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REVELATION OF JESUS CHRIST

BY T. AUSTIN-SPARKS

Contents
Ch 01 The Inheritance of Jesus Christ.......................................................................................................1
Ch 02 The Victory of Jesus Christ.............................................................................................................6
Ch 03 The Character of Jesus Christ........................................................................................................10
Ch 04 The Message of Jesus Christ.........................................................................................................15
Ch 05 Christ's Message to Ephesus..........................................................................................................21
Ch 06 Christ's Message to Laodicea........................................................................................................24
Ch 07 Christ Revealed as God's Purpose.................................................................................................28
Ch 08 Christ Revealed as God's Pattern...................................................................................................34
Ch 09 Christ Revealed as God's Provision...............................................................................................38

Transcribed from a series of conference messages given by T. Austin-Sparks in 1958. The spoken form has been
retained verbatim. Words which were not clearly discernible have been enclosed in [square] brackets.

Chapter 1 - The Inheritance of Jesus Christ


Chapter 2 - The Victory of Jesus Christ
Chapter 3 - The Character of Jesus Christ
Chapter 4 - The Message of Jesus Christ
Chapter 5 - Christ's Message to Ephesus
Chapter 6 - Christ's Message to Laodicea
Chapter 7 - Christ Revealed as God's Purpose
Chapter 8 - Christ Revealed as God's Pattern
Chapter 9 - Christ Revealed as God's Provision

Ch 01 The Inheritance of Jesus Christ

Revelation of Jesus Christ. That is to be the object of our occupation at this time and while it will come to us
through the book which bears that name, it is not the book, as such, that we are to study but that central,
inclusive, underlying theme - revelation of Jesus Christ. We can drop out the article and say 'revelation of Jesus
Christ'.

A subtitle might be:

The Nature, the Battle and the Victory of the Inheritance of Jesus Christ.

The one, great, triumphant cry which arises at a certain point in the procedure recorded here is 'now is come the
Kingdom'. And in that phrase everything that is in this book is governed: His inheritance, His kingdom, His
reign, His rights; His everything. That is the governing thing in the whole book. It is a revelation of Jesus Christ
in that sense. We hardly begin to read the book without the consciousness breaking upon us that we are moving
into battle - terrific battle - battle with many aspects. But with all the aspects of the battle, one issue: His
Kingdom.

We are not, let me say here, going to try to go through this book. I think at most we shall be occupied, and that

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quite imperfectly, with the first chapters. But I do want to indicate that inasmuch as those chapters particularly
concern the people of God, the Church, at this time, that is but one phase of this great question, His inheritance,
His Kingdom.

We shall have to say some things about the book in general before we can come to the particular message which I
feel the Lord has given for this time together. As to this book there are these things to be said. Of course it is a
most bewildering book; and because it is so bewildering, many have given it up and after perhaps chapter five,
they can't find their way any further and it is not, therefore, a book that is greatly beloved of the Lord's people. It
might be necessary to qualify that statement, but I repeat, it is certainly a bewildering book.

Someone said, I don't know that I agree with them, that if you're not mad before you start reading the book, you
will be when you get to the end! That is only a way of saying it is not an easy book to understand. And there are
reasons for that, but I want you to remember that right at the commencement it is stated that there is a particular
blessing attached to this book. Indeed, this is the only book in the Bible where it is so stated that there is a
BLESSING. I don't mean that this is the only book that has a blessing; it is definitely stated that there is a
blessing to those who read and those who keep what is written therein. This is a blessing that is promised to the
servants of the Lord. May the Lord give us that blessing; bring that blessing to us as we dwell in it.

Now there are two main reasons for the difficulty which is found in reading and studying this book; that is, the
difficulty is due to two main things, first of all its method, that is its symbolism. There are books in the Bible
which have a lot of symbolism in them but there is no book to compare with this, it is one vast system of symbols.

If you want to do some close study you can go through from beginning to end and see how many symbols you can
find. What you will find is that every thing in this created universe is taken hold of in some way or another
symbolically; that is - and used to symbolize some other thing, some spiritual thing. Heaven, earth, sea. All parts
and departments of the creation. Every phenomenon. Far too vast to comprehend in a few sentences. A book full
of symbols. It's not easy to understand always the symbolism. I am not even referring to some of them.

The numbers themselves, if we should touch any one symbolic aspect, are tremendously significant and
comprehensive from one through many particular numbers until you get to two hundred million; ten thousand
times ten thousand. And all is symbolic and significant.

We pick out number seven. Fifty four times number seven occurs, which must mean something. You see what I
mean? But all that constitutes a difficulty; you wonder why that was necessary. Well, for one or two reasons, but
for this particular reason, it was a NECESSITY in a time of persecution. You will notice that when the hostile
world rulers were in the ascendant over the people of God, symbolism was a particular feature of ministry. Take
Ezekiel and Daniel; crammed with symbolism, but nothing to compare with this. For here you have this time of
unspeakable suffering for the people of God in which this book was written. And because it was so dangerous to
speak in plain language that the enemy could recognize and understand, symbolism was resorted to and only the
instructed WOULD understand. That is significant in itself. You see, Rome was the great hostile power. The
people of God were suffering at this time as they had never suffered before, at the hands of Rome, but you don't
find the word 'Rome' mentioned. Rome has to be covered up with another name; Babylon. See, it was necessary
to speak amongst themselves in a way in which THEY would understand and the world would not. And that
should bring a sympathetic note in our approach to the Word. There is a language amongst the Lord's people
which only they understand, but they DO understand. The world does not understand.

But then, another difficulty which has arisen since then and is with us today in relation to this book, is the many
schools of interpretation. There are at least six different schools of interpretation of this book. I'm not even going
to name them; it would only confuse many of you and would not be at all helpful at this time. But there they are,
six, at least, different schools of interpretation and very few of them agreeing with each other on more than a
point or two. Volumes upon volumes having been written saying 'And THIS is the meaning' or 'THIS is the
meaning' and all in conflict with one another. We find ourselves in these days in the midst of that kind of thing
and it's exceedingly bewildering. We might well give it up as Martin Luther did; he said this book is all rubbish,
nonsense; no one will ever be able to understand it. Well, alright, throw the blessing away! There's a blessing.

However, that is one of the difficulties in our taking up this book and not pursuing it. You will not imagine that I
am going to adopt any one of the six and I do trust that you will not think for a moment that I am going to give

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you an improvement upon them all or think that I can. You will have to go on patiently with me and see whether
the way in which we approach it is a way of blessing, a way of spiritual helpfulness. And I would ask you this one
thing, that you will believe that I am not seeking to give some private interpretation but seeking to get right
through ALL this to the real blessing that is in this book. If we can come out at the end with that, then we shall
have been justified in tackling it.

Well now, what about the nature and the purpose of the whole book? It is quite clear that this book contains or
presents the consummation of all the ages and the consummation of this age. I use that word carefully. The
summation of the ages and the summation of THIS age. This book comprehends the WHOLE Bible and bounds
ALL history. It compasses creation, redemption, and perdition. It embraces God: Father, Son, Holy Spirit. It
embraces man and his history and the purpose of his being. It embraces the history, work and doom of Satan.

It will impress you I am sure, when I tell you that there are no less than four hundred allusions to the Old
Testament in this book. There's a bit of study for you. I mention it in order to bear out what I've said, this is a
summation this book. This is a gathering up of everything unto the end. But when we have said that and all such
things and have recognized it all as true, one question arises; IS there, IS there one thing that interprets and
explains everything in this book? And the answer is yes. There is one all-inclusive issue running from beginning
to end. It is the Purpose of God as to the eternal government of this universe and this earth in particular.

The issue and question of the government of God's creation through eternal ages. That explains everything that is
here. You have to read backward of course, from the end of the book, for all has moved toward that. Steady
movement through every phase and aspect unto that one end, "I saw the holy City, new Jerusalem coming down
from God out of heaven". Here you have the metropolis, the center of government; that is the end - the
government of everything established, again in a symbolic representation, the holy City. Well that implies
government, I say everything in the book moves toward that and you have to read everything from beginning
onward in the light of that final, wonderful issue. WHO is going to govern God's created universe through all ages
of eternity? HOW is that government going to be reached? And WHAT is the nature of that government? Those
are the questions that are answered in this book.

How great it is that when you come to the City, that is the realization of this great divine object; the government
of all things as from heaven. You find that that government is just as much a matter of character or nature as it is
of power. That is a VERY important thing to remember. It is not only official authority established at last, the
iron hand of government in control. It is a government of a certain KIND of nature. The City is the embodiment
not only of strength but of character and nature; everything that is precious in the sight of God. And those two
things are brought together and they run through this whole book. Those two things are implicit in the first
chapters as we shall see in the presentation of the Son of Man Himself and then in the messages to the churches.
So they run on. It's a reaching of the place of ascendancy by conformity to a certain nature. It's a tremendous
thing to come to that nature, to that character.

It is no less a question, an issue, in the nature of things than the government of this universe. What kind of thing
will it be that governs at last? That's the big question. And so page after page is dealing with that. Page after page,
phrase after phrase. It is not just the crashing of something against the mastery, it is the getting rid of a certain
character and nature and kind, to put in its place another kind. From center to circumference. Remember it is a
law always of God and of the Word of God that power is by character and not by office. And so it is here, it is a
tremendous question in this matter of ascendancy, the throne, the government, the dominion. I say again, it
governs everything through this book. In a word, it is the nature of God's Son as Son of Man, standing over
everything. He, in Person and divinely appointed destiny, but He particularly in character. That brings
everything under it. This great issue of government.

And is it necessary for me to say here that if ever there was a time in the history of this cosmos when the conflict,
the battle for the government of this universe was raging; that time is now. We are all very conscious of mighty
forces at work to get the control of this world and all that has to do with it. Of a tremendous battle raging as to
who and what is going to have the dominion here. That only needs to be said to draw out a response and assent
of recognition; it's on. And the point of the concentration of this conflict is the Church, the people of God! In
some parts from without, in an outward way they're in it, but if it is not by outward persecution, spiritual people
are conscious of TREMENDOUS spiritual pressure and conflict in these days which is increasing. Yes, it's quite
patent that this is the issue. What is going to emerge, on top at last, what kind of a thing will it be, that is the

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question to be answered.

For this issue take up the whole book again, this issue is shown to be related to five things, first of all to the very
purpose of God IN creation. The purpose of God in creation! There should be something answering to His heart
and to His mind, to His thought for His full satisfaction in the works of His hands. Chapter four takes up, as you
know, that creational aspect and the great song in heaven which bursts forth in that connection is "for thou
createst or didst create all things for Thyself, for Thy pleasure" it is the song of a redeemed creation showing that
it's all centred in the throne now. That chapter brings you right up into heaven, everything is up there and the
throne is set, and everything is around that throne and the song in the first instance is the song of a redeemed
creation. Centred in the throne, that's the meaning of the creation! A kind of creation absolutely grown united
with the Throne at its centre. That's the purpose of creation and then the book moves to show that this, this
issue, this great issue: government, is God's purpose in redemption.

Of course chapter five carries the theme further, it is still the theme in heaven but here the emphasis is upon
redemption and the second great song breaks out "Thou hast redeemed". Thou hast redeemed! And the throne is
at the centre of redemption. Redemption has brought the throne to its place, government by redemption. We'll
have more to say about this as we go on. In the third place this great purpose of world and universal government
is shown to be God's purpose concerning His Son. The place that He occupies throughout is supreme and
everything is working toward that end where HE, HE is Lord of all and in all things has the pre-eminence and in
the book is seen at the end riding forth in majesty, ruling! As we shall see His very titles indicate universal
lordship, God's purpose concerning His Son, the government of this world and of this universe.

In the fourth place this great purpose of dominion is shown to be God's purpose in choosing and raising up Israel
as a nation, that in an earthly way Israel should set forth the principles of heavenly government, and all that
focused in God's Son. That is why Israel was raised up. And that is touched upon here but Israel put the Son out!
And Israel in turn was put out. The place that Israel occupies today, the most tragic place you could think of, is
simply this: they failed in the purpose of God concerning His Son, His absolute Kingship and Lordship. And then
the fifth connection the book shows that this great issue of dominion is bound up with the Church. The Church!
The Church comes in here; it is not Christ in solitary isolation, the Church with Him in government eventually.

Well, you see how comprehensive the issue is, this book gathering all that up is the book of final recovery of
God's eternal intention and it shows that it WILL be, it will be done. A large place, as you know, is given to
prophecy in this book and right at the end, right at the end, it is gathered up in this way, "The Lord, the God of
the spirits of the prophets hath sent His angel and signified these things." The God of the spirits of the prophets!
Then there is this, the keeping of the prophecy of this book. And most of you know that prophetic ministry
always had one thing in view: recovery of God's thought. Recovery! And inasmuch as this book has so much of
the prophetic aspect in it, it indicates that that's what is in view, it's recovery! Something has been lost.
Something has been lost! And that is going to be recovered. Something of divine purpose and intention has been
lost and God in this book is seen as set and giving Himself to the recovery of that which has been lost of His
intention and will concerning this creation AND the Church. It's a mighty, mighty issue that is being fought out,
shall we say, through the pages of this book. Just to take a few minutes on that point alone and we'll leave it for
the morning.

A revelation had been given. A revelation had been given by God in the old dispensation, in the Old Testament,
and it does not need that anyone be very well instructed to see that as you read the Old Testament from the
beginning of Genesis right to the last chapter of the book of Malachi, there is one thing that is involved in the
whole story; it is this question of government! Dominion! Rulership! Sovereignty! Control of this world! Isn't
that clear? Everywhere it's there. It is one continuous battle raging, the ups and downs, the fluctuations,
sometimes it's one power in the ascendant and sometimes another. Sometimes the Lord's people in their right
place of dominion and other times they're in subjugation and antagonistic powers are in the ascendant but this
battle rages and sways through all those Old Testament generations but God had left no one in doubt as to what
His mind about it was and His purpose.

It's all there! The revelation had been given. It had been given in the New Testament. Mark you, we come to the
book of the Revelation we're at the end of the first Christian century. The book in all probability was written in
the nineties of the first century. And the revelation had been given in the New Testament. What a revelation of
God's intention, God's purpose, God's thought for the government of this world. And that revelation had been in

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a particular and peculiar way concentrated in the ministry of the apostle Paul, had come through Paul in a full
and shall we say, a consummate way. For if you want to know about the ages of the ages and God's thought
concerning Jesus Christ therein and the Church, it's to Paul you go. It's been given! It's been given; and
significantly enough, it was given in the Name to the churches in Asia. To the churches in Asia - we have
Ephesians, Colossians - it had been given! It had been lost. It had been let go. Said Paul, "All they which be in
Asia be turned from me". It had been let go. God had GIVEN the deposit of a FULL revelation of His intention
from eternity concerning His Son, concerning the Church in the government, the ultimate government of this
universe. It's there! It's been let go; now the book of Revelation comes in to show God's reaction to that, to
recover. And significantly enough He will begin with the Churches in Asia.

There the greatest responsibility rests; where the greatest light has been given, where the knowledge of God's will
has been most fully redeemed, there God will begin. He always does, He always does begin there, the point of the
greatest responsibility. To recover! To recover! And while I anticipate a little, let me point out to you at this point
that He's GOING to have that which does represent His recovery. In the churches He may not find a full,
complete response by all the people of God but He will have there that which DOES answer - "to him that
overcometh...". What God may not have in the whole He will have in a part.

I'm reading a book by a New Testament scholar this week, not one we would call a spiritually minded person but
one of profound knowledge of things as to the Bible and I came on this, I think it's worth reading at this point. He
says "We have made reference to the thought of a remnant", he's speaking about the faith of Israel, the history of
Israel. "The community as a whole could be narrowed down to a part which could represent the whole and
continue its inheritance. This idea of a remnant is found throughout the whole Bible, it is not confined to the
prophets, though they say much about it. In the story of the flood Noah and his family constitute a remnant in
whom the divine creative purpose is concentrated and preserved. The blessing promised to Abraham and his
seed was limited to one of his sons, Isaac. In the time of Elijah we read of a righteous remnant of seven thousand
which had not bowed the knee to Baal. This idea is found in Isaiah, in Jeremiah, in Ezekiel, in Amos, in Micah.
Sometimes the remnant is thought of as bringing about the sparing of the whole community." Note that: that's
tremendous! "Sometimes the remnant is thought of as bringing about the sparing of the whole community. If
God could have found ten righteous in Sodom the whole community would have been saved. Sometimes the
remnant itself is spared to convey to a future generation the knowledge of God's will. It is always thought of as a
corporate body and not just so many individuals. Wherever it appears, the remnant is for that moment, THE
people of God. Heirs of the promises and heirs of the revelation of God's purpose." I believe that's magnificent!

Carry that over here and see it gathered into the overcomers at the end. See on one side what a responsibility
rests upon them, what a need the Lord has for such! What a tremendous thing is bound up with them, no less an
issue than God's eternal intention concerning His Son, concerning the Church in the government of this
universe. It seems, perhaps, presumption to think that we here, a little company of insignificant people in this
world, might, as a part of others in the larger, be in that line of divine purpose. It might be, dear friends, I put it
this way; it might be that that is why we are here at this very time. If we were to speak of the conflict that has
preceded this time, the raging of the forces of evil, and all the determinations as are seen to make the
continuance of this testimony and ministry possible, we are driven to ask one question: What can it mean? What
can it mean? What are we? What do we amount to? And the answer must be this, has God abandoned His
intention? And if not, He will STILL seek to have those who know what that is and who come into line with it.
And, forgive me, and I know that I'll need a lot of forgiveness in some realms for saying it, but it is just possible
that the gathering of just a handful here in these days has no less a significance in it than God's desire to make
known to His people that He has not given up His original purpose concerning His Son and the Church. If I
should be right, may the Lord give to us a due sense of the tremendous significance of any time like this when He
chooses to speak to us again about this matter of supreme and paramount importance; His inheritance in His
Son. The Kingdom of His Son. His Son's place in this universe for all eternal ages. And of an instrument to His
hand for the expression of His government and the administering of His kingdom. Now I have not said and am
not thinking or saying that WE are the people for that. But that is the Lord's thought for as MANY of the Church
universal as will give Him the response that He seeks when He says "He that hath an ear to hear, let him hear
what the Spirit saith to the churches". I venture to say to you dear friends, that we are gathered in no small
matter. May the Lord give us eyes to see as we go on how this is to be, how He works it out, on what ground, in
the revelation of Jesus Christ.

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Ch 02 The Victory of Jesus Christ

Quite a large number of you were not with us this morning. The word then was foundational to what the Lord has
given me for this conference. I will do my best, without wearying those who were present with a repetition, to
help you all into the message.

We are occupied with revelation of Jesus Christ. Or the word can be changed and retain the same meaning - the
unveiling of Jesus Christ. I think it is impossible to take up this book which has that as its title and begin to read
without very early in our reading becoming aware that a tremendous piece of business is on hand. The
impression that very quickly begins to take hold of us is: we're in the settling of some big issue. We are faced with
some tremendous and momentous decision. Everything here says: now a long outstanding question is going to
be answered. A long standing issue is going to be settled. The time has come when what has been a matter of
controversy and conflict for a very long time, is going to be headed up and settled. Surely that is what ought to be
the impression as we begin to read.

Anybody who can take up this book and begin at the first chapter and even in the first words and just read it as
something printed without becoming aware that there is something tremendous involved and in view, surely has
missed the whole meaning and value of the book.

And that is just what the book is all about. It is the settling of this controversy which has gone on through the
ages, this answering of the question, this concluding of the whole matter and writing forever and ever:
"FINISHED" to one phase. And that matter, that issue, that controversy, that question, is just "Who is going to
govern this universe throughout the ages of the ages?" Who is going to govern? That has been a matter of
contention through thousands of years from the creation. All history has circled round THAT matter, THAT
question. Now, says this book, we're going to settle it once and for all. And when you have really got hold of that,
you've got the key to the book and to everything that is in it. It will interpret all that is in this book, much, as we
said this morning, that is difficult to understand in itself, almost bewildering in its detail and the manner and
form of its presentation.

But I shall go on to say, well what does that mean? Well, in some way that relates to this ultimate and
consummate issue: the government of this universe as God intended when He created it. The issue is: NOW is
come the Kingdom of our God and of His Christ - the climax of history. Well now, that helps you right into where
we were this morning with a great deal of detail and we proceed.

From that and with that, we're going to look into the part of the first chapter we read earlier and work right to
this very matter we have mentioned. Notice it begins with the revelation of Jesus Christ. That's grand! That's
fine! All that is coming subsequently, the warfare and the welfare of kingdoms and nations; all the manifold
movements, comes back to this. Alright, the revelation of Jesus Christ. That stands over it all, is the answer of it
all; the unveiling of Jesus Christ. How HE stands related to EVERYTHING in this universe. It is a revelation of
Jesus Christ. The same word is here as Paul used in his prayer in the letter to the Ephesians "That He would
grant unto you a spirit of wisdom and revelation in the knowledge of Christ". Spirit of revelation; unveiling in the
knowledge of Jesus Christ. That's what it is. And this unveiling or revelation is here said to have been something
that God GAVE to His Son. It needs a good deal, perhaps of imagination and quiet thought, to grasp the
significance of these statements, but here in the language of men it is said God let His Son see HIS place in
relation to all the consummatory movements and activities of the ages. Where HE stands as the ages are brought
to their culmination and their consummation. Father God gives to His Son to see His place in it all; "which He
showed or gave to His Son".

And then it goes on, "to show to His bondservants". That is general, not particular, not just to apostles, not to
some special people, just to His bondservants. You and I come into that category, the bondservants or
bondslaves of Jesus Christ. This unveiling is given by God to the Son, through an angel, to John, for us. The point
is that any true servant of God ought to be acquainted with all that appertains to the purpose of God in Christ
Jesus and He sent and signified it to His bondservant John.

Notice the title John gives to himself; he does not say "John the apostle of Jesus Christ". He calls himself "the

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bondservant" and then in verse 9 he says "I, John, your brother". John always speaks on the Family basis and
level, brings himself into very close relationship with those to whom he writes, as a member of the Family. He
brings them right in, not on official ground, but on the ground of Life. We're in this with John, that is what John
is saying, we're in this with him on the very basis of family life: "I, John, your brother". Brother!

"In the isle that's called Patmos, for the testimony of Jesus", he says, "for the testimony of Jesus and being there I
am your brother and partaker with you in the tribulation and kingdom and patience in Jesus". Be patient as we
work on through these details: on the isle Patmos... for the testimony of Jesus... partaker with you in the
tribulation, kingdom and patience in Jesus. Now the question at once arises, which gets us very near to the heart
of the whole matter: Why was John in Patmos? Because, he says, for the testimony of Jesus. But that is not very
enlightening. The question is a bigger one than that, why was John in Patmos? And being in Patmos in the
tribulation that is in Jesus. And the answer to that question is in this whole book. It takes the whole book really,
to answer that question.

And may I say here by way of parenthesis, incidentally, the answer may account for the tremendous battle that
has raged over this book. You know, or you may not know, the very great battle raged over the admission of this
book into the canon of the Scriptures. Oh, what a battle to have it bound up in the divine library! To allow it to be
included in the Bible! A real big battle raged over that, but at last the battle was won for its inclusion. I take that
as having some significance. But then what a battle over the book since it's been in! We pointed out this morning
the many diverse schools of interpretation, the controversy that has raged over this book through the centuries,
the confusion that has been brought about by the way in which the book has been handled, all the divisions that
have sprung up and there is no end to them. Only about a year or so, a year, eighteen months ago; a new division
sprang up in America over this very book, a fresh split on its interpretation and they're fighting, they're at one
another's throats about this quite minor point of interpretation; but there it is. What does it mean? I say, that
there is an explanation to all that, it is not just hap.

The answer to our question, I think, may be the explanation of that long, drawn-out controversy around this
book. The answer, then, as to why was John in Patmos is in the first place found in that which obtained in the
world at that time in the form of emperor worship. You, some of you, will know that the ruling Caesars claimed to
be divine and therefore they claimed human worship. Somebody has said they posed as gods and did the work of
the devil. That's significant. Julius Caesar was worshiped. Octavianus was called Augustus - "Reverenced".
Caligula demanded that his image should be put up in the Holy of Holies in the temple in Jerusalem; he was
killed before he was able to do it. That carries some significance. And this emperor under whom we believe John
was exiled to Patmos, Domitian, was called - actually called - 'our lord and god'. They usurped the place of God.
They claimed the worship of man; they took to themselves deity.

So, the issue is clear-cut. There is no mistaking it, it is Caesar or Christ! For THE apostolic proclamation
everywhere was without any mistaking it: Jesus Christ is Lord! That's the testimony of Jesus for which John was
sent to Patmos. The issue is clear-cut, quite clear-cut. It's a very significant thing that the Jews were dealt with
comparatively leniently. Were the Christians? They did suffer under Rome but they suffered nothing like the
sufferings of the Christians. I say that's significant! THEY had crucified the Lord of glory therefore the devil is
not so much concerned about them, but THESE people, THESE people who will have no compromise on this
matter; the absolute Lordship of Jesus Christ as God! As the Son of God! There can be no reconciling Caesar and
Christ, Christ and Caesar. That's the issue. And, dear friends, when John says 'in the tribulation in Christ' the
implication is that the tribulation or the suffering is ALWAYS proportionate to the place that you give the Lord
Jesus. If you give Him a second or a third place, well you will have a comparatively easy time. Put Him where
God has put Him, make Him Lord of all and of everything, and you're in for tribulation. In for tribulation! So it
was with John.

All this surely is gathered up into the very titles; Jesus Christ the faithful Witness, Firstborn of the dead, the
Ruler of the kings of the earth. Say that in the face of the Caesars; the Ruler of the kings of the earth! You're in for
it! You're in for it when you realize what store the Caesars set by their divine prerogative. The Ruler of the kings
of the earth - Jesus! Jesus Christ! You and I, dear friends, never realize the implication of that title, you know
that "Christ" is only the Greek for the Hebrew "Messiah", the whole conception both of the Hebrew and the
Greek Messiah and Christ, was His Kingship; Anointed! Anointed. The Kristos! The Anointed of God and that
Anointed meant nothing less than absolute Rulership, Supremacy. To speak that Name: Jesus the Anointed,
Jesus the Messiah, is at once to throw a challenge at that whole empire of the Caesars. No wonder the apostle

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said no man can call Jesus Christ but by the Holy Ghost. They knew it. You wondered what that means because
you can all call Jesus Christ, glibly, easily and say Jesus is Christ. Ah, but go into that realm, live in THAT day
and it would be the most terrifying thing to publicly say "Jesus of Nazareth is the Anointed of God to be the Ruler
of the kings of the earth". You need the Holy Ghost to make you bold enough to say that.

And dear friends, that is not so remote, in the past. There are many, many today who are afraid so to speak of
Him and afraid for their lives. You can go into fanatical Mohammedan countries and proclaim Jesus the Christ,
the Son of God; you do it with your life in your hand. You need the Holy Ghost for that boldness. So you see, here
we are right at the heart of this thing. Jesus Christ... the Faithful and True Witness. That word 'Witness' as you
probably know, is the same word as 'martyr', the Faithful Martyr. Alright, John's in good company. Jesus Christ
the Faithful Martyr, the Faithful and True Witness. It cost Him His life to stand for His Kingdom. It cost Him His
life at the hands of every devil-inspired instrument that knew the issue. Knew the issue! The issue of that Man
was nothing less than the dominion of this world and the devil knew it. So He would say 'you are of your father
the devil, he was a murderer from the beginning'. They murdered the Prince of life on this one matter - His place
in the eternal counsels of God as Lord, as King, Firstborn from the dead, I'll have something more to say about
that shortly, Ruler of the kings of the earth.

Well, these titles just set forth the stages of His progress to the throne:-
Faithful Martyr; that was the Way of the Cross.
Firstborn from the dead; the Way of the divine Vindication.
Ruler of the kings of the earth; that is the glorious End of the Cross and the Resurrection.

Ruler! Ruler of the kings of the earth! Satan, who knew Him, yes Satan's agents and [powers] betrayed their
knowledge of Him when they, the demons, said "I know Thee Whom Thou art, the holy One of God, I know
Thee!" Satan knew Him and knew His divine destiny and so he took Him up into a high mountain and showed
Him all the kingdoms of this world, the glory thereof and said "All this will I give Thee if Thou wilt..." now here
we are, back on this thing, "worship me"! Worship, where worship is to be. You see, here is the Caesars again.
Worship me! Jesus refused that dominion at the hand of Satan and took it by the Cross! And here, this book sees
Him in possession of it: the Ruler of the kings of the earth! If you have any question about that by reason of the
seeming power of world rulers in our time; power, world systems, how they do afflict the Church and the saints...
read the book of the Acts again and you will see in that book the Ruler of the kings of the earth wielding His
power and Herod learned something of that and others.

We know now, we know now that this wonderful book of the revelation of Jesus Christ has been fulfilled in a very
large degree. The very empire that denied Him His place and Lordship and set itself to destroy every trace of His
Kingship, has gone to dust. Daniel has a very, very real place here, hasn't he? Remember then the vision and the
fourth kingdom of iron which undoubtedly was the Roman empire, and in the days when that kingdom has been
reached from Babylon onward, in the days when the Roman empire has come into being, the vision goes on and I
think we've lost a good deal of the real point of that vision - the God of heaven, the God of heaven produces a
Kingdom. "I saw, I saw in a vision, a stone, cut without hands". Oh, I would like to dwell upon that for half an
hour - a stone cut without hands! And it smote the image and the image, by that smiting, crumbled to dust but
the stone itself rolled on and as it rolled, gathering momentum, it gathered volume until it filled the whole earth!
We're [really] IN that, we're in that! This empire which set itself up against the Lord and His Christ was smitten
by that Stone cut without hands, and it has crumbled to dust, there's no doubt about it, it's literally fulfilled! But
the Stone... the Stone of this other Kingdom of our Lord and His Christ, has gone on gathering momentum and
gathering volume as it has gone on, reaching to all the nations. Well, that perhaps doesn't stir you very much, it's
so commonplace, you know it. But here we are, the Ruler of the kings of the earth, He came to that position
through the suffering of death.

For the time being, as I have said, I am leaving out that section which gives us the revelation of Jesus Christ in
person; we come to that again perhaps. Here let us note that we are now introduced at this point to two things -
firstly His victory. His victory. And that can be summed up in two or three verses: "I am the First and the Last,
the Living One, I became dead, behold I am alive forevermore and have the keys of death and of Hades". That's
His victory. The other is His character which we shall reserve for another time. Just a few minutes on this: His
victory. "I am the First and the Last". That's victory in a statement by itself! And it's important to recognize the
significance, the particular significance, of the use of that title in relation to this book.

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Here we are at the end, at the consummation of everything. Now we have come to the culmination of all things
and He declares "I was the beginning of all things". Go back to Paul's letter to the Colossians for that - in Him,
through Him, unto Him, were all things created, things in heaven, things in earth, He was before all things. "I am
the First. As I was at the beginning and as I was the Beginning of all things, I am the Last, I am the End". The end
corresponds to the beginning, it is no other, it's no other than Himself, "I am the First and the Last". That's a
TREMENDOUS statement! "I am simply gathering up all things into My hands, all things in the end are with Me.
Everything has got to answer to Me at the end". In all things He has the pre-eminence. "I am the Living One, I
became dead". Now, I want to say a word about that way of expressing in a minute. But first that again, "I am the
Living one, I became dead. I am alive unto the ages of the ages". There was a reason why the Lord Jesus said that.

You know, Nero, under whom the apostle Paul suffered and was executed, was regarded as perhaps the most
ferocious of all the Caesars up to his time. But there was one who exceeded him and that was the one under
whom John suffered, this Caesar Domitian. Do you know what was said about him? This Caesar was said to be
Nero come back from the dead. He was called Nero, "Nero Survived", raised from the dead, back again to carry
on his nefarious work. John is suffering under the one who is said to have died and risen again. Jesus takes hold
of that, right hold of that and says "I AM THE LIVING ONE, I became dead, I AM ALIVE, not for a human
tenure but unto the ages of the ages". So we can accumulate all this data, material, on this one great issue: the
absolute supremacy of the Lord Jesus.

"I am the Living One, I became dead". Note, that's really the correct translation, and He did not say "I was killed,
I was murdered, I was slain, I was put to death". He had already in His lifetime said "no man taketh it from me, I
lay it down of Myself, Mine own Self, this authority that I have received from My Father". Today as we think of all
those movements toward the cross, we can so clearly see through men and their counsels and decisions and we
can see that the thing is in His hand. He is dictating how it shall be and when it shall be. They are saying "not
this" and He is saying "yes this". "Not on the Passover" He says "Yes on the Passover". He is dictating His own
death, its time and its manner - in His hands. NOT "they took away My life" - "I laid it down of my own accord. I
became dead. I became dead." WHY? There is another great question arises at once; WHY did He Himself,
deliberately, of His own accord, of His own decision, go into death? Well, the letter to the Hebrews throws a lot of
light upon it doesn't it? That PROVED it, "He might destroy him who had the power of death, that is the devil"!
That He might deliver those who all their lifetime were in bondage through fear of death. He tasted DEATH in
the behalf of every man. That's why He became dead.

But here it is, here it is in this beautiful statement here "Unto Him that loveth us and loosed us from our sins in
His blood and made us a kingdom and priests unto His God and Father". That's why He became dead; this
mighty US - this mighty Us - Who loveth US! Christ loved the Church and gave Himself up for it. Who loving us,
Who loosed us, He might redeem us from all iniquity, Who MADE us a kingdom and priests unto His God and
Father. That's why He became dead of His own choice: for US! For you, for me, for His Church. What a mighty
US that is. That's the answer. Christ loved! Christ loosed! From death... and alive! Became dead and alive to
deliver us from death. Death is the sum total of all human sin. Death is the sum of all Satan's power. Death is the
sum of Satan's kingdom. "He plunged in His imperial strength, to cast the darkness down, He brought His trophy
up at length, the foiled usurper's crown." That's why He became dead, to do that. That's the answer. "And I have
the keys of death and of Hades". Of course keys are authority, we know that. Authority over death and of Hades.
Jesus has said "Upon this rock I will build My Church, the gates of Hades shall not prevail against it. I have the
keys of Hades". What is that? For all their lifetime in bondage through fear of death... bondage through fear of
death - that's the prison of Hades. He has plundered Hades, He has broken its gates and its bars. He has
snatched the keys from the usurper, and wears them at His own girdle and His Church is DELIVERED from that
bondage of fear! The gates of Hades shall NOT prevail against it.

It is all tremendous, but you see, you've got to place the Cross over this whole book. The Cross stands over
everything in this book because it's the book of the Lordship of Jesus Christ in every realm and therefore it is the
book of the Lamb in the throne. In the throne! The Cross is the explanation of everything.

Well, I trust you catch a vision, the revelation of Jesus Christ in this which comprehends all that follows and all
that with which you and I have to do, dear friends. I said this morning, this is the book which is introduced, or in
its very introduction, tells us that there is a blessing attached to it. What blessing do you want and do I want?
What is the greatest blessing that could come to our hearts? It would be to realize the glorious, triumphant issue
of this long, long drawn out battle in which we are, how it's going to end and to realize it's going to end in glory.

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In GLORY! It's going to end with us with Christ in the throne. To REALIZE it, not just to be informed. It doesn't
have enough wit with us to be told about it, but oh, if it could come to us as a revelation, as it came to John in
Patmos, in tribulation, in patience. Suffering... because of this same issue we have made Jesus Lord, we have put
Him in His place, we have no other Lord. All things for us are subject to Him. He is over all. And that brings,
whether world persecution or not, it brings spiritual conflict, it brings tribulation into the life. It touches us
everywhere, in our families, in our homes, in our businesses and everywhere this thing is touching us; if only, if
only we would let go something, make some compromise, let down our standard, not be so utter for Christ. We'd
have an easier time, it is possible, you can, CAN for the time being! But you cast away your crown.

That is it, to realize that in the tribulation and the patience, the suffering, and the conflict, and the pressure; the
issue, the issue is absolutely certain. Jesus is coming out on top and we're coming out with Him. If that could
really come into our hearts, the greatest blessing that could come to us... it would explain so much, it really would
explain so much. All the problems and enigmas of our lives, all those things which come because of our
relationship to this One Who is God's destined Heir of the universe... That provokes quite a lot. I say this is the
blessing of this book, to know that. Not just to understand all its mysteries and symbols but to know that. That
He IS Lord and that nothing can alter that. The Lord give us that blessing in our hearts.

Ch 03 The Character of Jesus Christ

"I turned to see the voice which spake with me. And having turned, I saw seven golden lampstands; and in the
midst of the lampstands one like unto the Son of man, clothed with a garment down to the foot, girt about at the
breasts with a golden girdle. And his head and his hair were white like wool, as white as snow; and his eyes were
as a flame of fire; and his feet like unto varnished brass, as if it had been refined in a furnace; and his voice as the
voice of many waters. And he had in his right hand seven stars: and out of his mouth proceeded a sharp two-
edged sword: and his countenance was as the sun shineth in his strength." Revelation 1:12-16.

Revelation of Jesus Christ. We have already indicated that this whole book which bears those words as its title is
gathered into one tremendous consummate issue; that of the government of this universe, heaven and earth, as
determined by God, centered in His Son Jesus Christ. This book is the revelation of the processes and progress in
the culmination of this world's history unto the final establishment of that government.

In that setting, this afternoon we were occupied with the victory of God's Son, as in this first chapter. This
evening we take this short section, these four verses which set forth the character which lies behind that victory.

It's a mighty victory. We have seen His declaration of Himself as the Living One - Who became dead but is now
alive unto the ages of the ages - sets forth the greatness of His victory. We have seen it was no small power that
was exercised and exerted by the great Roman Empire for the destruction of the Kingdom of Jesus Christ. In the
vision of that empire in the book of Daniel, it is rightly symbolized by iron. A symbol of great strength and power
to break everything. And the great strength of that, the mightiest of the empires, was directed toward and
concentrated upon, the extermination of the testimony of Jesus, which testimony was that He is Lord. That Jesus
survived the exhausting of that mighty power and triumphed over death and is alive unto the ages of the ages, is
no small testimony to the greatness of His victory.

Combined with the Roman Empire was the Jewish nation. It would take a lot of time to tell and describe
conditions of the Jewish nation in the times of the New Testament. I myself have been very deeply impressed as I
have read anew during the past week the account given by the great Jewish historian Josephus about the
wickedness of the Jews at this time. He's a Jewish historian. He says that there never was anything so utterly
wicked as the condition of the Jewish people in New Testament times. Terrible thing to say and he shows how
that was, and it is only an exposition of what the Lord Jesus meant when He said "this WICKED generation" -
this wicked generation of downright wickedness of those people. Not only in their crucifying the Lord Jesus, but
their condition behind all their religion; their moral condition - using that word in its most general sense. And
they, as we know, exhausted their malice to DESTROY the Lord Jesus and all that He represented. If Saul of
Tarsus was really their representative and agent, he himself tells us in many words how utter he was in his

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determination there should not be left a relic of Jesus of Nazareth. He persecuted this Way unto the death, both
men and women he cast into prison.

All that vicious, vehement hatred, malice, concentrated upon Jesus Christ as Lord. All that and what more?
Behind it, around it and over it Satan and his vast kingdom calling upon all their resources to quench this Light,
finish this Testimony, to blot out this Name, obliterate this Way. And He says "I am He that liveth, I became dead
but I am alive unto the ages of the ages". What a victory, what a victory! We can almost say 'is there anything left
over which He can triumph'? If He HAS done that, if our Christian faith is true, if what we declare as to the
resurrection and exaltation of Jesus Christ is true at all, it's a far, far greater and vaster thing than we have
comprehended. And that is the message here and as we have said before, that is the blessing of this book: if He
can do all that, what cannot He do? That's hope for the end. But when we have said all that about His victory and
much more that we could add to it of truth, this fact remains - the victory, the throne, the government of Christ
and the Church is based upon His essential character. It is not just objective and official, that is, it is not just
something that is done by the exercise of superior might - as might. It is something that is accomplished in virtue
of His glorious character; it rests upon that.

Here is a combination of two things which, mark you, always go together with God; the combination of power
and character, nature and strength. With God character is power and power is character. He seems to have
written this large in the universe, in nature. It almost appears that He has established it as a law that these two
things go together. You see all that God does combines these two things. You go into the alpine country; you are
on the one side impressed at the massive and awesome strength of the mountains, the terrific force, volcanic
force which heaved them up and the mighty strength that they represent as they tower over you. It's awesome!
And yet as you stay to climb their massive slopes, in their crevices and on those slopes you find the beautiful
edelweiss. The beautiful flower. The combination of strength... and beauty. Nature has done it - balanced these
two things. Come to the English countryside, you see the massive towering oak tree and nestling at its roots - the
beautiful violet. Just nature, not arranged, quite spontaneous - strength and beauty, power and character - in
balance and combination. And we could go on like that drawing upon creation for illustration. But you go back
through your Old Testament, you find in the typology and the symbolism, all that comes from heaven, this
wonderful balance of strength and character. And here it is! In all this and particularly in this passage before us,
we have God saying, "If there is to be power, dominion, victory, ascendancy, might; there has got to be goodness
and if there is goodness, that is the greatest might!" It's the nature of Christ that is set forth here which is the
foundation of His Kingdom, of His Throne.

So you turn to this description or portraiture of Him. You notice the power lying in His eyes as a flame of fire;
His voice, the voice of many waters, the sound of many waters; His mouth, out of which proceeds a sharp, two-
edged sword; His countenance, as the sun shineth in its strength. All that is the symbolism of power! We go back
again to character, His garment down to the foot, a girdle about His breasts, the whiteness of His hair and the
purity represented by the refined brass of His feet. All that speaks of the other side, it speaks of His nature, His
character.

Now it is that that we are going to be occupied with for the time at our command tonight. But may I remind you
that we are here in the presence of One Who is called "THE SON OF MAN". We ought to be duly impressed with
that. He is not here in this book called the Son of God, He is that, but for the purposes of this book, His title is
that of "The Son of Man". We are familiar with that title in the Old Testament, in the prophets: in Ezekiel, in
Daniel. And we are familiar with it in the gospels. In the gospels only, the title is used of Him eighty-five times;
no fewer. In the Old Testament as applied to the prophets, it is 'son of man', in the New Testament as applied to
Him it is THE Son of Man. What they were partially, He is absolutely. And we know that the very title itself, 'son
of man' or 'The Son of Man', is related to God's full thought for His people.

In the prophets, as we have pointed out already today, their business was the recovering of God's full thought for
His people; and so they were representative of that thought - son of man. And that very thought of God or those
thoughts of God had to be wrought into their very experience and life and history and they became the
embodiment of those thoughts, hence they were made a sign unto the people of God. And that is the essence of
this very title: Son of Man - a sign of God's thought for His people. You come to the Lord Jesus and you find that
in a full, and final and utter way, He is THE Son of Man in this sense: that He embodies to the full God's primal
conception for man. What God ever had in His mind in conceiving the humanity idea, the manhood conception
as a special and peculiar creation, that is realized and expressed in this One Whose title here just means that:

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THE Son of Man. THE One in Whom ALL God's thought AS TO MAN is realized.

We're in His presence here as you notice: "I saw one like unto the son of man" then the portrayal. We look all so
briefly, inadequately, at the features of this Son of Man.

"I turned to see and having turned I saw one like unto the son of man, clothed with a garment down to the foot."
And of course there has been a division of opinion as to what that garment was. Dr Campbell-Morgan said it was
the garment of the Governor. Other equally able expositors have said it's the garment of the Priest. I'm not at all
concerned to take sides in that matter - it doesn't trouble us which it was. What we want to get at is the meaning
of a garment at all; not what kind of a garment it was exactly, but WHY a garment at all, down to His feet.
Whatever the robe was, whether of governor or of priest, it speaks of character; for garments always did from the
beginning speak of character, they were the symbol of the man. That's true right up to date. The garments, the
dress, betray the person. I won't dwell upon that too much, it's dangerous ground! But nevertheless it's true.
Right from the first garments that ever man wore, made by God Himself, garments have always been the symbol
of the person, indicating what kind of a person, or sometimes, what the person thinks of himself or herself. That
is character. I mean, in the days of the Lord Jesus they loved to wear long garments, and they wore their
phylacteries, they pretended to be something but they were not, but that was their character; their character was
a pretense but that was the people - revealed in the way they dressed. See the point.

Here, whatever the garment was officially, undoubtedly it was symbolic of the Person. It does not say so, but I
have no doubt that in the light of things which follow in this book, that it was a white robe... it was the white
linen... that would be true of priest or of governor. And we know from this very book the white linen is the
righteous acts of the saints and we know from the Old Testament typology, the white linen garments always
spoke of the character of righteousness in the presence of God, covering the unrighteousness of man that no flesh
should appear before Him. And here, right in the very first thing, describing this Person, the Son of Man, you
have Him enfolded and enwrapped in a character of spotless purity. And it is that that gives Him His regal
position, it is His holiness, His purity. It is enough to say that and leave it.

But this robe is girt up with a golden girdle around His breasts. How full of significance! Well, a girdle is always
the symbol of strength. Gold in the Bible is always the symbol of what is precious among minerals or metals;
precious. And the breasts are always the symbols of devotion. And if you put those three things together, what a
wealth they contain. Here this One is characterized by a passionate devotion to that which is precious to God, of
pure gold. The strength of this One, the strength of this One is that He is girded with this passion for what is
precious to God. That runs right through this book, it comes right out at the other end with the City, it is an
underlying, fundamental thing, and as I repeatedly say, it is the key to the throne. His throne is established in
His character, by His character and all, ALL victory is that, where God is concerned. This is going to be a very
searching thing through this book, it's going to be a very deciding thing everywhere in the churches. We shall
meet it again when we come to the churches in the will of God. It's a deciding thing as to the rise and the fall of
the Church and the rise and the fall of individual Christians, and the rise and the fall of nations - their character.
"How much of the character and nature of Christ is there?" is going to be the deciding thing, come back to that
again. Well, there it is: the strength of devotion to what is precious unto God. Remember that; that is the secret
of spiritual victory in any life.

"His head, and His hair, were as wool, white wool, as white as wool". What is it? Well, here we have another
combination, purely of age. We get this figure in the book of Daniel and it's the "Ancient of Days" that describes
this one. You get age - if you like - eternity. It's not always true that white hair is the mark of age, but usually it is.
The symbolism is a very common one, it speaks of that which outlasts time, that which transcends time, that
which is not of time but which is of eternity. And it speaks of purity. And seeing that this is His head and His
hair, the strict and exact interpretation of the symbolism, we have the permanence, the endurance, the time
outlasting power of truth, of purity. Here are His judgments, His thoughts, His mind, and there is nothing
impure in His thoughts, nothing unclean. How exact the Word is; "white as white wool", both to doubly
emphasize the utterness of this purity and cleanness.

Dear friends, though we may not be very much enamoured of the symbolism, the truth behind all this is
tremendously important. The fact is again that His kingdom which is an everlasting kingdom, is that because His
judgments are right and because it is founded upon absolute truth. It is a mind that is freed of everything of
mixture and duplicity; what is contrary to God. The apostle Paul writing to the Philippians said "Whatsoever

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things are PURE, think on these things" that's the mind of Christ. That's the mind of a character of Christ "let
this mind be in you... whatsoever things are pure, think on these things... whatsoever things are lovely" for here it
is; that is what He is like! A mind, that is, the mind of Christ, not our mind, is something that is a very strong
thing where God is concerned. If we can only get the viewpoint of the Lord, if we can only see as the Lord sees, if
only we can get the mind of the Lord about a person or a situation; we're in a tremendously strong position. Let
me put that the other way, so much of our weakness and our failure and our breakdown is our WRONG
mindedness, isn't it like that? We've got the wrong attitude of mind, we haven't the singleness of mind for the
glory of God, we're affected by how things touch us. Well, He was never like that, He was never like that. And that
character of right judgment of absolute truth, absolute truth - was the strength and is the strength of His
government, of His kingdom.

Let these things come out of the Bible and out of this high symbolism to us as spiritual lessons, spiritual
instruction. Do you want to go on and go through and endure and abide? Do you want spiritual strength? For
that is not something that He can give you, that He can give you as from the outside. Oh, how we ask for power,
how we ask for strength... It is only something that He can do IN us; He will make us strong by making us good.
What a lot that explains of His dealings with us! So often when we ask for strength He puts us through an
experience that is going to change something in us of our character, our attitude, our mentality; that is His way.

"His eyes were as a flame of fire". Well, all we need to say here is that these eyes, symbolizing His discernment,
His discernment, His real discernment and perception and grasp of things and seeing into things and seeing
through things and arriving at RIGHT conclusions, was due to the fact that His mind is what we have said it is,
like that. You know dear friends, discernment is a tremendous thing in the Christian life. Oh, what a lot of
mistakes we make, for want of real spiritual discernment... If only, if only we had this spiritual discernment, if we
were able to perceive, to recognize, to discern, to understand the meaning of things; what a lot we would be
saved. There is a great deal of strength in spiritual discernment. There is! People who are always making
confusion and messes because they lack real discernment, they are in a state of weakness, unable to see the
meaning of things, see through, beyond appearances of what is on the outside. Because His Spirit is what it is,
His mind is what it is, He is able to rightly discern everything. Oh, we are going to come onto this when we come
to the churches, seeing through and seeing things as they are truly, no deception can come through those eyes.
No, He is in the mighty strength of clear discernment, His eyes are as a flame of fire, there is nothing but truth
there, no falsehood, no carnal-mindedness (to use Paul's phrase) therefore He can see. The pure in heart shall
SEE God. Shall see! See... What we see depends on the state of our heart; His eyes as a flame of fire were that
because of the purity of His heart.

"His feet were as varnished brass as though it had been refined in a fire". How meticulous is the description.
Well, feet simply, we know, represent a man's ways, a man's goings and a man's quests - what he's after, what
he's aiming at, and toward which he's moving; the object of his movements. That's just the symbolism of feet
everywhere in the Bible; the goings of a man. And here we have brass, varnished brass refined in a fire. Brass is
always in the Bible, as you know, the symbol of strength and the fire is always the symbol of purging. Then brass
becomes righteousness, the strength of righteousness which has come out of the fire. Righteousness, the Old
Testament says, is the girdle of His loins and the foundation of His throne. Here again, the quest, the objects, the
interests, the movements, the ways, the goings of the Lord Jesus are always PURGED ways, CLEANSED goings,
no self-interest in this - nothing but the pleasure of God. "I come to do Thy will O My God". His ways are all
tested in the fire; purged of all unworthy motives.

"His voice was as the sound of many waters". This is very beautiful. The sound of many waters! What is the
sound of many waters? Not of much water, but many waters; all coming from all directions, and this way and
that way and the other way, rivers and the rivulets are all coming, converging and blending and harmonizing.
And this one has its note and that one has its note, the other one has another note and yet in their converging
and coming together they form a beautiful harmony like a choir of many notes. The sound of many waters.
Diversity in unity, unity in diversity.

Now, you say that's all a beautiful picture and it sounds all very nice; what do you mean? Go back to your gospels
and sit and listen to the Lord Jesus or follow Him with open ears, listen to His voice and you will hear sometimes
the note of deepest sympathy and tenderness... His kindness. Where a situation calls for that note, it comes -
gentleness and kindness and sympathy and understanding - "Leave her alone, for my burial she's done this" and
many other instances of the sympathetic, understanding, kindly voice... But we dare not take the time for it all.

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But you will find sometimes there's a sharp rebuke like a clap of thunder and out they go, convicted, from the
oldest to the youngest. They've been smitten as with a flash of lightning from His mouth. There's sympathy,
there's judgment, there's condemnation... oh, there's every note in His voice, and He's a combination of them all.
His voice is the sound of many waters. You and I have heard that, sometimes we have heard His voice of
sympathy and consolation, sometimes we've heard His voice of rebuke, sometimes of exhortation and
encouragement. It varies but His is the voice as of a sound of many waters. You're going to come up against that
when you come to the seven churches, you will find there are seven notes in His octave. For the churches a
wonderful harmony, as a voice as the sound of many waters.

"And out of his mouth proceeded a sharp two-edged sword". Our letter to the Hebrews chapter four verse twelve
interprets that for us: "the word of God is quick, powerful, sharper than any two-edged sword, piercing to the
dividing of soul and spirit, joint and marrow, laying bare the thoughts and intents of the heart". Two-edged
sword - discriminating, dividing, putting things in the place to which they belong - that belongs there and that
belongs there and you're to put those things in their right place and don't confuse things and call something by a
name that does not belong to it. Dividing asunder - a sharp two edged sword. This is His character; that He
cannot have confusion and mixture and contradiction; two things that do not agree. That is the character of the
Lord Jesus and mark you, there's a great deal of spiritual strength in that. One thing that God has always hated is
mixture, is mixture: is contradiction in the same place, speaking with two voices at the same time. God hates it. If
there's one thing about God that is true it is that He is of one mind. He is perfectly clear as to what He means and
what He wants. Two-edged sword divides, puts things where they belong and there's a good deal of strength in
doing that, dear friends.

"And His countenance was as the sun shineth in its strength". Of course the countenance is the sum of all the
features isn't it? It is the expression of the person. It is possible, of course, to hide yourself behind an
expressionless countenance but in the main, generally the countenance is the betrayal of the person behind it;
the expression of the life within. And so the countenance here is the sum of all His features. When you sum up
everything and what you have to say, there is no darkness at all. There are no shadows here; it is as the sun
shineth in its strength. In Him was light - in Him was light! In Him is no darkness at all, there is no variableness
with Him, neither shadow cast by turning, by changing, by being of two minds; He is all Light, no darkness, no
shadows.

Now dear friends, we've said all this but we've got to sum it up. We have set out to show that the end of it all is
not only Christ in the place of absolute sovereignty and Lordship and Kingship and dominion, but His Church
with Him, His Church with Him. If the City means anything it is the Church with Christ enthroned! If we are to
come there, let us not make it too objective and far off, belonging to some remote or near future time, let us see
that He's at work upon this thing in us now. Paul has given it in the revelation entrusted to him, has told us that
we were foreordained to be conformed to the image of His Son. The Holy Spirit had this in view when He first
drew you and me to the Lord Jesus. And if He has meant anything in our lives at all, this is the thing that He has
been engaged upon and is engaged upon: to conform us to the image of God's Son, working into us the character
of Christ, with a view! With a view; oh, I wish I could remember this always, I wish you could remember it
always, when He's trying to do something inside in the life, in the nature, in the character to change it, when He's
dealing with something which is not Christ and hammering it and battering it and shattering it; giving us an
awful time because of what we are in ourselves. It is not just for destruction, He is seeking to make room and way
for the Lord Jesus in our characters! That out of this shall come something that is more like the Lord of patience,
of love, of thoughtfulness and generous impulse and all that that is Christ-like, to bring that in. Ah, but not that
THAT is an end in itself... because it's that kind of person and that kind of Church that is going to be His
instrument of government in the ages to come. Christ loved the Church and gave Himself for it that He might
present the Church to Himself, a glorious Church not having spot or wrinkle or any such thing. That is the
governmental vessel and instrument at the end, it's a thing of character and its character is taken from the Lord
Jesus. The whole thing begins with the Church. When we have said that, we have just got to the end of the
contemplation of Himself personally. As the Lord leads us on in this, we shall see how all this is brought down to
the seven churches and that everything there is tried, tested and dealt with on the basis of this personal
portraiture of the Lord Jesus.

Now does this throw some light upon what He's doing? All that He is allowing in our lives and all that He is
working at in us... why is it? If we suffer we shall reign, and it is through the suffering, the tribulation that we're
going to come to the throne and through much tribulation we shall enter the kingdom, and come to reign

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together with Him. It is necessary for us to see the Lord Jesus - the revelation of Jesus Christ, that we should see
Him.

I suggest to you, I urge upon you, dear friends, that your constant and earnest prayer shall be: "Show me Christ.
Let me see the Lord Jesus, not objectively in some vision, but by the Holy Spirit let me see what Christ is. May He
make me more and more uncomfortable as to myself but then ever remind me that the work of the Holy Spirit is
to reveal Him and then make me like Him. For we shall be like Him as we see Him as He is." That must be our
prayer.

May the vision of Christ break upon our hearts and see His glory and His beauty; see what God desires and is
working at where we are concerned and all again, all again, with the Throne in view. For whether it be a literal
throne, whatever the reigning means, I think we are learning just now that government and ascendancy is a
spiritual thing, it's a spiritual thing. This Stone that wrecked the Roman Empire was cut out without hands. That
simply means that the kingdom of Christ is a spiritual kingdom, not made by man, it's a much more powerful
thing than all the kingdoms and dominions that man made whether they be Nebuchadnezzar or the Caesars; a
spiritual kingdom is a far more powerful thing than all [kingly] systems. That is the truth that you and I have got
to learn; the transcendent importance and power of spiritual life and spiritual character.

Ch 04 The Message of Jesus Christ

"Revelation of Jesus Christ which God gave him..." Revelation 1:1.

"John, to the seven churches which are in Asia..." Revelation 1:4.

"What thou seest write in a book and send it to the seven churches, unto Ephesus, and unto Smyrna, and unto
Pergamum, and unto Thyatira, and unto Sardis, and unto Philadelphia and unto Laodicea." Revelation 1:11.

"To the angel of the church in Ephesus write: These things saith he that holdeth the seven stars in his right hand,
he that walketh in the midst of the seven golden lampstands: I know thy works, and thy toil and patience, and
that thou canst not bear evil men, and didst try them which call themselves apostles, and they are not, and didst
find them false; and thou hast patience and didst bear for my name's sake, and hast not grown weary. But I have
this against thee, that thou didst leave thy first love. Remember therefore from whence thou art fallen, and
repent and do the first works; or else I will come to thee, and will move thy lampstand out of its place, except
thou repent. But this thou hast, that thou hatest the works of the Nicolaitans, which I also hate. He that hath an
ear, let him hear what the Spirit saith to the churches. To him that overcometh, to him will I give to eat of the tree
of life, which is in the Paradise of God." Revelation 2:1-7.

We have been led at this time to be occupied with revelation or the unveiling of Jesus Christ. We began by taking
note of the fact that this book which has that as its title and which has that as its very comprehensive content, is
the book which reveals Him inclusively, comprehensively as coming forth at last to settle all those issues which
have been underlying the spiritual conflict of this universe. All through the ages there has been a mighty conflict
in process. This earth has felt its repercussions; all that has been taking place here has been related to a great
conflict in the heavens. And the issue which has been in all that long, drawn out and many sided conflict is none
other than the issue of God's intention as to the government of this earth from heaven. His purpose, in the first
place, concerning His Son as the appointed Lord of lords, King of kings, supreme Ruler in heaven and earth. And
in the second place, the eternally chosen or elected vehicle of that government, what we now know as the Church.
These two things as two parts of One have been back of, and the occasion of, all this tremendous swirl and welter
of conflict through the ages. And this book is the revelation of Jesus Christ coming out to settle that issue once
and for all and finally. And in this book we see the processes of that settlement - how it is headed up, in different
connections and relationships - a steady, progressive movement until at last... the kingdoms of this world are the
kingdom of our Lord and His Christ. The issue is settled and He is established with His Church as forever in an
unchallengeable supremacy. Well, that is the revelation of Jesus Christ in very few words.

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In our former three sessions we have been considering the introduction to that. First, in noting how everything in
this book is consummatory. It gathers up everything from the beginning of the Bible all the way through. In its
some four hundred allusions to the Old Testament, it is very comprehensive and quite clearly it is the bringing of
all that to consummation. And then we went on to contemplate the two aspects of the Lord Jesus as presented in
chapter one, as foundational to all that is to follow. First of all, His personal victory: "I am He that liveth, I
became dead, behold I am alive unto the ages of the ages, I have the keys of death and of Hades." His victory...
And we spent quite a lot of time seeing what that victory was and how it was. And then we went to the second
aspect of this foundation: His person, that is His character. This matchless description of Himself which we have
in chapter one... and we saw that it is upon the basis not only of what He has done, but of what He is in His
intrinsic character, nature and worth that He has the right to decide anything - to judge either Church or nations
or the devil himself. His authority is based upon what He is, His real character. And that is always a law with
God; the power rests upon what a person is more than what a person does. With God the matter of authority, of
dominion, of government, or of any kind of trust or responsibility, always depends upon the character of the
person or the persons in view. With the Lord Jesus that is perfectly evident that He triumphed because of what
He was. And therefore He is in the right of judgment of all others because no one can ever point at anything in
Him that Satan could encamp upon and say, 'That's a contradiction'.

Well, again, we spent a long session on the character of the Lord Jesus and the challenge of that character to
everything. But when we have said all that we can say, and a great deal more could be said about chapter one; all
that is but preparatory to what follows. It is as though the Spirit of God had laid down a foundation for
everything now that is going to transpire. As though He had said, "Now this is our ground for everything and of
everything; it is upon that and from that that we move to everything else".

You notice that the first movement of the Spirit, here described symbolically as the seven spirits of God (the
meaning for that which we may consider at some time) is the Holy Spirit undoubtedly in sevenfold expression. It
is the Holy Spirit moving in the first place toward the Church, to deal with the Church inclusively and
comprehensively upon the basis that He Himself has laid down. That is a thing that we must bear in mind and
which will become more and more apparent as we go on.

Now, if chapters two and three - which contain this first movement to the Church - if these chapters have any
relation to our own time, then, dear friends, surely with them we are in the presence of the most solemn and the
most momentous issues. What is taken up in the first place where the Church is concerned is nothing less than
the very testimony of Jesus Himself in this universe. The Testimony of Jesus... that IS the supreme and the
ultimate thing for all history and for all realms. We've seen what that testimony is - the absolute Lordship of
Jesus Christ in every realm. That is the Testimony of Jesus. And that matter is the first thing that governs the
Spirit in moving toward the Church. We see that more fully as we go on. Then of course there follows quite
clearly by the patent conclusion that has to be drawn, the Church's responsibility for that Testimony. It is not
some thing that is detached and unrelated, abstract and apart in itself. The Church was chosen in Christ Jesus
before the foundation of the world to be the vessel and the vehicle of the Testimony of Jesus. And so, what is here
in the second place is the great and honourable responsibility of the Church in relation to the greatest issue in
this universe; the divinely appointed place for Jesus Christ in the whole system of things. And these two things
lead on, as is made perfectly clear, to the ultimate government of the world FROM heaven, BY Christ,
THROUGH the Church. Those three things are not small things. If that is what is here, then I am justified in
saying that when we begin with this first movement of the Spirit to the Church, we are faced with the most
solemn and momentous matters. And taking it (and with all our human insignificance, smallness and weakness,
all that we would not be and are not that we would be, we are a few of the Church, therefore we must not think
too objectively at this time) but when it says "the Spirit saith to the churches", the Spirit is speaking to us here in
this place concerning these very matters in this time.

Well, what is here then, is for the enlightenment of the Church as to the meaning of things that happen. Dear
friends, things are happening. And things are going to happen. That is what it says right at the beginning. Things
are happening and things are going to happen, we are in the midst of these happenings now. There are
movements of tremendous significance, very portentous in this creation with an impact of spiritual forces upon
this earth, and a lot of things are happening and a lot of developments are in process. We shall see more and
more of these things happening. The important thing is that we understand the MEANING of these happenings.

It is a tremendous thing to understand what is happening to us, conscious that things are happening to us, they

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are happening to us spiritually, in our own spiritual experience and life; conscious of being taken into and
through things that are difficult to bear and to understand. We don't know what is it that's happening to us; why
are we involved in this... this stress, this pressure, this strain, this tension, this conflict? If we are really God's
people going on with God, putting Christ in His place, we're involved in something; every one of us personally. It
strikes upon us individually in some way or ways. It strikes upon every relationship of our lives, it strikes upon
our families, and upon our homes, upon our businesses, it strikes upon our relationships with other believers, it
strikes upon the whole question of spiritual fellowship, it strikes upon the work of the Lord, it strikes upon the
local companies. Yes, things are happening, it's like that, we're involved in something.

There are big spiritual movements afoot and I repeat it is of TREMENDOUS importance that the people of God
know the MEANING of what is happening; WHY we are passing this way, WHAT the Lord is trying to do with us,
what the Lord MEANS by what is taking place. Yes, it's tremendously important that we have understanding of
these things. These things will happen. That is what is here in these messages. The Lord is moving in, so to speak,
and is bringing every thing to some particular issue. That's a very impressive thing you know, that the Lord
seems to be concentrating upon one specific issue!

I don't know how you felt when I read again that first message to the Church at Ephesus. I'll tell you how I have
felt as I have read it, I've read it: "I know thy works, thy toil, thy toil and thy patience, that thou canst not bear
evil men, and didst try them which call themselves apostles, and they are not, thou didst find them false..."
Remember this same writer John, who had the responsibility in the church at Ephesus, had written in his letter
"beloved, try the spirits, for there are many false prophets gone abroad". Try them! They had done it. "Thou hast
tried them that call themselves apostles, and they are not, thou didst find them false. Thou hast patience and
didst bear for My Name's sake and hast not grown weary..." "What more do You want Lord? What more can You
ask for? If You want more than that, You're very exacting. What can You expect of any people more than that,
what are You asking for?" Is that how you feel? You have to react like that in order to get to the heart of things.
"All that Lord! All that! We've given You all that, You've got all that, and that means a lot, you know! It means a
lot for any church in a day of persecution especially, as in this case. You've got all that; what more do You want,
what more can You have? And with all that, You come back and say, with all that, 'I'm on the point of removing
your lampstand out of its place, there's something, with all that, which not being present, does not justify My
preserving you as a vessel.'" That's terrible isn't it in one way? That's searching, that would drive us to our knees.
WHAT IS IT, that with all that, is essential to our continuation as a vessel of the Lord?

We'll have to come back to that before we are finished. I say that it's important that we understand why such
people can be dealt with by the Lord in condemnation, yes in correction, with an effort by encouragement and
confirmation to get that something else; that essential. Dear friends, there is one thing that surely is such a
contemplation and consideration will bring home to you and to me: that is that the Lord is never satisfied with
the comparative. He must have the absolute. The Lord will never ultimately, ultimately settle down to accept
something good, something good. He's going to have the best. A church may be good in many respects, a group of
the Lord's people may have many commendable things, that even the Lord commends, but in the final analysis,
His attitude is, "A good thing, with many good things is not what I set out to have. At the beginning I set out to
have something not good, but the best. Not comparative, but absolute. Not partial, but complete." That, I say, is
the conclusion to which we are driven if we read this right; we have to decide that.

Now then, here we have to answer one question; do these messages to the seven churches in Asia have an
application to the Church today? Of course there are these schools of interpretation to which I have referred
earlier. I'll not even mention their technical names, but there is the one school that holds and concludes that
what is here in this book was confined to the time of its being written, it was just a matter of contemporary
history, it had only to do solely with the churches in Asia as they were at that time, and all this was contemporary
history. Very well, if so, it may be interesting to read it, to know what happened and how things happened; but
you don't get over all your difficulties that way.

There is the next school that interprets all this as having commenced in apostolic times, in late apostolic times,
and been spread over to the time of the coming of the Lord, that is, that all these seven churches are like seven
phases of history which fill up the big gap between the two comings of the Lord. Alright, we are not going to
argue about that. And then there is the third school which holds that it all belongs to the end, to the end of the
age and afterward, all this is going to come up as the day of the Lord draws near and going to be all cleared up
and settled in the last phase of this age and then what follows afterward.

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I would say here, that not by way of convenience or compromise, I'm thinking that they all hold truth, they all
hold truth and they all hold error - or if that is too strong a word - they all hold weaknesses and flaws. But I'm not
going to discuss them, that is not the point at all. What I'm after is this: if this is the word of the Lord, if this has
come from God, if this is the word of the Holy Spirit, you can confine it to no particular time. It ranges ALL time
in the principles which it embodies.

You are not dealing here finally and ultimately and conclusively with anything that belongs to any one fragment
of time. You're dealing with the thoughts of God which govern ALL times. And wherever and whenever you have
those things that are found in these churches which are condemned by the Lord; at any time in history they're
still condemned - condemnation does not belong to any one place or one time. They are principles of universal
application. And where you find, and whenever you find that which the Lord here commends and is seeking to
have, that is an eternal something which compasses all time! And I hold that as the answer to all interpretations;
that we are not dealing with mere history, and localities and phases in time; we are dealing with eternal
principles. And I am certain that that is the sum of the significance of this book. As we have pointed out, it goes
RIGHT back to the eternal counsels of God and what took place THEN and He decided. And what has been
disputed and challenged and fought over through all the ages and now on the threshold of the ages of the ages -
it's THAT that is being settled as much in Ephesus as anywhere else. And the same everywhere else as in
Ephesus. These are no issues for some period or some place; we are in it as much as ever Ephesus in apostolic
times was in it. This is to us, because the word of the Lord is forever! He speaks and when He speaks He
expresses an eternal mind and a universal mind.

Well now, this book clearly compasses all time - past, present and what there remains of the future. And it does
so in one inclusive respect: this issue of the utterness, the utterness - not the comparativeness, not the
partialness - the utterness of the place of the Lord Jesus. That's the issue, and that was the issue for Ephesus, no
doubt about it. We'll see that as we look into this message.

You see, it is the full revelation of Jesus. The FULL revelation of Jesus. This is no partial revelation of Him, He's
here in fullness; and THAT'S the challenge. Churches, times, are not being challenged on something about Jesus,
some, even true part of Jesus; the challenge is upon the fullness of Christ, the FULLNESS of Christ - that's the
issue. And that is where we are in this book. And so I repeat for you, certainly that this book holds principles for
all time.

Now then, to Ephesus. He is heading up, we have said, to a final conclusion all these outstanding questions and
controversies through the ages. He's heading them up at last, saying "Now we are going to settle this and settle it
forever." And where does He begin? He begins with the Church. Rightly so! It's in the right order of God to begin
this with the Church. He cannot pass to the nations and call them to account until He has dealt with the Church.
He cannot even dispossess the evil powers of their place and cast them out until He has dealt with the Church.
Tremendous principle involved in that. Without giving mystical interpretation to this and this is not my intention
at all because I believe this is historic and by descent, nevertheless the principle does apply in this way; that you
and I will never see the evil powers and the evil one cast out of our realm while there is something wrong with us
before the Lord. Isn't it true? If he has some rightful foothold in us; no hope of his being cast out. You've got to
take the ground from him before you can do that. That is true in principle. In dealing with any life where Satan
has really got power, you've got to get down to know WHY he has got the power in that life, that there is
something there that is of himself. It's got to be removed before that life can be saved. That is the meaning of our
Lord's own words "The prince of this world cometh to me and hath nothing in me; hence the prince of this world
is cast out". See the basis. It's like that.

And that is what is here: how can you deal with the world in judgment or with the great kingdom of Satan which
will be dealt with in the third place, until the Church is put right? Because presently it will be the accuser of the
brethren who is cast down, but that will not happen until the ground of his accusation has been dealt with in the
brethren. You got that? His is not official power, his is not just objective power, his is spiritual power. His
strength and his hold rests upon a condition, a condition. "Simon, Simon, Satan hath obtained thee by asking
that he may sift thee as wheat but I have prayed for thee, when thou art turned again strengthen thy brethren..."
WHY does Satan have his request granted, to sift Simon Peter as wheat... and he did it, mark you, he did it very
thoroughly. Why? Because the Lord saw there was something in Simon Peter that had got to BE sifted that Satan
had a right over. And so the Lord dealt with that, and you have an authoritative Simon Peter after that, a man in

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spiritual ascendency indeed, who cares for neither men nor devils. That was not the original Simon. You see the
working of this law; power rests upon character.

And so, if the Church is God's eternally chosen vessel for the administration of the kingdom of God by Jesus
Christ, it's got to come to a spiritual position which justifies that government, that control. Hence the Lord
MUST begin with and be thorough and exact with the Church and not just accept good things, but sift down and
sift down. So the ultimate issue is bound up with these messages, no less an issue than that that we have called,
dear friends, we have called, (the wonder and amazement of it, it has perhaps by familiarity lost some of its
impress upon us): called into fellowship with Jesus Christ to take the place that the prince and principalities and
powers and world rulers of this darkness now hold. Not so difficult to understand if you think about it... this
world is governed spiritually. No doubt about that. It's a spiritual government that's behind all that's happening
here. Even men who make no profession whatever of being spiritual, even in any particular sense Christian;
never give us anything to indicate that they are born again people and know the Lord... nevertheless they see.
They see through, and they know that there are forces of evil behind the movements in this world. They say, they
speak of it as "that evil thing, that evil thing"; they know. And so it is. Back of all this there is spiritual
government of this world, "the world rulers of this darkness" what a rich full phrase that is. Where's it coming
from? Principalities and powers and hosts of wicked spirits in the heavenlies.

The ultimate vision of God's purpose realized is the Church in the symbolic presentation of the new Jerusalem,
heavenly City, taking THAT place, occupying THAT place. So difficult to move in our minds from a literal
symbolism to a spiritual meaning... That's what it means! Church is a heavenly body, with a heavenly calling, to
occupy a heavenly position for heavenly government with Christ in the ages to come. And if I have not misread
my Bible, that is what the Church is called to and that is what we are called to. Now, you cannot have such a
calling and such a vocation, such a divine intention, without the Lord being very exact. VERY exact! And, as I say
again, being unprepared to accept what is comparative.

Well, here we have the seven messages and I haven't got to Ephesus yet. But here we have then the sevenfold
symbolism and representation and it's that we must note first of all. Seven churches in Asia. Yes, but there were
plenty MORE churches in Asia besides these seven! All the churches in Asia are not mentioned when you've
mentioned these seven. Are the others alright, they did not need to be mentioned, nothing wrong with them,
they're alright; is that what it means? Why select these? Why select just seven? Well, because seven is always a
representative number, that's all. Seven is the number which symbolizes spiritual completeness. It represents
spiritual completeness or fullness. And so seven here selected are just lifted out, so to speak, to be representative
of all others and the whole Church and what the Lord says to the seven He says to the whole. It is here a
representation of the whole Church - that is all that is meant by selecting seven - to embody a complete
expression of spiritual principles. Is that clear? If that is true, then it's more than for Asia, it IS the whole Church
and what was in Asia, inside of Asia in these seven, is only taken as a kind of sounding board or platform for the
Church universal and all time.

These are united in the right hand of Him that walks up and down in the midst of the golden lampstands. United
in His right hand, "Who holdeth in his right hand", you notice "who HOLDETH in his right hand the seven".
Well, the right hand is another symbolic idea, it's the place firstly of honour and then of authority and then of
strength. He holds... all there in His right hand, in His authority, in His strength. The word 'hold' as used here or
'holdeth' is a very strong word in the Greek; different from other words which mean just 'to have', here it's what
we might call 'to have a grip'; He's got a grip on this. He is in charge, in possession. He has not let go what He
intended here, He is not regarding this loosely, carelessly, indifferently, weakly. This whole matter of the
Testimony of the Church and the churches is with Him something very definite, very positive, He holds in His
right hand for His honour.

The golden lampstands... the golden lampstands; that is essentially a divine idea. And as we, I think, earlier said,
gold in the Old Testament is always the symbol of that which is most precious amongst metals. You speak of gold
there; you always have the idea of value, of preciousness, of something that counts. Here it's in the churches that
which is precious to Him. That which is precious to God. That which is of intrinsic value. That which is
incorruptible. We've tried to set this forth in a fuller way in a book, "The Gold of the Sanctuary" but that is it.
What is He after, what is His thought about the Church and the churches, what is His thought about us as
companies of the Lord's people; what is it? His thought is that there is where we are - or there ought to be where
we are - something of transcendent preciousness to Himself and to the Father. Something of real value; REAL

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value. It's that that He's after.

These symbolic representations of lampstands of gold is simply this - here and there in the intention of God shall
be a representation and an embodiment of that which is supremely precious to God. If it's like that, if it's like
that, well of course that will explain a very great deal why the enemy would like the fine gold to become dim, why
the tremendous conflict for the PURITY of any corporate expression of the Church - its purity. To corrupt, to
corrupt - it's one of the things the Lord is dealing with in the churches - to corrupt, to spoil and mar the fine gold,
to rob the Lord of the preciousness. Oh, let us be very much given to this, brethren and sisters; see to it that so far
as we are concerned, we take this responsibility. I am not one of those who can conclude that the angels of the
churches are the single ministers of the church; I don't believe that because it contradicts so much that is in the
New Testament. But I believe that the angel of the church is simply the principle or the focal point of
responsibility. We are ALL responsible people in the Church and we're all called to take responsibility for the
Church and so I say the Lord help us every one to take responsibility where we are and where we are concerned,
to see that there is something precious for the Lord, that our gatherings and our companies are not just
preaching places, teaching places with a lot of truth and head knowledge of divine things... but really in character
there is something very precious to the Lord - it could be said that there is something there that is very precious
to the Lord. If that were spoiled, if that were lost, something of real value to the Lord would go. It MUST be like
that dear friends, very practical, but you see this is what the Lord is after: the intrinsic value, not the comparative
value, not the size of things at all, not what is external but the INTRINSIC value, the gold... refined in the fire.
That which is PRECIOUS TO THE LORD.

Seven golden lampstands. Lampstands, that is a better translation than candlesticks because a candlestick burns
itself away or the candle burns itself away. The lamp, it burns by a supply, an endless supply from outside of
itself. However, that by the way, the function of the lampstand, that's the point; what is it? Of course, obviously,
it is LIGHT, by the Holy Spirit. Let's qualify that. It is light, but it is light by the power, the illumination, the
energy, the resource of the Holy Spirit. A Holy Spirit testimony in every place where there is a company, small or
large, of the Lord's people. LIGHT in that place!

I cannot emphasize the importance of this enough although it seems SO obvious. But this ought to really concern
our hearts, really be a burden on our hearts, that where we are, as the Lord's people together, however few,
people can see Christ. People can really SEE Christ because we are there. Isn't that searching and challenging...
Just the matter of seeing the Lord Jesus. I've seen a lot of people going to meetings in a certain place, hearing
them sing and wondering what's happening amongst them, but you meet those people and you meet more than
those people. If you have any idea of God at all or what God ought to be like, if you have any information as to
God's character and nature, you see it in those people. You meet it with those people, you've got it right in your
very presence, that's where it is. That is the essential function of the Lamp; it is not an ornament, it is not a
[code] to get something, it is not a form and a shape; it's a living Life, a living History. That is what the Church is
here for and the churches are but local representations of the Church. It is that there, where the Lord's people
are, that is where what is Christ is found. Just what is Christ! Yes, these are the seven golden lampstands.

I must stop there I think, before we come to Ephesus after all, but that is enough to search our hearts. It begins to
show us, it begins to lead us to this thing that the Lord cannot do without, He cannot do without. With all the
works, the labour, the patience, and all the conscientiousness, and integrity and all the hatred of evil men, and all
the testing of people's professions and judging whether things are right and wrong, with all that, there's some
intrinsic value which is more than all and without which the Lord cannot be satisfied and the vessel is not
justified in its continuing. Very solemn thought, that is.

May the Word this afternoon provoke us to this and I would close here, this part, by saying again that as with
Ephesus, so with us all - there can be no substituting of something good for the best. I'm sure that searches us
here in this place. There may be a lot of good things, we may be wanting a lot of good things and doing a lot of
good things but remember there is a FULL thing for which God brought us into being. A full thing for which He
brought us into being, and He will never, never allow anything less than that to pass with Him. He'll hold to that
and ask: "Why did I bring you into being? This or that, something else... quite good, yes, nothing wrong with that
at all... quite good, BUT... is that all, IS that all?" That's His interrogation here. "Repent and do the first works".
And we shall have more light on this as we actually look into this message to the Church in Ephesus. The Lord
hold our hearts.

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Ch 05 Christ's Message to Ephesus

Now I think we can tackle this matter of Ephesus. We've been marching round Ephesus so far, now we try to get
inside. I'll just read a part of the message, the second chapter, the book of the Revelation: "These things saith he
that holdeth the seven stars in his right hand, he that walketh in the midst of the seven golden lampstands: I
know thy works, and thy toil and patience, and that thou canst not bear evil men, and didst try them which call
themselves apostles, and they are not, and didst find them false; and thou hast patience and didst bear for my
name's sake, and hast not grown weary. But I have this against thee, that thou didst leave thy first love.
Remember therefore from whence thou art fallen, and repent and do the first works; or else I will come to thee,
and will move thy lampstand out of its place, except thou repent."

So what we have to do, seek the Lord's help to do, is to get right to the heart of that message and find out what
that thing was and is, upon which everything turned. For, as we have seen, the continuance of this vessel as
serving the Lord's purpose did not rest upon a number of quite good and commendable things but it hung upon
one thing and that is called the first love - "thy first love". And we are going to ask the question and seek in some
degree to answer it: what is first love?

May I say here before I go on with that, that it is not my thought or expectation to make anything like an
exhaustive study of these messages. Indeed I do not know whether I shall deal with all of them. But whatever we
do, we shall seek to get right to the heart of the message and find out exactly what it is that is THAT expression of
Christ which is so vital and so full of consequence as to make this whole matter of continued ministry into a
crisis. For there's no doubt about it, that we're in the presence of crisis when we are here with these messages.
There's a real upshot of a very ultimate and utter character bound up with these messages. We want to find out
what it is that carries so much with it and means so much to the Church and to the Lord.

I have said, THAT expression of Christ; here I ought to spend time in again approaching this but I'll do no more,
for I've had a hint that I'm putting too much in, or trying to. But it is perfectly clear to the simplest reader that it
is that portrait of the Lord Jesus in chapter one that is spread over these seven messages. You probably have
noticed that something out of that description of the Lord Jesus is used in the introduction to every message.
There is only one slight change and that is to Philadelphia where instead of "who hath the keys of death and of
Hades" the change is "who hath the keys of David". With that exception or change, every message contains
something taken out of the description of the Lord Jesus "He that..." and then you have something from the full
portrait and presentation of Christ, clearly implying that it is THAT which is of Christ which is governing in every
case, all round, and everywhere, every time. It's something vital of Christ that's at issue. That is the important
thing to note.

Now come to Ephesus. Of course Ephesus was the mother church of Asia. We know that to be so because it is
said by Paul's three years there in Ephesus, "ALL Asia heard the word, both Jew and Greek" and it was the
mother church. And in the introduction, the message to Ephesus, the Lord describes Himself as "he that holdeth
the seven stars... and walketh in the midst of the seven golden lampstands..." Ephesus is inclusive of all. Ephesus
is comprehensive. And so what is said to Ephesus is not just said to Ephesus alone, it's to Asia.

It is quite comprehensive this message. And as we are able to put our finger upon this vital matter right at the
heart of things, I'm sure without my pointing it out, we shall see that it is a matter that is in no sense exclusively
local or of a particular period. It is something that is ever the peril of the people of God.

So we return and say, what is this thing called 'thy first love'? For the answer of course, we have to or should, go
back to the great letter of Paul which now bears the name "the letter to the Ephesians". We know it was the letter
to more churches than Ephesus but that was one of the churches, perhaps the first one which had a name put on
it in its circulation. We can, for our purpose, speak of it as the letter to the Ephesians. And if you call to mind the
content of that letter, you will remember that it has a very great deal in it about love. Chapter 2, verse 4: "For his
great love wherewith he loved us" chapter 5:2: "Walk in love as Christ also loved us" chapter 5:25: "As Christ
loved the church and gave himself for it" chapter 3:17: "Rooted and grounded in love" chapter 3:19: "The breadth

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and the length and the height and the depth, the knowledge-surpassing love of Christ". It's not a long letter so far
as compass of words is concerned, but what IMMENSE statements those are! What a tremendous love is
represented there!

Yes, Ephesus was the church which had been given a ministry and revelation of love; the knowledge-surpassing
love. And Ephesus had responded to it! Ephesus had responded to it, there's no doubt about it. Read chapters
nineteen and twenty of the book of the Acts and see the response that they made to that love and to the man who
had brought the knowledge of that love to them. As he bade them farewell, they knelt down together, he prayed
and they wept much at his departure. It's all a scene of divine love reciprocated.

Ephesus in a very real sense embodied love, from God and returning to God; from Christ to Christ. Yes, that's all
very true. But you've got to add another word alongside of that to be able to arrive at the meaning of this 'their
first love' and it's the other word which has the largest place in the letter to the Ephesians and it's the word
'grace'. Grace! I'll not take the time to give you all the nine references or mentions of grace in that letter, but
grace, grace is everywhere. Grace is running though it all, it's all grace! WHY was there such a response to the
love of God? Because they recognized and were fully alive to the fact of how GREAT GRACE there MUST be for
SUCH people to be loved in such a way!

This first love is no sentimental thing. We talk about first love... a good deal of sentiment bound up with that
phrase as often used. No, this is not something sentimental. This is a quality of love. The Lord help me to show
you that quality of this love.

The Lord loved Israel of old. Oh, how the prophets declared that love, how the Lord made known His love for
that people, there's no doubt about it; the Lord loved Israel. But Israel all too soon lost the sense of the infinite
condescension of God to love them. The infinite condescension of God in CHOOSING them from amongst all
peoples of the earth. And all too soon Israel allowed themselves to feel that THEY were something, and worthy of
that love, and they became proud and they took the love for granted. THE sin of Israel was just that. In the end,
well, it was just that, THAT; THEY were the people, THEY were the people! Yes! THEY merited this, THEY were
worthy of this, THEY were something to take account of, they WERE the people. [?] All of them. That's how it
came to be, that's how it came to be with Israel, and for THAT very reason, the covenant was broken and the
Gentiles were brought in their place.

And do you notice about the Gentiles... when the apostle turned to the Gentiles, when the message went to the
Gentiles, you always, you invariably have this most wonderful thing that you can think of - that WE should be
allowed into this! Never was anything heard of like this; that Gentiles, the heathen, the people whom Israel called
'the dogs', brought right in, right into the family and given all the privilege of sons. Most marvellous thing! It was
the TREMENDOUS APPRECIATION of divine love!

Did you hear our brother's prayer tonight, he might have known what I was going to say, first love, first love, first
love. Well, in this case you see, it was like this, it was like this. Here is a wife. Here is a bride. The Church is the
bride of Christ, not saying, "He's lucky to have ME for a wife, I'm quite worthy of Him, He ought to be very
thankful to have such a wife as I am". But no, "It is the most amazing thing that He EVER looked at me at all!
That EVER He should have given me a FIRST thought let alone a second thought. I can NEVER explain it,
NEVER understand that! I'll never be able for all eternity to know why He thought of ME, let alone loved me and
gave Himself for me". You see, that's the spirit of the Church, and that was the spirit of the Gentiles when the
Jews just took everything for granted. It all became so common place with them... all that God had given to them
and shown to them, well, there was nothing now very wonderful about that. It lost its lustre, its glory, its wonder,
its amazement; so commonplace now... They could do as they liked with it, take it or leave it.

But not so the Gentiles, see them in the house of Cornelius, my word what openness of heart! See them in
Philippi, what openness of heart, how they just drink it in there. See them in Thessalonica, as Paul said "you
received the word not as the word of man but as the word of God". Received it! Whenever you move outside of
Israel you've got an intense appreciation, a TREMENDOUS wonder and, coming back to Ephesus, come back to
Ephesus - what have you got here in Ephesus? You have this: "not a few of them that practiced curious arts
brought their books together and burned them in the sight of all and they counted the price of them and found it
fifty thousand pieces of silver". That's appreciation, that's appreciation, there's nothing commonplace there.
That's first love, dear friends, that's first love.

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The peril is, even in your labour and in your patience and in your conscientiousness and your sincerity and all
these works and lose that - the glory and wonder and amazement of being saved at all has been lost. And all this
marvellous revelation that God has given as to the Church's election, calling, vocation, destiny - what is called the
eternal purpose - you can hear it without a thrill. You can have it all and it does not stir you to the profoundest
gratitude and worship; it's all so commonplace... so familiar with it... It's lost its wonder. THAT'S the heart of the
message, that's the heart of the message! I say that's the peril of the Church at all times. God has given so much,
we begin to make it or allow it to be commonplace - "oh, we've heard that before, we know all about that, you
can't tell us anything that we don't know in that matter, we've got it all, we've got it all" and we are not on our
faces before God in the presence of it saying "AMAZING wonder, AMAZING wonder that ever I should have a
place in that"!

"Consider from whence thou art fallen". The mighty price of their earthly things became as nothing, NOTHING,
when they saw the Lord Jesus! They brought all those things of value to men and in this world by which they had
laid such great store, yes a great price, as things of this world go. And they burnt them in the sight of all "That's
rubbish! We've seen JESUS!" and not until you've seen Jesus does everything else become tawdry and worthless
and no greater value than to go up in smoke.

To see Him... Oh, the revelation of Jesus Christ ought not to be a teaching, a truth, an interpretation, a book; it
ought to be a WORSHIP. "And when I saw Him, I fell at his feet as one dead". Have you ever seen Jesus to bring
you down like that? Have you ever seen what He has given to you to the point of making you say 'it's the most
wonderful thing man could ever think of that I, I, should be given that, that I should have a place in that'? Do you
see how we need to be recovered? Don't let us blame Ephesus, this is OUR constant enemy, it's my constant
enemy. My continuous handling of these things through the years... always, always dealing with these matters
and ministering them... my abiding enemy is familiarity and association with it all as with truth, as with truth; to
lose the wonder. And it IS wonderful! And dear friends, that's your peril, when you continuously and repeatedly
hear it, it would be as a song that has lost its enchantment, this tale that is true, a familiar story; yes, a wonderful
story, but never bowing us before God in worship. That is our peril. That is first love.

And now you can see that you may have a lot of things and not that. A lot of good things. Oh, it isn't that you're
all bad, or we're all bad, and there's nothing good to be said about us at all... there is a lot of devotion and there's
a lot of labour, a lot. Yes, but, but what He is looking for is that TRUE heart appreciation of HIMSELF, what He
has done, and what He has given. We move into this book and you find that you move into a realm of worship:
"unto Him that loveth us, loosed us from our sins with his own blood, made us, made US, a kingdom and priests
unto His God". WHAT can you say? Only: to HIM be the glory, to Him be the glory! You move into chapters four
and five and that's where you are - a Church in heaven - a worshipping Church in the true and full appreciation of
the Lord.

Now, that's not overloading you in matter, but it is putting upon us a very great responsibility. I believe, dear
friends, that this is just the word the Lord would say to us all at this time. And I'm quite content to leave it there
tonight. Having conference after conference, conference after conference... if you saw my office you would see a
stack halfway up my own stature of reports of conferences over the years. You have to ask: with all that has been
given, the volumes... the volumes that have been given through the years; how much worship has it produced?
How much of all that are we alive to, as to what the Lord has given? But please don't think that I'm making this
personal, I'm only illustrating what I mean. What we, who are SO privileged, not here only, we the Church in our
time, who have all this... so privileged to have the revelation of Jesus Christ. All the cost to those first servants of
the Lord to give us this, all the cost to the Lord Himself that we should have it... Oh yes, what a price lies behind
it all! How much do we value it? How much do we worship in the presence of it? How much does it REALLY
mean to us? How much is teaching and truth and the Bible? How much does it REALLY touch our hearts? That's
the question and that is the meaning of first love, first love. Oh, the appreciation that ever the Lord should have
looked our way... to say nothing of just lavished upon us all that He's got to give! Well, there's the message.

See, we can understand now why it was the Lord could not be satisfied with a number of quite good things if that
one thing - the essence of all the cost - was left behind. No wonder He says do the first works, go back again...
first works; there they are. Oh yes, there's no doubt about it that they made a marvellous and costly, as this world
would think, response to the Lord. I love to read that story in Acts 19 and 20 of Paul in Ephesus; tremendous riot
where they would fain tear that apostle limb from limb. And some of these Ephesians said - ah, not only said but

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acted for his preservation - "Don't you go out there, you stay in here. We come between you and them"; and
would not allow him to go out to them in their wild rage. They wanted this man kept because for them he was
God's channel of so much. It's all such a wonderful picture of how they APPRECIATED what had come to them.
Now the Lord says, "You've fallen from that, you've fallen from that, you've left that. You haven't given up
Christian work, you haven't given up all Christian virtues, there's lots of good things about you but that's the
thing that matters."

I need not add more words to this; you see, it's all the appreciation of the grace of God. The GRACE of God!
Where should we be but for the grace of God? Oh, grace had no meaning for Israel; they didn't feel the need of it,
they were self-sufficient... and they lost it all. The people who really put supreme value upon grace were the
people who've got it all. Who've got it all! The Lord make us people like that, and stir our hearts and challenge us
and recover in us THIS first love.

Ch 06 Christ's Message to Laodicea

"For I would have you know how greatly I strive for you, and for them at Laodicea..." Col. 2:1.

"I bear him witness, that he hath much labor for you, and for them in Laodicea... Salute the brethren that are in
Laodicea... And when this epistle hath been read among you, cause that it be read also in the church of the
Laodiceans..." Col. 4:13,15,16.

"Not that I have already obtained, or am already made perfect: but I press on, if so be that I may apprehend that
for which also I was apprehended by Christ Jesus. I count not myself yet to have apprehended: but one thing I
do, forgetting the things which are behind, and stretching forward to the things which are before, I press on
toward the goal unto the prize of the on-high calling of God in Christ Jesus. Let us therefore, as many as be
perfect, be thus minded..." Philippians 3:12-15.

We will hold those Scriptures in mind. In these closing verses of the third chapter of the book of Revelation, we
reach the concluding phase of the first movement of the risen Lord toward the consummation of divine purpose
in this age. Throughout this time we have sought to have the great end of God for His Church overshadowing
everything, kept clearly in view, because what we have here, in the first part of this great book and in the last
chapters, is the great purpose of God in our salvation.

Paul, as we have read this evening, said that he was on full stretch to apprehend that for which he had been
apprehended by Christ Jesus. And then, without defining exactly what that was; that object, that purpose... he
did add "the prize of the on-high calling of God in Christ Jesus". It was unto that that he concedes himself as
having been apprehended by Christ Jesus. Not only to be saved but to be brought to a great and glorious destiny
in and by Christ Jesus. He calls it 'the prize of the on-high calling'. The end of this present part of the book of the
Revelation, which book is bringing us very near to the goal, the intention of the book is to get the Church ready
for the end, for the great time of crisis in view. At the end of this first part of this book which has to do with the
Church, we are told what it was that Paul meant by the prize of the on-high calling. This is it: "To him that
overcometh I will give to him to sit with me in my throne, as I also overcame and sat down with my Father in His
throne". That is the great object and goal for which people are saved and apprehended by Christ Jesus; to a place
of sharing with Him, their Lord, the throne of government of this universe. That is the meaning of Christianity.
That is in the heart of the Lord in giving the gospel, in appealing to men. It is that, dear friends, that is in view in
our Christian lives. Nothing less than that. A great calling, an on-high calling, a wonderful prize: throne-sharing
with Christ in government.

Well, it is of course quite significant, is it not, that that is the last note in this phase in this section of the book.
And we can say, because it is quite true, that it has been that, that has governed all that has gone before. The
wonderful presentation of the Lord Jesus in person in chapter one was in order that by showing His victory, the
glory of His risen person, the standard should be set. And then through all these seven messages to the seven
churches, as representing by their very number the whole Church in all ages - in all that is said through these:

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This thing is governing, this end is overshadowing, it is to this that everything is moving, the judging and the
condemning and the demand to put away everything that would thwart that end and the encouraging and the
confirming and the exhorting in relation to other things that will help toward that end. The End governs
everything - the on-high calling, the prize of the on-high calling of God in Christ Jesus. That is in view. That
explains everything. It explains all the Lord's dealings with His people. If at all times when the Lord is dealing
with us we could but pause and be quiet and think "what's the meaning of this, why this?" and allow ourselves to
entertain this great governing truth: He's getting us ready for the throne. He's doing something now that relates
to that glorious end; He's paving the way, He's preparing us, He is cancelling out things in us that would hinder
our progress toward that end. He is seeking to inculcate and develop in us the things that will hasten us toward
that end. If only we could be convinced that that is exactly what it all means, it would be a tremendous help.

Now, you notice that the Lord in these letters says that quite clearly to His people. We were thinking earlier in
the day about that suffering church, that suffering church, called to be faithful unto death. The Lord simply told
them in plain language that their tribulation was all with a spiritual and divine purpose and quite clearly to
prepare them, to qualify them for their great eternal destiny. And that's how it is.

I think, dear friends, perhaps our obsession with the importance of this life is often a great limitation upon our
appreciation of the heavenly calling. We make FAR too much of this life from one standpoint, from another
perhaps we don't make enough of it. From one standpoint we make far too much of it, that if we don't see
everything accomplished here and now in this lifetime and all our hopes and expectations realized, then we're
disappointed beings. The Lord never looks at it like that at all. Never has anything been made perfect in the
lifetime of any one believer except the Lord Jesus. It is like that. On the other hand perhaps we do not make
enough of the TREMENDOUS importance of what the Lord is trying to do with us IN this lifetime. However, be
that as it may, there is this that stands over our lives now, these lives here, it's this tremendous heavenly calling
unto which we have been apprehended by Christ Jesus. But unto the realization of that or what Paul calls the
'attaining' unto that; certain things are necessary. And in this message to the church in Laodicea the Lord makes
perfectly clear what is essential in the final issue - this Man. And He does that in the first place by presenting
Himself in certain terms. You notice how He introduces Himself here: "These things saith the Amen, the faithful
and true Witness, the Beginning of the creation of God". That may not be very clear as to what it really means.
Well, I suppose everybody is quite clear on the first, if you aren't, then you're terrible hypocrites for I've been
hearing a lot of 'amens' tonight. That prayer drew out many 'amens' tonight. And we're accustomed to using that
word, is it just a word? Is it just something we tack on at the end or at a certain point? Is it a habit, a custom?
What DO we mean? No, we understand that the meaning of that word "amen" is verily, truly, positively, YES! We
mean it! "These things saith the Amen..." the Amen. The One in Whom and about Whom there is no uncertainty
or indefiniteness.

My dear friends, if you and I at all value our salvation, we owe it to Him Who was so THOROUGH in the work
that He did for our salvation. Where should we be if He had been indifferent about our salvation? If it had been a
willy-nilly matter with Him whether we were saved, whether He was neither cold nor hot about this; where
should we be? No, everything about that work of redemption sees Him as One Who, without any reserve
whatsoever, or two minds, divided heart, GAVE Himself for our sin that He might redeem us unto God and from
all iniquity. He did not stop half way, thank God. He did not suffer Himself to be turned aside or to be influenced
by secondary interests; not at all. He is the girded Servant of the Lord. He came, as we have sung, from the
mansions of glory having laid aside His robes of comfort and ease... girding Himself as a servant He's come forth,
on business and thorough-going business. He's finished the work. These things saith such a One. "The faithful
and true witness..."

The faithful and true Witness, you see these are strong, emphatic words. He has been faithful, absolutely faithful.
The apostle Paul called upon Timothy to remember Jesus Christ who before Pontius Pilate gave His testimony
faithfully. Yes, He was a faithful witness and a true... the point is, and the underlining is that everything here is
emphatic, it's positive, it's definite, it's real, it's utter! It is unreserved.

"The beginning of the creation of God..." How does that come into this? Well, first of all we've got to get that
word "beginning". It is not the word that means the first of the creation; that He was the first one created and
then there were a lot more after Him created. It is not that word at all, [it is] the Greek word "arche" which
means the source of everything, the fountain head of everything, the One in whom and from whom everything
has come and Who is Himself the Standard and Model of everything. That is what we mean when we speak of an

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'archi-tect' - one who produces the model, out of whom comes that which is to be; the source of everything. And
that's the word here, the beginning of the creation of God. How? See Him coming forth - for it says that in Him
and through Him and unto Him were all things created, ALL things were made by Him, that's the Scripture. Was
He lackadaisical in the creation? Was He careless in it? When the thing was completed, the evening of the sixth
day, was there a lot left to be desired and a lot that needed improving upon? No, the verdict is, "it is VERY good",
it is very good. The Divine verdict. He had done His work thoroughly and well, He had applied Himself to it.

What we now, even in a wrecked creation, a ruined creation, can trace of His creative fingers impresses us with
the wonder of it, the wonder of the Mind there, the wonder of the Power there, all there. My point is, dear
friends, that this is only one further, it's the third phrase that bears upon this one thing: you're dealing with
Somebody Who is very thorough! Thorough in creation, thorough in redemption and thorough in His own
person and His own witness. And that is how He is introduced to Laodicea as though He would say "this and this
alone will bring you to the end". Such a spirit, such a mind, such a devotion, such a thoroughness, such an amen
disposition is ESSENTIAL if you're going to reach the end. You have got to mean business! You've got to mean
business to reach that goal and obtain that prize. That's perfectly clear as the basis of His speaking to Laodicea
and He goes on then to show the Laodicean's attitude of mind and heart will never get THEM there, never get
them there. "I have this against thee, thou art neither hot nor cold..." There's ALL the difference between sitting
with Him in His throne and being spewed out of His mouth and those are the alternatives resting upon this
matter of downright and utter committal, devotion and persistence unto God's great End. Like that.

Then He analyzes this thing and in so doing indicates some things, other things, more things, essential to the
attaining. Notice: "because thou sayest I am rich and have gotten riches and have need of nothing". Laodicea was
a very wealthy city, it was the great banking centre of Asia minor, and which, and out from which, all the wealth
of the province flowed. And the Lord took hold of that, they were proud of their wealth in Laodicea, the world
was, but in the church at Laodicea there was a complacency, a satisfaction, a sense of being quite sufficient - of
having got there and there was not much more to do about it "rich and increased in goods and have need of
nothing". The Lord says "That will never get you to the prize, that will never get you to the prize. One
ESSENTIAL if you are to come to that for which I have apprehended and chosen you, one essential is and must
remain, a sense, a deep sense of your own insufficiency, of your own need, of there still being FAR more in Christ
than ever YOU have discovered or possessed." It's this sense, deep sense, of spiritual need which is essential!
ANY kind of gratification or satisfaction that you haven't much further to go or to gain... you're content with the
little that you've got or perhaps you want a little more... but here is the spirit of the great apostle "and we've
discerned it over Laodicea and I would have you know, I would have you know of my travail, my conflict for them
of Laodicea".

Dear friends, anything in the nature of settling down with less than God's FULL content of Christ as our calling,
will rob us of the prize - will rob us of the prize. It will just be the people who are deeply, DEEPLY conscious that
they have not attained neither are they already complete but who have YET everything to gain in Christ, however
much they may have. That is the spirit, the mind, the disposition that is here demanded of Laodicea: "So I
counsel thee because thou knowest not that thou art wretched, miserable, poor, blind, naked: I counsel thee first
of all to buy of me gold refined by fire, that thou mayest become rich". This is not buying salvation. Salvation is
without money and without price. If there is something to be secured, it is not salvation by our effort or our
works or even our earnestness. Not that, that's of grace, but BEING saved we are saved unto something that will
draw us out and extend us to the full in the matter of faith. And it is in the fire, in the fire that faith is refined and
will be the currency by which the crown is won. I'm not going to dwell upon all the details here; I just want you to
catch the spirit of this without an exhaustive exposition.

"Thou knowest not that thou art poor, thou knowest not that thou art blind... I counsel thee buy of me eyesalve to
anoint thine eyes, that thou mayest see." Thou knowest not that thou art blind; here again is a local touch taken
up in connection with one of the temples in Laodicea there was a famous medical school and from that medical
school all over the Greek and Roman world an eyesalve went. It was famed for this ointment for eye trouble.
Everybody knew what this meant in Laodicea and yet, and yet, right there in the precincts of the place where the
world was getting its natural eyes healed, the church was blind. Spiritual blindness was there. "Knowest not that
thou art blind?" Let us say right away without too many words, an absolute ESSENTIAL of reaching that end of
God is to have a vision, to have a spiritual vision. I ask you my dear friends, every one of you personally now, to
challenge your own hearts; have you got a spiritual vision? Are you drifting on from day to day? Are you going on
without a mighty incentive for the divine eternal purpose? Are you in the shadows or in the dark as to what it all

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means, and what the end is intended to be? Or is there before you, before your enlightened spirit, a clear vision of
what God has determined as the issue of all things and has called you into in fellowship with His Son? Are you
CLEAR about it?

You know quite well that no one ever gets anywhere without a vision. An artisan will never get anywhere without
a vision, no one will ever make any progress unless they clearly see what they are after, what they are aiming at.
In any realm of life in order to get somewhere you want to know where it is and what it is you're going to. Here,
an essential is that you should see! The whole force of these letters and the presentation of the Lord Jesus is a
REVELATION that is going to MASTER our being; a revelation of Jesus Christ that shall capture us and draw us
on and make us people of a purpose, people who KNOW where we are going and what we are going after. Are you
like that? Have you got the vision of God's eternal purpose in Christ for the Church into which you have been
called by His grace? Have you got the vision? Is that something that is coming down into your life continually?
Are you tired of hearing that phrase "the eternal purpose... the eternal purpose"? Has it lost its music, its charm,
its captivating power? Ah, that's Laodicea you see; lost vision. Lost vision. That is ESSENTIAL to our eyes.

"I counsel thee to buy of me eyesalve that thou mayest anoint thine eyes that thou mayest see." What do you
mean when you talk like that figuratively and symbolically "buy of me eyesalve"? Well, again I've only to take you
back to such familiar words in Paul's letter to the Ephesians "That He would grant unto you a spirit of wisdom
and revelation in the knowledge of Him... the eyes of your heart being enlightened that you may KNOW what is
the hope of his calling" there it is! Buy eyesalve? That means lay yourself out with all your being before God that
the Holy Spirit will open the eyes of your heart; give you to see what God means for you as a part of His Church.
Buy eyesalve.

"Knowest not that thou art... naked: I counsel thee to buy of me... white garments, that thou mayest clothe
thyself, and that the shame of thy nakedness be not made manifest". Again, there it is here, this thing, as a
manufacturing centre for a beautiful fleece which they cultivated in their surrounding fields and made wonderful
garments which were world famed. A glistening fleece of Laodicean manufacture. They knew what it meant.
Here, in a place where everybody knew of this beautiful garment's material, that people were proud of wearing
those Laodicean garments, right in the presence of them all as the Lord looked at them, He saw them naked, but
they didn't know it, they didn't know it. "Knowest not that thou art naked?" He saw them as they were by nature
and you know dear friends, when our eyes are opened about ourselves, the one thing we want is to get covered up
somehow. As soon as Adam's eyes were opened the one thing he wanted was to get covered up, he went and hid
himself. And we know ourselves, and of course you know what I'm talking about, when we begin to know
ourselves in the light of God, one thing we feel to need is "Oh, for a covering. Oh, for a hiding... Oh, to get out of
the way, out of the scanning of those eyes, if only we could hide ourselves from ourselves!" This is no pleasant
view when we begin to see ourselves... but they didn't know it, that's how they were, that's how God saw them but
they had no sense of nakedness, they were priding themselves in the garments of their own flesh, their own
making.

Again the Lord says quite clearly, if you are going to reach the end, you must have a very, very poor opinion of
yourself and realize your absolute need of a clothing that you can't make for yourself; the white raiment of
Christ's own righteousness. That's your only way to the end. So Paul says "that I may gain Christ, not having a
righteousness of mine own, but the righteousness which is of God through faith" - that's the white raiment. We've
got to sense our need of that because of our deep and overwhelming sense of our own unrighteousness. These are
the people that are on the way to the throne. Any sense whatever or degree of self-righteousness, of being at all
fit, will put us out of the running for the prize. This may be comforting for most of us but this is, after all, the
gospel isn't it? And it all just amounts to this, that on the one side of this great argument, the Lord is saying
you've got to be a people who are characterized by such a strong sense of need, which only the Lord Jesus can
supply. You've got to be a people like that if you're going to get there to the place we are called. How different this
is from the whole world's attitude, why, the world's attitude is always certain fitness, certain ability, certain self-
sufficiency and self-importance to receive the prizes.

It's not the spirit of the world to feel absolutely unfit and unworthy and worthless! That's not the spirit of the
world but this is the spirit of Christ and this is the spirit called for. "As many as I love, I reprove and chasten."
These people are a chastened people. Well, some of us know a little about that... what it is to be chastened. "But
as many as I love, I reprove and chasten" then the appeal: "be zealous..." be zealous! That word simply means be
on fire, be burning, be not like that stream that runs alongside of Laodicea which is not a hot stream nor a cold

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stream... It was well known what He meant, there it was, a river just by the city, of tepid water - neither one thing
nor the other. "Be not like that but be zealous, be hot therefore and repent, behold I stand at the door and
knock..." We could dwell much upon that but it has been dwelt upon so much, it just means this: that where
conditions obtain such as these - no sense of the need of Him, no sense of our own undone condition and
helpless condition - well the Lord is outside of that, He's not inside that at all, He's outside of that. But He says I
stand at the door and knock... that knocking may mean many things, many things... the Lord is trying to get on
the inside by many a form of knocking and then this: "if any man open the door... I will come in... will sup with
him, and he with Me." Looking at that word 'sup', I find there are three words, one that applies to the Greek
breakfast which was but a bit of bread and a drink and that sufficed. Another was another little larger meal that
they had during the day; but there's another word which is used for the FULL meal of the day and that is the one
here. "I will come in and there will be a full meal." You see, everything that you look at in this part of the Word is
something positive isn't it? Something full that the Lord is after, not something partial, not just the early
morning scrap with which you start the day but the FULL meal! He's after fullness. "I have come in and there will
be fullness." It's all that!

Well, He calls for us to be of THAT mind, of THAT spirit, of THAT disposition, for again He says it's just the
people who have but One Thing... this ONE thing I do... leaving the things which are behind, all the things and
having only One Thing, "this one thing I do leaving the things which are behind I press toward the mark of the
prize of the on-high calling of God in Christ Jesus".

Oh, dear friends, don't be satisfied with less than God meant for you when He saved you. Don't settle down to
something that is not His FULL thought for you. Don't you be robbed of your prize by any compromises of any
kind or any carelessness. Be you an "amen" man, an "amen" woman. May our churches be like that, be like that,
that everybody can say, "Those people know where they're going, what they're after, there is no doubt about
them, they're on business bent! They're not just a people either drifting or just having meetings, they're a people
who are marked and characterized by a sense of a great Meaning, a great Purpose." The Lord make us like that.

Ch 07 Christ Revealed as God's Purpose

The Lord has led us in these days to be occupied with the revelation of Jesus Christ. So far, John the apostle has
been our interpreter. We are going now to allow Paul to say something to us about this matter.

I turn you, therefore, to his second letter to the Corinthians, chapter four at verse six: "Seeing it is God, that said,
Light shall shine out of darkness, who shined in our hearts, to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God
in the face of Jesus Christ." The light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ. Place
alongside of that the words from his letter to the Galatians chapter one at verse fifteen: "...when it was the good
pleasure of God, to reveal His son in me." It was the good pleasure of God, to reveal His Son in me; shined into
our hearts in the face of Jesus Christ.

This is Paul's way of describing his great life revolution. This is his personal testimony as to what happened when
he saw the face of Jesus Christ. And as you see, he likened that to the divine fiat in creation: God who said "Let
light be" has repeated that in a spiritual way in my heart. The implication clearly is that what happened in
creation when God commanded light to shine, had happened in Paul when he saw the face of Jesus. And when
you apply that to such a man as Saul of Tarsus (later Paul) the implications are indeed tremendous. It's a
tremendous confession on his part because when God said at the beginning in creation "Let light be" - there was
NO light. All was darkness. Darkness was over the face of the deep. And here is this man, SUCH a man as we
know him to have been with all his claimed enlightenment, here is this man saying: "until I saw the face of Jesus,
that's how it was with me". He would never have admitted that before, that he was in the dark, and all was
darkness to him; he would have claimed to have been one of the most enlightened of men! Here, when he saw the
face of Jesus, he said "Until then, I realize now that the primal darkness at creation was my condition
spiritually". More than that! When God first said "let light be" everything was in chaos, a state of disruption,
disorder - yes, chaos. The earth was without form and empty. And Paul dares here to say "After all, with all that I
had and had learned and knew and claimed to be, until I saw the face of Jesus, that's how it was for me, chaos,

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chaos! And still again, until God said 'let light be' there was utter desolation and barrenness. Really nothing there
at all!" Paul means what he's saying.

He realized - oh yes, you will find plenty in his writings afterward and utterances to bear it out - that for him the
face of Jesus meant light as over against darkness. Not just some more light, but the mighty CONTRAST between
light and darkness. Seeing the face of Jesus meant for him order out of chaos, meaning out of meaninglessness,
and still seeing the face of Jesus meant for him fruitfulness out of barrenness and desolation.

I say the implications are tremendous, but Paul quite agreed with all that, indeed he does. And dear friends,
although the method and the manner of the beginning of our Christian life and experience may differ, indeed
there may be many different ways in which we come into new life in Christ; however many may be the ways,
those should be THE features and characteristics of everyone's coming into that relationship with the Lord Jesus.
It should be as passing truly from darkness to light. Not just getting some light but the difference between day
and night, and the darkest night and the brightest day. Between chaos, confusion, disruption, and order;
beautiful order and meaning. Between emptiness, hollowness, a void, and fullness and fruitfulness and plenty. It
should be like that in every case.

But note the main and the great point in all this is that it was all in the face of Jesus Christ. In the face of Jesus
Christ! When it happened and Saul questioned, "Who art thou?" the answer came clear: "I am Jesus, I am Jesus".
We can never, never grasp the tremendous (and we do not use exaggerated language when we say the TERRIFIC)
implication for that man of that word 'Jesus' at that time. All this, all this in the face of Jesus! It's there that I
want to spend a few moments because that is really the focal point, and very much can be said but we want really
to feel the force of this message.

Of course we know that the use of the word or term 'face' is metaphorical. In the original language the word
means more than just 'countenance' it carries with it also the idea of person or personality. We understand that,
that metaphorically the face is the expression of the person. And so everything was in the Person of Jesus Christ
that Paul saw and came into.

Now this is the thing that I want to stress right at the outset, that if you and I, dear friends, are going to make
anything like the progress that Paul made as a young convert and as a growing Christian, and if we are going to
have anything of the wheat that he has had in spiritual impress and impact, and if we are going to count in any
degree as he counted in the work of the Lord; one thing is absolutely essential and do get hold of this. The
youngest Christian get hold of this and everybody else; that if we take our salvation, our conversion or anything
that has to do with it as something in itself, there's going to be limitation. We have got to see every thing in the
light of the PERSON, Jesus Christ! That is, we have not to take this as a gift - salvation as a gift - or anything else
of the Christian life as a gift in itself; we have got to look at that and say: "What does that signify as to the Giver?
What does THAT signify as to Christ? What does that mean as to the Source of my salvation?" You may not grasp
the point but it is of infinite importance because all progress in the Christian life and all power in Christian
service comes from NOT the grasping, the apprehending, and the enjoyment of salvation as such, but SEEING
JESUS! Because, you see, Jesus is the sum total of ALL divine fullness.

In a long experience in Christian ministry and work, I have moved much amongst Christians and I have had a lot
to do with what we may call "mission centres", "mission halls". Larger or smaller, in some cases a very large
number of Christians meeting there, and listening either to their prayers or to their singing, taking note of their
Christian life... There they are, they've been Christians for years, decades; and all they've got to talk about is the
day when they were saved, all about when they came to the Lord, when the Lord found them - they're back there.
And when you come to these people - who have YEARS of Christian life - with anything beyond the most
elementary, they don't know what you're talking about - it's another language, just can't follow it - you've got
nothing to work on! They've not grown up, they cannot take solid meat. All they want, as they say, is the simple
gospel, let's have the simple gospel.

Now, that is not meant to be a criticism or a judgment, but an illustration. What have they done? They've taken
salvation in itself and not seen salvation as only a PART of something FAR, far greater, more immense; and that
greater fullness is Christ! It is the thing and not the Person! And it makes all the difference. See, I come back
here: what does explain Paul's BOUNDING onward in the Christian life, his RAPID spiritual progress, his stature
spiritually and his tremendous impress upon the dispensation? The answer is he saw in the face of Jesus

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everything. Everything! For you see, Paul was a Jew and both personally and nationally the quest of the Jews was
for light, light! They were always in quest of light, they were trained to be the most enlightened, but light was
what they were after all the time. Light in relation to God, and God and man, and man and God. And Paul says
himself that although that was true of him as of all Jews, perhaps more so in his own case than many of his own
countrymen; all that quest for life did not begin to be answered until he saw the face of Jesus Christ. This was
such a tremendous thing, such an overwhelming thing for him!

The Christian life and everything to do with it is inclusively and fundamentally a revelation of Jesus Christ in the
heart. It may be there in the Word, now note: Paul probably knew the Old Testament as well as anyone and
better than most - it was all there! But not until this happened did he see his Old Testament; when he saw it in
the face of Jesus Christ. You will never know your Bible truly as it needs to be known for spiritual effect until by
the Holy Spirit you see Jesus Christ everywhere. Not the Bible, not books of the Bible, not the analysis of the
books of the Bible, not the themes and the subjects of the Bible, but in and through them all - the face of Jesus.
That is, how HE is signified here, how HE is implied here, what this means where HE is concerned. That is the
key. Paul never had that key until he saw the face of Jesus and then wherever he looked after that, ANYWHERE
in this universe - Bible or outside the Bible - he saw the face of Jesus. That face was clear to him wherever he
looked. Now that is not exaggeration. You know sometimes if you look right into the sun, right into the sun, for
some while afterward wherever you look you don't see the things that are there, you only see the sun. You're
blinded to everything else. That is exactly what happened with Paul; he was blinded in a sense, to everything else,
having seen the face of Jesus.

Everything in life, everything in character, everything in endurance, through trials and opposition and suffering,
everything in victory over opposition and adversity, everything in service; will depend entirely upon how much
we have seen in the face of Jesus Christ. Make no mistake about it. Dear friends, this, as we have said and as
we've said in prayer again here this morning, is a very critical time in the history of the people of God as it is in
the history of this world. And if I'm not mistaken, this conference is set in a very critical time. We are fast moving
into and more deeply into, the final testing of everything. Oh, how true that is literally in some parts of this
world. What an ultimate testing is taking place in the life of many of the Lord's people and the Lord's servants.
And think not that we shall escape that, in some form or another we are really going to be put to it. The world is
going to move into a situation where every Christian will have their foundations most certainly and severely
tested. You may be tasting that in a spiritual way now. How many people have said to me about this very time,
"Why, what a battle it's been to get here!" all the unusual things happening... wouldn't happen otherwise; strange
things. It all just happens when you've got something of the Lord in view. Oh yes, and those happenings are very,
very often testing happenings; they could shake you.

Well, it's like that, toward the end. I don't want to discourage you... it's going to increase in that way. But you see,
the point is this: even our salvation as such is going to be put to the test. Even all that we have really got is going
to be put to the test and it will not be too difficult for us to question our salvation, to question the Lord Himself if
our Christian life is a kind of objective thing that is made up of things, made up of meetings, made up of
teachings, made up of fellowship, made up of beliefs. If it is made up like that it will not be difficult for us to
question the reality of the whole thing. The REALITY of the whole thing - does that sound a terrible thing to say?
The REALITY of Christianity... not difficult to allow that question. The issue? The issue is going to be only one
thing: how much this thing is a matter of God having shined into our hearts! I've put it in a way which has caused
a good deal of trouble, but nevertheless perhaps that itself is significant; that God has revealed it in us, what we
have has come to us by REVELATION of Jesus Christ. I emphasize that does not mean something extra to the
Bible, but what is there in the Bible has, by the Holy Spirit, been ILLUMINATED in our own hearts. That this has
come out of the Bible into us by an ACT of God, a FIAT of God; we have seen that in our hearts. That has become
a HEART matter with us when it's like that.

Well, we referred, I think yesterday, to the saintly Polycarp who was burned for the faith there in those days of
the early persecution. And, as an old man with his white hair and his saintly face, was being forced along by those
cruel and wicked Jews to be burned on that day, an official standing by looked and was tremendously moved to
see such a man being carried to such a fate. And he stepped up and he said "Curse! Just curse Jesus and I will
save you. I'll save you!" Said Polycarp, "Forty and six years have I served my Master and He has never done me a
single injury. Do you think I would say something against Him to save my life? No." And so he went to the
martyr's death. That's a heart relationship isn't it? That is something more than life, more than anything else. I
say, it was that that carried Paul through all his sufferings; he'd seen the face of Jesus. It was that that was the

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strength and the substance of his great ministry, he'd seen the face of Jesus. It was that that made him the
Christian that he was. And please do not get mentalities about objective visions of the face of Jesus, that's not
what I'm talking about at all - seeing a face - I'm simply meaning that there has come to you by the Holy Spirit in
your heart, a knowledge of the significance of Jesus Christ in this whole universe in the counsels of God: the
revelation of Jesus Christ. That's the light, the knowledge, the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ. What
strength that brings, what strength that brings!

I'm quite sure that there are some here today who have gone on for many years with the Lord and who could say
with me that if what we have and hold and teach had only been theory, we'd have been out of the fight long ago.
Been out of the fight long ago, no doubt about it. It is because, may I put it this way, we've SEEN something...
where something is into someone, when you've seen, when you've seen, something is done. Oh, what effect it had
with Paul, first of all look what a man it made of him. Do you notice the context of those words that we read in
Galatians, "When it pleased God to reveal His Son in me what did I do, go and consult those who were apostles
before me as to whether I was right? Wonder whether I was mistaken, whether this was according to tradition?
No, not at all. I didn't go up to Jerusalem to confer with flesh and blood and talk it over and see whether I was
right; this thing put me on my feet in such a way there was no question for me about it. No one could add
anything to this for me by way of confirmation as to the reality and the rightness of it." So many dear Christians
are all the time running around to others for advice on their Christian life and on this and that... Now, please
don't misunderstand me, get all the help that you can, but somehow it seems that some people can never stand
on their own feet for any time together, they're not sure at all. They're not sure about anything, anything that
arises they've got a question, they must get some opinion on this matter. Now, while you must have help and seek
it, there is after all a fundamental, root thing that makes you KNOW where you stand - you stand in Christ by a
work of God. Something's been DONE. You can never question that. It put Paul in that position where, while he
was not independent and he did later on go up and have a nice time of conference with Peter in Jerusalem for
several days and I suppose they talked over much, but that didn't happen until Paul had faced this whole issue
for himself and got it settled with him between himself and the Lord. Like that. And all these other aspects of a
new creation started on their wonderful movement after he'd seen the face of Jesus like that.

The certainty and the assurance that was right at the root of his Christian life and service came because of this
one thing: he'd seen everything in Jesus. Everything... in Jesus. What liberation that brought to him! What
emancipation! We have often said here that there was no power in this world that could have turned that rabid,
fanatical Jew, Saul of Tarsus, into a Christian and a lover of Jesus of Nazareth. No power in this world that could
have done that, but just SEEING Jesus Himself in this way and that did it, that did it! He was emancipated, he
was free! No wonder of all his writings the fiercest, the fieriest is his letter to the Galatians, the letter of our
LIBERTY in Christ and it begins with this "God revealed His Son in me and that set me free from all other
things." No use telling people that this and that, and the other thing is a limitation and that they should seek
enlargement by getting out of it. That is an unfruitful, unprofitable, indeed that's a dangerous line to take with
anybody. But again, if only we can bring CHRIST... with all His divine significance and meaning and
comprehensiveness to them and the Holy Spirit can reveal Him in their hearts... oh, that will do it! That will do
it; they will never again be content with anything that limits them to the grave clothes of religion. It delivered
Paul from Judaism as nothing else would have done. The way of an escape, the way of enlargement, the way of
endurance is to see Jesus. It is not by learning, that is, it is not by the schools. Paul had all of the schools he did...
of religion. He didn't get it through the schools and we'll never get it through the schools; along that line of the
technical instruction of things Christian or religious. This is not a merely mental or academic or intellectual thing
at all. It is a work of the Holy Spirit.

Well, that's the foundation and may the Lord even now begin to shine into our hearts. I want to go on just for a
little while in answering the question: What DID Paul see in the face of Jesus Christ? Yes, he saw the light of the
knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ; a comprehensive statement. What DID Paul see in
Christ (if you like to drop out the word 'face' you can) what did he see when he saw Jesus Christ by divine
illumination? And I suggest to you that the first thing that he saw was Christ as the Purpose of God, Christ as the
Purpose of God.

If there was one thing that was true about Saul of Tarsus, it was that he was a man of purpose. He was a
purposeful man, there's no doubt about that, he was bent upon something, he was after something, he was in
quest of something, he was on full stretch for something. That is, he was characterized by this spirit or sense of
purpose. Now, as a Jew, and a member of the Jewish nation, his whole horizon was Israel. For him all divine

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purpose was centred in Israel. It was the nation that stood at the heart of the purpose of God for him, that nation
as in ascendancy over all the nations, superior to all the nations, ruling all the nations, having that central place
in the midst of the nations, to make all the nations serve it, and well, yes, to serve all the nations. This was what
divine purpose meant to Saul of Tarsus, as it meant to every Jew, every member of the Jewish nation. That was
the horizon. That was all temporal, that was all earthly, albeit it was religious. But that was the horizon. That
spelt purpose for every Jew and inasmuch as Saul of Tarsus was a Jew plus, you can see how that idea of divine
purpose for his own nation was INTENSELY strong for him. Let anybody call that into question! That really was
the cause and the reason for his VEHEMENT antagonism to Jesus. You know quite well that that is why the Jews
crucified Jesus. They said, "If we let this man go on, the Romans shall come and take away our, our nation, our
kingdom." And Saul was one of them. He saw that Jesus setting up another kingdom was a menace to Israel and
all Israel's heritage. That, for him, was the meaning of divine purpose. When he SAW the face of Jesus Christ, all
that was changed! All that was changed, his horizon expanded to the universe and what a universe it is that is
presented to us in his letter to the Ephesians! What an immense expanse and RANGE of divine purpose that
comes out - "called according to His purpose Who worketh all things out to the counsel of His own will from
eternity to eternity" - divine purpose. Poor little Israel, shrinking, and shrinking, and shrinking, until for him,
while he would that they would be saved and give anything to have them saved; they no longer occupy that place
- his horizon has become universal. And again, the temporal, the temporal has given place to the spiritual and the
eternal in talking about every spiritual blessing in the heavenlies unto the ages of the ages. These, you see, are all
terms which explain what happened in this tremendous revolution in which Paul's horizon was pressed out to the
uttermost bounds. He saw ALL this in the face of Jesus, JESUS signifies THIS! JESUS is the embodiment and
the sum of Purpose from eternity to eternity! It is the purpose in Christ Jesus; that is his language. HE is the
Purpose of God and it's not of this earth, temporal or temporary, material and transient; but of heaven, of
eternity and it's ALL IN HIM! Summed up in Christ - the fullness of all things.

If only we could, what tremendous amount we could draw in of quotations from Paul about this. God's purpose
concerning His Son that He should fill all things and that He should be the fullness of all things; all things should
in Him dwell, all things should be gathered together into Him! Indeed, his world has enlarged and all the barriers
have broken down. Dear friends what does this MEAN to us? This is not just a beautiful story or description of
what happened to a man, I'm speaking of spiritual principles. If you and I really DID get a sight of the
significance of Jesus Christ, we really DID see the glory of God in His face, we can NEVER be little! We can
NEVER be just tied up in our little local things, we can never be sectarian or anything like that at all, we should
be all-embracing. We could not (we get into a lot of trouble because we could not and would not) accept the
confines of human systems and Christian departmentalisms and all that. You're emancipated right out when
once you've seen the Lord Jesus and all that is silly nonsense - churches and chapels and playing at things - no!
Christ is FAR, far greater and vaster than all this. For enlargement you just need to see Him! For deliverance you
need to see Him!

What happened to Paul, and Paul's universality of vision and ministry, Paul's spiritual and heavenly impact upon
this earth through the centuries is due to this: he saw in the face of Jesus Christ the greatness of God's purpose
for this universe - that the universe was Christocentric. Not Israel-centric but Christocentric. He saw then that
divine purpose is centred in Christ. And that revelation, that seeing, that apprehending, brought with it certain
other things. First, it brought with it the understanding and recognition of God's energy in relation to Christ,
God's ENERGY in relation to Christ.

You can see that the creation was for, through and unto Christ. And all the energies of the Godhead called forth
in creation - and they're tremendous energies, tremendous energies - called forth in the creation of this universe,
those energies in creation were working toward Christ's inheritance. Tremendous energies in creation again were
unto Christ: "for unto Him were all things created, things in the heavens, things in the earth". Unto Him! The
mighty energy of God in creation, in changing chaos to order, light to darkness the darkness to light, and
emptiness to fullness; all that was mighty, mighty power of God, but it was unto His Son. The end is that He
should be the Heir of all things for He was appointed Heir of all things and He was to come into His heritage at
last.

We've been dwelling in the book of the Revelation and these are the final movements to the kindgom becoming
the kingdom of our God and His Christ - the inheritance of His Son. But that's only a mere fragment of the whole
story of divine energies. After that creation we see the fall of man and the fall of this earth. And it's a tremendous
fall, it's not just a moral fall, a moral collapse... We dare not stay to contemplate the IMMENSITY of the thing

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that happened when Adam disobeyed God and what he dragged with him and all the TREMENDOUS forces that
were focused upon him from the outside spiritual world to make him do it. Yes, it was a fall indeed, involving
tremendous and far reaching things as we very well know that was part. But does God abandon, does He give up?
He at once reacts, reacts to that and with new application and new energy proceeds along His line - same line -
toward His Son. And He immediately gives intimations that all this that has happened which has come from the
great usurper, the serpent, the devil, will one day in His Son come [under His heel] and be crushed forever.
Immediately He reacts! And you and I, dear friends, know what power is called for to bring that about - the
energy of God concerning His Son. God said that the Seed of the woman shall bruise the head of the serpent.
That's not a fanciful statement, that's a TERRIFIC cosmic conflict! The battle of the ages, but at last we see it;
forces in the heavens hurled down, no more place found for them, cast into the abyss. It's done! But this is the
energy concerning His Son, and that again is but a fragment.

The people in whom all this was to have its illustration and display as a kind and token - Israel - we find them,
because, because of their failure, spiritual failure, following on in the way of the covenant in the bondage of Egypt
and what bondage. You see, God has taken pains to let us know that THIS thing was a thing of TREMENDOUS
spiritual power. We are impressed aren't we, with how Pharaoh could stand up to it! Why surely he'll let them go
after that, even the first judgment, and the second and the third! No, not a bit of it. We're amazed! I venture to
say that you wouldn't hold onto anything if you had a little bit of that. Here it is, and God is drawing out this
thing, extending it to show what terrific force there is behind this whole matter and then finally with one blow He
smashes the whole thing until there was those people and forever their deliverance from Egypt becomes the Old
Testament illustration of the EXCEEDING greatness of His power. Always refer back to that as the example of
God's exceeding power: deliverance from Egypt. But it's all in line of His Son, the Son's in view. It's the energy of
God, you see, moving on.

I've missed the flood, another thing; God's reaction to a departure of the world. And so you must go on pursuing
this through the Old Testament - Israel coming through the wilderness to the border of the land and then again
the whole thing breaking down by unbelief. Did God give it up? No, that land forever stands as a type of His Son
and in His fullness into which He's going to bring a people and therefore He cannot give it up in light of the
spiritual meaning. He cannot give it up and say "Well, I must abandon My purpose". Not at all. Let THAT
generation fail, He'll have another, and He'll bring them in, and see the mighty energies of God in that new
people as they take possession and overcome in the land.

Failure again and you have exile in Babylon; oh dear, surely God's purposes are defeated now... The land lies
desolate, the city is waste and the people are gone. No! "For your sake have I sent to Babylon and have brought
down all their mighty ones". The remnant shall return! But this is not something in itself, it is still with the
object, the ultimate object in view: the kingdom of His Son moving on. So we go on like that. We come as we have
been in this book of the Revelation where His Church is suffering untold agonies, persecutions and
martyrdoms... but how does it end? Well, it just ends in God's victory, God's power, God's energy. Does it? How?
His Son is at last on the throne! That's the point. The purpose of God, calling out the energies of God; all in
relation to His Son! And what I have said to you is only what is contained in Paul's writings, I haven't added or
imagined, I've given it to you and I've given it to you imperfectly, it's all there, this is what Paul saw! The Purpose
of God, drawing out the energies of God, he puts it in one so familiar phrase, "the exceeding greatness of His
power which is to usward who believe according to that working of the strength of His might which He wrought
in Christ in raising Him from the dead and setting Him at His own right hand far above all rule and authority
and every name that is named". Exceeding greatness! The energy of God in relation to His purpose concerning
His Son... Paul saw that in the face of Jesus Christ. And I repeat, if we see something of that, it's going to be a
tremendous strength to us, it's going to mean tremendous enlargement, enrichment and strengthening to see us
through at last.

Now, because of my warning not to put too much on you at one time, I'll stop there, although there is so much
more of what Paul saw as to that very matter - God's thought concerning His Son, the Purpose. We'll have
another session yet perhaps.

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Ch 08 Christ Revealed as God's Pattern

For the many friends who have not been with us through the earlier gatherings, let me say the very briefest
possible word by way of retrospect. We have been led at this time to be occupied with the revelation of Jesus
Christ. We feel that the Lord has led us in this way with more than the object of just studying some thing, but as
related to the movements toward the consummation of this age which we feel are so evidently taking place and
that therefore, in the final scenes, the Lord is culminating and consummating His Testimony on this earth, it is
very necessary for His Church to be very clear as to their position. And that position is essentially and
inseparably a matter of understanding exactly what the Christian life and the Christian Church is and the
Testimony which is entrusted to them.

So we have spent nearly three days with the first three chapters of the book of the Revelation, particularly noting
that as that book does bring to this culmination and consummation of everything in the age, the Lord takes very
careful pains to give a full-orbed, clearly-defined, presentation of His Son. The significance of the very first
chapter of that book is that Christ overshadows everything. Christ encompasses everything. Christ stands before
everything as the Standard of God. And then all that follows - firstly in the dealing with the Church and then with
the nations and then with the kingdom of Satan and then the bringing in of the eternal kingdom; all that is
governed by what Christ is, by that matchless presentation of Himself. I go over that again in order that we may
see where we are, the setting of what we are saying today.

It has been there that the main part of our time has found us. But this morning we went back or over to the
apostle Paul in this connection and began to consider the content of his words in the second of his Corinthian
letters, chapter four, verses five and six: "We preach not ourselves but Christ Jesus as Lord, seeing it is God who
said Let light be, who shined in our hearts to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of
Jesus Christ." This morning we spent our time with the beginning of what Paul saw in the face of Jesus Christ.
We did note right at the outset that what he saw, or in seeing the face of Jesus Christ (which simply means that
the Spirit of God gave him an inward illumination or revelation of Christ) what he saw in the face of Jesus Christ
brought about a tremendous revolution both in his being and in his whole outlook. And the first thing that he
saw in the face of Jesus Christ or in the Person of Jesus Christ, was God's Purpose.

Well, we spent our morning time on Christ as the Purpose of God. This afternoon we are going to be occupied
with the second thing that Paul saw in the face of Jesus Christ, that is, he saw Christ as God's Pattern. I'm going
to be quite simple in the way I speak and in what I say this afternoon because there are many young Christians
here. What I say, or the way in which I say it, I trust will help them particularly; but I trust it will be, if necessary,
a corrective for us all.

It is exceedingly difficult to convey the impression that must have come upon Paul when he saw the Lord Jesus -
that time of which he speaks when he said, "it pleased God to reveal His Son in me" - the tremendous effect that
it had upon that man. I wish it were possible to convey to you something of that, because it is not in the terms,
the language or even in the teaching; it is in the IMPACT that we shall have the value. You may hear all that I
have to say and missing that impact it will be of very little value. I want you therefore, to try to enter into this in
spirit.

You see, when Paul saw Jesus Christ by revelation of the Holy Spirit, a WHOLE SYSTEM collapsed for him. It
completely collapsed! A whole mentality and way of thinking was shattered; turned upside down, inside out. He
had to go right away into the desert. He spent two or three years there to think this thing out, to reconstruct
everything in the light of THIS. It was indeed a revolution in that man. And although we are Christians and
although we have all the teaching of Paul and the other apostles, and we've got all the Christian tradition of the
centuries, I do feel, dear friends, that there's the need of something like that with us. That we can have a system,
a Christian system, just as thorough, just as complete, just as strong, with ALL its ramifications and
paraphernalia as the Jews had - without the TREMENDOUS impact of it all. We can have it all... Christianity has
become so largely only another Judaism in that sense; another system. I know it means much to you... I would
take nothing from all the blessedness and reality Christ is to you, but still I hold to this - that there's a great need
of a revolution even in the Church and in Christianity at this time and the same kind of revolution caused by the
same kind of revelation as came to the apostle Paul. I trust that you will at least begin to see something of this as

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I go on on simple lines this afternoon.

We have got to see as Paul saw Jesus as God's Pattern, Jesus as God's Model. What Paul has shown us in his
writings is that he came to see that before ever this world was created, before any of this cosmic system was set
up, God had in view the constituting of a universe on the basis of sonship; His Son. HE was before all things. HE
was God's appointed mind concerning all things. And all things were to be made with the embodiment of the
spiritual and eternal features of Christ. And when God reaches His End, and we come out with the work
completed, finally, the thing that will obtain will be that in everything perceptible, everything in the creation
revealing something of Jesus Christ. And oh, what a wonderful universe that would be! If we meet a little bit of
Jesus Christ anywhere in anyone today, what a blessed thing it is. But think of that being universal and nothing
else to it! Now that is what was in God's eye and mind right back there in the eternity past. And so God set in
motion all the creative processes and, by reason of necessity, all the redemptive processes, all the elective
processes, all the sovereign and providential processes of His grace to work out this Pattern, to perfect this
design - all things according to Christ. That's Paul's great phrase "According to Christ!" according to Christ - that
controls everything. Now, Paul came to see that and that vision, that perception and apprehension or revelation
was the governing motive, power and object of everything for him, "for me to live", said he, "is Christ".

Now then, we can break that up into very simple questions and answers. What is a Christian? What IS a
Christian? How interesting it would be if you were handed out a half a sheet of note paper all of you and asked to
put down your answer. What is a Christian? What is Paul's answer? What would your answer be? A person who
believes certain things about the Lord Jesus? A person who has come to make the Jesus their Saviour, who has
given himself or herself to Christ? How would you put it? But what is Paul's answer? Now that's the true one: a
Christian is a bit of Christ, a bit of Christ! Every true Christian is a bit of Christ. We will bear that out more fully
as we go along. From God's standpoint now, and He has laid the foundation for that, from God's standpoint now,
the only thing that concerns Him is our interest to Him in you, in me, as Christians, as believers, is that bit of
Christ which we represent. That's all He's concerned with where we are concerned; the bit of Christ that we are.
He's concerned first of all to have it as a bit of Christ and then He is concerned to enlarge it to something more of
Christ and to bring it to as full a measure of Christ as He can. And God's focus is upon the bit of Christ that has
been made a part of us, that has been deposited in us by new birth. By new birth God has deposited something of
Christ in us. It may be a very much smaller thing than all its surroundings - and we are the surroundings, what
we are - to begin with it may be, but it is of transcendentally greater INTRINSIC value than all the rest. To God it
is THE value. He is prepared to do anything in relation to that.

And so every true Christian from God's standpoint is just a bit of His Son. "God has sent forth the Spirit of His
Son into our hearts whereby we cry Abba, Father." Now I cannot gather up all the Scripture that proves that,
shows how that is, but that is the simple beginning. What are you when you become a Christian? What are you as
a Christian? What is it that makes you a Christian? What is the Christian and the Christian life, what is it? Well
now, strip it of everything that has been gathered around it - men say this is what makes a Christian, this and
that and the other thing comprises a Christian. Strip it of all that that has become the accretion of Christianity
and come right down to this: a Christian is a bit of Christ. Go about this world, get that mentality, realize that I
am - not when I'm in the meetings only, not when I'm with other Christians only, but wherever I am - I am a bit
of Christ. In that measure, in that measure, where I am Christ is. People have got to know it, that it is not I, a
professing Christian, a religious person, a person who belongs to Christianity; but I in very reality as a bit of
Christ Himself. I am there in this world. For me to live is Christ! Let's go on.

What is a church? What is a church? Now then, what was Paul's idea and mentality about churches? Do you
really think that Paul set out on a campaign to set up churches? To bring churches into being? To build churches?
Do you think that? Do you think that his vision and his mission in his mind was to see churches set up all over
the world? Think about that again, this is where we've got to rethink things. When you use the word 'church' or
'churches' you're only meaning companies of Christians, you're only meaning groups living together, gathering
together in certain places on a basis of corporate life. I believe most strongly that the apostle Paul would
repudiate the whole idea or suggestion that he felt himself chosen of God to go about this world setting up
churches. If you asked him what his business was in this matter, why, after having got the individual parts of
Christ in gathering them together and constituting them local companies, fellowships, (churches if you like) if
you'd asked him why... he would simply answer you in the simplest terms, I believe, and yet with very strong
feeling and conviction: that there should be a larger expression of Christ in that place and by as many bits of
Christ brought together as possible, the measure of Christ should be as strong in that place as possible. In other

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words, just that CHRIST should be all the more there! He's governed by this whole Pattern of God - that Christ
should fill all things! And he saw that two is better than one and three is better than two in this matter and the
more bits of Christ brought together (forgive me putting it like that, I must put it in simplest language) the more
bits of Christ there are really brought together, so the stronger the IMPACT of Christ in any place.

No, dear friends, it is not God's idea to set up churches or Christian fellowship centres or that sort of thing -
institutions and what not - that's not His idea at all. Let's clear the whole mind on this matter. If any company of
Christians fails in THIS respect: to be there a corporate and an adequate expression of the Lord Jesus, the
presence of Christ commensurate with their numbers or their being there; they've failed in the purpose of their
existence in that place! There's no justification. I believe that that is EXACTLY why the Lord said to Ephesus as
the representative church in which all were included: "repent or I will remove thy lampstand out of its place".
ALTHOUGH there were so many commendable things, they were THINGS! Works, labours, yes toil, THINGS...
but evidently THE Thing was lost sight of in the things. And THE Thing which, and which alone justifies, and
gives meaning to any local company of the Lord's people, is not the people and not their procedure, not their
forms, but CHRIST! CHRIST is met, CHRIST is found. Anybody who is seeking Christ will find Him there and
whether they are seeking Him or not they will meet Him if they go there. It is Christ!

So Paul would say, Ephesus, Laodicea, Thyatira, Sardis, Corinth, anywhere; I'm not out to set up a Christian
church there, I'm out to bring Christ there, to have Christ there and the bringing together of these, may I use the
word again, bits of Christ, is only to increase the measure of Christ. And if you want evidence from the other side
that this is so, remember that the great enemy knows the implications of Christ; he knows the implications of the
presence of Christ and especially the presence of Christ corporately expressed. And if there's one thing that the
enemy has set himself to do, it is to DESTROY the fellowship of the Spirit of Christ - to scatter the believers, to
divide them, to BREAK UP this unity of Christ because he knows THAT on the one side weakens Christ, on the
other side it strengthens his kingdom. Well, there's no argument there at all, there's no answer to that, that's a
fact beyond any, any question at all; that this matter of the RELATEDNESS of Christians is the most contended
thing in this universe. What are churches? Why meet together? Just that. Just that. Not the other in the mind of
God, Christ is God's Pattern.

Then what about those two great things that belong to the Church and the churches: baptism and the Lord's
table. What are we? Well, ask everywhere what kind of a church are you and what do you do and, "Well, we
believe in baptism", various forms given to the name in different times, "we believe in and practice baptism." Do
you? You believe in and practice baptism of infants, you call it. You, there, believe in and practice baptism of
adults and believers. You believe a little water will do, you believe that a lot of water is necessary. However,
baptism is a part of our order and system because we believe that it's a New Testament part of the Christian
church and order. Is that all? Is that all? See, you can never, never reach any conclusion of the whole matter by
arguing about the right and the wrong of THIS method or THIS time. Don't you try. The only way in which to
settle this whole matter is to stand right back and say, "What, according to the revelation of Jesus Christ in the
New Testament, does this thing really indicate?" And Paul will give us undoubted light on this matter. And he
will tell us in an accumulation of statements by him in this, "Why, baptism... do you want to know what it is? Yes,
it's right it's right, but it's not an ordinance, it's not a ceremony, it is not a rite, it is not a bit of ritual. Baptism is
just the way in which Christians say: one whole thing has gone and Christ has taken its place. It's something that
testifies to the fact that now all the ground is Christ's, we've died to all other ground. Everything else has died
and been buried, and now on this ground of resurrection, it is only Christ!" And if baptism doesn't mean that, it
has no New Testament meaning. You see, it's related to this One Thing! It is not something to be just perpetuated
and carried out because it is something that they did at the beginning. It is something which has got to be
brought right up to date with every new believer: that they have definitely died and been buried to ALL that is not
Christ! It is a position taken. And now they live, and they live ONLY for Christ - it is Christ. "I have been crucified
with Christ, it is NO longer I... but Christ". That's utter isn't it? So it's not the thing, it's the meaning.

What about the Lord's table? Here again, we believe in the Lord's supper, the holy communion or the Lord's
table; whatever phrase applies to the different sections... And we have it, some once a quarter and some once a
month and some once a week, and that's our order and our procedure and that's what we believe is the way. Is
that all? Is that all? "We must have the Lord's table, we must have the Lord's supper, because... because, well,
they did it in New Testament times and it's quite clearly the Lord's will that it should be had..." IT, IT, IT! See?
That's where the whole thing breaks down. It's an IT: some THING! What IS the Lord's table? What IS the loaf
and the cup? It is the Church's and the believer's CONTINUOUS declaration that CHRIST is their Life - that they

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have NO life but Christ! It is all Christ. That's not going to communion service. You see the emptiness and
hollowness of so much. The meaning is good, all well meant... but oh, oh, the power and presence of Christ -
that's the Thing that matters; not the ordinance, not the maintenance of the order, but the LIVING Christ. Christ
is our Life; and that not only individually and personally, He is that - He is MY Life and my only Life - Bread and
Wine - but He is the Life of the Church. He is Corporate Life, Corporate Life.

I earlier used that word "bits" of Christ. It's an awkward word; pieces of Christ, fragments of Christ, for when you
take the Loaf and break it and you all, twenty, thirty, fifty, hundred, two hundred, have that piece of the Loaf, is
that a piece in itself? No, it's the Loaf in representation. "Seeing that we who are many are one loaf." One Loaf!
One Loaf, one Body. The Lord's table is the declaration of that Life which finds us, joins us, and binds us and
holds us together, so that divisions in the Church NULLIFY the very meaning of the Lord's table. Divisions
amongst believers rule out the very significance of the Loaf and the Cup; are a denial of it. It cannot be when you
come to the Lord's table. It's a contradiction because it is Christ and Christ is not divided! Christ is not divided,
Paul says that doesn't he? Is Christ divided? No. The Lord's table is then a representation of Christ as the
ABIDING Life of the Church, until He comes, until He comes... that Testimony to Christ. Just Christ, that's all.
Oh, when you come to the Lord's table do remember that. What are you doing? Just going through some thing
that is a part of the church form and order, of Christian procedure? Oh no, I am here declaring one thing in two
ways, firstly that Christ is my very subsistence. I have no life, I have no constitution, I have no maintenance, I
have no continuance apart from Christ. He is my Existence. I declare that for myself, but here is a very searching
thing: I declare that my fellowship with other believers in Christ is also my Life, that Christ is my Life collectively
by fellowship, by oneness, by the unity of the Spirit and that if I break that, if I break that or allow that to be
broken; if I fail to try and repair any breach between me and another child of God, I am simply saying that the
Lord's table is a mere form - it's robbed of all its meaning, its real meaning and I am strangling my own spiritual
life. I am doing injury to my own spiritual life because my Life is not only an individual life, it's a collective or
corporate Life. We depend for our Life upon one another, brethren. Satan will rob us of our Life by interfering
with our relationships. Let there be no mistake about it, that can be very easily proved.

We go on... what is ministry? What is ministry? Now, this doesn't only apply to those who minister. Any who
minister can listen with all your ears, but those who are ministered to, what is ministry? Is it to make people
know what the Bible contains as its subject matter from Genesis to Revelation? Well, that's important, and very
good, and in some senses it may be necessary as a foundation... Is it to give out addresses by research and study
and get it off onto a company of Christians? Oh, I could go on like that, it's not pleasant. What is ministry? Any
ministry and all ministry that does not make possible and provide for an immediate increase of the Lord Jesus, is
not the ministry of the Holy Ghost; is not the ministry of Christ. ALL ministry must have as its IMMEDIATE
object, the increase and the building up of Christ in His people. That is the test; not that it is interesting,
informative or anything else, but that here Christ is being ministered: "I'm being brought right into touch with
Christ. Christ is being brought into touch with me. Not a lot of words... no; I'm having to face up to the Lord
Jesus in some way today, the whole issue of this word is: Christ! The living Christ". That is ministry. That is
ministry, you see it's like that, you can take all that I'm saying back to Paul. Take it all back, take it back into this
second letter to the Corinthians alone and you'll find that's it.

And then, for the present, because of the time, this final question: what is evangelism? What is evangelism? You
say evangelization is the business of the church. True. What is evangelism? Try not to misunderstand me when I
say that the end that God has in view is not just to get people saved - He wants them saved, He sent His Son that
they should be saved - we cannot be too much concerned for their salvation. But that is not the end upon which
the eye of God is resting. Evangelism, the salvation of men's souls with God is a related matter. It is to people, the
kingdom of heaven with Christ, Christ-people; more and more in whom He may have His dwelling to be an out-
shining of Himself. Listen: "When it pleased God to reveal His Son in me that I might proclaim HIM among the
nations". Evangelism is NOT to get so many people converted. Evangelism is THROUGH their being saved to
INCREASE the measure of Christ in this universe! That's a sufficient and a much greater motive I think, than to
be able to count heads and say we've had so many conversions. Oh no, let us say rather, "Christ is getting more
and more ground in this way!" Different mentality! And I am not quite certain that the Lord is not very much
reserved and straitened because of this wrong idea - we put it the other way. I believe that if really the whole
concern in evangelism was not to be able to count heads and say so many converts and so many have signed the
cards and so on and so on, but to say "My, Christ is gaining ground!" I believe that if that were more the object
and the motive, God would come into it more. Because I do believe, dear friends - and forgive me for putting it as
my belief, that doesn't matter at all what I believe, but test it by the Word of God - that where Christ is the ONE,

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the ONLY, the FULL Object in view, God's interest is the greater. God commits Himself. So it must be in all this,
the individual fragment of Christ. Oh, to be here as Christ here, then the Father will be with you; for the local
companies to be here in this neighbourhood as Christ, as Christ... God will commit Himself to that. So in
everything else, everything else that we have mentioned: Christ, only Christ! Christ the Beginning, Christ the
End, Christ All in all.

Ch 09 Christ Revealed as God's Provision

Now as we come to the close of this time together in which the Lord has been bringing anew into view the great
end for which we, with all the saved, have been called - the great end of our salvation in the purpose of God, a
very wonderful end - nothing other than union with Christ in His Throne in the government of this universe. I'm
sure that you have, as we've proceeded, become conscious of great need. Perhaps at times your hearts have
trembled in the presence of the tremendous demands that all this makes. The question may have been with you:
is it possible, can we ever reach that? The demands, requirements are so great in various ways if we are to attain
unto that high and holy calling. It all perhaps seems too much for us. We might fear that we should fail, that we
should come short, that we should not be able to go through. And our fear would probably have certain factors in
it, for it is not just an abstract kind of feeling. There's certain things that we feel that we need, we know
something of what those things are.

Now, today we have been with Paul in his words in 2 Corinthians 4:6 "...it is God that said light shall shine out of
darkness who shined in our hearts to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus
Christ." We have been looking to see what it was that Paul saw in the face of Jesus Christ. And firstly it was Christ
as the Purpose of God and then secondly Christ as the Pattern of God.

Now for a little while, in the third place, Paul saw in the third place Christ as the Provision of God. Christ as the
Provision of God; that he saw that provision in various ways. The one thing that I'm quite sure happened to Saul
of Tarsus when the Lord met him on that road on that day and he saw the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ,
I am perfectly certain that that was the final blow to all his own self-righteousness. I am certain that that day the
bottom was knocked out of all his self-assurance. Whatever he had thought of himself - and he tells it, what he
thought of himself - he tells us in his letter to the Philippians what he thought of himself; he included the whole
sum of his former assets with "concerning the righteousness which was of the law: blameless" the bottom was
knocked out of that on the Damascus road. He'd had a very great sense of his own righteousness and the
righteousness which was of the law. And from that moment when he saw the face of Jesus, there was no man on
this earth more uncertain about his righteousness. And from that time onward this whole question of
righteousness to commune took on a new tone for him. What a lot he writes about it! Have you ever tried to
gather up all that Paul wrote about this matter of righteousness, justification? One big question with him, one big
matter; it seemed in a sense to overshadow everything else... If ever he, as Saul of Tarsus and as a traditional Jew
had thought that he had a standing with God that was quite acceptable and quite good and quite unquestioned;
all THAT went on the Damascus road. Why, right at the end, right at the end of his life, when he's writing his last
letters before going to be with the Lord he said that "my aim, my one aim is that I may be found in Him, not
having a righteousness that is of mine own but the righteousness which is of God by faith".

It is a TREMENDOUS thing this matter of standing with God, acceptance with God, being able to have fellowship
with a holy God. What an undoing of the past, an emptying out of everything upon which he had rested. A
starting all over again with one big question, one big issue, one big quest - how shall a simple man dwell with a
holy God? But the answer he found in the face of Jesus. Yes, looking into the face of Jesus he saw that all the
righteousness that he needed, all the righteousness that ever God needed for him and in him - Jesus was, for
Paul, the Righteousness of God.

Now, dear friends, I know that is very elementary Christian teaching but you know what I have been repeatedly
emphasizing during these days, that it is NOT sufficient for us to have our Christian doctrine. When it comes to
the end, the theories of Christianity, the doctrines and the teachings and the interpretations and all the systems
of Christian truth are not going to get us through. They are not going to get us through. It is only as these matters

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in Christ really are rock under our feet in the day of the tempest that we'll get through and this is such a matter.
It's always arising. This evil one in this universe called the Accuser of the brethren, is ever and always on our
track to undercut this whole matter of our standing with God, our position with a holy God. And we perhaps find
this one of the biggest battlegrounds in our Christian experience. Let me put it like this - perhaps I'm only
suggesting things to you that you've never thought of, but whether you have put it in this way or not, and I'm only
putting into language perhaps what has troubled your hearts without defining the trouble - let me put it like this:
if we are justified by faith in Jesus Christ, if He atoned for our sin, if we are no longer seen by God in ourselves by
nature but in Christ, if we have received by faith in Him remission of our sins; then why are we dealt with by the
Lord as though we were sinful creatures? Why do we suffer for our wrongdoing, our mistakes, our faults, our
errors, our breakdowns? Why do we suffer if He suffered for it all? Why does it seem that WE have to atone for
the things that we do wrong if He atoned for it all? Now I'm perhaps suggesting to you something you've never
thought of, but isn't it just like that? That when we're in suffering, in adversity, in affliction, there sometimes
comes a cloud between us and the Lord and immediately there's an accusation: "THIS is judgment on you, this is
punishment, this is because, because of this or that". Have you never met that? It's like that always. There's
always present this voice of accusation in the presence of adversity and suffering and difficulty, laying at our door
because of, well you see, we were wrong in this and in that... Isn't that a problem? We have got to get VERY clear
on this matter of our standing and of the provision of righteousness in Christ to undercut the work and the power
of Satan and for our own salvation in the day of adversity.

If trouble is coming, if suffering is coming, if we are going to have difficulties and adversities; there's going to be
plenty of room for accusations and condemnation, plenty of ground for the enemy to work on. But we have got to
be absolutely clear on this matter of the provision of righteousness in Christ in order to get through. There are
two things to say about this. One is we must understand the meaning of righteousness. What is righteousness
and what is unrighteousness? It's an important thing for us to understand that. And the other thing is we have
got to be able to cut clean in between the matter of our training and discipline and transformation; and the
judgment of God. There's a great difference. Those are two different realms altogether. Let's look for a moment at
this matter of righteousness.

What is righteousness? Or, what is unrighteousness? Our translation of the word is rather unfortunate; especially
the Authorized Version is very misleading. In 1 John 3 in the old version it is stated "sin is the transgression of
the law", well of course the transgression of the law is sin, but it doesn't say that and it doesn't mean that. If you
look at a better translation (the Revised will help you) a more correct, accurate translation is "Sin is lawlessness".
Lawlessness! That is unrighteousness. Now we can take an illustration from the Old Testament because John
takes this illustration there in that very chapter. He brings in, he introduces Cain and Abel. And he says Cain was
of that lawless one. Now if you look back in the Old Testament to Genesis 4 you find this: "Now, now in the
process of time, Cain brought his offering..." and then you have the story of what happened: brought his offering,
built his altar, presented it to the Lord and got no acceptance whatever. No standing with God. God absolutely
ignored the whole thing. And then that tremendous controversy between Cain and the Lord. But Abel brought his
offering, built his altar, presented it, and the Lord signalized his acceptance by the fire. Abel got through. John
says he was of that lawless one, Cain. "In the process of time..." and the context will show you that there had been
plenty of time for light to be given and the light was that standing before God, acceptance with God, was on the
basis of another life given to God. Symbolized in the blood. That was the light, the light had come. But here is a
man who is a lawless one of the evil one, you see?

The evil one is called by Paul "that lawless one". That lawless one would NOT accept the light, be obedient to the
light; refused to come under the law of any kind, especially the law of the blood of the Lamb. No standing; that's
unrighteousness. And the very essence and core of unrighteousness is not that you are an imperfect or sinful man
or woman, it is a matter of your will in the presence of Light. Now that's what Paul teaches, it's the reaction of
our will when light has been given! Unrighteousness is lawlessness; refusing light. Don't you see that with all
their pretended, assumed, claimed, proclaimed righteousness; the whole nation of Israel was set aside and
rejected. Why? Lawless! They refused the Light. "This is the condemnation, that Light is come, and man loved
darkness rather than light." Because they are of that lawless one. That's unrighteousness.

Now, in the face of Jesus Christ what have you got? Ah, just the most perfect and utter opposite to the lawless
one. The One yielding... it's the Lamb, you see, it's the Lamb - submissive and yielding and meek and lowly -
amenable to the will of God. "Not My will but Thine". One who is wholly and utterly under the will of God. No
lawlessness. No rebellion. No independence. No superiority. Nothing whatever that came across His submission

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to the will of God. He became obedient unto death, yay the death of the cross. There is your great Abel. Now
note: the writer of the letter to the Hebrews, as you well know, said "By faith Abel offered a more excellent
sacrifice than Cain WHEREBY witness was borne unto him that he was righteous". The whole matter of
righteousness for standing, dear friends, is not what we are as big or little sinners, for remember by nature Abel
was no better man than Cain, no better man than Cain. He was of the sinful fallen race just as his brother. And it
is not that we in ourselves are better, are good, are an improvement on someone else whom we would call Cain.
No! We're all on the same ground. You know it as well as I do that there is just as much lawlessness in us by
nature as there is in anybody by nature. But! Light is given. And we act toward the light with our wills and are
submissive and surrendered to the will of God. And that is righteousness, that is righteousness. No lawlessness.
That brings us into a standing with God because that is Christ. That is Christ! The whole matter of righteousness
in the case of Christ in His acceptance with God as our representative was not that He was not made sin, for He
was; it was that He so utterly and completely yielded Himself to the known will of God by faith in God, whatever
that meant, whatever that meant; faith in God. He did the will of God and He stands.

You see, that is the meaning of baptism. In baptism, a figure of the Cross, where He, humbling Himself and being
obedient unto death can... what does He say about it? "Thus it becometh us to fulfill all righteousness". How?
Obedient unto death! Humbling ourselves, then the heavens are opened: "This is my beloved Son". See?
Justified, accepted, standing with the Father. It's an attitude of will. If you are stubborn, rebellious - you will not,
you just WILL not - then you are out of the running, you are out of court. For no matter what we may be as
faulty, sinful creatures, in this matter of standing - mark you, I'm talking about standing now - we stand on the
ground of a righteousness that is not our own at all. It's that righteousness perfected in Christ which God accepts
for us. He is made unto us from God, Righteousness.

Now, let me say this in passing on. I doubt whether there will be a more fierce battleground for the Lord's people
at the end than this one. It's an amazing thing; I recently read again the life of such men, two men, Dr A J
Gordon, one of the most saintly men, certainly one of the men most greatly used in his time, one of a few men
who walked with God in those days. And then the other, A T Pierson, another one, same kind, men who walked
with God. And a third one, A B Simpson. Here you have three spiritual giants. Well, out of the three, at any rate
two of them, right at the end of their course here on this earth, had the most terrible battle of all their lives on the
question of their acceptance by God, their standing with God! They passed into a time of such awful darkness as
though all the forces of evil gathered around them and quenched the light and raised this question of their
acceptance. Thank God that in both cases before they went they got through and the light returned. But its
significant! Its significant that this is THE battleground. And dear friends, whether it comes like that to us or in
any other form, and in any other way, you and I need to be absolutely assured of this matter: that our standing is
not on the ground of what WE are but on the ground of what Christ is.

It is so easy for us to sing Not what I am O Lord but what Thou art but when it comes to the test we forget all
about that and we go down under what we are. We know what we are. Now let me finish this bit for the moment
by saying, that in the end, in the end we are just going to be forced back upon Christ without any alternative. The
Church will be forced back on Christ. You and I will be forced back on Christ! We will have no other ground on
which to stand. And if, if then, we are not sure about Him and what He is for us to God, its going to be a sorry
lookout for us. But Paul looked into the face of Jesus Christ when all his mighty structure of self-righteousness
had collapsed, the bottom had fallen out of that whole system of righteousness by works, he looked into the face
of Jesus and saw a Righteousness that would carry him right through. He saw all the Righteousness that he
needed and one that would never collapse. Yes, Christ is Gods Provision in the matter of righteousness.

But then theres another phase and I know what youre all thinking about this, Yes but what about this other
phase of what we are after all and our failures and all this. We are that we ought not to be and are not that we
ought to be are we to ignore that? Not a bit, not a bit. You see that was one of the charges that the Lord
brought against two churches in Asia: Thou hast there those that hath the doctrine of the Nicolaitans. And that
doctrine was Well, youre saved! Youre saved, by grace... do as you like, live as you like, doesnt matter what you
do, youll be saved alright. Once in grace always in grace, doesnt matter what kind of life you live, you can be
worldly, you can sin, do anything, youre saved alright, nothing can alter that. None will pluck you out of the
Fathers hand. And He said Which thing I HATE! Which thing I hate: condoning wrong, not reckoning with
evil in your life. Oh yes, it doesnt mean that, but theres all the difference, dear friends, between judgment,
condemnation as out of Christ, without His righteousness; and the work of God in what the writer calls
'chastening', that is child training... child training. Now here you have it: But we all with unveiled face reflecting

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as a mirror the glory of the Lord are transformed into the same image from glory to glory as from the Lord the
Spirit.

When the Lord disciplines us - and He does - that does not mean that He has put us under judgment, under
condemnation. It means that He is just going to make good IN us by this discipline, what is true ABOUT us in
Christ. All His disciplines are transformatory. You may not think so, sometimes you think theyre making you
worse; it does seem like that but wait a bit, wait a bit... theres something gracious coming out of it, something
beautiful. You meet more of Christ in those who have the hardest time. Saints I mean, real saints are the people
who seem to have had the hardest handling by the Lord. Its like that. He is developing the character of Christ by
what seems to be hard dealings; hard dealings. Hes very faithful, very faithful. He knows... He knows what we
perhaps would not believe, and His dealings with us are really going to be in the direction of transformation. This
is what happens with TRUE believers. It doesnt happen with unbelievers, if they are dealt with hardly they go
from bad to worse and Paul says here when we are dealt with hardly we go from glory to glory! And though it
may not seem like it or appear like it, it is true, it is true.

We cannot speak very much about ourselves and our goodness and the grace of God in us, but we do know just a
little, that something has happened to us through our sufferings and our afflictions to change us a bit from what
we were. At any rate we say this: where would we be today, where would we be today if the Lord hadn't dealt with
us very faithfully? Very faithfully. But, you see, you must keep this line between the two things, that of judgment
and condemnation, and that of child training, discipline and transforming.

Now then, what is the provision here for the standing? Hes made the provision in the face of Jesus Christ, of
Righteousness. Do you notice the last clause of the verse just quoted: as by the Lord the Spirit. Thank the Lord
for that, the Spirit has got this thing in hand; the Holy Spirit is the Custodian of Glory! The Holy Spirit is the
divine Provision to change us; Hes at work upon it, its in His hands. If we wonder however we are going to be
reconstituted according to Christ, not only justified in Christ but reconstituted and conformed to His image;
leave it with the Holy Spirit. Hes taken it in hand and Hes going to do it and He will do it. Dont get back onto
the ground of rebellion. While you hold your ground of faith in Christ, the Holy Spirit will do it alright; make no
mistake about it. As by the Lord the Spirit.

Now, I want to hurry to a close. The third question that arises, it arose for Paul and it arose very quickly for
Paul... he was hardly off the Damascus road before the question of endurance began to be raised. Now, well, you
see to begin with he had been the official envoy of the Jewish rulers and their commissioned agent to persecute
the church and blot out everything to do with Jesus of Nazareth. And he was about his business very thoroughly
and he represented the attitude and the spirit of those in Jerusalem who had sent him on this business. He was
the very embodiment of them. He turned right round; on the side of the Christians what does he meet? Well, of
course hes got to meet what hed been giving the others. He got to meet all that of which hed been a part as now
against him and that pursued him down the years wherever he went. Oh, the wickedness of it, the suffering those
Jews caused him everywhere and there were other kinds of suffering. The enemy, the great enemy, was ever on
his track. He knew physical suffering, yes, very much physical suffering. He knew treachery, oh yes, every kind
it's certain, he gives us the catalogue. Christians are very, very real on how shall we get through? In the presence
of persecution, in the presence of affliction, suffering, and adversity, trial of every kind; how shall we get
through? And he said unto me: My grace is sufficient for thee and My strength is made perfect in weakness
Jesus; the Provision of God to get through. "Christ in you the hope of glory" He looked into the face of Jesus
and was ever looking into the face of Jesus with this question: Can I go through? Shall I get through? Shall I fail?
Shall I breakdown? And ever came back from that Face: My grace is sufficient for thee. I remember how Mr
Spurgeon put that, he said the little fish, the little fish in the mighty ocean... wondering how hes going to cope
and the mighty ocean says: 'Little fish, my waters are enough for you'. Little, little fish be he Paul the apostle or
anyone else: My grace is sufficient for thee, My strength is made perfect in weakness. The answer of the face of
Jesus to every need; Paul saw it all.

You see how Ive had to hurry through it and merely skim the surface, but go away not with the exposition, not
with the buildup of evidence, but just with the glorious fact: in each, in each case, each respect which proved,
PROVED to be sufficient for that man, and if it could be sufficient for HIM, it can be sufficient for us.
Righteousness? Yes, not our own but Christs, that we may stand before God. And in the daily need of being
changed, the Holy Spirit given to us and ever present with us to work through our difficulties and trials to change
us into the same image and in our sufferings and afflictions the Holy Spirit ministering grace to us. The grace of

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the Lord Jesus, all sufficient grace.

May we see the face of Jesus, may we see the Answer that comes back to all our need as we
look into that face. May the Lord make this time together really to prove to be a time of
looking into His face and being changed.

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