The
Spirit of the Word
"The words that
I speak unto you, they are spirit and they are life."-- Jesus
"The letter killeth, but the Spirit giveth life."-- Paul
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A People
With A
PURPOSE
(1)
by Ray and Doris
Prinzing
Chapter 3
BRINGING SONS INTO GLORY
"For it was an
act worthy of God....in bringing many sons into glory...." Hebrews 2:10,
Amplified].
"For whom He did foreknow, He also did
predestinate to be conformed to the image of His Son, that He might be the
firstborn among many brethren. Moreover whom He did predestinate, them He also
called: and whom He called, them He also justified: and whom He justified, them
He also glorified." [Romans 8:29-30].
As Paul stated these
precious truths he did so with a strong inner conviction of their reality, and
so he goes on to say, "What are we to say to facts like these? If God is for us,
who can be against us?" [Romans 8:31, Williams]. The revelation of God's purpose
being wrought out through the ages, and the definite inclusion of mankind into
that purpose, was so real to Paul that he was able to speak of these things as
being FACTS. A "fact" has the quality of being actual; a statement of a thing
done or existing. The works of God are a reality!
It is significant that the
figure of speech is in the past tense, though we still await complete
experimental fulfillment. Past and future are both alike unto God, for He dwells
in the eternal center of the I AM, the present reality, and therefore "Known
unto God are all His works from the beginning of the world." [Acts 5:18]. And
again, "The works were finished from the foundation of the world. For He spake
in a certain place of the seventh day on this wise, and God did rest the seventh
day from all His works." [Hebrews 4:3-4].
There are two different
words used for "foundation" in the Greek text, "katabole"― meaning a casting or
laying down; and, "themelios"― meaning a foundation, anything laid. The former
speaks of the projection of the purpose, and the latter speaks of its
experimental fulfilling. When God first PROPOSED AND PROJECTED HIS PURPOSE,
setting the laws into motion to run their course, He knew exactly how it would
end, and that the victory was secure, and therefore we can read that He rested
from all His works. This does not mean that He withdrew His involvement with His
creation, for Jesus plainly declared, "My Father worketh hitherto, and I work."
[John 5:17]. Yet there is a depth of rest implied here, so that one may be
occupied in carrying a plan through to fulfillment, and yet be so completely
assured of its victory that there is no strain or struggle, but actually a rest
and a joy in watching that which was first cast forth as a plan, now become
experimental in its outworking.
Praise God, here is victory
assured in its fullest measure, for the outcome of the purpose was predetermined
before the projection, or casting down of the world, i.e. this present "kosmos"
or arrangement. Now, as we are apprehended to become apart of the outworking of
this purpose, then "it becometh us to FULFILL all righteousness." [Matthew
3:15], as Jesus declared, and to give ourselves to see its consummation. We have
no desire to leave one part undone, let everything be brought to the full, to
HIS praise and glory.
Now we come to the
beautiful five-link chain, ordained by God, and beautifully executed by His
grace. It has for its basis and beginning an attribute of God, followed by four
divine acts, which bespeak of His sovereign grace withal. It begins with "whom
He did foreknow." FOREKNOW. This comes from the Greek word "proginosko," pro―
meaning beforehand, and ginosko― meaning to know by experience, or
experimental knowledge. With this key Paul unlocks the mystery of how God did
fully know us by experience before the ages began, before the creature was made
subject to the bondage of vanity.
The very same word is
used concerning Jesus Christ, "Who verily was foreordained (proginosko,
foreknown) before the foundation of the world, but was manifest in these last
times for you." [1 Peter 1:20]. Here is the beginning of grace, deep in the
wisdom of God, His intimate knowledge with the Sacrifice Lamb, and the creation
for whom the Sacrifice was prepared and offered. The scope of this is too
much for us, it staggers the mind to contemplate it, but it rejoices the spirit
to know it is so. God fully knew, intimately, personally, experimentally, the
Lamb which was "slain from the foundation of the world." [Revelation 13:8].
Before sin was
allowed to exist, before there was a need for redemption, God knew the whole
plan and purpose, prepared accordingly for its victory, and as far as God was
concerned, the Lamb was slain right then and there, though ages would pass
before there was a manifestation of that sacrifice upon the earth.
So also, the scripture
clearly indicates that there are those "whose names were not written in the book
of life from the foundation of the world" [Revelation 17:8], and if some were
"not", then it is self-evident that some "were." There are those who were
FOREKNOWN, and their names were already recorded in the Lamb's book of life
before the foundation of the world. Known by experience, God had an intimate
knowledge of them, and of how He would CHOOSE AND USE them in His purpose in due
time. While we were pre-existent, contained in God, He had full experimental
knowledge of all that we would be, when His plan was put into execution and
brought to its fulfillment. Then grace went on to a further manifestation with
the second link in this marvellous unfolding, for He did also "predestinate."
PREDESTINATE. The Greek is
"proorizo", meaning, to mark off beforehand. Again we would first observe how
this is spoken of concerning our Lord. When at the proper time in the purpose,
Jesus Christ was brought to the cross, "Him, being delivered by the determinate
counsel and foreknowledge of God, ye have taken, and by wicked hands have
crucified and slain." [Acts 2:23]. Again, "For to do whatsoever Thy hand and Thy
counsel determined before (predestinated) to be done." [Acts 4:28]. All that the
people were allowed to do was according to God's predetermined counsel, He
marked it out, and they later came along to fulfill it.
Then Paul also writes of
"that wisdom which has been kept secret which God foreordained (predestinated)
before the ages with a view to our g1ory." [1 Corinthians 2:7, Wuest Explanded].
Wonderful! God marked
out before the ages began that wisdom which in due time would be revealed,
resulting in our glory. Truly, "it was, and is an act worthy of God" in bringing
many sons unto glory. His omnipotence, His omniscience, and His tremendous love
and grace are all under-girding this act, and we bow low to worship Him for all
that He is.
"Having predestinated us into adoption through Jesus Christ into
Himself, according to the good pleasure of His will, into praise of glory of His
grace." [Ephesians 1:5-6, Interlinear].
Herein is love
overwhelming, for He hath marked us out for the placement as sons into Himself,
through our Lord Jesus Christ, with the result that we should be into the praise
and glory of His grace. This is the positive application of true predestination.
All other operations of His will, in the interplay of good and evil, are only
subservient to this cause, that we are to be brought into vital union with our
Creator, to be a part of the continued outworking of His purpose.
All of this betokens the
sovereign grace of God, for it was before the foundation of the world that He
knew those whom He would mark out to be apart of that first fruits of His new
creation, and they are truly "being predestinated according to the purpose of
Him who worketh all things after the counsel of His own will." [Ephesians 1:11].
Thus two links of the grace of God were forged in this chain before ever we
tabernacled in these bodies of clay. The next three links are brought into view
during our "time," and He begins to work out and fulfill that which was
predetermined and marked out beforehand, for these "He also called."
CALLED. From the Greek word
"kaleo," meaning to name, to call. What a precious operation of God. His grace
already foreknew us and marked us out long ago, and now, after the creature was
made subject to the bondage of vanity, turned towards destruction, gripped by
the passions and desires of this flesh, then comes the CALL, to awaken us to the
higher realm to which we truly belong. I do not know when you first became aware
of your call-but blessed is the man that knows that he has been called! Nor can
I personally ever forget those years when I began to be conscious of that INNER
SPIRIT CALL. The mind did not understand what it was all about, but there was a
stirring in my spirit that could not be satisfied with natural things. An inner
yearning for God and truth, righteousness and life, and an inner response to the
wooings of the holy Spirit.
"That the purpose of
election might stand, not of works, but of Him that calleth." [Romans 9:11]. The
call of God is not placed upon our life because of all our good works which we
accumulate, and finally we become worthy to be called. NOT AT ALL! It is not
based upon works, this call is the third link of the chain, vitally connected
to, and dependent upon the previous ones, namely His foreknowledge and His
marking us out for this hour. Then, when the proper time comes, the CALL comes
into focus, and we are made aware of that sense of destiny placed upon us.
Paul wrote, "But it pleased
God, who separated me from my mother's womb, and called me by His grace."
[Galatians 1:15]. Looking back over his life, Paul could acknowledge that it was
the HANDIWORK OF GOD from the beginning, and that the separations began from his
mother's womb, although it was years later, after dashing down the wrong path,
and ending up kicking against the pricks, persecuting the truth, that suddenly
rhe CALL came through, penetrated the density of the darkened mind, and he was
turned towards God. And even that hour, of the glory of the call, had to be
followed by much purging and preparation before he realized what the purpose was
all about, namely, "TO REVEAL HIS SON IN ME." [Galatians 1:16].
"Who hath saved us, and
called us with a holy calling, not according to our works, but according to His
own purpose and grace, which was given us in Christ Jesus before the world
began." [2 Timothy 1:9]. Let it be clear, it is all according to HIS OWN PURPOSE
AND GRACE, and yet so freely given to us in Christ before the world began. There
is nought that we have to boast of in ourselves, but we would glory in the Lord,
and praise Him.
Gideon heard the call of
God to him, but it surely wasn't based upon the man's faith and expectation of
doing great things, for he immediately responded, "If the Lord be with us, why
then is all this befallen us? and where be all His miracles which our fathers
told us of, saying, Did not the Lord bring us up from Egypt? but now the Lord
hath forsaken us, and delivered us into the hands of the Midianites." And when
he was assured that he would be the vessel used to bring salvation to Israel, he
could only respond the more, "Oh my Lord, wherewith shall I save Israel? behold,
my family is poor in Manasseh, and I am the least in my father's house." [Judges
6:13, 15]. Ah, but it was this very condition which God could use to reveal HIS
GRACE, and how gloriously the purposes of God were fulfilled.
The call of God is
placed upon us, not because of what we are in ourselves, measuring our natural
abilities, but because of what HE shall be in us. When we become aware of
this GRACE working in our lives, and then begin to trace back to where grace
might have had its beginning, we discover it is pure, solid grace back past our
mother's womb, back into the obscure re aims of "before the world began", when
God knew us, marked us out, and gave us this graee in Christ Jesus. Who can
presently comprehend such grace?
"The God of all grace, who
hath called us unto His eternal glory by Christ Jesus, after ye have suffered
awhile, make you perfect, stablish, strengthen, settle you." [1 Peter 5:10].
"Faithful is He that
calleth you, who also will do it." [1 Thess. 5:24]. The God of grace who gives
the call is also the same God of grace who shall fulfill it, bringing it to a
successful conclusion at the appointed time. Praise God, we are to be a people
with a purpose, and there is sufficient resource for the whole purpose, because
it is out of His boundless grace. The inflow of this grace progresses while we
suffer awhile, it progresses while we are being strengthened, and it continues
to unfold while we are being stablished, and will redound to His glory when we
are settled. Yes, the suffering process is a part of the call, as much as all
the victory to follow. But God knew way back before the world began that you
would be able, BY HIS GRACE, to endure this suffering, and He placed His mark
upon you because of that foreknowledge. Trust and rest in Him, HE knows full
well all that He is doing, and He will not lose you in the process.
JUSTIFIED. "Dikaioo",
meaning ―to make, declare right, "whom He called, them He also justified." With
the CALL OF GOD unfolding in our lives, this then becomes the point of our
present process, of being experimentally justified. There has to be more than
just an imputed justification, where we are declared to be righteous because of
what Christ shall be doing in us. There must be an outworking of that process to
make it a personal reality by experience. What we have positionally by faith in
Christ does not absolve us from going on to make it an experimental reality, in
fact it is this position already declared in Christ which makes it both
essential and unavoidable that we do pass through the process, until it is
established.
The basis for all expanding
of the process is that of revelation, for every advance must be preceded by a
Divine revelation, else there is no support for the advance.
In the throes of beholding
good and evil, and not yet quickened by the Spirit of God to walk in His life
and light, men have become a law unto themselves. "For when the nations, which
have not the law, do by nature the things contained in the law, these, having
not the law, are a law unto themselves: which shew the work of the law written
in their hearts, their conscience also bearing witness, and their thoughts the
mean while accusing or else excusing one another." [Romans 2: 4-15].
We justify or condemn one
another according to our own law making, of how good and evil appear in our
sight. We might, for the most part, do those things contained in the law because
it is a part of our nature to do so. But there is also another part of our old
Adamic nature which prompts us to do evil. So there follows the battles of the
mind-if others break the law which according to our nature is to do right, we
accuse them. But if we do certain things, which to them is wrong, but in our own
nature to do, we find an excuse for it, and seek to justify our actions. But
this kind of justification does not make it right.
A certain lawyer stood up,
to test the Lord, and asked what he should do to inherit age-abiding life. So
Jesus simply asked him, "What is written in the law? how readest thou?" [Luke
10:26]. Jesus could have very easily quoted to this man the law, but He let the
man tell it in his own words, and according as to how he "read it." An
interesting Greek word here for "read," being "anaginosko," which implies, how
have you gained an experimental knowledge of this law? In what way do you read
this? How do you relate your knowledge and experience to this? So the lawyer
proceeded to quote the law, "Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy
heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy strength, and with all thy mind;
and thy neighbour as thyself."
The lofty principles of
such complete love to God, because they are so great, become lost to our senses
oftentimes, and simply become beautiful words to utter. But when it came down to
the last phrase, "and thy neighbour as thyself," there was an immediate reaction
in the lawyer, for this part he well understood, and when he measured his
experience and practice, as against what he knew the law declared, he went into
a protective action. But he, willing to justify himself, said unto Jesus, "And
who is my neighbour?" [Luke 10:29]. Self had not measured up to what he knew was
the law, so he sought for an excuse, a justification. And I daresay, by the time
the Lord had explained to him who his neighbour really was, there was not one
particle of defense left to justify himself.
And He said unto them, "Ye
are they which justify yourselves before men; but God knoweth your hearts."
[Luke 16:15].
"If I justify myself, mine
own mouth shall condemn me: if I say, I am prefect, it shall also prove me
perverse." [Job 9:20]. How true! And the more words we utter in self-defense,
the more we give ourselves away, proving our own guilt. Now remember, we are not
just dealing with natural things here, but spiritual conditions of the inner
man. Self-defense is simply that, a defense for SELF, which proves that self is
not yet fully "crucified," so that HIS SELF becomes our new life. Jesse
Penn-Lewis once wrote to the effect that, if you become disappointed in
yourself, it is evident that self is not yet dead, or else it could feel no
disappointment. These might be hard words, and yet we rejoice to see how the
Spirit quickens truth to enable us to overcome. Again the words of a song come
to mind:
"Caught up beyond ourselves, into His glory,
Beholding the unveiling of our God,
Entered in beyond the veil,
From the earthlies, into the heavenlies,
There to live, and move, and have our being,
Made alive to God alone,
Quickened to stand before His presence,
Arisen to new life above in Him."
Justified, to be declared
right. "By the deeds of the law shall no flesh be justified in His sight: for by
the law is the knowledge of sin." [Romans 3:20]. The law can define what is
wrong or right, but it was unable to impart the power to do the right, hence it
could not declare us in right standing, but rather, having declared to us the
right standard, it served to condemn us because we could not measure up to that
standard. That which makes you sin-conscious cannot justify you from sin.
"Being justified freely by
His grace through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus." [Romans 3:24]. Praise
God! Herein lies the power for a right standing, HIS GRACE, and the REDEMPTION
that is in Christ Jesus. The word redemption here comes from a Greek word
meaning "a loosing away." It is the inworkings of His grace, which looses us
from our wrong doings, that brings us into a place of rightness. What a Saviour!
And while it is true, that the sudden burst of His light might expose to us our
sins, yet He does not come to condemn us for them, and though we might feel
"convicted of our sins" and therefore ask for forgiveness, this is freely given,
and He continues to just bathe us with His light, insomuch that we begin to gaze
upon HIS holiness and beauty-and as this fills our vision, we become what we
see. And knowing full well what we are becoming in Him, He can make the
declaration of our right standing, for HE shall make it so.
"For if by one man's
offence death reigned by one; much more, they which receive abundance of grace,
and of the gift of righteousness shall reign in life by one, Jesus Christ ...by
the righteousness of one the free gift came upon all men unto justification of
life." [Romans 5:17-18].
It is GRACE ALL THE WAY!
Grace in the foreknowledge of God which went on to mark us out for His purpose.
Grace in the callings which became known unto us in due time. And then grace in
the process of our being justified to have a right standing before Him, thus
enabling us to reign in life.
Yet there is another verse
which must be' included in these thoughts, for it is most challenging. Romans
6:7, "For he that is DEAD is FREED from sin." The word "freed" is actually
the word "justified" used elsewhere. This is grace in action, enabling us to be
completely free from sin, and to be declared righteous, by our experimental
conformity to His death. Death to self is actually apart of the PROCESS OF BEING
JUSTIFIED. And when we are totally dead to all sin, we shall also be totally in
a new right standing with God.
Then, "who shall lay
anything to the charge of God's elect? it is God that justifieth." [Romans
8:33]. It was God who led us down through the valley of the shadow of death, not
always "to be dying," but when fully dead to one realm, we might become fully
alive to another realm, into the fulness of HIS LIFE. And this freedom from sin
pre-supposes freedom from the consequences of sin, which is death, or literally,
carnal mindedness. To be free from the minding of the flesh, and all that
pertains to this realm, is to have the life and peace of the spirit. Thus
justification leads INTO LIFE, and though the process of being justified
includes "dying," until we are dead to the former, it is for the purpose of
LIVING, into the fulness of His more abundant life, the life of the ages.
GLORIFIED. "Whom He
justified, them He also glorified." And the Greek word here is "doxazo," to
glorify, to honour. "So Christ g1orified not Himself...." [Hebrews 5:5].
Answered Jesus, "If I glorify myself, my glory is nothing. There is my Father
who glorifies me." [John 8:54, Wuest Expanded]. Jesus received only whatsoever
the Father gave Him, He did not seek for Himslf, but to glorify the Father, and
in so doing He was glorified.
It is more of the sovereign
inworking of the grace of God, and thus we do not take to ourselves positions,
to decide that we will be some great apostle, prophet, etc. but through complete
yieldedness to Him, He will exalt in due time those who have humbled themselves
before Him. It was GOD who highly exalted Christ Jesus, and it will be God who
places us in whatever position of honour and glory for which He has prepared us.
"For I have come to a
reasoned conclusion that the sufferings of the present season are of no weight
in comparison to the glory which is about to be revealed INTO us." [Romans 8:18,
Wuest Expanded].
Interesting that the Hebrew
word for "glory" means weight, heaviness, thus speaking of SUBSTANCE, and not
just something nebulous. Wonderful! As heavy as the present sufferings seem to
be, they are of NO WEIGHT in comparison to the true weight, the glory which is
to be revealed into us. 1 Corinthians 11:7 states that "man is the image and
glory of God." Not man just in his unfinished state, but the NEW CREATION MAN,
fully conformed to the image of Christ― and this new state of being is a glory
in itself. It shall be a reality, a substantial thing which the world shall
behold.
"For our light affliction,
which is but for a moment, worketh for us afar more exceeding and age-abiding
WEIGHT OF GLORY; while we look not at the things which are seen, but at the
things which are not seen: for the things which are seen are temporal; but the
things which are not seen are age-abiding." [2 Corinthians 4:17 -18].
SONS-By
Grace
O grace
of God that antedates
The
course the ages run,
Yet ever
present in this hour"
To see
the vict'ry won.
Thy way
is most untraceable,
And
merged in love divine,
Our minds
can scarcely comprehend
Thy
wisdom's pure design.
For in
His great eternal realm
God did
His own foreknow,
And thou,
in Christ, was given then
His mercy
to foreshow.
And
sovereignly was manifest
To then
predestinate
The
vessels whom the Lord would choose
To now
illuminate.
And thou
art in the calling, too,
Of these,
the christed ones,
For
nought but grace could ever win
To
manifest the sons.
Whom thou
didst call, thou did inwork
To freely
justify,
For only
by thy inner strength
Can man
to selfhood die.
'Tis
grace in action, grace divine,
That sets
the sinner free,
Conforming man unto the death
That
births new liberty.
No
present suff'ring can compare
To
glories that shall be
Revealed
in those who have become
What
grace caused them to be.
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________
(1) Prinzing,
Ray and Doris. A PEOPLE WITH A PURPOSE. (now out of print), Boise,
Idaho 83705
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