Christ is all in all
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EN
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00:42:43
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Christ is all in all
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…
The second chapter of Colossians, reading from verse one.
For I would that ye knew what great conflict I have for you,
and for them at Laodicea, and for as many as have not seen my face in the flesh,
that their hearts might be comforted, being knit together in love,
and unto all riches of the full assurance of understanding,
to the acknowledgement of the mystery of God, and of the Father, and of Christ,
in whom are hid all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge.
And this I say, lest any man should beguile you with enticing words.
For though I be absent in the flesh, yet am I with you in the spirit,
joying and beholding your order, and the steadfastness of your faith in Christ.
As ye have therefore received Christ Jesus the Lord,
so walk ye in him, rooted and built up in him,
and established in the faith as ye have been taught,
abounding therein with thanksgiving.
Beware lest any man spoil you through philosophy and vain deceit,
after the tradition of men, after the rudiments of the world, and not after Christ.
For in him dwelleth all the fullness of the Godhead bodily,
and ye are complete in him, which is the head of all principality and power,
in whom also ye are circumcised with the circumcision made without hands.
In putting off the body of the sins of the flesh by the circumcision of Christ,
buried with him in baptism, wherein also ye are risen with him through the faith
of the operation of God, who hath raised him from the dead.
And you being dead in your sins, and the uncircumcision of your flesh,
hath he quickened together with him, having forgiven you all trespasses,
blotting out the handwriting of ordinances that was against us,
which was contrary to us, and took it out of the way, nailing it to his cross.
And having spoiled principalities and powers, he made a show of them openly,
triumphing over them in it.
Let no man, therefore, judge you in meat or in drink,
or in respect of an holy day, or of the new moon,
or of the Sabbath days, which are a shadow of things to come,
but the body is of Christ.
Let no man beguile you of your reward,
in a voluntary humility and worshipping of angels,
intruding into those things which he hath not seen,
vainly puffed up by his fleshly mind, and not holding the head,
from whom all the body, by joints and bands,
having nourishment ministered and knit together,
increaseth with the increase of God.
That's all I want to read.
In the third chapter of the Epistle to the Colossians,
there is a little word there that I want just to impress upon you,
first of all, tonight.
It's a word that has certainly made a great impression on me.
It made an impression upon me over these last months.
Yes, I'll say months.
When the Apostle talks about the new man,
in the third chapter of Colossians,
he says that in the new man there is neither bond nor free, and so on.
Then he ends the verse by saying,
Christ is all and in all.
I like the new translation rendering of that little expression very, very much.
I've taken it to my heart already.
If you have a new translation,
you'll find that what the Apostle says is,
Christ is everything.
You know, my dear brethren,
I would like that little word to rivet itself upon our hearts tonight.
I would pray that the Spirit of God might just indelibly write,
this upon your heart and mine,
Christ is everything.
If you were to turn also to the 12th chapter of 2 Corinthians,
I think it's verse 11,
and again to use the new translation rendering of the passage there,
towards the end of the verse,
Paul says, I am nothing.
One has put these two little statements together in one's mind,
and one has dwelt upon them a good deal.
So far as the Apostle was concerned,
Christ was everything, and he was nothing.
And one feels, beloved brethren, that this ought to be the way.
This ought to be our manner of thinking.
This ought to be our manner of living.
It ought to be our manner of conduct.
Indeed, in every department of our lives,
it ought to be Christ everything, and me nothing.
I think the Apostle expressed this very sweetly
in the words that Michael drew our attention to this afternoon,
for me to live Christ.
Christ everything, I am nothing, he says.
Alas, alas, one has to search one's own heart.
And how many things there are that come in from time to time
to displace Christ.
But I believe, you know, brethren, in speaking this way tonight,
I believe I'm saying what is normal Christianity,
normal Christianity,
as I see it outlined in the precious word of God,
in Paul's writings,
I see this outlined clearly and distinctly, Christ everything.
Now why was it, why is it, in the epistle to the Colossians,
the Apostle makes this tremendous statement,
Christ is everything.
Why does he say it in the epistle to the Colossians?
Well, it would seem, reading through the epistle to the Colossians,
that the Colossians were in a fair good state.
The Apostle doesn't say, of course, about the Colossians
quite what he says about the Ephesians.
But he had a good bit of commendation to say for the Colossians.
But I believe it would be right to say
that the Colossians were in terrible danger.
Terrible danger.
They were in danger from false teachers.
They were in danger of those
who came along with their science falsely so-called
and their philosophy.
Paul says,
There were those that came along with something which they said,
well, of course, you Colossians, Christ is all right,
but you want something else.
You want something which will suit your intellect
and your intelligence.
All you have to have, Christ, in your scheme of thinking,
but something else.
And you say, well, I don't want that.
I don't want that.
All you have to have, Christ, in your scheme of thinking,
but something else.
And so the Apostle says, in chapter 3,
he says, Christ is everything.
The philosopher can say what he likes.
The agnostic can say what he likes.
The knowing ones can say what they like.
They can ask you to search into the universe and angelic beings.
But oh, the Apostle says,
all this kind of teaching,
all this kind of philosophy,
all this kind of vain deceit,
is going to divert your attention from the Christ of God.
And so Paul says,
he stresses it, as I say, in chapter 3,
that Christ is everything.
Now, I don't think, beloved brethren,
things are much changed from the days of Colossae.
When I say that, of course,
I mean there are still those
who are decrying the precious word of God.
Young people nowadays,
in the colleges and universities,
have got to stand up to a good deal
of what slights and puts a slight upon Christ.
They tear the scriptures of truth to bits.
And fundamentally,
they give the Lord Jesus the place
which is a secondary place,
and not the place,
not the first place,
not everything.
Oh, I think, beloved brethren,
that things aren't much changed
as far as that is concerned
as to what it was in the days
when Paul wrote to Colossae.
The devil is ever on the watchtower.
The devil is always on the move.
If he can possibly,
in your heart, my dear brother,
displace Christ by something else,
he will.
He won't come along blatantly,
of course, as I said.
These philosophers,
they didn't come along blatantly
and say, you don't need Christ.
Oh, no, they didn't say that.
Oh, yes, you have Christ,
but you want something else.
And, brethren, this is satanic.
It's not blatant.
It's beguiling, beguiling.
Lead you astray, the apostle says.
Lead you astray.
Spoil you.
Brethren, young brother and young sister,
be on your guard
as to what you hear.
Be on your guard
as to what you are told.
Be on your guard
as to what you are taught.
Is it Christ-centred?
Is Christ everything
in what you're taught
and what you hear?
In this chapter,
there's quite a remarkable expression
in this chapter
when he talks about this philosophy
and this vain deceit down the chapter.
He says these words.
He says,
and not after Christ.
And not after Christ.
Could we take such a thing, beloved brethren,
and make it a test?
Is it after Christ?
Is it on his line?
Is it measured by him?
Is he the origin?
Is he the end?
Is he the way?
Is he the alpha and the omega
and the alphabet between?
Does it give him the place
of being first and the last?
Alas, the apostle had to say,
all this philosophic talk
and this highfalutin kind of talk,
it was not after Christ.
And I tell you, my dear brethren,
that only that
which is after Christ
is worth anything at all.
Not after Christ.
Oh, beloved brethren,
put it to the test.
Put it to the test.
Things you're taught,
things you hear,
voices in the world,
put it to the test, Paul says.
Not after Christ.
Is it after Christ on his line of things?
Does it make him everything?
The philosophers might have said,
of course, oh yes, of course.
He is a wonderful light
among other lights.
That was their kind of talk, you see.
But oh, beloved brethren,
he's not a light among other lights.
He's the blessed sun in the universe,
isn't he?
The sun in the spiritual solar system.
He's the sun.
Not a light among other lights.
He's the prominent one.
He's the sun, the sun.
Not after Christ.
Oh, beloved brethren,
put things to the test.
Put things to the test.
Is it after Christ?
Is it on his line?
I think you'll be able to see
why it was that the apostle said
in chapter three,
Christ is everything.
As far as I'm concerned, beloved brethren,
I find that to be a tremendously
searching word,
a very, very great test,
a very, very great test.
Our brother was talking about
loss of first love tonight,
this afternoon.
Loss of first love.
You have lost,
left your first love,
the church at Ephesus.
And I believe, beloved brethren,
that when we lose first love,
Christ ceases to become everything.
Christ ceases to become
prominent in our hearts.
Christ hasn't the place
that he ought to have.
Yes, Christ isn't everything.
I believe those who are characterized
by first love
believe Christ is everything.
I've heard it said thousands of times
that first love is embodied
in the words I quote again,
for me to live Christ,
first love.
And brethren, in this first chapter
of the epistle to the Colossians,
the second chapter of Colossians,
the apostle was terribly concerned
that the saints might make
Christ everything.
Was it a difficult matter?
I think the apostle thought
it was a difficult matter.
As he begins this chapter,
this chapter two of Colossians,
he talks about his combat.
What kind of combat
do you think it was?
He talked about a combat
in the end of chapter one,
which I believe myself
refers to his ministry.
But I'm persuaded
that when he speaks about
this conflict,
this combat,
in verse one of chapter two,
it was his praying,
praying, praying.
Paul didn't say his prayers,
dear brethren.
He fought and he combated
and he wrestled with God
in relation to the saints of God.
It was a combat, a conflict.
Paul, the apostle,
understood very well.
He understood very well
the power of Satan
and the subtlety of the enemy
and he prayed and he prayed
and he prayed for the saints of God.
What does he pray for
in Ephesians three?
He prays that Christ
might dwell in our hearts by faith.
What does that mean?
That means that Christ
should be preeminent
in the hearts of his saints.
And Paul prayed.
Oh, they were combatings,
combatings.
I sometimes have to
reproach myself and say
I don't pray for the saints
like that.
Do you?
Do you pray in wrestling,
combat,
conflict
for the saints of God?
Paul did.
Paul did.
Would be good exercise,
wouldn't it,
praying for the saints of God
and Paul saw the,
as I say,
the subtlety of the enemy
and he prayed
and he prayed that Christ
might be everything
to the Colossian brethren,
the Colossian saints.
Looking down this chapter
I've read to you tonight,
the second chapter of Colossians,
I couldn't hope to touch
on all this chapter.
It would be impossible.
I'd like to say a word or two
about,
well, all right,
these four warnings of the apostle.
Now,
it's not my objective tonight
to occupy you with the warnings.
It's not my thought
to occupy you with the warnings.
What I'm more concerned about
is to give you
or just mention to you
what was the apostle's
antidote to it.
What was the apostle's
antidote to it?
Well, all right,
let's sum it all up.
Christ was the answer to it,
wasn't it?
The person of Christ
was the answer to it.
The teachings of the,
of these false
apostles,
whatever they were,
false teachers,
they didn't give Christ
and therefore the great antidote
to what they had to say
was Christ.
Now, very, very simply tonight,
my dear brethren,
I want just to look at
the first one in verse four.
And this I say,
lest any man
should beguile you
with enticing words.
Now,
what is the apostle's
antidote to this?
There's so much in them
you can spend all night
on one of them,
but just let's look at
this little word first.
Some of my young brethren
here will recall me
making these words
just last Lord's Day evening.
As ye have received
Christ Jesus the Lord,
walk ye in him.
Take your mind back,
beloved brethren.
Take your mind back,
and think of the day
in your history
when you received
Christ Jesus the Lord.
Think of that day
when he was everything to you,
he was everything in your life,
he was the object
bright and fair to your heart.
These teachers are coming along
and they want you
to listen to something else.
One can listen to
some other argument
as the apostle Paul,
as ye have received
Christ Jesus the Lord,
so walk ye in him.
Or says the apostle,
I want you to go on
in the way we have begun
to walk in him.
You know,
he doesn't say here
be imitators of the Lord
quite the same.
That, of course, is right.
We follow in his steps.
That's very good too.
But what the apostle says here,
he says as ye have received
Christ Jesus the Lord,
so walk ye in him.
In him.
I believe what the apostle
was driving at was
that we might get the gain
of conscious union with Christ.
The apostle is the apostle
that talks about union.
You know, I'll tell you,
dear brethren,
it's a lot of years
since I heard a brother
speak about union.
Brethren,
God through his infinite grace
has united us to Christ.
Union is a Christian teaching,
dear brethren,
a Christian teaching.
And the apostle says,
so walk ye in him.
Consciously one with him,
drawing all you need
from the living one.
As ye have received
Christ Jesus the Lord,
so walk ye in him.
That seems to me to be
one of the antidotes
the apostle has to say
to these Colossians
in answer to those
who sought to beguile them.
A lot more one could say about this.
He goes on to speak about
being rooted and grounded,
interesting words
because the words here
rooted refer to the past.
Builded up is what is present.
It's being rooted.
Having been rooted, I should say.
Having been rooted,
it's the perfect.
Having been rooted and being built up.
Oh yes, every one of us tonight
who belong to the Lord
were the subjects of a divine operation,
a divine operation in our souls.
Having been rooted
and being built up
is the continuous.
It's what's going on.
And Paul says
established in the faith.
Not our personal faith.
Established in the faith,
the faith.
Our brother was
commending tonight
this afternoon
to the second Timothy
where Timothy was to be
a workman rightly dividing
the word of truth.
And, oh brethren,
what a need there is
to be established in the faith,
the Christian faith.
And as I am established
in the Christian faith,
then I'm abounding with thanksgiving.
I'm abounding with thanksgiving.
It's very sad, isn't it,
to see a miserable Christian, isn't it?
Very sad to see a saint of God
with a long face.
Oh brethren,
if we're not abounding with thanksgiving,
there's something wrong.
Something wrong.
In fact, I'll tell you what's wrong.
If you're not abounding with thanksgiving,
brother and sister,
Christ has ceased to be everything to you.
That's it.
As long as Christ is everything
to your brother and sister,
you'll be abounding with thanksgiving.
But on the chapter the apostle says,
gives a warning here in verse eight.
I just want to look at this verse.
Beware lest any man spoil you
through philosophy and vain deceit
after the tradition of men
after the rudiments of the world
and not after Christ.
Oh yes,
the philosophers, you know,
they had a word they liked to use.
It was the word pleroma.
Oh yes, the Greek word pleroma.
Oh you see,
you're missing something, you know,
says the philosopher.
You want some fullness.
Well the apostle, of course,
he takes their words up.
Oh yes,
he takes the philosopher's words up.
Pleroma, fullness.
Whatever do you want
with the traditions of men?
What do you want
with man's philosophies?
What do you want
with this vain deceit?
Oh, says the apostle,
all the fullness of the Godhead
dwells bodily in Christ.
Whatever do you want anything else
but Christ for?
In fact,
in the early part of this chapter,
the apostle uses another one
of the philosopher's fancy words,
epignosis.
Full knowledge.
Four times in this epistle,
full knowledge.
It came from the philosophers.
It was their kind of talk.
And Paul says,
I can talk like that as well,
as fullness in Christ.
All the fullness of the Godhead bodily
resides in that man
in the glory of God tonight.
Whatever do you want
to look anywhere else for?
In chapter one of this epistle,
referring to which blessed path
we're here,
the pathway of the Son of God here,
he says,
it pleased,
it was the pleasure of the Godhead.
It was the pleasure of the Godhead
that all the fullness
should dwell in him.
I haven't got the words right, have I?
That all the fullness should dwell in him.
And as a man treading through this world,
dear brethren,
all the fullness of the Godhead
was resident in him.
All the fullness of the penitude
of the Godhead was there.
Wonderful thing, isn't it?
A man that trod the streets
of Capernaum and Galilee
and Nazareth,
a man that,
yes, who started his life
as a babe in Bethlehem's manger,
hung on the cross.
Oh, says the apostle,
all the fullness of the Godhead
was there in him.
Wonderful, isn't it?
There are those who tell us,
he emptied himself.
Oh, you see, that's right.
That's what Darby says in his translation.
He emptied himself.
Yes.
But Mr. Darby didn't mean
what the Kenosis teachers meant.
But he divested himself
of divine attributes.
He didn't divest himself
of divine attributes.
This verse is the answer to it,
the clear answer to that horrible idea.
All the fullness of the Godhead
was pleased to dwell in him
here as a man.
No such thing as him
giving up divine attributes.
He was ever God over all,
blessed forevermore.
And, brethren, he's up there tonight.
All the fullness is dwelling in him.
Says the philosopher,
he wants some more knowledge.
He wants something
to satisfy your intelligence
and your intellect.
Oh, says the apostle,
he says,
all the fullness,
in him dwelleth all the fullness
of the Godhead bodily.
As a man in glory, beloved brethren.
Some people have objected
to the expression,
a man in the glory.
This scripture, as far as I'm concerned,
tells me it's a man up there
bodily, bodily.
And all the fullness of the Godhead
resides in him.
And then the apostle says,
and ye, ye, ye,
are filled full,
filled full in him.
That's what he says.
Ye are filled full in him.
And I believe very, very simply, brethren,
what the apostle was saying
was this.
You don't need anything else.
You don't need what
the philosophers are saying.
You don't need what men are saying.
You don't need tradition,
the elements of the world.
You don't need these things.
You're filled full in Christ
and you need nobody else but him.
God has made us, brethren,
if we do what is right,
to be independent of everything else
but Christ.
I wonder if you realize that, brethren.
I don't think I realize it, you know,
as I ought to have done.
I honestly don't think I have.
I don't think a truth like this
has really dawned upon my heart.
But everything that I require,
whatever it might be,
it's in Christ.
It's in Christ.
Oh, don't listen to what men say, dear brethren.
I'm interested in these warnings
of the apostle, you know.
He keeps saying
what man does, you see.
Beware lest any man does this.
Any man beguiles you.
Any man draws you away.
To go back for a minute,
and talk about men.
Men.
Listen, as ye have received Christ,
Jesus the Lord,
that's the man that you ought to be concerned with,
not what men say.
And so the apostle says
that you're filled full, filled full in him.
You are a Christian friend,
young brother, young sister.
I don't care how young you are
or how old you are.
Filled full is what the apostle says.
You don't need,
my dear brethren, I repeat,
to go anywhere else for anything.
Everything resides in Christ, dear brethren.
Everything is resident in him.
Filled full in him.
The apostle makes a comment here
about the work of Christ.
He hasn't got much time to touch on this.
Circumcised with the circumcision,
made without hands.
We've been brought to see
the judgment of God upon the flesh
at the cross.
The cutting off of the Christ
refers to the cross.
Buried with him by baptism,
in which we are raised with him
by faith of the operation of God
who has raised Christ from the dead.
That's as far as the apostle
goes in Colossians.
That's as far as he goes
risen with Christ.
Doesn't go as far as Ephesians.
Risen with Christ.
I'm here upon earth,
raised with Christ,
looking up into heaven
where my hope is.
And he says,
you're quickened together with him.
That's not in Romans.
It's in Ephesians,
Colossians as well,
quickened together with him.
These expressions, dear brethren,
all have to do
with union.
Union.
Buried with him.
Raised with him.
Quickened together with him.
Union.
What do these things mean,
dear brethren?
What a wonderful thing is
that God looks at me
and he sees me as being
risen with Christ,
risen with Christ.
By faith, you know,
by faith of the operation of God,
by faith of the operation of God
who raised Christ up from the dead.
God has given me,
in his infinite grace,
a receptacle whereby I can
apprehend something of the
blessedness of what it means
to be risen with Christ.
Faith, faith grasps it.
Faith lays hold upon it.
Now I tell you something more.
God has given me
a life.
Get it, dear brethren.
Quickened together with him.
God has given me
a life.
And that life enables me
to enter into the enjoyment
of what it means
to be risen with Christ.
That's what I believe it means, brethren.
It's when you come to chapter 3
and we start to feed upon
the old corn of the land.
Set your minds on things above
where Christ sitteth
at the right hand of God.
There's the heavenly man,
risen with Christ,
looking up into the glory.
In a power of life,
quickened with him,
in a power of divine life,
God would have us to be
in the blessed enjoyment
of all those things
which belong to Christ
at God's right hand,
quickened together with him.
Raised with him,
quickened with him,
dead with him.
These are all precious truths, brethren,
that touch upon the fact
of our union with Christ.
And I ask you once again,
I raise the question, brethren,
if these things are true,
if I'm united to the man
in whom all fullness dwells,
what do I need
with the word of the philosopher?
What do I need with vain deceit?
What do I need
of all the false science
that the world ladles up?
What do we want with it?
If Christ, as he says in chapter 3,
is everything.
I haven't left much time, have I,
for the other two.
I knew that would happen, of course.
But in the third one,
the apostle says,
let no man judge you.
Let no man judge you
in meat or in drink
on the respective unholy day
or the new moon
or the Sabbath days.
There were those, of course,
who were inclined to be
Judaistic in their talk.
They were wanting to bring
the Colossians not only
to dazzle them with philosophy
but to bring them under bondage
to a Judaistic influence.
And the apostle says very simply,
he says, the body is of Christ.
What does he mean by that, do you think?
Well, I would say, you know,
yes, maybe.
The kind of thing he says
in the epistle to the Hebrews
when he says, look,
we are done with the shadows.
We've been brought to the substance.
Let's not bother about Sabbaths
and new moons
and that kind of thing.
They're all shadows, shadows,
the apostle says.
But the body is of Christ.
He is the substance.
Oh, brethren,
I say again,
are we in danger
of being brought into bondage?
Well, not perhaps,
not that kind of bondage,
but whatever it might be,
brethren, the whole answer to it is
it's Christ.
And the answer to the shadows
of the old economy,
the shadows of the law,
the answer to it is Christ the substance,
the body is of Christ.
I believe that's what the passage means.
People think otherwise.
They think it means two things.
I don't think it means two things.
It means one thing.
The body is of Christ.
It's substance in contrast to shadow.
And lastly,
I want one little word if I may
on this last one in verse 18.
Let no man beguile you
of your reward
in a voluntary humility
and worshipping of angels
and touring into those things
which he hath not seen,
vainly puffed up by his fleshly mind
and not holding the head.
What a lot we learn
by these negative statements
of the apostles, don't we?
Not after Christ.
Oh, how much that brings
into our hearts, doesn't it?
Not after Christ.
And here he says,
not holding the head.
It only seems to emphasize
that we ought to be holding the head.
What does it mean to hold the head?
The head of the body, of course.
I remember once being in a reading meeting.
Michael was telling us
little pieces this afternoon.
I remember being in a reading once
a lot of years ago up in Sutton,
over at Sutton,
at Cheam Road Hall.
And we had a reading
on the 15th chapter of John.
And we came to the little expression
about abiding in Christ.
And the brother who was there
that day, I shan't mention his name,
he said something
which stuck with me.
He said, you know,
there's not a lot of difference
between abiding in Christ
and holding the head.
And I said to myself,
as he said it, of course,
the simile is completely different,
of course.
It's a branch and a vine
in the 15th of John.
It's the body and the head
in the epistle to the Colossians.
But I think I got the idea,
you know, the idea of it.
The branch draws its sap
and its nourishment
from the vine.
And when you think about it,
there's not a lot of difference,
is it, between holding the head,
except, of course,
holding the head has a corporate effect.
A corporate effect.
The Lord has a corporate effect.
It must be done
by each individual member.
Holding the head.
Holding the head.
How can we explain it?
Difficult to explain, isn't it?
I apprehend him, dear brethren,
as the source of all.
The source as far as direction,
control, nourishment,
life is concerned.
I need the head.
And so the apostle says,
not holding the head,
telling us, of course,
what we've got to do
is to hold the head.
And philosophy, vain talk,
angels, all this kind of thing
would divert my attention
from Christ.
Not holding the head.
Our brother was talking
this afternoon about gifts.
Gifts.
God has given to the church gifts.
But I don't think
that the joints and the bands
are gifts.
The joints and the bands
are not gifts.
If I apprehend this passage
right, dear brethren,
it's not a gift
to be a joint and a band.
I believe it's something
open to every single believer
in the Lord Jesus Christ,
every member of the body,
to be a joint and a band.
Oh, it's not gift.
It's not gift.
We heard this afternoon
we've all got gifts.
Thank God for that.
But I don't think
to be a joint and a band
there is growth, growth.
And when the apostle
speaks about the increase of God,
I believe he speaks about
what is proportionate,
what is normal,
not disproportionate.
As we hold the head,
says the apostle,
all the body, all the body,
by joints and bands
having nourishment ministered
and knit together increases
with the increase of God.
Joints and bands.
Brethren, let's play our part.
Let's play our part.
Oh, you say to me, of course,
the body's in smithereens today.
Yes, it is.
It's in shattered.
It's shattered.
Absolutely shattered.
Paul says all the body.
Can I reach this today?
Can I touch this today,
do you think, all the body?
All I say is this, dear brethren.
Now, brother was touching upon
this this afternoon.
Being like the ostrich
and putting our head in the sand.
Let's look at things
plainly and squarely,
our brother said,
and I agree with him.
But brethren, at the same time,
never for one moment
lose God's thought.
Never for one moment
lose sight of what God has
in his mind for his sins.
And if all the body
may be broken up into
smithereens as we speak,
brethren,
don't lose sight
of God's thought.
Paul says that we ought
to be holding the head.
And if we are holding the head
individually,
then there's bound to be
some corporate blessing
here below.
Well, I've gone over my time.
Just before I close,
let me say this.
I haven't come to Canterford
tonight
to just talk.
I want to make
that plain, brethren.
The things that I've said today,
I feel, I feel,
Christ
is everything.
I
am nothing. …