by T. Austin-Sparks
Chapter 7 - Recovery of Lost Testimony
As we move into the next and succeeding chapters of
Isaiah—being now, as I have said, on the positive,
the resurrection side, the constructive side of the
Cross—we find that one thing comes very much into
view: namely, the recovery of God’s testimony in the
City and in the nations. That is the key to this section
of Isaiah from chapter 54 onward. You will notice that
Zion is much in view here. If you run through and circle
the words ‘Zion’ and ‘Jerusalem’, you
will see that that is the centre, the focal point of the
testimony; but again, the nations are very much in view
also. This will come out more fully as we proceed.
We come, then, first, to chapter 55, and we notice two
things that mark this chapter.
Abundant Grace, and God’s Sure Word
In
verses 1–9, we see the freeness and the abundance of
grace released to the people of God on this resurrection
ground—free and abundant grace. “Ho, every
one that thirsteth, come ye to the waters, and he that
hath no money; come ye, buy, and eat; yea, come, buy wine
and milk without money and without price....”
How much of the New Testament could be crowded into that!
Then, from verse 10 to verse 13, we have God’s sure
word: “My word... shall not return unto Me void”.
Nowadays, we usually claim that promise from the Lord
when we are going to give a message, that His word shall
not return to Him void. Of course, the principle is of
general application; we are not wrong at any time in
taking hold of that, provided that it really is the word
of the Lord that we have to deliver. But I want to point
out that that is not the particular meaning of the
statement here. You will notice the sequence in verses 11
and 12: “So shall My word be that goeth forth
out of My mouth: it shall not return unto Me void, but it
shall accomplish that which I please, and it shall
prosper in the thing whereto I sent it. FOR...”
(you must not stop there)— “FOR ye shall go
out with joy, and be led forth with peace: the mountains
and the hills...”, and so on. The immediate
meaning of the promise of the sure and effectual word is:
This people had been promised by God deliverance; they
had been assured that the Lord was going to bring them
back from captivity. (Compare Is. 35:10; 48:20; 52:12).
He had given His word that they should go out with joy
and in peace, in these conditions. That was the word, and
that word was not going to fail.
The House of Prayer, and the Need for Meekness
When
you come to chapter 56, you find that everything centres
in the House of Prayer for all peoples. “Even
them will I bring to My holy mountain, and make them
joyful in My house of prayer: their burnt offerings and
their sacrifices shall be accepted upon My altar: for
Mine house shall be called an house of prayer for all
peoples” (verse 7). This is still related to
the recovery of the Lord’s testimony, and it is to
be found in His House—‘My house of
prayer’.
In chapter 57, we find some further warnings to the
Lord’s people against any recurrence of that which
had destroyed the testimony before. It seems always
necessary for the Lord to say, and to say again: Be
careful of the coming back of those old things which
wrecked your testimony in the past; the things which (to
use Jeremiah’s phrase from the potter’s house)
‘marred’ the vessel of testimony. (See Jer.
18:4.) So He gives here admonition concerning such ever
present perils. Then, in verse 15, the ground of the
Lord’s presence and committal is mentioned. “For
thus saith the high and lofty One That inhabiteth
eternity, Whose name is Holy; I dwell in the high and
holy place, with him also that is of a contrite and
humble spirit, to revive the spirit of the humble, and to
revive the heart of the contrite ones.” These
are the conditions of the Lord’s presence, those in
which His testimony will be reconstituted.
Chapters 58 and 59 are full of more warnings, more
admonitions, more instructions, by way of clearing the
skies of the clouds that would obscure the testimony.
Notice chapter 58, verse 8: “Then shall thy
light break forth as the morning....” It is the
shining out of this testimony that is governing
everything with the Lord. These warnings and admonitions
are given in order to bring about the removal of the
clouds that are lingering about the sky and trying to
obscure the clear shining.
A Clear Shining Testimony Recovered
We
are thus led into chapter 60. All that has gone before
has prepared the way, always with this in view: “Arise,
shine; for thy light is come, and the glory of the Lord
is risen upon thee.” Here, then, we come to
this matter of the recovered testimony; the shining light
of the Church in the midst of dark conditions, in a very
dark world. “For... darkness shall cover the
earth, and gross darkness the peoples: but the Lord shall
arise upon thee, and His glory shall be seen upon thee.”
That is the thing that is uppermost in this last section
of Isaiah’s prophecies. When the testimony is
restored (verse 1), the nations are affected by it:
“Lift up, thine eyes round about, and see: they
all gather themselves together, they come to thee; thy
sons shall come from far, and thy daughters shall be
carried in the arms. Then thou shalt see and be
lightened, and thine heart shall tremble and be enlarged;
because the abundance of the sea shall be turned unto
thee, the wealth of the nations shall come unto thee”
(verses 4–5).
When the testimony is clear, when the shining is
undimmed; when God has in His House, in His people,
conditions answering to all that the Cross means, then
you have this effect all around: the nations are
affected, the peoples are touched; something happens, and
a wealth, an enrichment, a fulness comes back to the
Church itself. If the Lord has things according to His
mind: in other words, if He really has His testimony in
fulness, undimmed, without cloud, without shadow, in the
midst of His people, in the vessel of His House: then the
nations feel the effect, the impact, of it, and the
Church itself is greatly enriched. “Surely the
isles shall wait for Me, and the ships of Tarshish first,
to bring thy sons from far, their silver and their gold
with them, for the name of the Lord thy God, and for the
Holy One of Israel, because He hath glorified thee”
(verse 9).
The New Testament Counterpart
Now
this, we know, is Old Testament prophecy. We recognize
that the prophet was saying more than he knew—that
his utterances contained and combined two interwoven
elements. On the one side, as far as Israel was
concerned, there was history in the making; but on the
other side, all the way through this, there was (as in
chapter 53) a pointing on to the Messiah—to the Lord
Himself; to the Cross, and to all that was to follow the
Cross in resurrection. There was the temporal and the
passing, but there was also the spiritual and the
eternal, which the Holy Spirit always saw and had in view
in history.
Thus, in every connection, as we have seen, we are so to
speak ‘handed on’, by these prophecies, to the
New Testament. And the New Testament counterpart of what
we have been seeing in Isaiah about the recovered
testimony is found particularly in one of Paul’s
letters, namely, in his Second Letter to the Corinthians.
Paul’s Second Letter to the Corinthians
The
great issue of both the letters to the Corinthians was
that of the testimony of the Church in the city of
Corinth and in the world. When we read these letters, of
course we become very much taken up with all the details:
in the First Letter, with the miserable details; the many
things that are being dealt with. It is, for the greater
part, not a happy or pleasant letter to read: perhaps you
have given it up many times before you have got to the
end, not understanding very much, and not liking a good
deal more. But we need to stand back from it, and ask:
What is it all about, after all? Let us not upset
ourselves about all the details, for the moment; they all
go to make up some one particular issue. What is the
issue?
Well, as I have said, the issue of the letters to the
Corinthians is the Lord’s testimony in the Church,
in the city and in the nations. Let us be clear about
that. In the First Letter, there is, as you know, very
much said about the world, and how the church in Corinth
was failing to overpower the world, because the world had
already overpowered it from the inside. The testimony was
destroyed from within, and therefore there was no real
impact upon the world. The natural, the carnal man had
found his way into the church, and the church had
therefore lost its testimony. It will always be like
that. If anything of the natural man and the carnal man
makes inroads, in any locality, into the church, that
will be the end of the testimony in that church, and in
that locality, and, so far as that company is concerned,
in relation to the world. When the natural man comes in
the testimony goes out.
Testimony Destroyed by Carnal Elements
In
the First Letter, then, the whole question was one not
merely of local conditions, but of the local conditions
destroying the testimony of the Church in the city. And
therefore all those conditions had to be dealt with, had
to be exposed, uncovered, and brought to the Cross of
Christ. Of course, what we have in 1 Corinthians is
Satan’s second great strategy toward paralyzing the
Church’s testimony. His first strategy, his first
line with the Church, was open persecution, to try to
destroy, to obliterate the Church’s testimony in the
city of Jerusalem and in the nation. As we know, it
failed! But now Satan comes back along a second line of
strategy: that is, he insinuates, into the very ranks of
the church, men according to his own mind—carnal
elements—the natural man, the carnal man. They serve
the Devil’s purpose so well; they effect the very
thing he is after. When he finds he cannot succeed by
open persecution, he comes round, as it were, to the back
entrance, and introduces carnal and natural elements in
by that door—and that has done it! The testimony
goes out; it is destroyed.
But in between these two letters to the Corinthians,
something happened. In chapter 7 of the Second Letter we
read: “Now I rejoice, not that ye were made
sorry, but that ye were made sorry unto repentance; for
ye were made sorry after a godly sort, that ye might
suffer loss by us in nothing. For godly sorrow worketh
repentance unto salvation, a repentance which bringeth no
regret” (7:9–10). The Apostle has a good
deal to say about what had evidently taken place after
his first letter. There was repentance, there was judging
of themselves and of the conditions; there was, as he
said, ‘a clearing of themselves’ (v. 11). There
was a real distress and exercise about their condition,
and this had taken place between the two letters. We may
say that they had brought the situation to the Cross, and
that had changed everything. And now that things had been
dealt with on the inside, the whole matter of the
testimony to the world, in the city, could be
reconsidered, and a counter attack could be made by the
church upon the enemy.
So that is what is in this Second Letter—the
recovery of the testimony in the locality and out to the
world. It all brings out into very clear relief the
constituents of effective testimony—or, to use
Isaiah’s figure, the shining forth of the light. Let
us look at some of the things that Paul says about this.
The Value of Triumphant Love
“For
out of much affliction and anguish of heart I wrote unto
you with many tears; not that ye should be made sorry,
but that ye might know the love which I have more
abundantly unto you” (2 Cor. 2:4).
The first thing that we see is the value of triumphant
love. That is a constituent of effective testimony, of
clear shining. This clearly had its two sides in the
Apostle. If ever a man might have found his love
exhausted, the Apostle might well have been that man, as
far as these Corinthians were concerned; for he did say:
“If I love you more abundantly, am I loved the
less?” (12:15). Surely that is enough to put
any man off—to find that all his outpouring and
outgoing and giving in love only means that love is being
withdrawn; that less and less love comes back. What a
situation he had to meet! yet his love triumphed. But it
seems to have had an effect in them too: something of
what he had written in his First Letter, chapter 13,
seems to have come about. Yes, the triumph of 1
Corinthians 13 can be traced in this Second Letter to
some very real degree—the love that “suffereth
long, and is kind”, and so on—the quality of
triumphant love.
That, we might very well say, is the first and primary
factor in effective testimony. The Lord Jesus said that:
“By this shall all men know... if ye have love one
to another” (John 13:35). This is the testimony;
this is how it will be known—if we have love one for
another. It matters very much whether the world is
affected by what it sees. We cannot close the doors on
ourselves, and say: ‘Oh, well, the world in any case
is inimical, it is always hostile, it is always
unsympathetic; why take any account of it? Let us shut
ourselves in and get on with our job.’ You cannot do
that; you cannot ignore the world. We are here to affect
the world—that is one of the chief reasons why the
Lord leaves us here. We are not just to live here,
cloistered and closed in, indifferent to the world,
coldly detached from it.
Moreover, the world is going to find out, sooner or
later, what is happening inside the church—what is
happening in your local assembly! Make no mistake about
it. The world will know the condition of the church: you
cannot close doors and windows on that, and keep it in!
All around will know; it will become known. And I
repeat—it is a most important thing that the world
should be affected, not by what it hears us say, but by
what it sees in us. And the only thing it can really see,
that will affect it, will be the mutual love which we
have one for another. “By this shall all
men know... if ye have love one to
another.” One of the most effective ways of
testimony is—not preaching, but—loving!
If that is there it will do far more than our preaching.
But it will at least give a great backing to our
preaching. All our preaching must be supported by this
one thing—a strong triumphant love in the midst of
the Lord’s people.
The Value of Suffering with Christ
The
second thing in testimony is the value of suffering with
Christ. There is much about this in the Second Letter to
the Corinthians. For instance: “The Father of
mercies and God of all comfort; Who comforteth us in all
our affliction, that we may be able to comfort them that
are in any affliction, through the comfort wherewith we
ourselves are comforted of God. For as the sufferings of
Christ abound unto us, even so our comfort also aboundeth
through Christ” (2 Cor. 1:3–5).
First of all, suffering with Christ brings a wonderful
return in our discovery of the consolations of Christ.
It is a very important thing, in a world like this, that
we should have some comfort to give. Both in the Church
and outside of the Church, there is a great need of a
ministry of comfort. You come back to Isaiah:
“Comfort ye, comfort ye My People, saith your
God" (Is. 40:1). But you cannot fulfil a ministry of
comfort in mere platitudes; by coming into difficult and
troubled situations and just saying nice things. If
people are in real trouble, in real distress, and you
begin to talk to them, the first thing they have a right
to say to you is: ‘Well, what do you know about it?
Have you ever been in my position, my condition? have you
ever had any deep, deep suffering? What do you know about
it?’
Perhaps, therefore, it is one of those sovereign,
providential ways of God, that He allows His people to
know much suffering, so that they may derive this
wonderful value of the consolations of Christ, in order
that they may have that with which to comfort or
encourage others—the tried, the suffering, the
sorrowing. And what have we to give? Well, the word is:
“that we may be able to comfort... through the
comfort wherewith we ourselves are comforted of
God.” And if there is anyone reading these lines,
who is having a painful, suffering time, going through a
‘dark patch’, as we say, might I try to
transfigure it for you, in this way. Just look at it like
this. Say to yourself: ‘This gives me an opportunity
to make a discovery of the Lord which will be stock in
trade for future service. In my distress and trouble I
can find comfort and help from the Lord, which may be of
tremendous value to some others in the future.’
Ministry Made Through Experience of Resurrection
For
that is how ministry is made. The man or the woman who is
ambitious to be ‘in the ministry’—to be
speaking and preaching, going about taking meetings and
all that sort of thing—but who has not gone through
deep places, and found the Lord there, and brought up
some treasure from the depths, some ‘pearl of great
price’: that one’s ministry is not real; it is
artificial, it is merely professional. The true minister
of Jesus Christ will be taken down to the depths, to
discover there, right down there, and to bring up thence,
these pearls, these precious things, for the sake of the
Church. Did you notice that phrase in
Isaiah—“the abundance of the sea shall be
turned unto thee” (Is. 60:5)? Yes, but the sea can
be a very deep place, a very dark place, a very terrible
place: and yet there are treasures there. That is the way
of testimony.
Notice what Paul writes at the beginning of his letter.
“For we would not have you ignorant, brethren,
concerning our affliction which befell us in Asia, that
we were weighed down exceedingly, beyond our power,
insomuch that we despaired even of life: yea, we
ourselves have had the answer of death within ourselves,
that we should not trust in ourselves, but in God Who
raiseth the dead” (2 Cor. 1:8–9). This is
how ministry is made—when you have a real experience
of and testimony to the power of His resurrection. When
everything seemed hopeless in your own personal
situation; when everything seemed hopeless in your
company of believers; and the providence of God led you
to make a discovery of the power of His resurrection,
‘that you should not trust in yourself but in God
Who raises the dead’: this is a constituting of
ministry. If you have gone that way, you are a true
‘minister’; you need not take the name; you
need not be set apart or anything. If you have a
knowledge of the mighty power of His resurrection, you are
a minister; you have something which is most greatly
needed.
The Value of Brokenness
The
third thing in effective testimony is the value of
brokenness and weakness.
“But we have this treasure in earthen vessels,
that the exceeding greatness of the power may be of God,
and not from ourselves; we are pressed on every side, yet
not straitened; perplexed, yet not unto despair; pursued,
yet not forsaken; smitten down, yet not destroyed; always
bearing about in the body the putting to death of Jesus,
that the life also of Jesus may be manifested in our
body. For we which live are always delivered unto death
for Jesus’ sake, that the life also of Jesus may be
manifested in our mortal flesh. So then death worketh in
us, but life in you” (2 Cor. 4:7–12).
We should continue reading down to verse 18. You will
notice that this section has as its real message the
tremendous value of the quality of brokenness and
weakness. That is a vital thing in effective testimony.
We, perhaps, do not naturally put much value on
brokenness and weakness; but here, very much value is put
upon it. “We have this treasure in vessels of
fragile clay.” What the Apostle is saying, in
effect, is this: ‘We are broken men; we are weak
vessels. The one thing about us, more than anything else,
is our capacity for being broken—it seems that we
have just been made to be broken.’ And then he is
saying that there is an infinite value attached to that.
In the First Letter to the Corinthians, the church was
not broken. It was hard; it was trying to hold itself
intact; it was proud; it was judging; it was cruel; it
was unkind; it was anything but broken. But now, as we
read this Second Letter, we find there is about the
church a softness. It is soft—it is melted—it
is broken! You can talk about ‘ministry’ now;
you can talk about ‘testimony’ now; you could
not do so before. No: until the vessel is broken, nothing
can flow out; if anything is to flow out, it will only do
so when the vessel is broken. The Apostle is saying that
that was how it was with him personally (and of course he
is, by inference, passing it on to the church in
Corinth). Our weakness, our brokenness, is of the
greatest importance and value, for it is only then that
the real treasure can be manifested.
Do you talk about ‘the testimony’? have you got
a phraseology of ‘testimony’? Do you talk about
‘ministry’? have you got ideas about
‘ministry’? My dear friend, the Holy Spirit
would say, both to you and to me, that testimony and
ministry are only real when they come from broken men and
women. Let us make no mistake about it. I know it is the
hard way, but it is the only way. You and I have no right
to minister, no right to talk about ‘the
testimony’ or about ‘the Church’ or about
‘the vessel’ or any such things, unless we know
something of this brokenness, this weakness.
You see how true this is to what we read in Isaiah. The
Lord says: “Mine house shall be called an house of
prayer for all peoples” (Is. 56:7); but—“Thus
saith the high and lofty One That inhabiteth eternity,
Whose name is Holy; ‘I dwell in the high and holy
place, with him also that is of a contrite and humble
spirit’ ” (Is. 57:15). You find Him at humbled
Corinth, chastened Corinth. There is something new in
this second letter—something that was missing from
the first. You feel the unction of the Spirit, the beauty
of the Lord. Yes: the Lord is here now, because they are
broken. That unction of the Lord is only found with men
and women who have really had a weakening, a breaking, an
emptying, who have lost all “confidence in the
flesh”, whose own self strength has all gone. That
is the way of the shining; that is the way of recovered
testimony.
Love the Way of Enlargement
There
is one more passage to which I would like to refer you.
“Our mouth is open unto you, O Corinthians, our
heart is enlarged. Ye are not straitened in us, but ye
are straitened in your own affections. Now for a
recompense in like kind (I speak as unto my children), be
ye also enlarged” (2 Cor. 6:11–13).
What was the cause of the lost, broken down testimony in
Corinth? They were too small; they were too little. Paul
said that he had to treat them like babes—they were
peevish! Children can be like that, can they not? Trifles
have far too much importance. Paul says: ‘Be
enlarged, be enlarged! Let your hearts be enlarged! Be bigger
people—be too big to come down to all these mean
things. Have big thoughts, have big feelings—of
course without self importance or self inflation; have a
large heart—a heart of love!’
What does love do? Love “rejoiceth not in
unrighteousness, but rejoiceth with the truth”. Love
“believeth all things”: it takes a large heart
to do that, does it not? It is never ready to believe an
unfavourable report, but always ready to believe that
there may be something that can be set off against
it—that there may be another explanation. Love
rejoices not when one who has committed a wrong suffers
for it—that is paltry. This is where David is such a
rebuke to us. Just consider him: what a life Saul gave
him during those years! He hunted him, he said, like a
flea, like a partridge (1 Sam. 24:14, 26:20); chased and
pursued him from rock to rock, from cave to cave, in the
wilderness, if only he might get him and destroy him;
gave him no peace day or night. He was determined,
implacably determined, that David should die. And the day
came when, in one of these pursuits, Saul, with his 3,000
chosen men—an army to catch a man!—arrived in a
certain place at night, and lay down to sleep. And,
unknown to him, David was very near, right on the spot (I
don’t think he would have slept if he had known!);
and David came with his men, and looked on him; and
David’s men said: ‘Now is your chance—the
Lord has given him into your hands!’ (1 Sam. 24: 4).
You know, if only we can imagine we have got Divine
support for something, that is all we want. We only want
someone to say, ‘It is the Lord’s will’,
and, if it is something that serves our own interests,
something that we would naturally very much like, how we
will go for it! It is a very strong temptation, is it
not, when it appears to be supported by the Lord?
But here, David—as on another such occasion, when
his companion said: ‘God has delivered your enemy
into your hands this day; now is your chance! Let me
smite him, and I won’t have to smite him twice! One
blow, and I will finish the whole thing for you!’ (1
Sam. 26:8)—David replied: ‘No, no; God forbid
that I should touch the Lord’s anointed!’ Ah,
that is bigness; that is real greatness. He forbore, to
his own hurt. He knew not how many more years of
suffering he would have, but he accepted them. He could
have ended all that at one blow, but he said: ‘No, I
must not touch the Lord’s anointed. I may be in the
right, and the Lord’s anointed may be altogether in
the wrong: nevertheless, it is not for me to touch him. I
leave him with the Lord; I must not lift my hand against
him. God forbid that I should touch the Lord’s
anointed.’ I repeat: that is bigness, that is
spiritual greatness! And so Paul appeals to the
Corinthians: “Now for a recompense in like kind...
be ye also enlarged.” The Lord make us big people,
in this spiritual sense.
The Constituents of Recovered Testimony
Let
us now try to summarize the constituents of recovered
testimony, whether that testimony be local or to the
world.
It must be born, firstly, as we have seen, out of what we
know of Divine comfort in suffering.
Secondly, it must be born out of what we have known of
resurrection (whether individual, or collective and
local), when all has seemed to be hopeless.
Thirdly, it must be born from what we have learned of
Divine love through our own failure. I am sure that this
was a great factor in Corinth. How deeply they recognized
their failure! They went down, right down in the dust,
under the sense of what a miserable failure they had been
as a local company. And then, smitten with this
realization of their own failure, they discovered that
there was love pouring to them, through this Apostle,
from the heart of God; and that discovery constituted
their new testimony.
Fourthly, it must be born from the brokenness and
enlargement of heart that comes through the consciousness
of weakness. I suppose, if any people ought to have been
conscious of their own weakness, it was those people at
Corinth. There are, in fact, indications in this Second
Letter that they came almost to the point of despair
about themselves. I think this realization of their own
fallibility and untrustworthiness just overwhelmed them,
overflowed them. But through it they came to this
enlargement of heart. If you and I are groaning under the
consciousness of our own failure, we are not going to be
petty and mean toward the failures of other people; we
are going to be very much more patient, very much more
understanding—altogether larger of heart. We are
going to say: ‘Well, I have had to walk very
carefully myself, just there. But for the grace of God,
there goes myself!’ That is largeness of heart, true
brokenness.
Fifthly, and finally, what utterness for the Lord should
result from a sense of responsibility for His honour in
the locality and in the world. I think that is what
arises here. If that is not present, then all the other
means nothing. It must have been brought home to the
Corinthians that they were letting the Lord down in the
locality. Their condition, the situation among them, was
just bringing dishonour to Him. And that provoked a sense
of responsibility: ‘Oh, we cannot afford to let the
Lord down! For the Lord’s sake, for the sake of the
Name of the Lord, we must put things right amongst
ourselves, whatever it costs.’ There is much in
Isaiah’s later chapters about the Name of the Lord
in Zion, when recovered. And so, in the church at
Corinth, this sense of responsibility for His Name and
for His honour, in that vicinity and in that city and in
the world, produced a new utterness for the Lord.
We come back to our question: “To whom is the
arm of the Lord revealed?” Well, to those, such
as we have seen, who accept the implications of the
Cross. This is all the outcome, the outworking of the
Cross. This all comes out of Isaiah 53. Recovered
testimony of this kind can only be as the result of the
Cross. The Cross is the basis of everything in all
testimony.
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