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Book messages «Recovery of Christ in the Present Evil Age, The»
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CHAPTER FIVE

BEING RESCUED OUT OF THE PRESENT EVIL AGE BY EXPERIENCING CHRIST AS THE SPIRIT IN OUR SPIRIT

NEEDING TO BE RESCUED OUT OF THE PRESENT EVIL AGE, THE RELIGIOUS WORLD

  The book of Galatians deals with the present evil age, the religious world (1:4; 6:14). To try to keep the law is something of religion (2:16, 19). According to this principle, to try to do good or improve oneself to please God is religion. Circumcision also is something of religion (5:6; 6:15). This indicates that to keep any form, ritual, or regulation is religion. These two definitions of religion are great principles. Human beings seemingly cannot stay away from trying to do good or from keeping forms, rituals, and regulations. We often keep forms and rituals without realizing it. In the church life we may even attend meetings as a religious form or ritual. However, to decide not to go to a meeting is also religion. To try to do good is religion, but to try not to do good is also religion. To keep a form is religion, but not to keep the form may also be religion. We need to drop all religion. Only Christ is not religion.

THE SUBJECTIVE CHRIST BEING VERSUS RELIGION

  In Galatians the apostle Paul says that he was formerly in religion and was even a leading one there (1:13-14). But one day it pleased God to reveal His Son in Paul (vv. 15-16). This shows that Christ is versus religion. After seeing the present evil age in Galatians 1, we see the subjective Christ—Christ revealed in us. The Christ who is versus religion is not the objective, doctrinal Christ but the subjective, experiential Christ. Galatians 2:20 says, “It is no longer I who live, but it is Christ who lives in me.” Then 3:27 says that we who have been baptized into Christ have put on Christ. Finally, 4:19 says that Christ is being formed in us. This means that Christ needs to be constituted into our being. Ephesians 3:17 reveals that Christ is making His home in our heart. Every part of our inner being—our mind, emotion, and will—needs to be saturated and possessed by Christ so that He can be one with us. This is the subjective Christ who is versus religion.

THE EMPHASIS IN GALATIANS SHIFTING FROM CHRIST TO THE SPIRIT

  In Galatians 3 the emphasis begins to shift from Christ to the Spirit. Verses 2 through 3 speak of receiving and being perfected by the Spirit, and verse 14 speaks of receiving the promise of the Spirit. God’s blessing in the gospel is to minister the Spirit to us. When we receive the Spirit, we are born of the Spirit. Galatians 4:6 says, “Because you are sons, God has sent forth the Spirit of His Son into our hearts, crying, Abba, Father!” Then 5:25 says, “If we live by the Spirit, let us also walk by the Spirit.” The Spirit today is one with our spirit. The divine Spirit mingles Himself with our human spirit to be one wonderful spirit. Now we need to live and walk in this mingled spirit. Galatians 6:1 says that even when we see a brother overtaken by sin, we need to restore him in our spirit, which is mingled with the divine Spirit. Verse 8 says, “He who sows unto the Spirit will of the Spirit reap eternal life.”

  In the middle of Galatians the crucial point shifts from Christ to the Spirit. Christ and the Spirit are one, but we need to see the difference between Christ and the Spirit. The title Christ, which means “the anointed One,” implies the Lord’s divinity and humanity. Christ as the Son of God was incarnated to be the Son of Man. He is a wonderful person with divinity and humanity. As One who is both God and man, Christ was uniquely qualified to be anointed, appointed, and commissioned by God to fulfill God’s eternal purpose.

  The first and the main thing that Christ did to fulfill God’s eternal purpose was to accomplish redemption. On the cross Christ took away our sin (Heb. 9:26; John 1:29) and our sins (1 Pet. 2:24), dealt with the world (Gal. 6:14), crucified our old man (Rom. 6:6) and our old “I” (Gal. 2:20), destroyed the devil (Heb. 2:14), and abolished the law of the commandments in ordinances (Eph. 2:15). All the negative things were taken away by Christ on the cross. By accomplishing redemption, Christ, the anointed One, opened the way for God to reach us. Because God is righteous and holy, He could not do anything to be one with man until Christ had accomplished a full redemption. Christ’s work on the cross gave God the full liberty to come in to accomplish His purpose with man.

  After His death Christ was resurrected to impart His life into all His believers, making them His members (John 12:24; 1 Cor. 12:12). Furthermore, Christ ascended to the heavens far above all (Eph. 1:20-21). The powers on the earth and the evil powers in the air could not hold Christ. He transcended everything and ascended into the heavens, where He was made the Head over all things to the church (v. 22).

  After accomplishing redemption, Christ became the life-giving Spirit to indwell us (1 Cor. 15:45b; John 20:22). Christ and the Spirit are two parts, which together form a complete view. To illustrate, being a student is the first part of a person’s career. After earning a college degree, a student may enter a profession, such as teaching. Thus, the student and the teacher are two parts of a complete whole. The student and the teacher are not different persons; they are one. However, without first being a student, a person is not qualified to be a teacher. The first part qualifies a person for the second part. Likewise, to become the indwelling Spirit, Christ first had to be incarnated, crucified, resurrected, and ascended. Christ’s processes qualified Him to become the indwelling Spirit. For this reason, the book of Galatians first focuses on Christ and then emphasizes the Spirit. When a student becomes a teacher, it does not mean that his qualifications as a student are gone. Rather, the teacher still possesses all the qualifications of the student. Similarly, Christ, who today is the Spirit, still possesses His incarnation, crucifixion, resurrection, and ascension. The indwelling Christ is the Spirit. He is not only in us but also in the heavens. In the heavens He is the Christ; in us He is the Spirit. Christ and the Spirit are one.

RELIGION BEING TO DO ANYTHING APART FROM THE INDWELLING SPIRIT

  Religion is to do anything apart from the indwelling Spirit. To love others apart from the Spirit is religion, and not to love others apart from the Spirit is also religion. Thus, it is not easy to fully come out of religion. After hearing a message, we often make up our mind that we will change. Husbands make up their minds to be nicer to their wives; saints make up their minds to function in every meeting. All this is religion. However, to make up our mind not to do anything after hearing a message is also religion. To make up our mind apart from the Spirit is religion. Whatever we do apart from the Spirit is religion. Only what we do by the indwelling Spirit is not religion.

THE SECRET TO BE SAVED FROM RELIGION BEING TO UNCEASINGLY PRAY

  The secret to be saved from religion is to unceasingly pray (1 Thes. 5:17). The Bible likens our prayer to breathing (Lam. 3:55-56), which never ceases. Whatever we are doing, we are still breathing. Likewise, we all must learn how to unceasingly pray. Unceasing prayer cannot be by our mind; we must learn to pray by and in our spirit. Ephesians 6:18 says, “Praying at every time in spirit.” When we learn to pray in our spirit, we will be able to pray without ceasing. We should not care primarily for our mind, emotion, or will. Instead, we need to always exercise our spirit, turn to our spirit, and return to our spirit. Setting aside specific times to pray will help us to exercise our spirit. When we begin to pray, we may not be in the spirit, but if we keep praying, after a short while we will be in our spirit. The more we pray, the more we will be in spirit. Eventually, we will become a person who is in spirit all the time.

BECOMING STRONG IN SPIRIT TO BE PREPARED FOR THE LORD’S MOVE

  We may be stirred up, burdened, and ready to go for the Lord’s move to Europe or to a college campus in the United States. However, before we go, we have to learn to pray to stir up our spirit, turn our being to our spirit, and call our being back into our spirit. We have to become a person who is strong not primarily in our mind, emotion, or will but in our spirit. Eventually, we will become those who live, walk, and do everything in spirit.

NEEDING TO BE CONTROLLED BY THE SPIRIT

  It is good to be stirred up, but we must learn to be stirred up in our spirit, not in our emotion. If we do not exercise our spirit to control our excitement, we will act foolishly. We should not go to our college campus and shout what we have seen, nor should we meet with the pastor of a denomination to tell him that whatever he does is religion. This kind of excitement is also in religion. We need to be stirred up in the spirit and allow the spirit to control our excitement. Nothing controls us as much as our spirit. To be wise, proper, bold, or frank, we need to be in the spirit. When we are in the spirit, we will know the right time to shout and the right time to be quiet. When we are in the spirit, we will know the right time to speak at length and the right time not to say a word. The spirit tells us when to speak and when to be silent. We only need to follow the spirit.

THE GRACE OF OUR LORD JESUS CHRIST BEING WITH OUR SPIRIT

  Galatians 6:18, the last verse of the book, says, “The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with your spirit, brothers. Amen.” Galatians opens with our being delivered from the present evil age, and it closes with the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ being with our spirit. We all need to be delivered from the evil religious age, and we all need to enjoy the grace of the Lord Jesus in our spirit. We should not care for any kind of religion or even for spirituality or overcoming sins but only for the enjoyment of the Lord Jesus in our spirit. In our spirit, instead of regulation, ritual, doctrine, or knowledge, there is grace. Grace is the Lord Jesus as our enjoyment. Christ, the Spirit, and grace all denote one person—our wonderful Savior. As Christ, He is in the heavens; as the Spirit, He is within us; as grace, He is our enjoyment.

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