by T. Austin-Sparks
Reading:
Ezekiel 43:1-12
At a time when the temple in Jerusalem was in ruins,
Ezekiel the prophet was shown a spiritual temple,
measured out by a man with a golden measuring rod. The
measurements were all exact; the prophet was led in, led
through, led round, led up, set down, so that he could
see it from every side. From every angle and every aspect
this spiritual house, which was God's mind accurately
expressed, was shown to him. For Ezekiel it was a
spiritual temple, and it remains so until now. Then the
command was given to him to show it to the house of
Israel, so that they should be thoroughly ashamed -
presumably at their own short-comings.
It was not
only a prophecy: it was also a figure. It spoke of God's
people who were meant to form His dwelling place. In a
sense it pointed right back to Adam, the man who was
originally intended to be indwelt by God and filled with
His glory. If, as we look backwards to Adam, we have any
doubts about this intention, these doubts are dispelled
immediately we take the forward look to Christ, for we
see Him as the Man on the mount of transfiguration
crowned with glory and honour. We are given to understand
that He is the first of the new humanity, and that He is
bringing many sons to glory. We are to be joined with
Him, as members of His body, and so to share His glory.
God's true temple is not an earthly edifice, but a
people. Israel's temple was but a type of the intention
for Adam to be indwelt by God and filled with His glory.
The first man, Adam, failed. Israel, with its typical
temple failed, and the key to their failure is found in
the matter of heart fellowship with God by faith.
This is really the key to so much, this matter of heart
fellowship by faith. For lack of this Adam never became a
temple of God, and because of failure in this respect the
Jewish temple became a ruin. When it lay in ruins, the
word of the Lord came by Haggai: "Who is left among
you that saw this house in its former glory? ...The
latter glory of this house shall be greater than the
former, saith the Lord of hosts" (Haggai 2:3 and 9).
Now the fact is that there has never yet been a literal
temple on this earth with greater glory than that of
Solomon. Whether there is still to be such a temple on
this earth does not concern us very much, for we look
higher, and see the veil drawn away for a new temple to
come down from heaven with the proclamation: "The
tabernacle of God is with men, and he shall dwell with
them". Only a spiritual temple can come down out of
heaven, so Haggai's words are prophetic, pointing on to
Christ. He alone can transcend all that has gone before,
so that the last Adam is greater than the first, just as
the last temple is greater than the former. Christ is
God's eternal reality, not a type or a pattern, but the
fulfilment of them all. Adam was a type of Him that was
to come, and the temple was a type of Him who said:
"Destroy this temple, and in three days I will raise
it up again". The types have broken down. Christ is
the reality. He is the temple in whom God truly dwells,
the Amen, the final conclusive realisation of God's
desire to live with men.
Ezekiel spoke of "the law of the house". In His
life on earth, Christ was governed by spiritual laws, and
we can discover one of these by considering the cause of
the breakdown of the types. Where did the ruin begin? It
began before it affected this creation and overtook Adam.
We understand that the original cause of the ruin was
pride of heart: "For thou saidst in thine heart, I
will ascend into heaven, I will exalt my throne above the
stars of God... I will be like the Most High"
(Isaiah 14:13-14). Adam fell by succumbing to this same
temptation, and his pride revealed itself in a threefold
way - independence, possessiveness and self-centredness.
The same features were thus found in Adam's pride of
heart as had been expressed by Satan's fall to ruin.
Adam's fall meant that from then onwards he had to take
responsibility for making his own way. He had to earn his
bread by the sweat of his brow. Up to that point, God had
taken responsibility and provided everything for him;
life was a very simple matter, with no cause for anxious
thoughts about anything. From the moment of yielding to
heart pride, however, he had to accept responsibility for
his own affairs and maintain his existence on earth.
We see the great contrast in the case of the last Adam.
If pride of heart caused ruin, then humility of heart was
basic to recovery. If pride of heart found expression in
independence, then humility delighted in dependence. From
His birth onwards, everything about the Lord Jesus spoke
of lowliness and humility. With Him there was no
self-importance; even as the king He came: "...meek,
and riding upon an ass". It was by virtue of His
life of utter dependence that He provided a home in which
the Father could live. It was to this that Stephen was
leading up when he was so brutally interrupted. His full
quotation would have been: "...what manner of house
will ye build unto me? and what place shall be my rest?
...but to this man will I look, even to him that is poor
and of a contrite spirit, and that trembleth at my
word" (Isaiah 66:1-2).
If ruin came by pride, and pride showed itself in
possessiveness, then humility will be revealed by
self-emptying. Certainly Christ emptied Himself, and so
became a fit home for God. There is a power about this
divine humility which is capable of bringing the pride of
Satan to the dust, destroying all the devil's works. It
might be thought that when we speak of humility we are
simply emphasising one of the common virtues of the
Christian life, but in fact we are dealing with a much
bigger issue, even the desire of God to dwell in man. The
whole intention of the incarnation is "God with
us", and for that purpose Christ was God manifest in
the flesh so that He could recover a home for God in the
hearts of men. He was "crucified through
weakness", but what a complete transformation has
been made possible in the whole universe on the basis of
that crucifixion! The pride which made it impossible for
God to dwell in Adam, and which made it necessary to
withdraw His presence from the earthly temple, has now
been challenged and defeated by the humility of the Lamb.
Now the outcome of the cross is the Church as the house
of God, and we notice that this spiritual house must be
governed by the same laws as ruled the life of the Lord
Jesus. The perfect humility which made Him a fit dwelling
place for the Father must also be found in the redeemed
who represent Christ's recovery of a home for God. It is
notable that Paul, who was especially called to reveal
that house, is a man who speaks a great deal about
himself. No apostle used the first personal pronoun so
much as he. We believe that it was the Holy Spirit's
intention that this should be so, for a man who spoke so
much about the house of God needed himself to be an
object lesson of the true nature of that house. Paul was
taken hold of in relation to his revelation, and made an
expression of his message as well as being the appointed
messenger. So we are entitled to look for the outworking
of the principles of the house in the man Paul.
Now Paul - or Saul of Tarsus - was in himself the very
opposite of a humble man. Before he met Christ he had
been assertive and aggressive, a man of great
independence and forcefulness of will. From time to time,
even after his conversion, little glimpses of his natural
self-strength emerged. But the outstanding impression we
get is of one whose pride had been broken, and who
displayed a beautiful humility. He was always deeply
dependent on his Lord for guidance and strength. Moreover
he was careful to lay down the principle of dependence -
mutual dependence - as the basis of the house of God,
insisting that the body consists of many different but
interdependent members, who will spoil God's purposes if
they abandon the humility of the need for one another and
begin, in pride, to act out of harmony with the rest.
As we have said, pride is shown in possessiveness, and so
often the ruin which can be seen in the churches has been
caused by this tendency of their members. It is a mark of
the home of God that it offers no rights of possession,
no place for personal power or mastery. The Lord Jesus
wanted nothing for Himself, being content to leave it to
the Father to decide what should come to Him. He refused
to strive, to strain, to manipulate or scheme for His own
interests, but committed everything to the Father. That
was how the living Foundation of the Church was laid, and
that is how the whole structure must be built. We must be
very careful that natural possessiveness does not arise
in the things of God. It can do so unconsciously, even in
our desire for spiritual blessing. Even a desire for
holiness may have a subtle snare about it, if it means
that we want to be noticed or praised for our holy
living.
The first great law of the house of God must be the
humility of Christ in all its aspects of dependence,
emptiness and God-centredness. There is a tremendous
significance about the victory of the humility of Christ.
Satan had robbed God of His desire to dwell with Adam and
then with Israel, by inducing them to adopt an attitude
of pride. Then Christ came, and challenged this whole
satanic principle, overcoming it by being the Lamb. He
repudiated independence, possessiveness and
self-centredness and by so doing brought God into His
own. In His case men thought that they were dealing with
a poor weak Man, but they found that in fact they had
come up against the mighty God. This is to be repeated in
the experience of the Church. It may look like a poor
remnant of humanity, weak, persecuted, helpless, but as
God makes His dwelling there, the opposing forces of evil
will find that they have to reckon with the Almighty and
so meet with utter defeat. Humility is one of the
greatest forces in God's universe. In the case of the
Lord Jesus humility did not begin when He took man-form.
Of Him we are told: "...who, subsisting in the form
of God, counted it not as something to be grasped at to
be on equality with God..." (Philippians 2:6). We
may consider this in contrast to Satan, who did grasp at
equality with God and who infected Adam with the same
proud ambition. There was no personal self-glorying in
the attitude of the incarnate Son of God; but on the
contrary He was willing to empty Himself to become Man.
This makes it clear that humility is not just something
required of the human race, but it is a divine feature,
an attribute of the Godhead. Humiliation and humility are
two different things. The humiliation of the Lord Jesus
was one thing; His humility is another. This humility is
eternal; it is an expression of our glorious God, who is
no vaunting, proud, Self-glorifying Being.
So, from His place in glory, Jesus emptied Himself and
"being found in fashion as a man He humbled
himself...". As God He emptied Himself and as Man He
humbled Himself. What a marvellous Lord we have! Satan
and Adam sought to exalt themselves to be equal with God,
but here was One, eternally equal with the Father, who
did not grasp at this equality but was willing to
relinquish all His rights in order to ensure that the
will of God was done on earth as it is done in heaven.
And He is the One to whom all glory is given. We are told
that Christ has been exalted as a direct result of His
perfect humility. In the Word of God various reasons are
given for the exaltation of Christ. He has been exalted
because of His sufferings in death. He has been glorified
because He glorified the Father here on earth. Now in
Philippians 2 it is specifically stated that God has
highly exalted Him and given Him the name which is above
every name because He carried a life of humility through
to its full and final self-emptying. So His humility is
the explanation of His power. And humility is the basis
upon which the Church can know the presence and power of
almighty God. In the humility wrought by the cross we are
brought into oneness with our exalted Lord, and we enjoy
a practical experience of the spiritual reality of the
house of God. God dwells and God makes known His power
when the law of the house is observed and the true
humility of Christ is allowed to govern in all things.
From "Toward
the Mark" March-April 1974, Vol. 3-2.
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