Kingdom of God
Part
1
The
word "gospel" means good news, and this is the message we are to
take to all the peoples of the earth. We are living in a day when there is
very little "good" news. Our TV screens are filled with violence
and crime, and the world news only makes one depressed. Health-wise we
find new diseases afflicting man with all sorts of maladies. We begin to
wonder if there is any such thing as good news in this world.
The
church has compounded the problem by spreading a "gospel" which
carries as much "bad" news as good. This is the gospel of
salvation, which says that Christ died for our sins according to the
scriptures, and if we will put our trust in Him, He will forgive our sins
and takes us to heaven when we die. However, when it comes down to the
out-working of this "good news," there is precious little that
makes a lot of difference between those who accept this gospel and those
who do not. At least that is as far as life here on earth is concerned.
People
"converted" under this gospel, continue to live in bondage to
sin, and are subject to all the ills and misfortunes that are common to
man. It would seem the greatest benefit is not available during this
lifetime at all, but only after death and it would be open to question
just how much actual "good" news is contained in this
"gospel." The conclusion we must come to is that something was
left out, or forgotten in the message of this particular gospel.
As
we turn back to the scriptures we notice that when Jesus began His
preaching ministry, it was with a declaration of the gospel of the Kingdom
of God. He said, "The time is
fulfilled, and the Kingdom of God is at hand, repent ye and believe the
gospel." Now before we can explore this Kingdom gospel, let us
look at the teaching upon which the gospel of salvation is based. The
popular theology behind the gospel of salvation is built upon the premise
that man is born a sinner as a result of Adam’s transgression. It is
because this is the foundation teaching of the evangelicals that sin
becomes the focus of the gospel they preach. Then it automatically follows
that the good news must center on dealing with that sin, and receiving
forgiveness. No mention is made of the fact that man has lost his God
given status of dominion, and become a slave, nor are we given any true
remedy for the situation.
In
this study we will discover:
·
Who man really
is from God’s point of view?
·
What dominion
involves?
·
Did God expect
that man would exercise that dominion?
·
How is this
dominion to function in our lives today?
What is Man?
The
Psalmist said, "What is man
that thou art mindful of him, and the son of man that thou visitest him?
For thou has made him a little lower than Elohim and crowned him with
glory and honor, and made him to have dominion over the works of thy
hands, and put all things under his feet," Psalm 8. This is the
view that David had of man by revelation of the Spirit of God. Now let us
go back to the very beginning where we see man as he comes from the hand
of the Creator.
"And
God said let us make man in our
image and after our likeness, and let them have dominion over the fish
of the sea, the fowl of the air, the cattle and over all the earth. So God
created man in his own image, in the image of God created he him, male and
female created he them. And God blessed them and said, ‘Be fruitful and
multiply and replenish the earth and subdue it and have dominion over the
fish of the sea, the fowl of the air, and over every living thing that
moveth upon the earth’ ....... And God saw everything that he had made
and behold, it was very good," Gen. 1:26-31.
The
answer to our question as to what man is has been complicated by the
theological concepts of our day. In view of this, we must clarify the
question just a little further by focusing our attention on man as he was
created by God, and not what he became during the course of history. These
two aspects must remain separate if we are to arrive at the truth. Most
Bible teachers only see man from the point of view of his failure in the
Garden of Eden, while ignoring what he was by creation. No one would
consider any automobile that had been abused and damaged, to be a true
representation of that particular make of car. So to say man is a sinner
surely does not truly represent man as he came from the hand of God!
If
we are honest in our quest to discover "what is man" we must go
back to the beginning for only then will we discover the truth. Now in
order to help us understand the truth, we must look at two scriptures and
see by the Spirit their relationship. The first one is found in Genesis
1:26-27, which details the creation of man. He is declared to be the image
and the likeness of God, and given dominion over all the works of His
hands.
Let
us note carefully what is recorded concerning this man in Genesis 1. He is
actually brought forth in the likeness
(that is the resemblance or comparison) and image (this word means, "to shade," a phantom or
illusion) of God. It is
necessary to challenge the many and varied concepts of God that exist
today among God’s people. It is commonly believed that God is corporeal
or has a "body" like ours.
Many
Christians imagine God in the form of a man sitting somewhere up in the
sky, controlling everything that goes on in this world. However, John
tells us clearly that "God is Spirit, and those that worship Him must do so in
spirit and truth."
Now
if God is Spirit then He has no discernible form or body. Therefore man,
who was created in His likeness and image must be spirit, and so there is
no mention in the account in Genesis 1:26-27, of any "human"
body. I am emphasizing this in order to contrast this
man with the man in Genesis 2:7. In this account we find God forming
(Hebrew-Yatsar, which means to mold
as a potter), man out of the dust of the earth. This
"forming" involved using material that already existed and that
is the earth. Let us notice that there is no mention here of the likeness
and image of God. The reason is clear, because this man,
formed of the dust becomes not a
spirit, but a living soul,
functioning in a body. The image and likeness of God can only relate to
that which is Spirit.
When
this man was "formed" it required another act on the part of God
before this man could begin to live. The scripture declares God breathed
into his nostrils the breath of
lives and man became a living
soul. This statement differentiates between these two men and makes
them distinct. Many Bible teachers suggest that these two accounts should
be regarded as one, describing
the same event from different angles. But this can only bring confusion
and destroys the truth concerning what
is man! The question is to ascertain what is man’s intrinsic being,
and not what he may appear to be from humanities point of view. Whatever
man was in "the beginning" is what he is today, regardless of
what may transpire through the years. None of the changes we observe in
man are permanent, for we hear the voice of God declaring to the whole
world,
"Behold
I make all things new."
Revelation 21:4.
Not
I will make all new things, as many Bible teachers teach, but a return to
the freshness of the original. For this reason we must know what that
"original" man was, and according to Genesis 1:26-27, he was in
true spirit form as he came from the hand of the Creator. What then do we
understand about the man formed of the dust of the ground with a corporeal
body? As we bow before the wisdom of the Almighty, we understand that,
"as far as the heavens are
above the earth so far are My thoughts above your thoughts and My ways
above your ways, saith the Lord."
This
then poses the question, is man essentially a spirit being, or is he a
human being? Or to put it another way, is man simply a body made from the
dust of the earth? Which idea do you think is more correct? If we are just
flesh and blood then when we die we simply go back to the dust from whence
we came, and that is the end. If we are really spirit, then perhaps the
body counts for nothing and we should ignore it, for it is of no
consequence. Personally, I do not believe any of these answers are
correct, although each one has a good number of followers today.
This
is what I believe to be the truth. Because God is Spirit He does not have any "form" in terms of
what we can see with our eyes, therefore He is invisible. When God created
the heavens and the earth He dispersed Himself throughout all of creation.
He is the life in all-living
forms, for He is the only source and the sustainer of all life, as scripture declares, "in Him we live and move
and have our being." But of course you could look at creation
forever and probably never see God, for He is invisible. So out of all
creation God chose to make something very special through which He could
reveal Himself. That "something" was not a tree, animal or bird,
but God said, "Let
us make man in our likeness
and image."
This
special creature, which He called man was to be like no other form of
creation. The account of this act of creation is stated in very simple
terms for us to understand, but to man has added a good measure of his own
imagination, which has robbed
this amazing episode of its divine uniqueness. This man came forth exactly
as God spoke him into existence.
This mystical being was not an angel but was called man. We need to be quickened by the Holy Spirit to see the history
of this One through the scriptures but it is all there for those with eyes
to see. John said of this One, "In
the beginning was the Word."
This was the Word spoken by
Almighty God in the beginning
when He said, "Let us make man."
Now
the Greek word used here for "word" is logos, and is full of
meaning in this context. It does not refer to the spoken word as such, but includes the thought and the intention
that lay behind that word. In other words the logos that came forth in the beginning was not just a
word spoken by God, but included with itself the
very expression of the heart, mind, will and purpose of God Himself!
No wonder it is said that He was created in the likeness
and image of God. Now let us
look further into what John has to say about this One, "In the beginning was the Word
(Logos) and the Word was with God and
(for all intent and purposes) He was
God."
We
need to ponder these words having removed our shoes, for the very ground
upon which we stand is holy. It
becomes very clear that whatever God was before creation, and wherever He
dwelt, at this point a change took place whereby God took up residence in
a creature of His own creation called man. But this is not, all for we
are told this "man" is both male and female, and two basic
directions were given to him. The first is to "be
fruitful and multiply" and replenish the earth, and the second is
to "have dominion over all the works of God’s hands," or over
all creation!
When
we face the truth without the interference of our carnal mind, it shines
with all the splendor of the noonday sun. Here is the truth, God has
become an integral part of His creation in a creature, which is the very
pinnacle of everything that was made. The Word, the Logos, from which the whole
earth is to be populated, and through this One is to be exercised a dominion
over the whole of creation. Just think of it beloved, for this is the wisdom
of God! Now wonder David asked the question, "What
is man that Thou art mindful of him?"
If
you want to know what man is here is your answer, as well as the will and
desire of God concerning him. This is the crowning glory of all creation,
for as he came forth on the sixth day, God declared it was very good! The
zenith had been reached and all that was needed now was for God to
sanctify creation, or set it apart in all its pristine glory, and enter
into His rest or Sabbath. The final outcome of all creation will be according to
the plan and purpose of God established in the beginning, regardless of
what issues that may arise along the way.
There
are several more thoughts that we must explore here regarding this man
created in the likeness and image of God. The first is to discover his
identity today. Again we turn to John who declares,
"The
Word became flesh."
Now
we begin to understand the difference between the man in Genesis 1:26-27,
and the man in Genesis 2:7. Here in the beginning is the birthing of a
spiritual and a human society, both of which come out of the same root.
For the spiritual man this account contains the treasures, which are ours
behind the veil of our natural intelligence and the heavenly realities of
life for us. The words written here are simply a vehicle to convey to us
the hidden mysteries of the Almighty, if we would only look beyond their
outward form into the mind of the spirit that they contain.
If
we would unravel the mystery of these two men we must start at the very
beginning. Thus we read, "In
the beginning God created the heavens and the earth."
Following this announcement little is said about the heavens, but the
focus is on the earth, which is declared to be "without form and void." If we only see these words in their
natural application, we will miss the true import of their message as they
relate to us. If God is merely referring to the physical earth then the whole passage has very little relevance to you and
I today. But as the Spirit quickens our mind, we see the earth as being the earth
man in Genesis 2:7. The whole passage is actually a commentary on the
course the man of the earth took, and God’s restoration plan. Let us
look at scripture to see if this idea can be substantiated. The prophet
Jeremiah used these very words concerning Judah in chapter 4:23, where he
says,
"I
beheld the earth and lo it was without
form and void, and the heavens they held no light .... I beheld the
mountains and lo they trembled, and all the hills moved lightly ..... the
fruitful place has become a wilderness and all the cities thereof were
broken down at the presence of the Lord ..... the whole land shall be
desolate yet will I not make a full end."
This
whole chapter is the cry of the prophet for Israel, but Judah in
particular. Isaiah uses very similar words in chapter 45, especially
verses 4-13, regarding Jacob. So the prophets saw earthly man down through
the ages as the "earth" which was without
form and void. Now we know
this situation did not exist at creation,
so it must refer to an event that took place after man came into being. It
is in chapter three of Genesis that the story unfolds of that catastrophe
which turned the "earth man" from an habitation of God into an empty
desolation. The garden
fades to be replaced by a wilderness,
with this man now existing as a
separate identity from God. He had become a "hu-man."
Sad
and tragic as this whole episode is, remember the end is assured, for
the purpose of God established in the beginning by divine decree cannot be
broken. For this reason the Spirit of God inspired Moses to record for
us the process in Genesis 1, by which this calamity was reversed for the
earth man, until he finds himself again the dwelling place of God and
Father’s house, and fulfilling the role given by God. Beloved, we
desperately need the Holy Spirit to lift the veil on our understanding,
particularly with regards to Moses’ writings. Paul says, "When
the heart of natural or earthly Israel shall turn to the
Lord, then the veil will be lifted."
Now
we must return to John’s revelation where he states that, "the
Word became
flesh and dwelt (or took up residence) among
us, and we beheld His glory, the glory as of the only begotten of the Father,"
John 1:14. Who was he referring to? It was the
Word made flesh, with a body of flesh
and blood just the same as ours
today, and born of a woman. This one was called Jesus the Christ. Now Jesus
is the name of the man who was born of Mary in Bethlehem, but Christ
means "the anointing" or manifestation of God. Now here is the
mystery of God entering our human society. With spiritual vision we can
see both of the men in Genesis 1 and Genesis 2, combined together as Immanuel
which means "God
with us." In this "man" we see humanity and
divinity united, as God becomes integrated into humanity.
This
Christ was the One who existed before the incident recorded in Genesis 3,
when man partook of the fruit of the knowledge of good and evil. This is
referred to by the Apostle Paul as "the
disruption." He also records that we were, "chosen
in Him before the disruption
that we should be holy and without blame before Him in love," Ephesians 1:4. So,
God’s choosing of us was not affected by Adam’s sin. What we were then
in Christ is still exactly what we are now at this very moment.
Here
then is the picture that unfolds to us as the Holy Spirit turns on the
light of divine understanding. There are two
streams of man recorded in
Genesis, both from the same stock. The one with all the glory of the
likeness and image of God was given dominion over all the works of God’s
hands. The other man, fitted with a body of dust and made a living soul,
begins life elevated over creation, but divided within himself so that Spirit
(the God aspect of man) and the soul
(the earthly aspect of man), functioned independently
of each other. This is represented in Genesis as the separation of the
woman (the soul) from the man (the spirit). He that hath ears to hear, let
him hear what the Spirit is saying.
Man
who has borne the image of the earthy, has been sustained by the breath of
lives (plural), which God breathed into him. This life functions in the
man of the earth through the various channels of the soul, such as the
emotional life, physical life, etc. The
pure essence of the life of God is Sprit and was forfeited through
death, by Adam. Life on the Adamic level has limitations, both as to its
duration as well as its quality. It also requires food, water and air in
order for it to be sustained. In comparison the life of God or spiritual
life needs nothing to sustain it, for it is eternal
and can never be destroyed or
terminated.
In
the Adamic man, the soul broke its allegiance with the Spirit and began to
function independently, thus lowering him into the realm of earth from
whence he came. God’s divine order is that the Spirit is Lord, and not
the soul, whose only task is to manifest and "birth" an
expression of what the spirit is. The true spirit man was a perfect
expression of the image and likeness of God Himself. The man of the earth
found his expression through the faculty of soul, which had prostituted
itself to the flesh, thus the image was that of earthliness containing but
a dim outline of spiritual reality. The ages have conditioned man to live
in the realm of appearance, and to consider what can be seen with natural
perception to be reality, so that the unseen world of the spirit now seems
like a fantasy, when in fact the reverse is true.
It
has been necessary for us to look deeply into man and his origin because
of the ignorance and confusion that has been foisted on the Christian
church by carnal men, who are limited by their natural understanding. But
our goal is to come to a true understanding of the Kingdom of God, so we
will continue on to that end.
What is Dominion?
The
word dominion is very closely
connected with the king and ruling. It would seem from scripture that
Nimrod, who was a direct descendant of Noah’s son Ham, established the
first dominion in opposition to God. This is recorded in Genesis 10:10,
and it is interesting that it was called Babylon or confusion.
The authority system set up by Nimrod has continued to create confusion in
society right up to this day. The reason why is not difficult to
understand.
God’s authority
system is God!
Before
we can ever understand the Kingdom of God, we must discover the truth
about God’s authority, and how it operates. Nothing in man’s authority
system functions in the same way, so there is really no comparison. In our
discussion on the creation of man, we found that God invested Himself in
man, in order that He might become intelligible to humanity. Because of
this, God’s authority was not delegated to man, but functioned out of
God Himself, who constituted an integral part of man. This means that when
God gave dominion to man over all the works of His hands, He did not sit
up in some "heaven" dictating orders to this man, which he in
turn was to act upon. No, God exercised His authority from within man
himself.
This
puts the authority of God into a new dimension. But you may say that
everything any man does then, must be God, including the disobedience of
Adam in the garden. He who has ears to hear let him hear what the Spirit
is saying. The overt form of Babylon was established by Nimrod, and
continues unto this day, but the birthing of Babylon, took place in the
Garden of Eden, in the heart and mind of this creature God made as His
dwelling place. What happened in the garden has to do with God’s
authority. Any departure from God’s designated authority system
automatically becomes Babylon, or confusion. So speaking from within the
man Adam, God says, "do not reach out for a knowledge outside the
scope of what is in Me, because
if you do, you as a being, will be thrown into awful confusion, which will
result in you denying who I am and where I am." This is true because
God is God and no one and nothing can take His place. Yet if God is
allowed to be God within man, that man becomes Immanuel, which is "God
with us."
If
that does not cause you to worship Him that sits upon the throne, perhaps
you may need to check your pulse! Let me explain further. The tree of the
knowledge of good and evil represents for every one of us a knowledge
realm that is outside of God.
Comparison should never ever enter into our contemplation of God. He is
incomparable! If you speak about good and evil you have introduced a human
comparison system, upon which mankind bases all his concepts and makes his
decisions. If my eye is single and all I can see is God, then I do not
need any comparison system. In other words I do not need to consider God
and ...... for there is nothing else!
Note
the words of scripture, "In the
beginning God!" It
does not say in the beginning there was God and good and evil, or God and
evil. No, there was only God, and nowhere do I find where evil came into
being as a part of God’s creation. God is omniscient, and as such knows
all things. Therefore if He dwelt in man there is no reason for that man
to reach out for any knowledge outside of God, for it could only be death
to him. There is no "good and evil" in God, and neither does God
think in terms of "good and evil" or function in our lives on
the basis of "good and evil," it is totally foreign to Him.
In
our world knowledge is power and nations are manipulated by men who use
their knowledge, which is kept from the masses in order to achieve their
own ends. In what is called Adam’s temptation in the Garden of Eden, man
used his mental capacity to explore the possibility of gaining knowledge,
which he thought God was withholding from him in order to subjugate him.
Because of the brilliance of his mind, Adam was able to tap into this new
concept of good and evil, which he assumed would actually constitute him
as God. But that knowledge introduced death into his being, because
instead of everything being God, now it was "living or dead,"
"good or evil," or "love and hate."
Six
times in the New Testament the Apostle Paul states that, "Everything
is out of God," and that is an indisputable fact. But man
believes there are realities outside of God, such as sickness, evil, and
death to name just a few. Now because of God’s authority structure from
within a man, all these things, which we have added to God are given power
by us to exercise authority in our lives, which they do because we have
convinced ourselves like Adam that they must be all part of God. Although
the Bible declares God is love, we declare God loves, but He also hates.
He is just, but also burns people in hell forever. Therefore the knowledge
of God in man is totally distorted because for us He is no longer
omniscient or having all knowledge. We have a knowledge that goes beyond
God, because we have the power to discern between good and evil, a
comparison or distinction by which means we believe we can rise to
divinity, even though it does not exist in reality.
It
has been necessary to divert a little in our discussion on dominion,
because we must grasp the very basis of God’s authority if we are to
enter into a true realization of the Kingdom of God. God’s dominion
functions out of Himself as He dwells within man. When He is enthroned
within us in reality and in the truth of His being, His dominion or
authority, functions out of what God is, and that is love plus nothing! He
is our Maker, our Life, our Sustainer, our All, or everything that He is.
But
if like Adam we embrace a knowledge that is outside of the I AM, we give
that knowledge power and so create our own monsters
who enslave us and force us to serve them. They have names like fear,
sickness, and death to name but a few, none of these are found in God
and are beyond the scope of His omniscience. It is not God that makes us
sick or causes us to die, etc., it is the monsters we have created in our
own mind by embracing knowledge that is outside of God.
Many
Christians rely upon imagination as their guide when it comes to
understanding how God functions today and the process of His authority.
There is a common perception that God is a "man" up in the sky,
sitting in a room or place called heaven from where He dispenses judgment
on every infringement of the Ten Commandments committed by mankind. He
listens to all our prayers and grants some, but ignores others, while
determining what each one deserves on the basis of right and wrong. Most
are convinced that God functions out of the tree of the knowledge of good
and evil, blessing us if we are good and judging us if we are evil. Just
think how ridiculous such a notion is, if God functioned out of that same
tree Adam was told not to touch.
The
question is how does God dispense His authority in this world today? To
answer the question we must go back to "the beginning" and see
how God established His authority over all creation.
Where is God’s
Throne?
If
you asked that question of most Christians what would be their answer? I
can tell you that they believe God rules from a throne set in some
ethereal "heaven" which is the product of man’s imagination. You maybe surprised to know that God established His
dominion in man according to
Genesis 1:28. "God blessed them
and said unto them, be fruitful and replenish the earth and rule
over it, and have dominion over the fish of the sea, the fowls of the
air, and over every creeping thing that creepeth on the earth."
Our
main problem is that we picture man
as separate from God, an independent being. But as we have seen in our
study this is not so, for the likeness and image of God within man is God Himself. The
outer form or body does not detract from, nor add to what God is. Many
Christians believe that in some abstract way, when they received the Holy
Spirit, they received power, which was placed under their control, but
this is not true. Jesus Christ set the record straight when the Jews tried
to kill Him, because He said that God was His Father, which they
considered meant that He was equal
with God.
However,
look at the answer He gave to them, "The
Son can do nothing of himself
only what He sees the Father do." He also said to Philip,
"Do you believe that I am in
the Father and the Father is in
me? The words that I speak, I speak not of myself, but the Father that
dwelleth in me, He does the work."
So we are left in no doubt that God’s authority is not delegated
to man to function independently, as many Christians believe.
Jesus
summed up this interaction between God and man when He said, "At
that day (when I have returned to my Father),
you will know I am in my Father and ye are in Me and I am in you."
It was Paul who said, "Great is
the mystery of godliness, for God was manifest in the flesh."
Today we are taken up totally with the form or outer man, and so do not
recognize who it is that dwells
within, for that is where we find God.
In
creation, God has manifested Himself in every living creature. We may look
at a tree and know God is in that tree. Some who have not been enlightened
have bowed down and worshipped the tree as God. But the tree, the outer
form, is not God, but the life
that dwells within it. Man is that special creation in which God not only
dwells as the life, but by reason of his being can actually manifest God,
so that His presence becomes visible to mankind by demonstration. Thus the
power and authority of God is able to be expressed through man, but not
independent of God.
Adam’s Sin
The
question may be asked, "How can man fulfill the role given to him at
creation when Adam failed the test and was cast out of the garden?"
The question suggests that God’s plan had failed, and so God had to make
some alternative arrangements. Such is the darkness that has invaded the
mind of men today. God has never
failed in anything He has done, in fact the truth is God cannot fail! The Kingdom of God is a reality today despite
Adam’s sin. Not one word spoken at creation has had to be changed, for
the word of the Lord stands sure. Let us look at the wisdom of God
declared through creation.
We
saw in our previous discussion, that man came from the hand of the Creator
as a perfect expression of what God had in His mind, in declaring His
likeness and image. This one was the Word or Logos, which is the total
expression of all that was in the heart and mind of God concerning man.
Through the enlightenment or revelation Paul received by the Spirit, he
saw this one as Christ, which comes from the Greek word Christos, which
means, "anointing." Now it is important that we understand what
this anointing is and its purpose.
The anointing is
that which takes the invisible God and brings Him into manifestation in
the visible world.
Christ is not the name of a person, but simply means anointing. It was the
anointing that enabled Jesus to perform the miracles, all of which was a
manifestation of God.
As
we follow this One who is Christ or the Logos through time, we find Paul
declaring that we are chosen in
Christ before the disruption of the world. Now in the King James
version, the word "disruption" is changed to
"foundation," but the Greek word used here means "to cast
down." When did the "disruption" of the world take place,
and what was it? The disruption refers to the casting down of the
earth-man in the garden, from a divine state of consciousness to an earth
consciousness. This is referred to in Genesis 1 as the "earth"
(man), being without form and void, and darkness was on the face of the
deep (or consciousness).
Now
in the light of these facts, let us think again about what Paul says, that
we were chosen in Christ (the
Logos), before the disruption
of the world. So our being chosen has absolutely nothing to do with what
happened in the Garden of Eden. Just think about it!
A
people living thousands of years after the episode in the Garden of Eden
are told God chose them in Christ
before sin or evil entered into
the world. Beloved, do you realize what this means? You and I were chosen in the perfection of Christ or the Logos as He
came from the hand of the Creator!! As God see us there is not even
the slightest taint of sin upon us when He chose us!
This
throws new light upon the words of the Apostle Paul when he says, "If
any man be in Christ he is a new
creation!" This
means we are new in the sense
of the freshness and perfection of that creation called "man"
who was the Word or Logos, and He came straight from the Creator’s hand. Every word
that was said to the first man applies to us today, and what happened in
the garden has made no difference.
The
proof of this is perfectly evident in the coming of "the Word"
to dwell on earth in a human body of flesh and blood. Of Him it is said,
that He "knew no sin." He
is the prototype of man
preserved in all His pristine glory, ready to be revealed as our own true
identity, when God speaks within us, "Let
there be light."
For
the earthly man in the garden, we see a different path that is based upon
a desire to achieve the "likeness and image" of God, not as an
act of creation, but through the pathways of knowledge.
This man by the activity of his brilliant mind explored a knowledge which
is not part of God, which he was deliberately told would result in the
complete devastation of his being, and be known as death. The life of man
is circumscribed by God, and totally limited by what God is. If we try to go beyond the knowledge that is in God, we
walk out of the life that is
God, like a man walking out of the very air
that we breathe.
When
Adam touched the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, thinking that
this knowledge had within it the power to make him "as God," he
had stepped out of life and out
of God. Carnal man has majored on Adam’s disobedience considering that
it was because of his breaking God’s law that God Himself passed the
judgment of death upon him. This completely misses the truth that only in
God is their life. So the scriptures declare, "In
God we live and move
and have our being." But it is just as true that if we move
beyond what God is, we are dead! Good and evil are not in God, for they
refer to comparison, and there is nothing in this entire universe to which
we can compare God. He is incomparable. However, you may say, "Surely
God is good?" But the very question itself is declaring a further
question, which is "Good, compared to what?"
The
majesty of God is declared in the name God gave to Moses. He said, "I
AM THAT I AM!" There is no comparison, no additions, and
nothing to be omitted. I AM. Now when we go beyond that we run out of air
to breathe, and we die, just as
Adam did. The incredible thing today is that many churches and preachers
are encouraging people to live by that same tree, by substituting a code
of living based on good and evil, instead of the righteousness of God in
Christ. In this concept we arrive at a form of behavior which is regarded
as good, having shunned all that which is considered evil. The result is
man has established his own
righteousness on the basis of his ability to discern between good and
evil, considering this to be the righteousness, which is of God.
The
world in which we live today has an insatiable quest for knowledge. There
is a "knowledge explosion" in every facet of learning. Children
are being taught today what was not known when I was a child. The church
has followed the trend, with Bible study, the most popular meeting in the
program. Bible teachers are in great demand, expounding their latest
doctrine, which most times is simply the product of the carnal mind.
Like
Adam, man has gone beyond what is God, while believing that he is still in
God, by his doctrines, choices and actions. This is exactly the same
form of rebellion in which Adam engaged, and it produces the same results.
Thus in this condition, man is outside the Kingdom of God, for he has not
submitted himself to God, and so is dead.
However,
we must bear in mind that there is really no life outside of God at all. Whatever life is yet functioning in
them is based upon the soul of
man and operates through the soulish attributes in man. The knowledge of
God is covered by the darkness of their heart. As a result of this there
is no "dominion" operating through them, so they are literally
slaves to sin and death. How then can man enjoy the dominion that he is
declared to have in creation?
Paul
tells us, "That in the
dispensation of the fullness of times,
He might gather together in one
all things in the Christ, both
of which are in heaven (the
realm of the Spirit), and on the
earth, even in Him."
How can this be possible? The answer is in
Christ.
Paul
declares that, "We were chosen
in Christ!" This Christ we discovered is the Word or Logos, who
was the pure Spirit man in the likeness and image of God, and to whom was
given dominion. So when He came into this world, born of a woman, He came
from heaven, and not from the
earth. But the wonder of the man Christ Jesus is that He had a body of
flesh and blood just the same as ours. Yet whilst he was man in the true
sense of the word, He could say, "I
and my Father are one!"
So in Jesus Christ, God combined these two,
the "earthly" as far as the body or form was concerned, yet He
was Christ, the anointing, which has the power to bring the invisible God into
manifestation.
It
is declared of Him that He was the first
born of many brethren. These "brethren," all part of the
same family, are all born from
above, or the realm of heaven. In contrast are those who see
themselves as born of Adam or
the realm of earth. Therefore those who see themselves as generated from
the seed of Adam believe an illusion, which is birthed in man through the
tree of the knowledge of good and evil. There is no
true God to be found within the knowledge of good and evil.
When
Jesus began to preach to the people of His day, He told them to repent!
What did he mean, confess all your sins and ask for forgiveness? No,
repentance is a change of mind, a new direction, based upon new thinking,
which allows us to be renewed in our minds by the Spirit of God to see our
reality in Christ. Then He continued by saying that the Kingdom of Heaven
is at hand. He was both the herald and the teacher concerning the Kingdom.
Contrary
to many modern preachers, Jesus did not refer to the Kingdom in earthly
terms, nor did He indicate that it was something for a future time.
However, He did declare the mystery of the kingdom when He said it was within
you. Just think about it! This personal aspect of the kingdom will be
the subject of the next set of notes, but in the meantime allow the Holy
Spirit to open the eyes of your understanding as you come to Him as a
little child, for such is the Kingdom of God.
Des
Walter