"Be
not ashamed therefore of the testimony of our Lord, nor
of me his prisoner: but suffer hardship with the gospel
according to the power of God; who saved us, and called
us with a holy calling, not according to our works, but
according to his own purpose and grace, which was given
us in Christ Jesus before times eternal, but hath now
been manifested by the appearing of our Saviour Jesus
Christ, who abolished death, and brought life and
immortality (incorruption) to light through the gospel."
(2 Timothy 1:8-10)
God is supremely concerned with ultimate and
time-outlasting values. He would have those values
secured as directly and immediately as possible. The
effectiveness of a believer's life, and of the life of
God's people together, is all a matter of the measure of
intrinsic value; not of comparative or superficial, but
of intrinsic value. It is a matter of primary importance
that the Lord's people should recognise this and be
committed to it. The clause from the above Scripture
which we take out as the key to our present consideration
is this - "who abolished death, and brought life and
incorruption to light" with special stress on the
words: "life and incorruption".
THE
GREAT ISSUE OF CHRIST'S COMING
The verses
present a statement of the grand issue of the coming into
the world of the Lord Jesus; as to His life, His death,
His resurrection. The one great issue here is stated to
be the bringing to light of life and incorruption. That
coming, that living, that dying, that being raised, had
secured the substance of the gospel, so the apostle says
here; and it was the gospel which brought to light that
great issue. The whole great matter was brought to light
by the gospel. The issue of the preaching of the good
news was life and incorruption.
Logically, therefore, the conclusion is that, apart from
that coming, that living, that dying, that rising,
neither life nor incorruption would be known or be
available. Some translations of the passage have the word
'immortality' in place of 'incorruption'; an unfortunate
translation for us because 'immortality' has taken on a
much more general meaning in the minds of people than the
word here allows. It is thought to mean continuance after
physical death, survival after the life here; but
although the Bible teaches the survival of all after
physical death, that all have to stand before the
judgment seat after death, that is not what is meant by
the word as it is used here and in several other places
in the New Testament. The word here is connected with
several different matters.
In the first place it is used in connection with God. He
is spoken of as: 'the incorruptible God' (Romans 1:23).
You recognise in this case that there is some element
about incorruptibility that is more, much more, than just
eternal existence. He is the incorruptible God.
The word is used in connection with the Lord Jesus:
"... neither wilt thou give thy Holy One to see
corruption" (Acts 2:27). It is not possible that He
should see corruption. The Lord Jesus had an
incorruptible nature and life, and that meant that there
was something there which conquered death. It was not
just death suspended or put aside; there was some element
that destroyed death. It was that incorruptible element.
The word is also used of the blood of Christ: "Ye
were redeemed, not with corruptible things, with silver
or gold... but with precious blood, as of a lamb without
blemish" (1 Peter 1:18-19). You see there is an
element in incorruption that is extra.
It is also used of the glorified bodies of believers:
"... this corruption must put on incorruption"
(1 Corinthians 15:53). That is related to glorification.
And it is used by the apostle in relation to an
incorruptible crown: "Now they do it to receive a
corruptible crown" (1 Corinthians 9:25). We know
what that means - something that not merely fades and
dies, but completely disintegrates and becomes something
very other than glorious. But the incorruptible crown
means more than just survival, as of a flower that does
not die, an everlasting flower. It is something with an
extra element in it.
This, then, is the word we are considering: "Jesus
Christ... brought life and incorruption to light through
the gospel". It is the quality of the life, the
inherent and intrinsic nature of the life that He has
brought to light, that is the incorruptible thing. He
annulled death, not just non-existence, by destroying the
essential nature of death which is corruption.
Incorruption is the nature of the life.
EFFECTIVENESS
DEPENDENT UPON INCORRUPTION
What we are
concerned with, then, is the one supremely important
thing of being incorruptible. As Christ's concentrated
effectiveness depended upon certain spiritual factors, so
it will be with us; and the factors upon which that
spiritual effectiveness depended were the factors or
features of incorruption - those things in the background
or constitution of His life which were incorruptible
things. It was those that gave to His life its
tremendous, its immense, meaning.
What a great amount of intrinsic value was found in three
and a half years. Such a period is not much in a
lifetime. But consider again all that those three and a
half years contained. It has not only taken two thousand
years to touch the very fringe of it: it will take all
the ages of the ages to exhaust the content of that small
space of time. It is an inexhaustible fullness. From the
baptism to the glorification there was a concentrated
fullness of value capable of filling eternity. Men
through all the centuries have been drinking at the
fountain of those three and a half years, and they are
still drinking - all nations, all classes, all languages
- and it is as full as ever. It is still more full than
all that has been taken out of it. How pregnant were the
values of that brief spell of life here! What a seed plot
for the whole universe! How could it be that so much
should come out of so little? How could it be that for
ever and ever afterward there should be this flowing of
the mighty river of inexhaustible divine values?
That is the question to which, I believe, at least to
some extent, the Lord would give us an answer here. It
was because during those three and a half years that life
was constituted upon incorruptible principles,
incorruptible elements. While Jesus was the Son of God,
and thus fundamentally and infinitely different from us
as regards Godhead and Deity, the New Testament makes it
unmistakably clear that the features of an incorruptible
life are to be reproduced and to reappear in His people;
not the features of Deity or Godhead, but these features
of His life. Otherwise what is the meaning of this - that
they are 'brought to light by the gospel'? What is
brought to light? Just certain facts? No. Certain values
for us, which are to become ours and are to be true of us
as of Him, the incorruptible values and characteristics
of Jesus Christ as the Son of Man. And so we say again
that concentration of effective values depended upon
these incorruptible elements; and our effectiveness, our
value, will correspond to the measure in which there are
incorruptible values in our life. Therefore certain
things follow.
INCORRUPTION
THE STANDARD MEASURE OF HEAVEN
Firstly,
the standard weights and measures of God, of Christ, of
the Holy Spirit, of heaven, of eternity, are the one
standard of incorruption; that is, everything is weighed
and measured, from the divine standpoint according to its
incorruptible characteristics. That is a tremendous
statement, but it is very true. Heaven has no other
standard of values, God has no other standard of values,
the Holy Spirit has no other standard of values, eternity
has no other standard of values. Everything is weighed
and measured by its incorruptibility. Heaven takes this
attitude. How much will reappear and abide throughout
eternity? How much will come through when all else has
gone? What will be found ultimately as glorified? That is
heaven's standard; that is the law of the incorruptible.
THE
STANDARD OF INCORRUPTION APPLIED TO OUR LIVES
Therefore
we should judge everything of our lives and in our lives
by its incorruptible nature and value. You have to sit
down with that and think. Everything that makes up my
life, everything in my life, brought to the bar of the
incorruptible, i.e. that which can take on glory.
How much will stand the test, how much will pass, how
much of all that makes up my life will go when times
goes, when I leave this world, when all that is here
ceases where I am concerned? How much will go on and
appear again with eternal glory? It is a very serious
challenge; but that is how heaven is viewing things all
the time, and that is what heaven is at work upon. All
the dealings of the Lord with us are according to that
law, that standard - to make very, very little of the
corruptible, the passing, the transient, whatever it is,
and to make everything of the incorruptible. What will be
the proportion of the incorruptible to the corruptible
resultant from our time here? I suggest that very few
more solemn and serious questions could be asked or faced
than that. Oh, how much there is that makes up life, that
we are interested in, that we are dealing with, that we
are accumulating that has no future! How much
expenditure, how much time, how much worry that will show
nothing afterward, will not stand, will not reappear! How
much of it is really being turned to account for the
incorruptible, or is just being spent on our corruptible?
As I have said, God is primarily concerned with intrinsic
value, and that is not with Him a comparative matter - it
is an absolute matter. "The fire... shall prove each
man's work of what sort it is" (1 Corinthians 3:13),
the Word says. That is a universal and an imperative
dictum. "The fire shall..." - that is
imperative - "prove each man's work" - that is
universal; and I think, in the light of the New
Testament, we would be right in adding: 'the fire shall
try every man' and not only his work. The fire shall try
every man. Fire may mean many things. It may mean the
personal fiery trials of which Peter speaks, the fiery
trial of faith, proving the gold. It may be the ordeal of
the Church in persecution and suffering - and God knows
how much more that may be in the near future than it has
been in many parts of the world - the fiery ordeal for
the Church. But whatever the fire may mean in its
manifold application, it is that which puts things into
the categories to which they belong. The fire puts the
corruptible into the category of the corruptible, and
makes it known that it is corruptible, that it belongs
there: the fire declares it. The fire, on the other hand,
puts the incorruptible into its category, and shows it
has no power over that: that belongs to the
incorruptible, and the fire has no power over it. It has
defined its nature: either that it is of the perishable
and the passing, or that it is of the imperishable and
the permanent. The fire does that.
And do not let us think merely objectively. Are you in
the fire now? Is the fire not at work in your life now -
the fiery trial of testing, of adversity? How many words
could define the work of the fire in us? Yes, it is a burning
in our experience. We know already the individual ordeal
of fire. What is the fire doing? Why the fire? For one
thing only, under the hand and in the intent of God - to
put things into their place, to make us think ever more
lightly of the corruptible and to lay store by the
incorruptible; to make the incorruptible the transcendent
in our standard of values. The fire shall try every man's
work and every man.
Therefore this law of the incorruptible must be applied
to everything. It must be applied firstly to ourselves.
When we have lived our lives and gone hence, what will go
on as the substance of the incorruptible resultant from
our having been here at all? This is a universal
question, though a difficult one. What will there be that
defeats time, defeats decay, defeats death, defeats the
whole realm of corruption, and appears again in glory
forever, as the outcome of our having been on this brief
journey on the earth? We have to apply this question of
the incorruptible to ourselves.
APPLIED
TO OUR KNOWLEDGE
What about
our Christian knowledge - all the teaching we have had,
all the truth we possess? We have to apply the question
here. How much of that great store of teaching and truth,
doctrine and knowledge, is producing the incorruptible in
us, is going to appear again in eternity? We have been,
perhaps, to many conferences, we have had a great deal of
teaching by one means and another. Well what is the
upshot of it for eternity, when the fire tests our
teaching, when the fire tests our knowledge, perhaps in
this life? A great deal of teaching has been given in
some lands, and now the fire is testing the incorruptible
value of that teaching. What can survive and triumph over
the fire? In all that we know, in our Christian
profession, as we bear the name of Christ embodied in the
title: 'Christian', Christ's one, how much of that very
profession is more than a profession? Is it a possession,
an intrinsic value, incorruptible reality? All our
Christian tradition handed down from our fathers, all
that we inherit through the centuries of Christianity;
how much of it now is of this particular quality, this
essential value, this essence of Christ, and how much is
just form, habit, an established and recognised and
accepted thing? How much of it in our case is
incorruptible? All our emotions, our excitability, our
noisiness - is there behind all that substantial element
that will stand up against the fury of Satan, the hatred
of hell?
As to ourselves, this matter of the incorruptible is a
very pertinent thing and, if I mistake not, this is going
to be the kind of thing that will be pressed home by God
to the nth degree at the end-time. If, therefore,
we are in the end-time, and it is not easy to doubt that,
such a word is of importance. If we were to turn aside to
consider the matter, we should find that never before was
there so much in the Scriptures that was never
understood, even by its writers, which today is
intelligible with a mere modicum of intelligence. The
very language of Scripture which could not possibly have
been understood at the time when it was written is as
patent as anything can be patent today. At such a time
God would gather those who really mean business with Him,
and He would begin to say: 'That is good, but there is
something very much more than that: this is the thing
that matters - the intrinsic value, the essential value'.
He would put His finger upon the absolute essentials. How
much of the very essence of Christ is wrought into us?
That is the point.
APPLIED
TO CHRISTIAN WORK
This
question of the incorruptible has to be applied, of
course, to Christian work and works, and everything must
be tested by it. It is all very well - size, appearance,
seeming, immediate effects, the trappings and the means -
but what about the essential, intrinsic value? God does
not judge by the size of a thing as it appears, by the
seeming of things, nor by the immediate effects produced
by man's means and methods. God is looking through. His
eyes are the eyes as of a flame, and He looks right in to
find the measure of the incorruptible that will not be
gone in a week, a month, a year or a few years, but will
go right on and appear again. He is looking for that.
There are two kinds of starting point - man's and God's.
Man usually starts with big frameworks, with a big plant,
machinery, publicity, structures and so on. That is how
man usually starts when He is going to do something for
God. It is a propensity: it is our way. We may argue that
God is worthy of something big. That is man's way. God's
way is never like that - it never was. You search in vain
to find any instance of God beginning like that.
Pentecost came out of very deep and drastic dealings with
twelve men. God's starting point is always the intrinsic.
God has always begun with life, with the inherent, with
the potential. Man's beginnings usually end in only a
small percentage of lasting value. God's beginnings
always end in a very great percentage of lasting value.
But God's beginnings seem so small, they appear so
little. But so does a seed: it is a small thing, a little
thing. Yet look at the potentialities in one seed, in one
grain of wheat. It is the intrinsic with God. That is
where God begins. That is why everything really of God
has a long and hidden history of deep dealings on His
part.
GOD'S
SECRET WORK
The thirty
years of our Lord's hidden life had a great bearing on
the three and a half. The forty years of Moses away back
there in the desert, looking after those sheep of his
father-in law, had a great bearing on the rest of his
life. They were not lost, wasted, futile years. And so we
could take up one after another - Abraham, David, and
others, who had a long deep, secret hidden history; it
was out of that that the effectiveness came. Very often
more is done, when God has been at work, in the last few
years of a life than in all the years previously. That
does not mean that all the previous years have been of no
account, having no place. It means that God has been at
work to get intrinsic values, and now at last these
values are coming out. Young people must be careful not
to write off older saints as back numbers. It may be a
violation of the very principle of their own life - that
of intrinsic value. But God have mercy on the older man
or woman who has no intrinsic values! As we get older we
ought to be the substance for the generation to follow.
Everything must be judged not by time, but by the
incorruptible.
God's greatest things are coming out of intrinsic values
to make themselves known. Therefore He takes a lot of
time and a lot of pains in secret history with that one
object. It may be that, though you are thinking the years
are going, soon life will be past, all over, and you have
missed the way, everything being a problem, an enigma,
yet it may be that in a few years an infinitude of
spiritual value will come out of the time through which
you are going, out of this which you think is lost time.
You must adjust yourself to this, that God is not careful
at all about our standards of values, either in time or
in method or in any other way. What God is careful about
is to have the inherent, the potential, the essential,
the intrinsic. Lay that up in your hearts and cherish it
and let it be a real governing factor with you. God works
for depths. God works for solidity. God works for
intensity. Therefore He works through testing, through
hiddenness, and with very little appeal to our natural
pleasure. Incorruption is therefore a very testing thing,
and may demand a complete adjustment of our whole
mentality.
Having reached this point, we are committed to an enquiry
into the nature of the incorruptible. If all that we have
said was true of the Lord Jesus, and if it is true that
the Word of God teaches us that, Deity and Godhead apart,
what was true of Him in this way is to be reproduced in
His people, then we want to know what were the
incorruptible things that constituted such a life, and we
shall go on to look at these, for it is in this way that
we shall have the best explanation of the matter under
consideration.