Kingdom of God
Part
3
Introduction
The subject of
the Kingdom of God is most important for us to understand, because it
provides the very basis upon which we are to live life today. Jesus told
us to "seek first the Kingdom
of God and his righteousness and all these things shall be added unto
you."
In this study
we are going to look at the Kingdom in more detail and discover the
practical aspects of the pathway by which we enter. Much of the teaching
concerning the Kingdom is based upon traditional theology, most of which
is simply the product of the minds of men. It is commonly accepted that
the Kingdom of God is something that will be established after what is
termed the "second coming of Christ." The concept is, that
Christ will then set up His Kingdom in the city of Jerusalem and from
there will ultimately rule the world with a "rod
of iron."
To understand
God’s Kingdom we must first realize that it is not literal! Jesus
Himself declared that it would not come by observation or in other words
it is not visible to the natural eye. So anyone who is looking for a
literal kingdom on the earth with a man enthroned as king, will be
disappointed. The natural mind of man cannot conceive anything that is not
literal or visible, and for this reason Jesus told the disciples that the
world would not be able to receive the Holy Spirit because they could not
see Him.
The only
theologian who is qualified to teach us, concerning the things that be of
God, is the Holy Spirit who is the Spirit of Truth. Jesus declared that
when the holy spirit is come He will "lead
you into all truth." So both the writer and the reader must bow
to the divine teacher who alone knows the deep things of God.
Now we
recognize that everyone who seeks to teach the word of God needs the
anointing of the Holy Spirit to do so, but, how many of us understand that
the hearer also needs the anointing of the Spirit before they can know
those things that be of God? Apart from the Spirit of God we will never
understand spiritual things. It matters not whether one has a university
degree or is illiterate, because apart from the Holy Spirit we will remain
ignorant of truth. So to hear what the Lord would say to us let us all bow
before Him.
Because the
Kingdom of God is not a literal kingdom, does not mean that there is no
physical evidence of its function in this world. Paul said the Kingdom is
not "meat and drink," both of which are physical, "but righteousness peace and joy in the Holy Ghost,"
which are non-tangible, and yet their effect can be seen. We will first go
back to the "beginning" in our search to discover the truth
about the Kingdom of God.
The Beginning
The Bible
begins with the words, "In the
beginning." Our natural minds can go no further for eternity is
not a "human" concept since we are locked into the limitation we
call time, where everything has a beginning and an end. However, we know
that at this point in which God created the heavens and the earth, He
already existed. There is no other
power or authority for He is the "subjector" of all. I
believe it would be reasonable to say that the Kingdom of God was not a
created thing as such, but is the function of God in His capacity as God.
It was "in
the beginning" that the question of authority arose, because God
decided to declare Himself through creation, all of which existed within
Himself. To this the scriptures agree when Paul says God has manifested
the "invisible things of
Himself" through the creation of the world, so that He would be
known by mankind who is also a part of that creation. Among those "invisible
things of Himself" that He wanted to make known was His power and
divinity.
It was in man,
the highest form of creation, that God placed the "invisible
things of Himself" on
display. First of all man was created in the "likeness and image" of God so that something of the divine
representation was incorporated into his being. Also, dominion was given
to man over all the works of God’s hands. I do not believe that we have
given sufficient thought to these facts and their effect upon us today. So
let us look at the divine intention concerning man in Genesis chapter one.
The word
"dominion" has to do with rule as it would apply to any king,
and this first man was given expressly, dominion over the fish of the sea,
the fowl of the air, over the cattle or four-footed beasts, over every
creeping thing, and over all the earth. This comprehensive mandate was the
charge given to the man, who was created in the likeness and image of God.
However this
was not the total responsibility given to man, for we read God also said
to him be "fruitful and
multiply and replenish or fill the earth and subdue it." After
this his dominion is extended to include "every
living thing that moveth on the earth." Finally a direction is
given concerning the provision of food for all living souls on the earth,
which was to be the green herb of the field.
In all of this
discussion about the man created in the likeness and image of God, we must
conclude that the dominion or "rule" given to him is in some way
connected to the Kingdom of God spoken about in the scriptures. It is not
surprising therefore that when Jesus Christ came into the world He said
that the Kingdom is within you,
since He was the Word that was in the beginning, now made flesh. Jesus
Christ Himself was the true expression of that Kingdom, because it is
through Him that God would manifest His power and divinity, so that it
could be known throughout all the earth.
We must ask
the question, why the divine rule or Kingdom of God is not evident in
society today, if man was given this dominion in the beginning? We have
chaos among the animal kingdom as the strong kill the weak, and the same
with the birds and the fish. Death and suffering abound on every hand.
Then within the world of humanity we have sickness, suffering and death,
besides the evil that man inflicts on his fellow man in war, murder, rape
and other evils too numerous to mention. What has happened to this
"intention" of the Creator that man should have dominion over
all the works of His hands, controlling all of creation out of the
"divinity," that was expressed in him as God’s likeness and
image? If we are honest we would have to admit that today man is probably
more of the problem than any part of the answer.
To really
understand the situation we need to allow the scriptures to provide us
with the answer, rather than asking some theologian to give us his views
on the matter. We will begin the search by looking into the scriptures
themselves and allowing the Holy Spirit to enlighten us as to what they
have to say.
The Disruption
There are
three verses we may consider in the New Testament in order to begin our
search, and I will quote them for you so you will be familiar with the
scriptures concerned:
"That
it might be fulfilled which was spoken by the prophet saying, I will open
my mouth in parables, and utter things which have been kept secret from
the foundation of the world," Matt 13:35.
"According as he hath chosen us in Him
(Christ) before the foundation
of the world," Ephesians 1:4.
"And all that dwell upon the earth shall
worship him, (the
beast) whose names are not written
in the book of the life of the Lamb, slain from the foundation of the world," Revelation 13:8.
The word
"foundation" occurs in each of these verses and the casual
reader would assume that this refers to the time when God laid the
foundation of the heavens and the earth. We must always bear in mind that
the natural man does not understand the things of the Spirit because they
can only be spiritually discerned. However the Greek word used here for
foundation, is the word "katabole" and means "the casting
down." For this reason some translations use the word
"disruption" to better express the true meaning.
The next
question is, to what does this "casting down" or
"disruption," refer to? Because it is the focal point of the
three scriptures quoted, it becomes obvious that it has reference to the
time when Adam rebelled against the rule of God and partook of the tree of
the knowledge of good and evil. At that moment the rule or authority of
God was cast down and disrupted, and in its place another rule or
authority based upon the knowledge of good and evil took its place. Adam
rejected the fact that the dominion given to man in Genesis 1:26, only
operated through a divine union between God and the man He created.
John in his
gospel correctly identifies the man created in God’s likeness and image
as "the Word." He was
in the beginning with God and was God. In the Greek language he is called
the "Logos" which is not simply a word, but also contains the
whole thought and intention that was in the mind of the one who spoke the
word. So we can see that as the Logos, man was the total expression of
what God is. In this sense we can say He was God.
However when
the Word became flesh, He could declare God to be His Father from whence
He came, which made Him the Son of God. The religious leaders of that day
could not comprehend what Jesus was saying when He said, "I and my Father are one." They considered the statement
to be blasphemy so tried to kill Him, because to them He was making
Himself God.
Now I have
said all that to let you see that God the Creator, and the man He created
were in fact one. So when the man was given dominion over all the works of
God’s hands, it was in the context of the union which existed between
the two. However in the Garden of Eden, Adam obviously believed the lie of
the enemy that there was a place and position beyond that which was
invested in man through creation. All he had to do to achieve it was to
eat of the fruit of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, and
he would be God in his own right.
The man Adam
considered the knowledge he gained from the forbidden tree gave him
sovereignty over his own life, separate from His Creator. In his rebellion
man adopted a separate identity from God. Instead of being the "express
image of His person," he saw himself as something formed
from the dust of the ground, and would one day return to that same dust.
This is what
disrupted the dominion or authority of God, which is called the Kingdom of
God. This dominion was now replaced by a spurious authority, which was
based upon good and evil. From that
moment there was a disruption concerning God’s authority over the man He
created. This is the disruption that cast the world into spiritual chaos.
From that moment the Kingdom of God no longer functioned in man’s world
until God’s only begotten Son became flesh, and declared to the groaning
creation that the Kingdom of God had come!
Let us go
another step in the pursuit of truth and say that because this
"new" knowledge of good and evil, which governs the life of
every man in Adam, was not placed there by the true God. There was created
in his own mind another "God," which was simply a figment of his
imagination. This "God" became responsible to dispense the
"new authority" in everything that involved the life of man,
especially in relation to good and evil. This is the one referred to as
the God of this world, about which we will have more to say later. This
now results in a total reversal of reality, because the man now becomes
"God," and so has the power to create someone in his likeness
and image, and to this one he gives dominion over mankind.
Here is the
birth of the kingdom of darkness, which is set in opposition to the
Kingdom of God. Now we need to understand that in spiritual terms darkness
refers to "ignorance of God," and so everyone who lives in that
kingdom "created" in the mind or consciousness of fallen Adam,
does not know God. Light, which has the power to dispel the darkness is
the knowledge of God, referred to in John 17:3 as eternal life.
So when Jesus
Christ the Word came into the world, it was said of him, "He was in the world and the world was made by him, but the world knew
him not." He had been replaced by another consciousness, and
was not recognized as representing the authority controlling the
circumstances of humanity. The reason being that He did not represent the
"God" they were conscious of, because they were dominated by an
"alien power."
The transition
to this complete domination was achieved as soon as Adam believed he was a
separate entity from God. Up to that point nothing could have dominated
man, because his consciousness declared from within
"I and My Father are One."
No external proof of this fact was possible or necessary, but to
contradict this truth, Adam had to abandon his consciousness as the Word
or Logos established in him at creation, and function out of a new
consciousness established by natural sight, in the world of appearance.
Therefore, he now lived out of the knowledge
of good and evil, which is based upon a comparison system. Adam
decided now he was something different to, and separate from God. His
"new" knowledge declared what he now believed to be truth, and
that he was naked! The question God asked of him is full of meaning,
"Who told you?" To put
it bluntly, the question really asked, "what is your authority for
making such a declaration because it is not authorized by God your
Creator?"
From the time
of the disruption mankind has not lived in the real world, but has
suffered under a delusion, and the tyranny of the "god" of good
and evil known as the "god of this world."
This
"god" blesses those who do good and punishes those who do evil.
He functions according to an external law, without mercy, declaring, "The soul that sinneth it shall die." He also is
responsible for everything that happens on the planet. He controls the
weather, including the cyclones, tornadoes and earthquakes, which kill
thousands. He holds the power of life and death over all mankind, and is
responsible for the starving millions in the world. He sanctions war, even
though the law states "thou
shalt not kill," and takes sides in the conflict by assisting
those he considers are more righteous.
He tells us to
pray but seems very arbitrary in his response to our cries for help, for
sometimes he seems to say yes and delivers us and other times allows us to
be destroyed. It appears that he makes us sick, so that we can become
better Christians through suffering.
He uses our
negative circumstances as punishment for our disobedience, in order to
bring us back into line. If we tithe to the church he will grant us
prosperity but if we don’t, he brings poverty upon us. If we love him we
will go to heaven when we die, but if not he banishes us to hell. He
blesses those who are Christians, but has no regard for the heathen, or
those who do not trust in him. Finally, if we do not respond correctly to
him, he has the power to throw us into an eternal, burning hell, where we
will suffer forever and ever.
This is the
"God" which has evolved through the Adamic consciousness, under
whose authority we have chosen to live. However the fact is that this
"God" is not part of reality at all, and actually does not even
exist. But you say, he does exist, because he exercises his authority over
my life. So what is the answer? The answer is, this "God" is not reality, but exists only in the carnal
mind of man! Now you can have
a god, but you cannot make a
god, however you can make an idol.
Now do not be fooled by thinking an idol must have some form and shape,
because you can make an idol in your mind and then call it
"God." Then where is its source of power? The answer is the same
as in all cases of idolatry, you
give it the power.
The Adam
consciousness has formed its own God, which is really an idol because it
has no reality. This "God" in contrast to the true God, forms
man out of the dust of the earth, which had already been created, because
he had no power to do otherwise.
The result is
that now this man formed of the dust of the earth becomes a living soul, and so are all his offspring. They are born in his
(Adam’s) likeness and image and are subject to the law of sin and death. From this scenario it can be seen that Adam,
through disobedience did not live under the authority of the Kingdom of
God, but under the dominion of darkness,
which is death.
Instead of God
being his Father, He had now become Adam’s enemy from whom he must hide.
Adam’s disobedience had cost him his union
with a loving God and Father, and the abundance of Father’s House. His life consisted of "tilling the
ground" from which his needs must now be met. But being cursed, it
yielded a bountiful harvest of thorns and thistles, but with little
produce, and the price of his existence is now reckoned in sweat and
tears.
So to sum up
this section, we have discovered the rule or Kingdom of God was disrupted
by Adam when he sought for equality with God on his own terms through the
knowledge of good and evil. As a result Adam cut himself off from the
benefits of divine supply and divine authority, and accepted
responsibility for himself. Now Adam served the creation (earth) as the
source of his supply and life, becoming a "tiller of the
ground." Instead of living as a Son of God with dominion over
everything God made, he became a slave to that which was created,
including the serpent. This is a picture of the disruption of the Kingdom
of God.
The whole
concept of the Kingdom of God was now so totally outside the understanding
of man, that to introduce it required much more than some literal
statement. For this reason God sent his original, only begotten Son into
the world to demonstrate the Kingdom in all its glorious reality. This One
was no "tiller of the ground" nor did He look to the earth for
His life or supply. He declared His origin was out of God in heaven from
whence He came.
He fed five
thousand people without tilling the ground, through the inexhaustible
supply from heaven. He brought water out of a rock for Israel in the
wilderness, and supplied "manna" to sustain them for forty years
in a desert where nothing would grow. He walked on water and stilled the
storm, showing His power over creation. Thus the Kingdom of God functioned
before the eyes of the people.
Finally when
on trial for his very life, instead of fear He declared, "No man takes my life, for I have power to lay it down and I have
power to take it up again." He demonstrated no fear of death at
all when He raised Lazarus who had been dead four days.
Behold the King
After thirty
years living in relative obscurity, Jesus came to the river Jordan and is
baptized of John to fulfill all righteousness. The heavens opened and a
voice said, "This is my beloved
Son, in whom I am well pleased." What is the purpose for such a
declaration, are not all men the offspring of God? (Acts 17:28-29)
You may be
surprised to know God only had one
son, and for that reason He is called the only
begotten Son. Since the disruption, man considers he came from the dust
and is going back to the dust. He has a beginning and therefore he has an
end. To correct this false sense of identity, God sent His only begotten
Son, created out of Himself, the proto-type and original man, into this
world.
John’s
statement is simply "the Word
was made flesh." In this, Father was refuting the lie that
man’s was created out of the earth, thus locking him into the kingdom of
darkness. He was saying to the whole universe, that man today is ignorant
of his true origin and identity, declaring this One standing before them to be God’s original
man and prototype created in
His likeness and image.
Jesus Himself
confounded the anthropologists by declaring that He came from heaven or
realm of the Spirit, and not from Adam or the dust, and that He would
return back from whence He came. He claimed God as His Father when He
said, "if you have seen me, you
have seen the Father." He stated that His life was not limited by
any physical birth, and that He existed before
Abraham. He claimed a union of complete oneness with the Father. He
referred to Himself as the Son of Man, by which he meant that He was the
son of that man created in the
beginning in the "likeness and
image of God."
When
questioning the disciples concerning who they thought He was, Peter
declared, "Thou art the Christ
the Son of the Living God." Jesus confirmed the truth of that
statement saying it came as a revelation from His Father. This meant that
He was also Messiah of the Old Testament, as well as Christ of the New.
The testimony of John recorded in his gospel, chapter 1: "In
the beginning was the Word (or Logos), and the word was with God, and the
Word was God, the same was in the beginning with God." Here the
apostle identifies Him as the one created
in the "likeness and image of God" in the beginning.
Thus the declaration of the gospel, which came by
Jesus Christ, was: "The time is fulfilled and the Kingdom of God is
at hand, repent and believe the Gospel."
The Greek word
for "time" used here has nothing to do with the clock or
calendar, but a time set by God, a time of divine appointment. This
particular time is related to the establishing of the Kingdom of God in
the man Jesus. You will notice that the announcement of the Kingdom was
not given until he was thirty years old, and after the declaration of His
Sonship at the river Jordan, which was followed by the temptation in the
wilderness. All this was required before the "time" could be
fulfilled for the Kingdom to find its expression.
Many
Christians have been taught that Jesus was Himself God and not a man,
because it is written in the Nicene Creed. If this were to be so, then
tell me what was the point of the temptation in the wilderness, because if
He was God He could not have failed? No beloved, Jesus was a man otherwise
the gospel has no relevance to mortal man today. So let’s look for a
moment at the two issues that brought about the time being fulfilled.
In the Garden
of Eden, Adam lost sight of his true identity as a Son of God, believing
the lie that he had come from the dust. Since that time man has had no
sense of his spiritual origin in God, but considers he was born and that
he will die. Jesus was born of a virgin whose name was Mary, conceived by
the Holy Ghost. So as a man there was no reason for him to believe
anything different about his identity other than that he was born. Of
course I am sure Mary told him about the visit of the angels and the
problem she had with Joseph wanting to put her away.
How then did
Jesus discover his real identity? We are told in Luke 4:16 that it was his
custom to go into the synagogue where he had access to the Old Testament
scrolls. On one occasion after he had qualified to enter the Kingdom of
God, he chose a scripture to read to the people as a personal testimony.
This is what it says:
"The
Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he has anointed me to preach the
gospel to the poor, and hath sent me to heal the broken-hearted, to preach
deliverance to the captives, and recovering of sight to the blind, and to
set at liberty them that are bruised, and preach the acceptable year of
the Lord." Isaiah 61:11-2, and Luke 4:18.
Jesus then
announced, "This day is this
scripture fulfilled in your ears." In other words he understood
that those scriptures spoke of Himself. After His death, burial and
resurrection, we find him walking with two of the discouraged and
disillusioned disciples who had believed that Jesus was the promised one
who should redeem Israel, but now were full of doubts because they had
just witnessed his death. They were still grieving three days later when
Jesus caught up with them and said,
"O fools and slow of heart to believe all that
the Prophets had spoken. Ought not Christ to have suffered these things
and to enter into his glory?" Luke 24:25-26.
Beloved, Jesus
did not have the New Testament as we have, yet he discovered his identity
through the voice of the prophets. The truth is that the Messiah of the
Old Testament is the Christ of the New. So whatever is spoken of Him in
the Old, is applicable to all who are in Christ. Jesus understood these
things which formed the basis of His own identity.
But now comes
the testing just as it came to Adam. Jesus was led by the Spirit into the
wilderness immediately after His anointing as Messiah, the second
man and the last Adam, who is the Christ. The stage is not of His choosing, but is
set for Him. There is no physical food and nothing grows in the
wilderness. So a great strain is put upon his physical being to prove if
His origin is God or the dust. The body now raises its voice to be
satisfied, fearing death, but no effort is made to satisfy its craving.
The word
"tempted" means tried or put to the test, and the Greek actually
means, "to pierce through, so as to test." The testing covered
the same three areas in which Adam was tested. The Apostle John speaks of
these three areas as being, the things that are "in
the world" and "not of
the Father," 1 John 2:16.
· The
lust of the flesh
· The
lust of the eyes
· The
pride of life
Tradition has
declared that there were three temptations, but nowhere is this affirmed
in scripture, for it appears that the tests were repeated in another
order, as we compare the different accounts.
"If Thou art the Son of God"
or more exactly, "If thou art Son of God," for there is no
article with "Son." The devil is alluding to the words the
Father spoke to Jesus at his baptism,
"This is my Son, the Beloved." He challenges this statement
just as did the "serpent" in the Garden when he said, "Hath God said?" The test is to see if these words were simply
knowledge, or had become his established consciousness. In other words did
Jesus just assume the condition of Sonship to be true with the natural
mind? The tempter deftly called on Jesus to exercise his power as Son of
God to appease his hunger, and thus prove to himself that he really was
what the Father called him.
"Command that these stones become loaves,"
(each stone a loaf). It was all so simple, obvious and easy. It would
satisfy the hunger of Christ and was quite within his power. But herein
lies the test, for to do so would place the truth on trial making it
dependent upon his ability to demonstrate its reality. Beloved here is
where most of us have failed the test. To each one of us comes the voice
of the tempter, as truth is revealed to us saying, "prove it to me
and I will believe you," but if you cannot prove it, then you must
admit that it is not true.
To accept this
premise is to doubt the word of God, and so cannot be classed as faith.
You see the Father’s statement of Jesus’ true identity as Son of God
remains forever truth, without any physical or mental proof. As soon as we
try to prove what God says to be true, we enter into doubt, which chains
us to the kingdom of darkness. The reply to the request of the tempter was
simply another statement of truth, without entering into any argument.
The
"proof" of your real identity in Christ is not your ability to
heal the sick, or raise the dead, but that inner voice of the Spirit
within you crying ABBA Father. From the moment you see the heaven’s
opened (the realm of Spirit) and hear Father’s voice declaring your
sonship, you can do whatever you see your Father doing, and you can say
whatever you hear your Father saying, but nothing more, regardless of the
circumstances involved. This is the limitation of true sonship that so
many refuse to accept.
Because this
is such an important issue I feel that we must pursue the question of
sonship further. The Apostle Paul covers the basis of sonship in his
epistle to the Galatians, and I will quote the verses for you.
"If you be Christ’s then are you Abraham’s
seed, and heirs according to the promise. Now I say the heir as long as he
is a child does not differ from a servant, though he be lord of all. For
he is under tutors and governors until the time appointed of the Father.
So we also when we were children were in bondage under the elements of the
world. But when the fullness of the time was come, God sent forth His son
made of a woman, made under the law, to redeem them that are under the
law, that we might receive the adoption of sons. And because you are sons
God has sent forth the spirit of His Son into our hearts crying ABBA,
Father."
Now let us
define the words Paul used in order to better understand their
implications for us today. The word heir refers to being Abraham’s seed,
and if you are in Christ then you qualify as an heir
of God
This is a most
wonderful truth and many rejoice in it. However Paul now proceeds to
qualify this truth by saying, if that heir is but a child then he is not
entitled to the inheritance. What does he mean by a child? This word in
the Greek refers to an infant who has not yet learned to communicate.
Paul is saying
the child is one who is too young to speak, which means in the spiritual
metaphor, one who is unlearned and immature. These are reckoned in the
same category as a common slave in regard to the inheritance, even though
in a legal sense he may be Lord of that inheritance.
Because this
"heir" is a child, he is subject to tutors and governors, so who
are these educators? In the Spiritual realm these "tutors"
represent primarily the Holy Spirit, who is the divine teacher appointed
by the Father, but also includes those who are led by the Spirit in
preaching and teaching. The training was not for a specific time, but was
at the discretion of the Father, or to relate it to the scripture, until
the time appointed of the Father.
During this
time of tutoring,, the child is said to be in bondage, under the elements
of the cosmos. This involves the natural laws of the universe, as well as
the laws of governments and the standards of society, etc. We are subject
to pain and suffering, sickness and death, besides fear and deprivation,
amongst other things.
However in the
Jewish home, the children were not sent out to school, for their education
but their "tutors" were arranged by their father. They were
responsible for instilling into the children not just their general
education, but also the very character of their father, because the boys
were expected to be able to represent him in any given situation by the
time they graduated. This is a beautiful picture of our
"training" under the Holy Spirit’s tuition, building into us
not just Bible knowledge, but the very character and nature of our
heavenly Father.
The
"graduation" is called in our English Bible an adoption, however
this term is confusing. No one can be "adopted" into God’s
"family" as we would understand the term today. One must be born
into the family of God to qualify as a son.
So what does
the apostle mean concerning this adoption? In the Jewish family, this
graduation was a time of great celebration. The child now trained in the
ways of his father, is placed in the family and declared to be a
responsible son with all the rights and privileges of family, and he is
able to act on his father’s behalf. For Jesus this took place after he
came out of the waters of baptism in the Jordan River. It was then the
heavens opened and the Father spoke and said, "This
is My Beloved Son in whom I am well pleased!"
The tutor had
done an excellent job, but His work was to be put to the ultimate test.
Jesus was at that moment declared to be Son of God, and from that moment
He represented the Father, and His ministry began. Later Peter declared of
this event, "God anointed Jesus
with the Holy Ghost and with power," (dunimus), the divine power
of God. Let it be known beloved that no one receives what Jesus was given
that day, until they have been also placed or declared to be a Son of God.
What then
shall be the evidence that such a declaration has been made by the
"voice" of the Spirit within? God has sent forth the Spirit of
His Son into our hearts, crying ABBA….Father. This is the cry that
arises out of the very consciousness of our being…. Father. This name
declares the most intimate relationship man can have with God. But this
cry does not emanate from the natural mind, nor is it simply a term
memorized from a verse in the Bible, but is generated by the Spirit of God
out of the "depths" of a man’s consciousness, declaring "I
and My Father are One!"
Then note the
result, "Wherefore you are no
more a servant or slave but a son, and if a son then an heir of God
through Christ," Gal 4:7. Hallelujah! Just think about it for a
moment, for here we see some of the issues concerning the reality of the
Kingdom of God which apply equally to us today.
In contrast to
the testing of Jesus, we have all witnessed how charismatic preachers to
establish their credibility in the eyes of the people have used the
"gifts" of the spirit. Their "charisma" that put them
among the stars did not come from true sonship, but from proving their
ability before the people. To be able to lay people out on the floor,
called "being slain in the spirit," is high on the priority list
of those seeking notoriety. If the technique is failing, a gentle push is
perfectly admissible.
The miracles
Jesus did were not exhibitions before crowds of people, and in many cases
he told those who were blessed not to tell anyone. Jesus saw many in his
day who were sick, but he never healed them! Why, because his sonship
demanded absolute obedience to the Father’s will, just as it will in
your life and mine. The King in the Kingdom of God has all authority, and
the sons only live to do the will of the Father.
He did not
have to prove anything to anyone. In other words, He was not Son of God because
He healed the sick or raised the dead, but He healed the sick and raised
the dead because He heard the voice of God, and believed what the voice said in
declaring His true identity.
When asked to
prove His sonship Jesus simply replied, "It
is written" i.e. it stands written and is still in force. Each
time, Jesus did not quote the "voice of God" which only applies
to those who have ears to hear, but appealed to that which was
"written," to repel the subtle temptation of the devil. Here it
is in Deut. 8:3 from the Septuagint. "Bread
is a mere detail in man’s dependence upon God." Our life
depends upon "every word that
proceedeth out of the mouth of God," which is established in us
as truth requiring no other proof than that God said it.
In the
"temptation" our Lord endured, we can see a parallel to the
history of Israel. Before the children of Israel could enter the Promised
Land, they had to endure the journey through the wilderness. In Deut. 8,
Moses is speaking about that "journey" from Egypt, which
represented the land of bondage and suffering, to the land of Canaan which
was known as the Promised Land.
Moses states "they
were led by the Lord God for forty years in the wilderness, to prove them
and to know what was in their heart," and whether they would
submit to the authority or dominion of God. So the forty years represent a
time of testing with these three things in view. The land of Canaan
represents for us the Kingdom of God, with Israel a type of the believer
who seeks release from domination by a "Pharaoh" who has
enslaved us. So we can view the story as a parable representing our
struggle to enter into the rest of God.
One of the
greatest tragedies of our time is that man’s theology has removed the
struggle and testing from this reality and presented to humanity a
"quick fix" gospel. It says, "Give your heart to Jesus and
believe He died for your sins, and you will be born again, and then you
will go to heaven when you die." Such thinking has nothing to do with
the reality of entering into the Kingdom of God. Many can testify that as
they face defeat and despair in their life, "their gospel"
proved to be more like quicksand than a rock bringing safety and
deliverance.
After 6000
years of human history living in the world of darkness, the eyes of man
will obviously take some time to adjust to the light of God. The search
for God as reality will consume your entire life, and the struggle
involved will demand all your energy, because when you have found Him,
your mortal life will be consumed, thus releasing the spirit that
recognizes God as Father.
Now having
seen the importance of this time of testing let us continue, for the
scripture says, "They that
search for Me with their whole heart shall find Me."
The wilderness
"testing" was primarily to see if Israel could really trust God
implicitly. After leaving Egypt by a miracle, they came to the Red Sea and
could see no way of escape from the pursuing enemy, so they murmered and
complained to Moses, who represented God to them. Even Moses lacked
confidence at that moment despite having had personal contact with the
"I AM that I AM." But this is a lesson which is designed to
build Israel’s confidence in I AM. So Moses is told to hold out his rod
over the sea which became dry land, and the people were able to cross over
on the path provided. Finally, when the Egyptians tried to follow, God
returned the waters and the might of Egypt was broken so as not to trouble
Israel again on their journey.
This should
have satisfied every heart that God would take care of them, however they
are soon crying out for bread, not in confidence that "I AM" was
the source of all supply, but in frustration. However God remains faithful
and will not allow us to be tested above that we are able, for that would
simply destroy us and prove nothing. So God ends this test by supplying
manna sufficient for their needs, having proved to them that they do not
trust Him.
The story goes
from one issue to the next, the people now complain they have no water,
and the fear of death that stalked them in Egypt continues to manifest
even now. No water to them means death, and the presence of the I AM in
the cloud did not influence their thinking at all. Yes beloved, God was in
the cloud by day and in the fire by night, but the knowledge of God was
not in their consciousness, so they lived as those who knew not God!
Again the test
is not prolonged, but only long enough for them to be aware of their
thoughts and actions. God provides water out of a rock, which is a type of
Christ. It is so easy for us to consider Israel and their gross failure,
but consider this for a moment. Today we have a revelation of Christ far
beyond what was revealed to Israel, and know that He dwells within us, yet
beloved how do we fare in the circumstances of our life when in need, or
faced with seemingly impossible situations? Can we trust the "I
AM" any more than did Israel?
Let us also
note that after many miracles and divine interventions, there was a whole
generation that perished in that wilderness. They failed the test and so
disqualified themselves from entering the "Kingdom of God." Make
sure you understand what we are saying here, it was a whole generation!! Who are these who fail the test? Can they be
identified? Paul tells us that all "these
things are recorded as examples," which we need to consider as
how they relate to us today.
The generation
who are not qualified to enter into the Kingdom of God are the offspring
of Adam, the man of rebellion who came from the dust, and is governed by
good and evil. Not one of his offspring will ever enter into the Kingdom
of God. You may ask concerning these, whether they will be saved or lost?
My answer is, the Kingdom of God has little to do with some future
destiny, but concerns a state of being which we can enter and enjoy today.
The Kingdom of
God is a realm in which Christ reigns supreme without opposition, being
the sole source of all supply and having all authority so that there is
nothing that offends. There the lion sleeps peacefully beside the lamb.
There will be no night, for the lamb the nature of God is the light
thereof. Love, light and life control, and have dominion over everything.
Paul tells us
that in Adam everyone dies because they are dust. But in Christ everyone
lives, because God is their Father and He has no beginning and no end. So
beloved check your origin, for those whose generation is traced back to
Adam do not qualify to enter into the Kingdom of God. These will die in
the struggles of life being overcome by death, having never been delivered
from its power. Leaving Egypt is
not a guarantee of entering the Kingdom.
The final
miracle that took Israel into the Land of Promise was the crossing of
Jordan. Jordan, which represents death,
was the final barrier between Israel and Canaan, or the Kingdom of God.
Remember beloved, flesh and blood cannot inherit the Kingdom of God, for
it is from the earth, and so has an end and must be left behind.
Death Swallowed Up In Victory
Much of our
theology is very confused concerning death, but the Holy Spirit is
revealing the secrets of Life to us today. There is an existence, which
the Bible calls death, and there is an existence, which it calls life.
(See Rev 3:1, Matt 8:22, John 5:25.) From our human perspective we see
life simply as the opposite of death, and death as the absence of life.
You may be surprised to know that from God’s point of view death, and
life are really two levels of existence.
This is easy
to understand for in nature there are many levels of existence. Man has
life and can move and think and reason and know God who is invisible.
Animals have life and can move and express themselves being souls even as
man, but are limited in intelligence, etc. Plants and trees have life but
cannot move and their expression is limited even more. Then we could go on
into even lower forms of microscopic life, all of which are alive
nevertheless.
From God’s
point of view man can "live" on only one of two levels. One is
the earthly level where the realities are all within the realm of
appearance, and is governed by the knowledge of good an evil. This earthly
level of living is called death in the Bible. On this "level"
our consciousness is devoid of a true knowledge of God, so that our life
is the result of being born, i.e. we are flesh and blood. We look back to
Adam as the one from whom we have come. We can be happy and kind and
experience love, but also hate and be tormented by fears, sickness,
suffering and death. On this level the only knowledge of God we have is
through the natural mind, and is based upon verses in the Bible. As earth
bound creatures the reality of God never touches our consciousness so we
can never know Him!
This is the
"flesh and blood" man whose level of consciousness functions and
operates on an earth level, breathing the natural oxygen of this earth’s
atmosphere in order to sustain life. This one lives life as a separate
entity from God, believing they are responsible for their own life, and
also for their own needs. This is the "flesh and blood" that
cannot inherit the Kingdom of God for the "atmosphere" there,
does not sustain such a life!
However, there
is another higher level or realm in which we may live, and this is the
realm of Spirit, which incorporates the invisible world. This realm is not
discernible by the natural flesh and blood man, nor can it be seen with
natural sight. For this very reason Jesus told Nicodemus,
"You must be born from above, or you cannot see the Kingdom of God,"
because it cannot be seen with natural eyes.
To be born
from above involves a new consciousness based upon a new origin and source
of life. It is commonly referred to as being born again, but with little
understanding of its true implications. The true experience is far more
dynamic than asking Jesus into our heart and believing that He died for
our sins! Nicodemus, representing the carnal mind tried to grasp the
import of the words in terms of natural birth, but Jesus was speaking of
spiritual things of which the natural is but a parable.
The Parable in Nature
To be born
from above is not so strange a statement, for this same thing functions in
nature everyday. The life in the soil is absorbed by the plant through its
roots, and so is swallowed up into a higher form of life (from above), the
life of the plant. Now the plant life is eaten by the cow lifting it up
yet higher on the scale of life to become animal life. Finally, the cow
produced by the life in the soil, plus the life of the plant, now becomes
steak, which is eaten or "swallowed up" to become a still higher
(from above) form of life as man. Now in the same way God is saying that
this mortal life of flesh and blood must
put on immortality. How can this be? By
being "swallowed up," or incorporated into God.
Jesus called
it being born from above, which is God, the source and origin of all life
in the universe. Only then has life reached its peak, having discovered
the Father of all. Paul says, "As
we have borne the image of the earthly, we shall also bear the image of
the heavenly."
It is most
important to understand that the lifting of life from one level to the
next must of necessity involve a death. The seed must die or it will abide
alone! The plant must die as it is stripped from its source of life before
it can be lifted into a higher realm in the animal kingdom. Likewise the
animal must die before it can be incorporated into a higher life in man.
In the same way man must die to his mortality and be severed from that
which had been his source of life in the earth. The reason is clear, for
God alone becomes the only source of that life which was given to man
created in His own likeness and image.
I have shared
these things to show you that we cannot enter the Kingdom without passing
through death to that flesh and blood man, and severing the very life-line
that perpetuates his mortality. Death must be allowed to complete its work
in us by destroying our earth consciousness, our sense of separation from
God, the concept of our nakedness, and our fear of impending doom. It is
an established principle in God that life comes out of death and it is
called resurrection.
Because our
natural concept of death concerns being placed in a coffin and buried in
the cemetery, the question is, how can we pass through death and not be
totally destroyed? For this reason we have the history of Israel recorded
for us, which to the natural mind is just that, history. However to those
enlightened by the Holy Spirit the veil is removed to reveal spiritual
truth for us today. Let us look at the details of Israel’s crossing over
the Jordan River.
The Lord told
Israel they were to keep their eyes on the Ark of God, which represented
the presence of God. We have no
such physical representation of God today, but the Messiah of the Old
Testament, who is also the Christ of the New, He became flesh and
tabernacled among us. So we must look
unto Jesus who is the author and finisher of our faith.
The priests
were ordered to carry the ark down into the river Jordan, which
represented death. But please notice that as soon as the feet of the
priests touched the water, the river (death) stopped flowing. Just think
about it! Now that was simply the type, but the reality is that when
Christ (the Ark) died and was buried the
power of death was interrupted and broken forever. Then on the third
day Christ arose triumphant and the cry went up, "O
death where is thy sting? O grave where is thy victory?"
Notice that
for Israel the ark remained in the river until every last one had passed
over into Canaan! That speaks volumes to us concerning the work of the
cross of Christ. But what is the application for us today?
The river of
death is a stream that flows through a generation of people, just as a
particular "gene" is transferred from parent to child. The
source of that river is Adam, who disobeyed the command of God by eating
the fruit of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil. The result for
Adam was that "in dying you
will die," and so sin and death were passed upon all men. Death
is in the "genes" of everyone born of Adam, so even a little
innocent baby is subject to death.
How then can
this "river" of death be stopped seeing it flows through a whole
generation of people? The answer is simple, the whole generation of Adam must die.
How can this
be done without destroying the whole of humanity? Paul tells us that the
man Adam was "a figure of him
that was to come," Romans 5:14. That one was Jesus Christ, the
last Adam. We must be very clear as to who died upon the cross, because
there has been much confusion over this matter. It is generally taught
that it was the Son of God who died, but of course it would be an
impossibilty for God’s Son to die, because he came out of God who is
eternal.
The truth is that God made Him
(Jesus Christ) to be
"something," 2 Cor 5:21. What was it He was made to be? The
answer is he was made to be the last Adam. For what reason did God make Him
to be the last Adam? It should be very obvious that if man’s mortality
results from a problem with our generation from Adam, that he (Adam) the
source of our mortality should be put to death. As a direct result of his
(Adam’s) death, mankind has now been freed from the power of that river
of death.
I am speaking
here to those who have ears to hear what the Spirit is saying to His
people. Remember Adam was a figure
or a type of the One who was to
come, who was Jesus, the Christ of God. Because Christ was the reality of
the "figure" represented in the garden as Adam, He must also
contain within Himself all of
humanity, so therefore His
death as the last Adam was our death!
Paul
understood these things for his testimony was, "I
am crucified with Christ nevertheless I live, yet not I but Christ liveth
in me, and the life I now live I live by the faith of the Son of God who
loved me and gave Himself for me."
Paul believed
he was a direct participant in the cross of Christ (Ephesians 1:4), and
that Christ’s death was his death,
so Paul no longer had any connection with Adam. Paul’s identity is now
established in Christ instead of Adam, so he can say, "It is Christ
that lives in me and is my life, and death cannot touch that life."
Paul’s testimony is now ours and we can say with Jesus, "I
am He that liveth and was dead and now I am alive forever more and within
me, are the keys of death and the grave."
Jesus said, "I
am the resurrection and the life," so if
He dwells in you, you have the
resurrection and the life, which is eternal. Thus the
"Jordan" (death) has ceased to flow for those who believe,
and the presence of the living
Christ will remain until every
man has passed from death to life. Then of course death, the very
river itself will be no more, being replaced by the River of Life, which
will never run dry. The last vestige of the Adam
man who was just a figure or shadow of Him
who was to come, will then have been eliminated and replaced by
Christ the reality.
Thus, the
final test before entering into the Kingdom of God is to know as a spiritual reality
your Adam identity is dead.
Therefore the generation, or river of death is no more, and our true
Father waits to welcome us home. Like the prodigal son we are greeted by
Father, with a kiss, ring, shoes and a robe, saying-
"For this my son was dead, and is alive again,
he was lost and is found," and
another son has through much tribulation, entered the Kingdom of God!
Des
Walter
BACK