritual fullness which He
embodied, to the outward, historical, traditional system,
the Apostle wrote this letter to save them from the awful
disaster to their faith which would inevitably take place
if they were solely bound up with that system and had no
more. He wrote to woo them from the transient and the
passing to the abiding and the permanent, and to bring
them into the things which CANNOT be shaken.
You go through the letter and mark each step, right from
the first chapter, as to what can be shaken and what
cannot be shaken. The eternal sonship of the Lord Jesus
Christ cannot be shaken. Our sonship in Him cannot be
shaken. Is it the blood of the covenant? It is the Blood
of the EVERLASTING covenant, and it cannot be
shaken! Is it the Priesthood of the Lord Jesus? It is
after the order of Melchizedek; not merely after the
order of Aaron, which passes, but after the power of an
endless life, which cannot be shaken! Whatever there is
in this letter has two sides. There is the outward form
used to express something, and that will pass. And then
there is the inward thing being expressed, and that will
not pass. So the call is to be bound up with the
unshakable things, the eternal things and the heavenly
things which are always the spiritual things, as
differing from the temporal things.
The types represented the earthly, physical body of the
Lord Jesus before the Cross and the resurrection. Paul
tells us in his letter to the Philippians that He was
"found in fashion as a man", and we know that
that word 'fashion' in the Greek means something which is
passing. The Greek word 'schema' is something which is
transient, which does not come to stay. It is the same
word that Paul uses at the beginning of Romans 12:
"Be not fashioned according to this world",
this age. The fashion of this age passes so quickly.
"He was found in fashion as a man", that is, He
took a form which was not His permanent form. His
permanent form is found after the resurrection, when He
had a body of humanity, but different from the form, the
fashion, of His pre-crucifixion body.
That body concealed an eternal, spiritual reality, and no
one was able to discern or perceive that inward, eternal,
spiritual reality of the Person of Christ apart from the
operation of the Holy Spirit. "Thou art the Christ,
the Son of the living God... Blessed art thou, Simon...
flesh and blood hath not revealed this unto thee but my
Father which is in heaven." We know how blind the
religious people of His day were as to who He was. That
body, that fashion, concealed, hid an eternal, spiritual
reality. That is "the mystery", as Paul calls
it. It is that which was associated with the ark of the
covenant, the mystic secret of God, into which the
Philistines wanted to peer, and which they were so
anxious to possess, for when the ark came into a
situation it represented some power. It was the secret of
Israel's glory, and they were always seeking to get hold
of the secret of Israel's glory. God was there. That ark
was a type of Christ, but it is an ark of acacia wood - a
humanity. It is overlaid with gold, it is true, which
means that Deity is associated with it, but its purpose,
its meaning, is not in the combination of those materials
- wood and gold - but in the Spirit that is embodied in
that. That was the mystery of Christ.
The disciples were wont to regard that earthly body as
the essential and indispensable thing. Whenever the Lord
Jesus referred to His Cross or to His going away, a cloud
came over them, and they became overwhelmed with a sense
of foreboding, almost of despair. They were greatly
troubled. To them the physical presence of the Lord Jesus
was essential, indispensable. If He went away, that
represented the losing of Him. It was in that way that
the Jews, the Hebrews, regarded the typical system. That
Mosaic order and system were their very being; they were
bound up with them.
In relation to the body of Christ which was prepared for
Him to fulfil an eternal purpose, and also in the whole
Jewish, or Mosaic, system of types, which was provided as
a means to an end, the fashion had to be broken,
shattered, in order to bring the reality out. It is the
difference between the flesh and the spirit - not merely
the flesh in its evil sense now, but simply the natural
life, and the spiritual. One has to be broken to make way
for the other. The way into the 'naos', the very presence
of God, was through the sundered flesh of Christ, just as
the way into the Most Holy Place, the very Sanctuary, was
through the veil of the Temple or the Tabernacle. But
that way was not open to all until it was rent from top
to bottom, and the veil of the Temple, or the Tabernacle,
was that upon which everything else hung. All was
gathered up into it. There was God's side, and there was
man's side, represented in that veil, and the whole
system had its focal point in the veil. The priests, as
representing all the people, could go as far as that
veil, but they could go no further, and that means that
the people could go no further. God was on the other side
of that, and He came, as it were, to that veil, but there
was no way through. Once every year the High Priest went
in, but there was no such thing for abiding fellowship or
continuous union. When God split that veil from top to
bottom He opened the way for all right into His own
presence.
In the flesh of the Lord Jesus there was the meeting
place of God and man. On the one side - God; on the other
side - man. But there was the veil, and we know quite
well how that veil did hang between them. When the Lord
Jesus went to the Cross and THAT BODY was broken,
then the innermost secret of His Person was revealed - GOD
was manifest. That is why you must have Christ crucified
in order to know the wisdom and the power of God. You
never get through to know the power of God except by
Christ crucified.
This letter to the Hebrews says that the shattering of
this whole typical system is to make way for the
spiritual reality to become predominant, just as the
breaking of that body of Christ led to the yielding up of
the eternal heavenly secret of His Person. It will always
be so. Not only is it true in relation to the destruction
of Jerusalem in the year A.D. 70, but it will be true
again at the end, when all that is merely external in
representation will be shaken, broken, and proved to be
temporary, transient, imperfect, and never leading
through to the reality. When that happens, those whose
lives are bound up with it will go with it. So there is
some point in our stressing the necessity for an
apprehension of what is heavenly and what is spiritual,
and our coming into it.
These words are introductory and lead to something quite
concrete. We have said that this shaking relates to an
earthly system of representation and types. That, then,
leads on to the bringing into view of the heavenly
system. (System is not a wrong word. God is systematic.
He is a God of order and has arranged this universe as a
marvellous system. The evil is in making what is earthly
take the place of what it is only intended to represent.)
There is a counterpart of all that is in this letter. The
thing that is brought in with this letter - not discussed
as such, but mentioned and taken very largely for granted
- is what comes in with chapter 3, verses 3 to 6.
It is assumed in this letter that the House of God is
represented by everything here. It seems to come, in so
far as the phrase itself is concerned, in quite a casual
way, which implies that it is taken for granted. It is
not something detached or unrelated. It is the thing
which gathers up everything else. All that is taking
place here is taking place in the House of God. It begins
with the "Son"; it goes on with the
"sons", the "brethren", the
"children"; then the priestly ministry in the
House; and before it closes it will speak about the
Father's discipline in the House, the child-training of
the sons; and the very subject of the inheritance and
heirship is something which has to do with the House, the
family, the household. The bare mention of the House of
God does not suggest another subject, but it suggests the
inclusiveness of everything here in the House. That House
of God is the heavenly system of which the house of
Israel was but a type, a foreshadowing.
THE NECESSITY FOR THE HOUSE OF GOD
It is necessary to all the Lord's purposes which are
gathered up into that which we have been considering -
the bringing of children unto the full meaning of sonship
- to have the House, for all that development takes place
in, and because of, the House of the Lord. Wherever you
fail to get that which truly represents the House of the
Lord, and which is in accordance with the spiritual House
of God, you will get immaturity.
This House of God, fully constituted, is essential to
spiritual maturity, and if you have not got it you find
that Christians are immature. In what way is it
essential? To begin with, there is nothing like a
properly, spiritually ordered House for spiritual
training. All the lessons that you need to learn can be
learned in a properly ordered assembly, and the ordered
assembly provides the background for the learning of
those lessons. There are spiritual laws which govern the
House of God, laws of relationships, laws of position,
laws which the Lord enforces and demands shall be
observed, which take away from us all our independence,
and which definitely hold us into mutual responsibility.
There is all the difference between a spiritual assembly
as an organism, and the congregation. A congregation is a
company of units. They come and go, and may do so for
years, for decades, yet responsibility for one another
spiritually never arises. But in a spiritually ordered
and governed assembly the whole question and law of
mutual responsibility for the spiritual lives of one
another is demanded, is incumbent, is essential.
Everything is relative. In that organism, if one member
suffers all the members suffer, so very closely related
spiritually are the members. In that organism there is no
such thing as independence of action for life. The whole
goes with the part, and the part demands the whole. In so
far as that law breaks down, then the Testimony breaks
down, the life breaks down, and God does not get what He
is after, that is, spiritual maturity.
Read the letter to the Ephesians, the Colossian letter
and the Corinthian letter, and you will see that that is
running strongly through the whole, and wherever that law
is not observed there is immaturity. In Corinth it was:
"I am of Paul", "I am of Apollos",
"I am of Peter". That is sectionalism,
departmentalism, independence, detachment,
fragmentary-ness, and the fruit is immaturity. The true
spiritual fellowship is essential to spiritual growth, to
maturity, and that is what is meant spiritually by the
House of God.
It is there that we get our training. If you come under
the government of the Holy Spirit you immediately are
related by that one Spirit - by whom we are all baptized
into one Body - and are made responsible for other
believers. If something comes up between you and other
believers with whom the Holy Spirit has linked you
spiritually, you cannot snap your fingers and say: 'Let
them get on with it! I go my way and they can go their
way.' The Holy Ghost sees to it that you cannot get on!
It is like the dislocation of a joint in your physical
body. You will be suffering in your soul and in your
spirit. There will be an ache, and you will know that you
have not got freedom of action and restfulness of heart.
There will be something all the time which is working
against the free, spontaneous expression of your
spiritual life. This thing will be there all the time.
What has happened? The Holy Ghost is witnessing against
that and life is arrested. Why? Because of the fact that
the law of the House of God has been violated. When you
come into that realm and know that you are getting some
training, you are learning that it is not only necessary
to have fellowship and maintain fellowship, but that
increase of spiritual life is that way, and increase of
spiritual power is that way, that the Body builds itself
up in love that way, that prayer becomes mighty that way,
testimony becomes effectual that way, and everything for
the Lord's ultimate purpose depends upon that. Unless you
recognize that, all these things are weakened and
destroyed. And so the Lord brings saints together and
relates them in groups, smaller or larger, for the
spiritual purpose of representing His House, and in order
that the spiritual laws of the House should operate
there. It is so different from organizing a 'church', and
having a 'church' roll and 'church' services. It is
something which is a spiritual order, and a
representation of a whole heavenly system, or, rather,
the heavenly system itself in operation. Can you see the
difference between the Body of Christ and what is called
'the church' today? One is an organized system; the other
is a spiritual, living organism. The one will pass; the
other is eternal, indestructible, heavenly, spiritual.
The House of God is essential.
The House of God represents an order. Just as truly and
fully as Israel's life was ordered, so is the House of
God. If you read the book of Numbers you get but the type
and representation of the House of God as ordered. Then
you look into the New Testament and you will find the
spiritual principles which are embodied in the book of
Numbers. You do not organize the Church according to the
book of Numbers, but you find that the Holy Ghost orders
the Church according to the book of Numbers.
You will have representative members. In the book of
Numbers they are princes and heads of fathers' houses.
Carry that into the New Testament and what does that
mean? It means men who have been brought to a place of
spiritual wealth and spiritual dignity in the House of
God, and can take responsibility. Moses (as God, mark
you: "Thou shalt be to him - Aaron - as God" -
Exodus 4:16) there at the door, and then all the fathers'
houses gathered representatively at that door in these
princes and these heads of fathers' houses, and God spoke
from that door to all the households through these
representative members.
Princeliness and headship are spiritual principles.
Princeliness speaks of wealth and dignity. Headship
speaks of authority and government. In the New Testament
the ministry is the ministry of those who already have
spiritual wealth and spiritual dignity, and have
therefore, by spiritual maturity, come to a place of SPIRITUAL
(not ecclesiastical) authority. They are not appointed
officially, for you can never appoint people to be full
of dignity, nor appoint anyone to spiritual wealth by a
formal act.
That is a part of the heavenly order, and God takes great
pains, when He gets things into His own hands, to see
that that is how things are. The Lord is very jealous for
princeliness. His people must be able to look up to those
who represent the Lord's higher interests amongst them as
their overseers, their leaders. That is a household
thing, a Temple thing, a thing which is to have its
expression amongst the Lord's people corporately, and a
thing which means strength, growth and development. It is
a great thing for young Christians to have had the
advantage of having seen princeliness in their leaders,
when those leaders were under provocation, were in
suffering, affliction and trial, and to have seen the
wonderful grace, graciousness, steadiness and dignity of
the Holy Spirit, of THE PRINCE HIMSELF, reproduced
in them. There is no small significance associated with
that title of the Lord Jesus: "A PRINCE and a
Saviour." Watch Him and see the princeliness! That,
by the Holy Spirit, is reproduced in the House of God for
the good of the House. It is not enough that there should
be only one prince in a household. The Lord wants to
develop that as a spiritual thing in all the members of
the household - to develop spiritual responsibility.
Responsibility only comes to those of spiritual means and
spiritual dignity; otherwise it is merely official and
will lack something.
The order of God's House is many sided. There are the
princes of fathers' houses; there are priests, and
Levites, and much more; all signifying the Divine, the
heavenly system.
If only the Lord's people would recognize more that they
are responsible for one another, there would be
development and maturity. That is too long delayed so
often. You remember the word which seems to touch this
aspect of things most directly, from Ephesians 4:
"When he ascended up on high, he led captivity
captive, and gave gifts unto (or amongst) men... and he
gave some apostles; and some prophets; and some,
evangelists; and some, pastors and teachers; for the
perfecting of the saints unto the work of ministering,
unto the building up of the body of Christ." That
passage has been grievously mutilated by words being put
in which are not there: "He gave some TO BE
apostles." The word is: "He gave some
apostles", that is, amongst men He gave them
apostles, pastors and teachers. What did He give them
for? For the perfecting of the saints unto the work of
the ministry. If you put a break between those two
sentences you upset the sense. It does not say or mean
that He gave them for the perfecting of the saints, for
the work of the ministry, for the building up of the Body
of Christ. It says that He gave them for the perfecting
of the saints unto the work of the ministry. Leave the
responsibility with those gifts, and the building up will
not take place. It is only when the saints come into the
work of the ministry that the building up takes place.
When the saints are growing, being perfected, and taking
up the work of ministry, the Body grows. If you use a
definite article there and say: 'For the perfecting of
the saints for the work of THE ministry', you are
in danger of making THE MINISTRY something apart
from everything else. It is "...the work of
ministering". The ministry is a general thing
amongst the saints. All the saints have to be in the
ministry, and it is only as they are in it that the Body
is built up. Are you in the ministry? Are you leaving the
ministry with the people whom you call 'the ministers'?
If so, the Body is being deprived of something. If you
are growing, in the sense of that word "being
perfected", that is simply 'for the making complete
of the saints'. If you are being made complete
progressively, then that ought to be expressing itself in
ministry, and that will result in the building up of the
Body of Christ.
You see how the order of God's House is necessary to
God's end; how the House is necessary because it embodies
an order which is fruitful in the purpose of God.
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