by T. Austin-Sparks
When
we come to chapter 54 of the prophecies of Isaiah, we
have what we may call a sample chapter of
resurrection—a sample of the conditions which the
Lord would have as characterizing His ‘New
Day’. We find in this chapter eight features, or
characteristics, of the New Day; eight, as you know,
being the number of resurrection. Let us cast our eye
down the chapter, and note them briefly in order.
(1) In verse 1, we see the movement from barrenness to
fruitfulness. “Sing, O barren, thou that didst
not bear; break forth into singing, and cry aloud, thou
that didst not travail with child: for more are the
children of the desolate than the children of the married
wife, saith the Lord.”
(2) Verses 2 and 3: from straitness to enlargement.
“Enlarge the place of thy tent, and let them
stretch forth the curtains of thine habitations; spare
not: lengthen thy cords, and strengthen thy stakes. For
thou shalt spread abroad on the right hand and on the
left; and thy seed shall possess the nations, and make
the desolate cities to be inhabited.” How true
that was of the resurrection of the Lord Jesus!
(3) Verses 4 and 5: from shame to honour. “Fear
not; for thou shalt not be ashamed: neither be thou
confounded; for thou shalt not be put to shame: for thou
shalt forget the shame of thy youth...” ;
and so on.
(4) Verses 6 and 7: from forsakenness to fellowship.
“For the Lord hath called thee as a wife
forsaken and grieved in spirit, even a wife of youth,
when she is cast off, saith thy God. For a small moment
have I forsaken thee; but with great mercies will I
gather thee.”
(5) Verses 8 to 10: from wrath to mercy. “In
overflowing wrath I hid My face from thee for a moment;
but with everlasting kindness will I have mercy on thee,
saith the Lord thy Redeemer.” You see the look
back to the Cross, in which all those things were true;
but now it is resurrection, and they have passed. It is a
mighty and wonderful change.
(6) Verses 11 and 12: from affliction and desolation, to
comfort and glory. “O thou afflicted, tossed
with tempest, and not comforted, behold, I will set thy
stones in fair colors, and lay thy foundations with
sapphires. And I will make thy pinnacles of rubies, and
thy gates of carbuncles, and all thy border of pleasant
stones.”
(7) Verses 14 and 15: from oppression to security. “In
righteousness shalt thou be established: thou shalt be
far from oppression, for thou shalt not fear; and from
terror, for it shall not come near thee. Behold, they may
gather together, but not by Me: whosoever shall gather
together against thee shall fall because of thee.”
(8) Verses 16 and 17: from reproach to vindication.
“Behold, I have created the smith that bloweth
the fire of coals, and bringeth forth a weapon for his
work; and I have created the waster to destroy. No weapon
that is formed against thee shall prosper; and every
tongue that shall rise against thee in judgment thou
shalt condemn. This is the heritage of the servants of
the Lord, and their righteousness which is of Me, saith
the Lord.”
Is this not a wonderful sample of resurrection life,
power and glory? As in other connections, so in this, we
carry it all over from Old Testament history into New
Testament, into this very dispensation in which we
live—the Day of Resurrection. How true all this
was— and is—of the Lord Jesus, in the first
place. There had been the negative side—all the
straitness of which He spoke: “How am I straitened
till it be accomplished!” (Luke 12:50); the
stripping, the barrenness and desolation of the Cross;
the shame and ignominy; the forsakenness, even of His own
Father and God—the very wrath of God rested upon
Him; He suffered affliction, oppression and reproach. All
those things were true, as we saw in chapter 53. But now
the whole scene has changed. What fruitfulness has taken
the place of barrenness! Yes, the ‘corn of wheat,
falling into the ground and dying’, has indeed borne
very much fruit—fruit out of many nations. What a
great joy it is to us to know, and in so many cases to
know personally, something of the fruitfulness of His
sufferings, in the ‘seeing of His seed’. Out of
barrenness into fruitfulness; out of His straitness,
against which He groaned, into the great enlargement
which has come to Him—and what enlargement!—out
of shame into honour: multitudes and multitudes ever
since, and multitudes today, all over the world, are just
heaping honour upon Him. And so we could go on.
But you can see also how true this became of that little
band of disciples. You can say that, at the time of the
Cross, these negative and dark things were in a certain
sense true of them. Yes, everything was gone; the trees
were stripped bare; it was barrenness indeed. In their
hearts they were saying: ‘What has it all been for?
It has all gone; we have lost everything.’ But see
the change from the Day of Pentecost onwards. From
barrenness to fruitfulness—again you go through this
list of characteristics—from straitness, as a little
band, a little handful of men, hedged up in a few miles
of Jerusalem, of Judæa, of Palestine, a little
country—unto what? “Their sound”, said
Paul, “went out into all the earth, ...unto the ends
of the world” (Rom. 10:18). What enlargement! it was
the lengthening of cords, the strengthening of stakes in
resurrection. Their aloneness —the terrible
loneliness that had come over them when He, as they
thought, was dead—has given place to a marvellous
fellowship, that is being established in relationship
with an ever-growing company of fellow believers. All
these things came about: this wonderful change over was
true for the disciples.
But does it stop there? No! The same thing became true in
every new believer; and it has been true from then on
until now. These are the things which are the
characteristics of the true believer’s life—a believer’s
life! If you are living on the other side of the Cross,
or even if you are living in the day of His death, just
living with Christ dead, these things are not true. But
if we are living, as true believers should, on the ground
of His resurrection, then all these things are true. It
is a very blessed thing for us to be able to say, without
any hesitation or reserve, that He has changed our life
from barrenness to fruitfulness; from straitness to
enlargement; from shame to honour; from forsakenness and
aloneness to fellowship; and so on. This is the heritage
of every true believer.
Immediate Effects of Christ’s Resurrection
In
the resurrection of the Lord Jesus, there is struck and
sounded forth this wonderful note—a new life, a new
hope, a new assurance! We see it clearly in the New
Testament. It is worth noting the marvellous effect that
His appearances had upon the people concerned. As far as
we can see, there were about ten appearances of the Lord
after His resurrection. Five of them took place on one
day, between sunrise and perhaps a little after sunset;
the other five were scattered over a period, in different
places. But it is most impressive, most instructive, to
see the tremendous change that came over the people, and
over the whole situation, between the time before He
appeared, and the time He disappeared. Let us run through
some of those appearances.
The first, undoubtedly, was with Mary Magdalene, who came
early to the tomb, with spices, to anoint His body (Mark
16:9; John 20:1–18). What a poor, sad, desolate,
empty sort of person she was that morning! What a
plaintive note there is as she beholds Him without
recognizing Him, and takes Him for the gardener:
‘Sir, if you have borne Him away, tell me where you
have laid Him’. Jesus only speaks her
name—“Mary”—and the whole situation
is transformed, transfigured! She hurries from the
tomb—hurries away to tell the disciples. It would
seem, too, that there were other women near by, and that,
as they were going, she and they, to tell the disciples,
Jesus met them on the way—another transforming scene
and experience (Matt. 28:8–10; Mark 16:10–11).
And then, we are told, He appeared to Simon Peter (Luke
24:34; 1 Cor. 15:5). It does not need very much
imagination to picture what kind of Simon he was when
Jesus appeared to him. He was not a very happy sort of
man! If ever there was a man who felt he was
bereft—bereft of everything, stripped, stark, alone,
forsaken, and in utter despair—it must have been
Simon Peter. And then Jesus appeared to him—gave him
a private interview! Ah! that changed the whole
situation, completely transformed the whole outlook for
Simon.
Then there were the two disciples on their way to Emmaus
(Luke 24:13–35; Mark 16:12–13). What sad,
doleful, desolate men they were! As they walked those
three miles, it must have seemed the longest three miles
that two men had ever walked! But then Jesus appeared....
Their eyes were opened, they saw... He went... and those
three miles back were the shortest three miles that ever
men had run! I don’t know what their time was for
the course!—but I am quite sure they were not
conscious of those three miles. Distance and time lost
all their meaning as they raced back, fleet of foot, to
Jerusalem, to tell the others. And as they came in,
before they could get out anything of what had happened
to them, they were met with this from the other
disciples: “The Lord is risen indeed, and hath
appeared unto Simon”! They were changed men, and it
was a changed scene in Jerusalem into which they came.
And He appeared to the apostles themselves, and to James,
and to “above five hundred brethren at once” (1
Cor. 15:6–7). His appearance—that is, His
coming in resurrection—brought about a marvellous
change on every occasion, in every situation. It
represented a very real fulfilment of Isaiah
54—Isaiah 54 is resurrection!
Can this Be a Present day Experience?
Now,
the big question that arises for us is: Have we any
ground for believing that this can be our own up to date
experience? And I want to say that the New Testament
presents us with very solid ground for just that. We find
very much, in the experiences of men and women after the
Lord had gone to glory, that had this effect. I need only
turn you to the Book of the Acts, and remind you of that
Ethiopian on his way home, disappointed and desolate,
sorrowful and perplexed. Surely we may say that, through
His servant Philip and through the word of Isaiah 53, the
Risen Lord met that man. The whole scene was changed. The
last thing we hear of him is: “he went on his way
rejoicing” (Acts 8:39). Here is a transfigured life,
a transfigured situation, because one has come into touch
with the Risen Lord. That incident is typical of the
marvellous transformation that took place when the Spirit
of the Lord touched people, came into their lives, came
into their midst. They met sometimes in much perplexity
and oppression, in much affliction and suffering with the
threats of the rulers, and they went away changed people,
full of joy, full of confidence.
Has the dispensation changed since the time of the Acts?
That book has never had a conclusion; it is just broken
off. The Holy Spirit never intended Luke to write the end
of the story, because it had to go on and on and on to
the end of the dispensation. What was true then is to be
true in our experience now. Yes, we have plenty of ground
and evidence for this. But then, you say, ‘On what
ground can this experience be mine?’ If the
Scripture gives that which justifies an expectation that
it should be true in our case, if we really have it in
the Word that it ought to be like that with us, then the
question arises, ‘How can this be true of me?’
Let me therefore try to say, as concisely as possible,
how it can be—how we really can know this.
The Need for (1) A Positive Stand Upon the Ground of the Cross
Firstly,
we must take our stand most positively on that ground
which God has provided for us through the Cross of the
Lord Jesus. That is, we must appropriate all the values
of Isaiah 53, as being provided for us. Isaiah 53 tells
us all that has been done for us. “He was wounded
for our transgressions, He was bruised for our
iniquities: the chastisement of our peace was upon
Him”. “He bare the sin of many”. Our whole
state and condition, under condemnation and judgment, was
put on Him by God Himself. ‘He, He made His
soul an offering for sin.’ That was on the Divine
side. If you and I will still linger on the ground of
question or doubt as to whether the Lord Jesus has done
that, for us, as men and women, for our sins, past,
present and future, there is no hope of this transforming
experience of resurrection! If you are still nursing
condemnation, still opening your heart or your mind to
accusations, you are, in effect, denying the work of the
Lord Jesus on the Cross, and God cannot show you His
mighty arm.
“To whom is the arm of the Lord revealed?”
Never to the man or woman who brings in any question as
to the work of the Lord Jesus in His Cross! Never! You
must get right off that ground in every way. If you are
so fond of doubting and questioning, if you will so
tenaciously hold on to condemnation, can you not swing
right over in the opposite direction, put all that
capacity for doubting and unbelieving round the other
way, and say about your condemnation: ‘I don’t
believe it! Isaiah 53 says that He took all that for me:
then I definitely do not believe, I will not
believe—the Cross of the Lord Jesus forbids me to
believe—that there is condemnation.’ Yes, put
your strong and mighty capacity for unbelieving the other
way round—let it be converted! Put it over against
all the work of the accusing spirits, the accusing
conscience and the accusing heart. Meet the whole thing
in reverse!
No, we shall never know this mighty, many-sided
transformation and transfiguration of life, until we
quite positively take our stand upon the values which we
see secured for us in Isaiah 53. We shall once again, and
in the simplicity of a beginner, have to sit down with
that chapter, and, as has been so often said, put our own
name in there: ‘He was wounded for my
transgressions; He was bruised for my
iniquities; the chastisement of my peace was
upon Him; with His stripes I am healed.’ We
shall never experience resurrection glory until we have
our feet firmly planted on that ground. You see, it is we
ourselves who constitute the ground of death: it is
in us—it is not in Christ; we must
therefore repudiate our own ground. We must say, when the
Accuser would bring all our sins to remembrance:
‘Yes, I know them well, and thousands more; but...
there is One Who died in my place.’ Faith must
credit God and Christ with the full meaning of the Cross.
(2) A Positive Drawing upon the Power of His Resurrection
Next, we must take a positive attitude at all times to “the power of His resurrection” (Phil. 3:10)—the attitude of faith in ‘God Who raises the dead’ (2 Cor. 1:9). We must really reckon upon that ‘extra’, and that ‘other’, which is represented by the power of His resurrection. It is all true—that this is this and that is that, and things are as they are; it is all true. We are not putting on blinkers, trying to make believe that we are not as bad as we are, or things are not as bad as they are: we know that they are just as bad as they can be, inside and out. But... there is something more than that—an altogether transcendent factor: and that is, the power of His resurrection. We must take a very positive attitude at all times toward that.
(a) For Personal Life
This
means, in practical terms, a definite drawing upon His
risen life. But it does not mean that we are thereby
entitled to break the laws of God. For instance, if you
speak at three or four or five meetings a day, for
something like eleven weeks, without one day’s rest,
you are breaking the laws of God, and God will not
protect you. That is exactly what I have known to happen.
How long it takes us to learn these
lessons—sometimes a whole life time! We get drawn
out by need and appeal and so on. I believe the Lord is
very sympathetic, but, nevertheless, He does not set
aside His laws. So I have to say, that, while avoiding
breaking Divine laws, the laws of nature, the laws of our
bodies (and you can never speak of the laws of nature
without meaning God, for the laws of nature are an
expression of God, and God is Himself the supreme Law of
Nature: that is not Pantheism, but it does mean that the
laws of nature bring you right into touch with
God)—I say, while not violating God in His laws, in
the body and so on, we must deliberately at all times
draw upon His resurrection life. We must do it;
we must keep a tight hold, so to speak, on the risen life
of the Lord, and draw upon it; make a very practical
thing of it.
When I was a small boy, I remember my mother telling me
something that has remained with me to this day. She was
describing to me the death of my grandfather, an old man
of eighty four. She was sitting by his bed, holding his
hand, as he was slowly, very slowly passing away. He had
been a very strong man, physically, and this is what she
told me. ‘He had hold of my hand’, she said,
‘in a tremendous grip: I was praying for him, but he
was gradually sinking away: but I felt as though he was
drawing the very life out of me; I felt my very vitality
being sapped; he was pulling something out of me, to hold
on to life: and at last I could stand it no longer—I
just had to wrench my hand out of his; and when I did so,
he went.’
Well, I do not know how much scientific truth there is in
that; but to me it is an illustration. We have literally
got to draw on the vitality of our Lord. It is an
attitude, a grip of faith: we must ‘lay hold on
life’, as Paul said to Timothy (1 Tim. 6:12). It
must be something that we do.
I fear we are far too indefinite in this matter of our
relationship to our Risen Lord. We believe in the
resurrection; we believe in resurrection life; and we
believe that it is for us: but we are not definite enough
about it. We must first ask ourselves: ‘Do I need
resurrection life? Am I in need of the power of His
resurrection?’ Of course, if you have no sense of
need, you will not be definite about it; but if, in any
way, you really feel your need of the power of His
resurrection, that the Arm of the Lord should be revealed
to you in that way, then ask yourself the further
question: ‘Are there any Scriptures, any statements
in the Word of God, which justify me in believing that
that life is for me?’ Then, if you believe the
answer to that to be in the affirmative, say to yourself:
‘Let me get to the Word, and find out what it says
about this; let me gather up, search out, all that the
Word of God says about this matter of resurrection
life— for me!’
Do it as an exercise, not just picking out random texts;
get a strong foundation of Scripture under your feet.
“If the Spirit of Him That raised up Jesus from
the dead dwelleth in you, He That raised up Christ Jesus
from the dead shall quicken also your mortal bodies
through His Spirit That dwelleth in you” (Rom.
8:11). That is in the Bible! “Always bearing
about in the body the dying of Jesus... that the life
also of Jesus may be manifested in our mortal flesh”
(2 Cor. 4:10–11). That is Scripture! Gather up in
this way all that you can find; take it to the Lord, and
say: ‘Lord, Your Word clearly says...’ (and
here you can quote Scripture to Him, if you like: it is a
very healthy thing to remind the Lord of His Word).
‘Now, Lord, You have said that the power of the
resurrection is to be known in Your people, in believers,
as a present experience: here is Your Word about
it.’ Bring it to the Lord; present it to Him, all
that you can find, be very definite in this matter. We
might see marvellous things, wonderful things, have a far
greater testimony of resurrection life, if only we would
be more definite about it. It is not just going to
‘happen’; it is not going to be casual. Any
dilly dallying about this thing will not find us coming
into the good of it. We must be positive; we must be
definite; we must make this a very real matter.
For it is not just personal, for our own private good;
the whole testimony of our Risen Lord is bound up with
this. There is, of course, thank God, the
personal application, and this may be either
spiritual—for we are surely all, individually, in
constant need of new accessions of life
spiritually—or it may be physical. Blessed be God,
that we can take life for our bodies! We may know
resurrection life carrying us through impossible
situations, physically. Or it may be that we need a new
accession of life, the ‘baring of His arm’, in
our ministry: for all ministry, if it is to be true
spiritual ministry, has to be fulfilled in the power of
His resurrection.
(b) For Corporate Life
But
then, widening out beyond personal, individual need, it
may apply to a company of the Lord’s people of which
we are a part, or in which we may have some
responsibility. Things are going down into death,
straitness and dishonour; the situation is not glorifying
to the Lord; and we are greatly burdened with the
need—Oh, that the Arm of the Lord might be revealed!
Oh, that the power of resurrection might be manifested!
What are you going to do about it? Well, it requires the
same exercise. This resurrection of the Lord Jesus is for
every aspect of the life of the believer and the Church.
But... it does not just happen. I say once again: we have
got to take a very definite and positive attitude to this
matter. If we will, and if we do, there are those who can
testify, from a long history, that this really does
work—that repeated miracles of sustenance and
enablement and supply, of raising up and carrying on,
will result again and again, from a definite laying hold
of the fact that Christ is risen for us. He died
for us—He is risen for us. He died in our
place—He lives in our stead. He is the Living One!
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