There is One Body
ID
fw014
Sprache
EN
Gesamtlänge
00:43:33
Anzahl
1
Bibelstellen
Eph 1:23; 4:4
Beschreibung
n.a.
Automatisches Transkript:
…
I think it's obvious that we want to say a word tonight about the truth of the
assembly as the one body, and in the time that we have, quite impossible to go into
all the details of the passages we have read together. But we trust we will be
enabled of the Lord to say sufficient to indicate what a wonderful position this
is for the people of God in this world. Much more could have been read in
Ephesians, other choice passages relating to the one body, the assembly,
but I read the three that we've read together to indicate three things. First
of all, that it gives us the opportunity to see one of the distinctive glories of
the Lord Jesus Christ. He is the head of the body, the assembly, which is his body,
the fullness of him that filleth all in all. He is the head of the assembly, his
body, the fullness of him which filleth all in all. Well, anything that enhances
the glory of Christ must be of the greatest possible interest to us. We are
accustomed to think of our own blessings, and rightly so. The Bible is full of the
wonderful blessings that we have in our Lord Jesus Christ. But how right it is to
consider the glory of Christ in relation to those blessings. Indeed, I believe if
we miss this, we miss the very greatest and best. So the fact that there is on
the earth at the present moment, and always has been since Pentecost, a
company of people designated as the body of Christ, with a head in glory, enhances
the greatness and glory of the Son of God. Because if there is a body, he is the
head of it, and all that it has, it derives from him, in the way of power, and
life, and nourishment, and strength, and blessing. The body derives it
from the head. It's one of the statements in the epistle to the Colossians, that
the body is of Christ. That is, it derives its origin from him. There would have been
nobody, apart from the death and resurrection of our Lord Jesus Christ,
and consequent upon his ascension, the sending down of the Holy Spirit. And this
is the real vital truth, connected with the body of Christ, that each member is
united to the head in glory, in virtue of the presence and power of the Holy
Spirit. It's not so much that there is an aggregate of believers all joined
together, that's perfectly true, but the vital truth of the body is the presence
and power of the Holy Spirit, uniting the members to a glorious man at the right
hand of God. Now it says in Ephesians 4, there is one body. It doesn't say that
there should be one body. It says that there is one body. And since Pentecost,
this has always been true, that upon the earth at any given moment, the believers
in the Lord Jesus Christ, wherever they are in the world, are viewed as one body.
Not one particular class of believers, however intelligent and separate they
might be, but every believer is a member of the body of Christ. Every believer is
united to Christ by the power of the Holy Spirit. Every believer derives from
the head in glory. So again, I say it's of the utmost importance to keep in our
minds that there is one body at all times since Pentecost up till this
present moment, there has been upon earth the body of Christ. We'll see in a moment
that it can also be viewed as every believer from Pentecost until the coming
of the Lord for his church, when he shall take it home to glory. We can view it in
a universal sense, as we've already said, every believer forming the body of
Christ. But we can also see it in a local sense, as we shall see in the Epistle to
the Corinthians. Now, there is one body. Now, dear brethren, this raises a
very practical question. We look abroad in Christendom, and we have our part in
Christendom. We can't get out of Christendom. We're all part of it. Every
believer is in Christendom. We may not be corrupt, and we may not be connected
with many of the corruptions that exist in Christendom, and thank God if we have
separated from them and desire to walk a path of truth and obedience apart from
these abominations. But we face facts, and we see instead of one body, many bodies,
and all under particular names and labels, which they avowedly claim. They
meet together on certain ground, certain established ground, whether national or
whether in some revival movement, and they meet avowedly under those names,
different bodies. Now, it must be obvious to us, as we examine the Scriptures, that
that's certainly not what Scripture says. Scripture says there is one body, and
that body is the body of Christ. It hasn't a distinctive national name, or an
international name, or a local name, or any particular man's name, or any
particular truth attached to it. It says distinctly and plainly, there is one body.
And so every believer is responsible to walk in the light of that truth and
express the features that Scripture so clearly delineates for the
expression of that truth. And that's a different story. And so this is something
that we can be profoundly thankful for, that Christians who have been recovered
in some measure to the truth of God over the last 150 years have never gathered
under a particular name, have never gathered under a national designation, or
even under a particular teacher's designation. Because of the truth that
was brought to them in the mercy of God, they gathered together simply as
believers in the Lord Jesus Christ, and according to the measure of power and
truth they had, they tried to express what was true of the one body. And I
trust that that is what we seek to do today. We cannot possibly claim to be the
one body. That would be a most arrogant and presumptuous thing to do, something
that we would have no right to do. But we can humbly desire to meet together in
the truth of those things. We can meet together humbly and desire to express
them, and if we do that, I'm perfectly sure the Lord will sustain us and
maintain us, even though it might be in much weakness and much reproach. No
company of Christians could ever claim to be the one body. What a joy it would
be if all believers were unified by the truth and by devotion to Christ ahead
and walk together in this world as the one body. What a powerful thing it would
be. What a joy it would be. Every believer in London, every believer in Britain, every
believer throughout the whole world, every member finding his true place in
the body and expressing what God wants him to do. Oh, what an impact upon the
world in testimony. It's sad to say it isn't so. But we mustn't throw up our
hands in despair and say, well, not much that we can do, and we'll just sink into
the confusion and hope to get through the best way that we can. No, dear
brethren, we would seek to be governed by the truth of God. Because if we do throw
up our hands in despair, if we do say that we cannot act upon the principles
laid down in the Word of God, then we are tacitly acknowledging that we're taking
a lower ground, as scripture says, and we're confessing that we're following
error. Surely no saint of God would ever desire to do such a thing, but rather to
be humbly governed by the Word of God and seek to do the things that please
him. The other scripture that I read was the one in connection with the
ascended Christ receiving gifts and giving them to men, and those gifts all
operating together for, as it says, the work of the ministry, the perfecting of
the saints, and the edifying of the body of Christ. And how long is that to go on?
Well, the scriptures make it very plain. Until, until, until that day comes when
the purpose of God is completed for us, we're conformed to what God has in mind
for us, and surely that's the end of the road, the end of the dispensation. And
when God's mind is complete, then the final moment arrives for the completion
of his thoughts here in testimony in this world for the saints, and the body
of Christ ceases as far as this earth, earth is concerned. Some speculation as
to whether there will be such a thing as the body of Christ in heaven, and I'm not
prepared to enter into that, but it's certainly very true that the scriptures
indicate that the body of Christ is upon earth in testimony to exalt its
glorified head, and to show something that has never been in the world before,
and that's very important to take account of. So we have the fact that
scripture says there is one body, we have the fact that it's going to continue in
spite of all the opposition against it, and in spite of all the confusion that
exists, it's going to continue right to the very end. Nothing will thwart God's
mind in relation to it. You see, this is something that is not in our hands and
responsibility. There is no such thought in scripture as an abnormality, a body
without a head, or a body without arms or legs. The truth of the one body is always
presented as the normal figure of a healthy, strong body, and operating in
life and vitality. So it's a very wonderful thing to realize that this is
going to go on, because Christ is in glory, its head, in power, and in blessing,
and in resource, and the Spirit is here, the one who has united us to him,
and because of those two great distinctive blessings, the truth of the
body will continue right to the end. Now we ought to say that this is one of the
most distinctive blessings belonging to the Christian dispensation. If we read
about Israel, we certainly read that God's mind was that this should be the
particular nation in the world. It was to be separate from all other nations. It
wasn't to mix with the other nations. It wasn't to adopt their customs, wasn't to
be marked by their idolatry. It was a distinct nation, the one nation that God
had blessing for. That's abundantly plain in the Old Testament. They were to have
no dealings with the Gentiles. They were to be separate from the Gentiles. An
Ammonite or a Moabite was not to come into the congregation of the Lord, even
to a thousand generations. You can see how God desired his nation to be
kept very separate and very distinctive. Now when we come to the truth of the
one body, we find something entirely different. It doesn't matter whether a
person is a Jew or a Gentile. National distinctions, they go. Social
distinctions go. We're all one body in Christ, and there it's not that we're
leveled down, it's that we're all raised up to a very dignified and glorious
position in Christ. One body in Christ. Now that indicates to us something very
special, and there isn't any figure of this in the Old Testament. There are
many beautiful figures of the assembly in the Old Testament, but there isn't any
figure of the one body, because there isn't a figure of a man in glory, a head,
and a body here upon earth. It doesn't exist in the Old Testament. So we have to
wait until this glorious truth comes out, and of course the Apostle Paul was
the great minister of this truth, and he says so distinctly that this was never
revealed to the Old Testament prophets. It was something that was hidden God and
was made known to the New Testament apostles and prophets, and Paul was the
vessel used of God to make this known, to complete or to fulfill the Word of God.
And the idea there is not simply that it's the last revelation, it's to give a
fullness to it, the topstone of your life. You see, there had been progressive
revelations, and many wonderful things had come out, but something was wanting.
And when the truth of the mystery was revealed to Paul, that there's a man in
glory, and there's an assembly on earth composed of members who are united to
him, then was revealed for the first time this wonderful truth, and this gave
a fullness to all the revelations, a completion and fullness. What a wonderful
thing it is that we belong to this, one of the most distinctive revelations and
distinctive blessings ever given to man. Now I want for a few moments to dwell
upon the epistle to the Romans and the epistle to the Corinthians, and we'll
begin at the epistle to the Romans first. I'm sure we all know here that
the epistle to the Romans is Paul's great pretext to salvation. The early
chapters of the epistle to the Romans unfold to us a very dark and sordid
picture of man's fall and his departure from God, and if left in that condition
he was hopeless and helpless. There was nothing he could do to retrieve himself
from this terrible position. But God stepped in, and God said, I'll change the
whole thing. Man has been changing my glory and has suffered the consequences.
Now I'll change man, and in the power of the work of Christ, and in the person of
Christ at his right hand, he brings in salvation and justification and
reconciliation, and he changes man completely and gives him a place of
blessing before him. What a wonderful change. Dear brethren, let us all rejoice
in the glory of God's salvation. Wonderful thing to be saved, wonderful
thing to be justified, wonderful thing to be reconciled, and to have our part in
this great recovery to God. But then there is always the danger of man even
in blessing being independent. Always a danger of him saying, well, I'll follow my
way, thankful for the blessing that I have received from God, but I want to
move in my way, the way that I think is right. And sad to say, this is quite often
done. Now I believe that the twelfth chapter of Romans is to show us that if
we give our wills to God, we'll find that we are not walking in an individual
pathway, but we'll find that there are others who have subjected their wills to
God, and normally, theoretically speaking, this ought to be true of all believers,
and finding themselves in this company that Paul refers to as one
body in Christ. Now it's often been said that the truth of the body of Christ
coming in in the twelfth chapter of Romans is to be a check on independency,
and that's a very important thing in these last days. Because of the confusion
that prevails, we might be led into the idea, well, everything's broken,
everything's being given up. Well, I'll tread the individual pathway myself. Now
we've got to say very clearly and distinctly that there is such a thing as
individual discipleship, very much so. I cannot live for God for you, and you
cannot live for me. We all have to live our individual lives of faithfulness. But
what the epistle to the Romans is showing is that we're not expected to do
that all the time, that we've got to find our responsibility in relation to
other Christians who are walking in the same pathway. And I believe unless we
arrive at the point mentioned at the beginning of the chapter, where we give
our bodies to God and we desire nothing else but his will, we'll never know what
it is to find our true place in the company in relation to each other.
Because it's my will and my desire and my service and my operations and my, my,
all along the line. But if we find that God has a sphere of operations that
embraces all believers because we're all members one of another, then we'll find
we have to work out the truth of God with each other. And oh, what a need there is.
And the truth of the body, the truth of the one body, is perhaps the greatest and
best figure that has been employed to indicate how much we need each other.
Now you take your own body, you would never think for one moment that you can
dispense with your arm and not be seriously affected in your movements and
in your desires too. You need your arm, you need your legs, you need your ear, you
need all your organs. The body is one, the physical body is one, and God has
made it so, so that it works together the most wonderful machine that the world
has ever seen. I use the word machine advisedly. Oh, what a wonderful thing it
is, the human body, and it works according to the way God desired it to
work. But it works in harmony, I'm talking now of a normal body, and that's the
figure that the Spirit of God has given to show how much we need each other.
And the Epistle to the Corinthians, chapter 12, we'll touch that in a moment,
indicates how this operates. The leg cannot say to the arm, I have no need of
thee. It cannot. It's not that it says it, or it feels that it can do without. It
cannot do without. It's an impossibility. Every member is working together in
complete harmony. Now, if we think of that in relation to each other, we can never
have any thoughts in our hearts that we can do without each other, or we can get
on very well together without this one or that one or the next one. And when you
bring it down to very practical details, it means that in a given area where
there is a number of Christians, the truth of the body in expression must be
very seriously affected if we are not together in actual practice. If we're all
scattered and broken, how can there be an effective expression of the truth of the
body? But if we can be together for various reasons, and I would think it
was the reason would be discovered in the first few verses of chapter 12, there
is some evidence of self-will rather than God's will that prevents all
Christians from being together. I'm sure you would agree to that. And of course
we're not saying that all the humility is on our side. There might be some
self-will in our part that prevents us walking with other Christians in the
truth. And if there is so, then we would need to examine this very carefully and
desire and pray to God that anything that hinders the expression of this
great truth might be removed. It's not an ecumenical movement where we're all
brought together under one lump and all thinking different things and thinking
our differences to walk together. That's not what Scripture is presenting. It's
one body, a harmonious working together of all the members according to
the mind of God. So Paul says, now you Roman believers, you offer your body to
God because it's the right thing that you should do. And if you do this, you'll
soon prove what is the good and acceptable and perfect will of God. I
don't think that we can ever make effective progress in the Christian life
until we arrive at this point. When we say deliberately, carefully, that we have a
desire to do the will of God, no matter the cost, no matter the sacrifice, we are
prepared to do the will of God. I believe this is extremely important in every
Christian's life, whether they be young or old. Now, having made that decision, you
can see what a challenge it is going to be to put that into effect. And of course
one of the greatest helps to put that into effect is the fellowship of other
believers, the help of others, other members of the body. Now Paul goes on in
verse 3 to say, for I say through the grace given unto me to every man that is
among you not to think of himself more highly than he ought to think. Now don't
you think it's very, very important to take account of what Paul said in that
expression? Isn't it significant that he should say such a thing? He says, now
don't think more highly of yourself than you ought to think. Isn't that another
way of saying don't express your own will? Don't think of yourself as the most
important person and ignore others. He goes on to say, now think soberly. Now
that means you have a true appraisal of yourself in the presence of God. You take
account of what God has made you. Not what you might think you are, but what
God has made you. A true, sober reasoning, if you like, in relation to the blessing
that God has brought you into. Now having done that, he goes on to say, for as we
have many members in one body and all members have not the same office, he's
reasoning from the figure of our natural bodies. All our bodies have many
members, but they don't do the same thing. My ear can't do what my hand does. Every
member has its own particular place in the body, given to it by God, but they're
all one body. The ear is not the body, the hand is not the body. There's one body
with many members and they're all members one of another. Now he says, apply
this figure of the physical body to the Christian company. He says, so we, the
Christian company, being many, many individuals, are one body in Christ. Not
one body in the expression of who we are and what we are naturally. After all, one
member might be very intellectual, another member might be very illiterate,
one member might be very rich, another member might be very poor, and so on. We
could mention many contrasts. That's not the point, says Paul. We're not many
members in our natural ways or our natural propensities. We are one body in
Christ and that makes all the difference. You know, if this had been realized and
followed out amongst believers, it would destroy the notion of many bodies. Many
bodies following particular men or particular crews, under state control, or
any other idea of that kind. It would have cleared away man's ideas and showed
clearly that this organism, this living vital body, is so in Christ, the man who
is at the right hand of God. But not only so, not only are we one one body in
Christ, but we're everyone members one of another. I'm going to take you to another
figure, one I'm sure that you know well. You remember in the book of Daniel, that
Nebuchadnezzar saw a vision of a great image. And in the description of it that
Daniel gave to Nebuchadnezzar, the interpretation of his dream, he went down
from the head right down to the legs and the feet and the toes. And when he came
to the part that was made of clay and iron, he indicated that these two
elements, they formed the legs and the feet and the toes. What he says, they
don't unite. That's not the exact words. They mingle, but they don't cleave
together. You see, opposite elements, different elements, but there was no
affinity, no cohesion. Now, says Paul, in this figure we are members one of another.
Now, if in pride we think of ourselves above our fellow believer, simply because
we have a better social status, if we think ourselves above others because we
are better educated than they are, we don't understand the truth of the body.
These things are the proper place, and we must accept them. But in the
understanding of the truth of the body, we are members one of another in Christ.
All social and national distinctions have gone. And when we apply this in a
practical sense, and we think of Christians in the Anglican Church, in the
Church of Scotland, in the Baptist Church, in the Methodist Church, brethren, or any
other company of believers you like to mention, if we understood this truth,
every one of us, all these distinctions would need to go, because we are not
members of different companies one of another. There's no such thing in the
Bible of churches being one of another, but members one of another. So every
believer in Christ, wherever he is or she is, they are members one of another. And
if we realize that, we wouldn't look down our noses at other Christians simply
because they don't walk with us. We would remember that they belong to the body as
we do. When we come to other distinctions, of course, the question of evil
associations, or wrong doctrines, or even wrong behavior, that's a different matter
altogether. And, of course, we have plenty of scriptures to guide us in relation to
these things. But in the truth of the body, we face this again, and we must face
it because it's what the Bible says, we are members one of another. Every
Christian existing in this area and throughout the whole world are members
one of another. We're all united together in this wonderful life and blessing and
power. Is it not right to say, dear brethren, what a shame it is that there
isn't a better expression of this in these last closing days. Isn't it a
disgrace that such a wonderful blessing should find such a feeble
expression, when so much has been done by the Lord, by the Spirit, by God
himself, to bring this into concrete expression. How sad it is that
there isn't a better expression of it. Now we turn over to 1 Corinthians
chapter 12.
We began at verse 12, and again the reference is to the human body. For as
the body is one, and hath many members, and all the members of that one body,
being many, are one body, now that's all the physical body that's being referred
to, then Paul refers to the Christian company. So also is Christ, or so also
the Christ. Now we believe that it's not the Lord Jesus Christ personally that is
referred to here, but rather a designation of the Christian company in
Corinth, that they were the anointed vessel in Corinth. The Bible says this
clearly in chapter 1 of the second epistle. God anointed them. They were
sealed. They were anointed. And let me quote the other three things in the, yes,
verse 22 of chapter 1, sealed us, given the earnest of the Spirit in our hearts,
and anointed us. So the Christian company in Corinth is viewed as anointed with
the Holy Spirit in the midst of all the corruption that prevailed in that
city. You remember the tabernacle of old was anointed with oil, and this
indicated the presence and power of the Holy Spirit in a typical way. So this is
what Paul is saying, you Christians in Corinth, you're anointed with the Holy
Spirit. And because of this, the anointed vessel is the figure in Corinth of the
one body. We'll see this later on in the chapter. Now he says in verse 13, for by
one Spirit are we all baptized into one body, whether we be Jews or Gentiles,
whether we be bond or free, and have been all made to drink into one Spirit. Now
this is an expression that's used quite often. You remember in Ephesians chapter
2, Paul says we all, that is Jew and Gentile, we all have access unto the
Father by one Spirit through Christ. Now the Jews might have said, well we've got
one Spirit, exclusively so, and you Gentiles, well we don't know what kind of
Spirit you have, but we have the Spirit to help us to worship the Father. No, says
Paul, you can't say that, because Jew and Gentile have been brought onto exactly
the same platform of blessing and position, and Jew and Gentile in the
power of one Spirit, the Spirit, have access to the Father. Now Paul says this
is exactly the same in Corinth, for by one Spirit are we all baptized into one
body. Now it's extremely important to keep in our minds here that this is not
water baptism. There are no unbelievers in the one body. Unfortunately it's quite
possible for an unbeliever to be baptized in water baptism. It's quite
possible for a person to profess to be a Christian and yet to have no living
connection with our Lord Jesus Christ. It's well known that in the Middle Ages
many companies of people were forced to be baptized to the name of the Father
and the Son and the Holy Spirit at the point of the sword, either get baptized
and become a Christian or perish. Well what kind of conversion was that? And
today we say it is quite possible for an unbeliever to be baptized and yet not to
be a real Christian. Now the baptism of the Holy Spirit brings us into the one
body and that took place once and for all when the Holy Spirit descended at
Pentecost, never to be repeated. I've tried to give a simple illustration to
prove this and I trust you'll bear with me. I hope it is of some help. When
Parliament opens for the first time after an election a great deal of pomp
and pageantry and ceremony takes place and then proceeds the daily duty of the
Parliament in governing the country. In the course of the Parliament many
members die and by-elections are held. Now when a new member takes his seat in
Parliament there is no pageantry and pomp to welcome him into Parliament. He
takes his place in Parliament in view of what was done at the very outset at the
opening of Parliament. It was there that it was instituted as the government of
the land and those who are elected come in and take their place in virtue of
what was begun then. Now to me this is a simple illustration of the Holy Spirit
coming down from the ascended Christ and forming the one body uniting every
believer to Christ in glory. Now when a person gets converted today the Bible
tells us that when they believe they are sealed with the Holy Spirit of promise.
They receive the gift of the Holy Spirit and they take their place in the body or
rather they're set in their place in the body in virtue of what took place at
Pentecost. There's no more repeating of the rushing mighty wind and the cloven
tongues of fire and the speaking with tongues and the three thousand souls
getting converted when the preaching of the gospel takes place. There's no
repetition of that. That was done in power and glory the outset of the
assembly's position here upon earth. But every person who gets converted comes
into the body in virtue of what was set up at the beginning and will continue
right to the very end. So when we read by one spirit are we all baptized into
one body we think of what began at the beginning and whatever the believer
comes into in virtue of that wonderful day. And it says here what we've said
already there's no national distinction or social distinction. There's neither
Jew nor Greek, neither bond or free, and have been all made to drink into one
spirit. Now if we read in the Bible we'll find that our spirits are affected by
the different circumstances that we are in. Even the Lord Jesus when he was here
says he groaned in his spirit. The circumstances were such. We think of Mary
my soul doth magnify the Lord and my spirit hath rejoiced in God my Savior.
There are many other references to how our spirits are affected in certain ways
because of the circumstances that we are in. Now the spirit is the real part of us.
Our bodies are the temple. It's been said that our soul connects us with earth but
our spirits connect us with God. And of course when we die it is our spirits
that go to be with the Lord Jesus. Just as Stephen said, Lord receive my spirit.
As the Lord himself said to his father, father into thy hands I commend my
spirit. So our spirits really are the part, it's the thing I should say, that
expresses us in the actions of our bodies. Because of the circumstances
we're in and our spirits are affected we either groan or rejoice or we pray or we
worship or we serve in whatever way our spirit directs us. Now says Paul, every
member in the body drinks from the one spirit, the spirit of God which animates
the body and gives it its expression. Now the spirit says to you do this and under
his control and obedience to the headship of Christ you do it. And the
spirit says to another one, another member of the body, you do this and so
we're all drawing from the one resource, the spirit of God. And there is no other
resource to help us to express our true position in the body or our true
function. Now we come down to the end, the other verses that we read. And whether
one member suffer, all the members suffer with it. Or one member be honored, all the
members rejoice with it. Is that a difficult thing to do? Unfortunately
sometimes it is. If a member of the body, our physical body, if we have a sore
finger, very small member of the body, you might say very insignificant, but a lot
of pain and trouble it can cause us. Just one little finger or one little toe,
indeed, any part of our bodies, if it is affected by pain, it affects the whole
body. We know this only too well. Now says Paul, this is exactly the same in the
Christian circle. If there's one member who is ill and we're unconcerned, we're
not expressing the true features of the body. And perhaps the other thing is more
difficult. One part of the body is being exalted and envy and jealousy can
operate, and instead of full-hearted acclamation and praise for the other
person who has been so honored, there might be a reluctance to give what is
due. But the scripture says so plainly that we are to both suffer and rejoice
with the members in those respective conditions. Now says Paul, now ye are the
body of Christ and members in particular. Now here we have Paul saying to that
company in Corinth, now you are the body of Christ. Of course at that day, that was
the only Christian testimony that existed in Corinth. They were together as
one. There might have been differences of opinion, but up to this point they hadn't
separated into different halls and into different companies and under different
names. They were, as Paul designated them in the first chapter, the assembly of God
in Corinth. Now he's giving them a different figure. He's saying they are
the body of Christ in particular in Corinth. There was no other such company
and they were the body of Christ. Now the body of Christ in a local sense was
simply a miniature expression, if you like, of what existed in the whole world.
You couldn't conceive of the Lord Jesus Christ in glory and the Spirit of God
here upon earth guiding, controlling, and animating one company of Christians in
the city of Corinth and doing something the opposite in the city of Ephesus. And
the two companies claiming we're all under the guidance and control of the
Lord and we're all under the control of the Holy Spirit and yet they're doing
things that are diametrically opposed, in conflict with each other. Well, it's
inconceivable. If there is the body of Christ in Corinth and it's under the
control of the head and the Spirit, it will produce exactly the same features
in Ephesus as it does in Corinth. And Corinth will be exactly the same as
they're doing in Colossae, that is, if they're all under the control of the
Lord and the Holy Spirit. Can it possibly acquiesce with any idea that it's
possible to be under the Lordship of Christ and under the guidance of the
Spirit and yet do things that are contrary to each other? Because it
certainly isn't in Scripture. There is one body and it's under one head and
it's animated by one Spirit and it ought to produce the same features, not a
uniformity that is rigid, but a variety of expression that all adds up to the
same thing. And so, dear brethren, we feel this is a most important truth for us in
these last days, that although things are in confusion, we would seek to seek help
from the Lord to put it into expression wherever we are. I know how difficult it
is to remember that we ought to love every Christian and to help every
Christian and to be helped by every Christian as far as the truth of God
will allow us. That's a peculiar thing to say, but we're reminding that there are
other scriptures that we have to consider in connection with doctrine
and practice. And so, again I say, dear brethren, we would cry to God for his
help and guidance that in these days of confusion we might have the utmost
wisdom and power and blessing to put these things into practice until we
reach what the fourth of Ephesians says, conformity to the Son of God. May it be so for his namesake. …