There are 77 verses in the New Testament that read “in Christ”.
PLEASE
NOTE THIS IS ABSOLUTELY VITAL TO OUR UNDERSTANDING AND WALK WITH JESUS CHRIST. Contrast these otherwise hard to understand
verses from Christ:
"And he who does not take his cross and follow after Me is not worthy of Me. "He who has found his life will lose it, and he who has lost his (life-psuche in Greek) for My sake will find it, Matthew 10:38-39 New American Standard Bible
"And he who does not take his cross and follow after Me is not worthy of Me. "He who has found his life will lose it, and he who has lost his (life-psuche in Greek) for My sake will find it, Matthew 10:38-39 New American Standard Bible
Also, please look up Matthew 16:25, Mark 8:35, Luke 9:24, and John 12:25 to “get” the Idea of what is being Said to us.
No servant can serve two masters: for either he will hate the one, and love the other; or else he will hold to the one, and despise the other. Ye cannot serve God and mammon.
(Luke 16:13 KJV)
Strong’s Concordance # G3126
= mammōnas
pronounced mam-mo-nas'
Of Chaldee origin (confidence in the FLESH, that is, figuratively wealth,
personified); mammonas, that is, avarice (deified): - mammon. AVARICE is extreme
greed for wealth or material gain.
synonyms: greed, greediness
He that loveth
his life shall lose it; and he that hateth his life in this world shall keep it
unto life eternal. (John 12:25 KJV)
Just PLEASE NOTICE the difference in the two words translated life in John 12:25. The one that we are to lose is translated from the Greek word psuche, Strong’s # 5590. The one that we are to “find” is translated from the Greek word Zoe, Strong’s # 2222.
In John 10:10 Jesus Said he came to give us life more abundantly. The word life is Zoe, Strong’s word # 2222.
Now,
when you read these verses see if they make a bit more sense to you:
Enter ye in at the strait gate: for wide is the gate, and broad is the way, that leadeth to destruction, and many there be which go in thereat: Because strait is the gate, and narrow is the way, which leadeth unto (life-#2222 = Zoe), and few there be that find it, (Matthew 7:13-14 KJV).
Enter ye in at the strait gate: for wide is the gate, and broad is the way, that leadeth to destruction, and many there be which go in thereat: Because strait is the gate, and narrow is the way, which leadeth unto (life-#2222 = Zoe), and few there be that find it, (Matthew 7:13-14 KJV).
One
last Scripture to keep close to your Heart before you start the very important booklet:
For the preaching of the cross is to them that perish foolishness; but unto us which are saved it is the power of God, (1 Corinthians 1:18 KJV).
For the preaching of the cross is to them that perish foolishness; but unto us which are saved it is the power of God, (1 Corinthians 1:18 KJV).
Wo is perishing according to Jesus? Those who do not lose this old life of the “flesh”
by refusing to take up their cross and take the Narrow Way, which is the Way of
the Cross.
In-Joy this booklet, but read it several times
this year and look up all the Scriptures for your own profit. In-Christ, Marion
. Williams, Ascension Hill
Romans 6 to 8 - By Norman Grubb
Part 1: Paul's Key to the Liberated Life
Part 2: Paul's Answer
Part 3: The Lost Secret
Part 1: Paul's Key to the Liberated Life
I suppose every eager searcher after God's truth for the liberated
life knows that the biblical key to opening the door lies in Paul's letter to
the Romans, chapters six to eight. I have been a persistent searcher for years,
and these pages of my many Bibles have been well worn! I think now, in my
nineties, as never before, I have in working focus what Paul is saying. So I am
writing this for those who are also diggers and hopefully finders.
I will assume that we are already born-again knowers by God's Spirit
(Rom. 5:5). As confessed sinners, in our guilty and lost condition, we found
"peace with God" through Christ, who was "set forth as a
propitiation through faith in His blood" and "Raised again for our
justification" (Rom. 3:25; 4:25; 5:1,5,10).
Now we come to the practical question of Rom. 6:1, as up to date
today as when it was first posed. Is there such a sure provision for daily
consistent and holy living as for having the past blotted out? "Yes,
surely," says Paul. "Don't you know that it is all part of the gift
of a full salvation?" So in these chapters he begins to explain himself,
and we will follow along.
INTO DEEP WATERS
Paul starts by taking for granted that his readers have a deeper
quality of spiritual understanding than most of us today had at our new birth.
"Know ye not," he asks, "that when our Lord Jesus Christ hung on
that cross, he represented us all, and therefore His dying there means you and
I died there?" Water baptism -- our being immersed beneath the waters and
lifted out again -- is a symbol of the fact that when He died on the cross and
was buried in the tomb, by faith we died, were buried, and then were raised
with Him (Rom. 6:3,4). And as the Holy Spirit entered the resurrected body of
Jesus, which represented all ours, the same Spirit has entered us, delivering
us from Satan, whose sin nature had entered our bodies and taken us over at the
Fall (Rom. 6:5,6).
Therefore, we have died in Christ's death to the indwelling and
operation of Satan's nature in us: we are "dead to sin" (Rom.
6:7-11). Sin, however, isn't dead to us as an operating power in our world, and
thus we experience its pressures on us. But in our bodies we have died to its
false claims to be still dwelling in us and thus expressing its self-for-self
nature by us. Equally, the same Spirit who raised Christ from the dead is
dwelling in us and living His quality of other-love by us. Thus, we are
expressers of God's holy nature, just as formerly we were expressers of Satan's
sin nature (1 Jn. 4:4,6).
"So," Paul says, "based on the historical fact that
Christ settled the sin question once for all" (Rom. 6:9,10), "we now
reckon ourselves dead to sin and alive to God" (Rom. 6:11). We therefore
no longer yield ourselves as agents of that self-for-self sin nature, but as
agents of God's other-love nature. This is strong meat, packed into a few
sentences. But does it really work out in our lives?
A STARTLING STATEMENT
A much deeper problem needs to be solved in order to make workable
the life of being dead to sin and alive to God through Christ. We must be dead
to law, as well as to sin. But why? Is not the law a safeguard to keep us from
running into loose living? "No," Paul maintains. "You have a
much deeper reality to learn -- that you have no independent human self, which
keeps or doesn't keep the law. You are really just a slave to the deity who
owns you, and it is his law you keep."
Paul slips in a statement here which sounds startling, but which
turns the key in the lock for us when we know it. "Sin shall not have
dominion over you," he states, "because you are not under law, but
under grace" (Rom. 6:14). But what does that mean? Many would ask,
"Is not the law the standard for right living, announced by Moses in those
Ten Commandments and demanded of us by God, with the penalty of judgment and
wrath if we disobey it? Is not the Law the means by which God exercises His
control over us and by which we endeavour to live? Obviously, we would go
wildly into lives of self-gratifying license, if the conditions of the Law were
removed."
But this is our vast error. We have been under the Satanic
delusion of being independent selves who can and must respond to law. And while
we think this, we are actually still salves to Satan, who compels us either to
try and fulfill or to resist God's laws, thereby obeying his own law of sin and
death. So the more we think we should obey God's Law, the more Satan is aroused
to make us break it. And we shall always have this problem while we blindly
think we are independent selves who can keep the law.
THE GREAT DECEPTION
The main consequence of our yielding to Satan at the Fall was that
he deceived us all (Rev. 12:9) into thinking that we have a human self which
can operate and manage itself, even as he lyingly thinks he can manage himself.
In fact, we are only operated and managed by the deity self -- Spirit of Truth
or spirit of error (1 Jn. 4:6) -- who owns us. This was symbolized in the
Garden by receiving the fruit of one or the other of the two trees. So when the
Law, which is meant to expose Satan's lie, comes to us in our deluded
condition, Satan has the laugh on us. We obey his self-for-self sin laws, being
his slaves, and cannot obey God's laws.
We who are saved admitted our sins in their outer forms and
received forgiveness and justification through our Lord Jesus Christ and the
new birth of the Spirit. But we were still too blind to recognize the depth of
Satan's deceit in us. We thought that as saved and new creatures in Christ we
could still take a share in managing ourselves.
Paul explains the full meaning of redemption through our dying in
Jesus' death to Sin-Satan's indwelling and becoming alive in His resurrection
to God's Spirit now indwelling us. But it is meaningless to reckon and say that
we are now dead to sin and alive to God while that root deception is not yet
out of us and we think we are more than a people managed only by the deity
spirit in us as vessels, branches, temples, slaves, or wives.
UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT
In order for us to learn this indwelling principle to its depths,
Paul challenges, "Just try to keep the Law, and you'll find the very
opposite occurring. You have been a slave to Satan and sin and are now a slave
to Christ and His righteousness. But that change of owner and indweller doesn't
truly lay ahold of you in its reality while there remains some sense of
self-relying self in you as if you are not just a slave. So just try to keep
the law and live the Christian life; and you will find you can't, because there
never was a 'just you'."
Your trying is really the remnant of Satan's deceit on you that
you are an independent self. Then you will respond to his sin controls and fall
on your face in your failures to keep the law; and that failure will at last
expose to you this lie that you can act and respond independently. There is no
such thing. your "I can" is still Satan having his lying hold on you.
Ten at last, it can become real to you that Jesus' dying for us
and as us, and His rising by God's Spirit for and as us means a change of
ownership. But we never did own ourselves. Satan owner is out for keeps and
Christ owner is in for keeps. Now we just need to know we are Christ-managed,
never self-managed, and no longer Satan-managed. The outer Law is now
meaningless. We are dead to it because our "I" is solely the
expresser of God's life; and he operates His laws and nature spontaneously in
us, by us, and as us. That is our answer to every false claim in this
Satan-infected world that Satan has a hold on us. Christ in us is our law; and
He fulfills it by us, just as Satan used to fulfill his by us. Satan is out for
keeps, Christ is in for keeps and now we can actually live what we said we do
live in Romans 6:11 -- dead to sin and alive to God in our Lord Jesus Christ
(Rom. 6:11).
THE BASIS OF THE SOLUTION:
ONLY CONTAINERS
In eternity, God begat His Son, thereby transmuting His own fire
self into a light self and becoming the self of other love. We understand from
Genesis that our first parents were created in God's image, to be containers of
His Spirit and expressers of His nature by means of their humanity. To
symbolize this planned union, the Tree of Life with its precious fruit was set
in the midst of the Garden.
Satan, on the other hand, his self of fiery desires into the
self-for-self nature of consuming love. And this nature of his is what he
infused into us all at the Fall, as though it were ours. So man, who was
designed to be united with the Spirit of self-for-others, was tricked into
yielding to the Satanic spirit of self-for-self (Eph. 2:1-3; Jn 8:44).
In the present, we have learned and by faith put into practice our
Lord Jesus Christ's Calvary identification with us and as us. As a result, a
tremendous change of indwelling spirit has taken place in us; and that deceiver
no longer indwells and controls us.
NO SEPARATE SELF
When Paul tells us that we are no longer under that former outer
law of Moses, doesn't that mean that we shall be given over to a spirit of
license? "God forbid," pronounces Paul. In our new life our human
selves are motivated, controlled, and spontaneously express the nature of God,
by His Spirit united to our spirits. Laying the foundation for this assurance
in Romans 6:16-7:6, Paul there presents one strong evidence after another that
there is no intermediate, "independent me" to be taken over, unless
we foolishly believe it.
"First," he says, "we were always slaves; and a
slave just obeys his owner." We had handed ourselves over to owner
Sin-Satan, to express his sin-nature. Now, however, we have become God's
willing slaves through the obedience of faith which takes Him at His word, and
we express His nature of holiness.
"Put it this way," Paul explains. "We were free in
our sinning, with no response to God's law. Now we are free in our right
living, with no response to Satan's law. And there is no 'you,' with an
in-between or independent life of your own (Rom 6:16-20)."
Next Paul introduces a second illustration: a fruit-bearing tree.
he describes how we are now producing right, good fruit in our lives, whereas
we were ashamed of the former fruit (Rom 6:21,22). He wants us to understand
that we are only branches which have changed trees. We never produced fruit
without a tree!
To sum it up, we learn through the slave and branch analogies that
we never exercised any kind of in-between life as self-operators. We are slaves
of either one owner or another, or branches of either one vine or the other.
Therefore, the idea that we humans were self-operating selves and had a
"nature" or quality of life of our own has been a vast human illusion
-- there never was such a thing. We have been created to produce the way of
life of our Deity Creator and Operator. Only first we had to experience and
discard through Calvary that false deity operator, who produced that opposite,
negative way of life.
In Romans 7:1-6 Paul uses one further powerful and convincing
illustration - the law of marriage, which he speaks of here as the "law of
the husband" (Rom 7:2). The wife is legally bound to her husband so long
as he lives, and he is her "lord" (1 Pet 3:6); she receives his seed,
conceives by it, and produces their family.
We humans were "married" at the Fall to our Sin-satan
husband and became his sin family, he working in us the "motions of
sins" which produced "fruit unto death" (Rom 7:5). We had to do
this according to the law and demands of marriage, as any change of husbands
would have been an "adultery." It looked hopeless; our husband was
not going to die.
But there was One, representing the whole human family, who died
as us. So the marriage was dissolved because we died "wherein we were
held" (Rom 7:6). The dissolution of the first marriage and release from
that husband meant that in Christ's resurrection we were immediately married to
another, our risen Saviour, and are now under His law.
The law of marriage in Romans 7:1-6 is therefore a continuation by
Paul of his two illustrations from Romans 6. For just as we have always been
slaves to an owner and branches producing the fruit of a tree, we have always
produced the fruit of a husband. We have never been widows conceiving without a
husband.
A FRUSTRATING COMPLICATION
Now comes the burning question. If the new relationship has
replaced the old, and given us fully-satisfying life, rich fruit, happy
service, loving union and communion, and the conscious ability to be who we
long to be and help others to be the same, why doesn't it happen? What is
wrong? Where is this completion in Christ, loving as He loved, walking as he
walked with the faith that overcomes, being more than conquerors, easily living
out the Sermon on the Mount as Jesus said we would, as lights in the world?
Hasn't Paul made it plain to us that we have been crucified, raised, and
ascended with Jesus and inwardly confirmed by the Spirit? Then where is the
snag?
This burning question has greatly disturbed and seemingly
disrupted our first faith statements, by which Paul told us to "reckon
ourselves dead indeed unto sin and alive unto God." It has also caused
many sincere, born again, Bible rooted believers to use a nice little cliche:
our position in Christ is one thing, but our condition in its outworking is
quite another. And they usually add, "Of course, our condition does not
level up to our position." But this is precisely what Paul's says does
level up! Our position in Christ and our condition in living this Christ-Life
are one and the same.
Next Paul reaches the least understood and most misused section of
his Romans letter, or of all his writings. But when understood through Paul's
own explanation and experienced by the inner confirmation of the Spirit, this
section gives the desperate believer the one key that turns the lock and the
whole freedom he seeks. In his need, the believer must find the full and final
meaning of life, for which he was created and is now redeemed by grace. This
section (which we shall cover in Part II) extends from Romans 7:7 through 7:25
and then is fulfilled in Romans 7:26 right through chapter 8.
Part Two: - Paul's Answer
In Part One of this article, Paul had pointed out that in our
redeemed experience of justification by faith and new birth of the Spirit, we
do not continue in sin. The reason is that as our Lord Jesus Christ died and
rose again as representing us, we then died with Him to being sin-indwelt and
rose with Him to being Christ-indwelt, as symbolized by our burial and rising
in water baptism. So now we live yielded to God and expressing His right living
in our members.
But this is based on a further startling fact of a different kind
-- that we are no longer "under law, but under grace," and that we
are "dead to law" as well as "dead to sin." We are thus not
only freed from the guilt of broken law, but from responding to and having to
operate law at all!
But, steady! If we are not under law, do we mistakenly conclude
that we shall easily slip back into sin living? Paul then opens to us the basic
radical delusion that we have lived in since the Fall, under the Satanic lie of
us being independent self-managing selves who must therefore see to it that we
respond to law by our self-efforts. But the actual fact is that we were never
created to be independent human selves, but were deceived into that delusion by
Satan at the Fall.
Paul then points out that in fact we have always been just slaves,
either to the sin-owner or the righteousness-owner: branches bearing the fruit
of either the false vine or the True Vine: married and producers of the seed of
either Satan-husband or Christ-husband. There has never been such a lie and
delusion of us being independent self-acting, self-producing human selves, and
responding by ourselves to a law of evil or good. Paul now proceeds to explain
his own experience of discovery and release from his false deceived bondage to
this radical misconception, and thus his freedom in Christ to a totally
liberated life.
BACK TO HIS BEGINNING
In Romans 7:7-25 Paul turns from general statements to the
strictly personal. How do I find that the Christian life works? How do you? To
explain this and to identify with us all, Paul does a big thing. He
deliberately backtracks from his actual present experience as "dead to the
law," and aligns himself with every born again believer, using the present
tense of "I, I, I." He starts with his new-born experience, then
shares with us his early years of spiritual adolescence, and finally his
searchings and wrestlings right through to the final answer for himself, and
thus for us all.
Paul's use of the present tense about himself, in sharing what he
had long left behind, has been misunderstood though all these succeeding years
by millions of sincere believers, who have themselves not entered into the
release of the liberated "I." Thinking that the furthest a believer
can know in lie is humiliation, struggles, and constant failures under sin's
apparent dominion, they have falsely deduced a "two-nature"
condition, as if we humans are permanently caught up in the opposing strife of
sin and holiness natures. If, as they say, these natures were both a part of
our very selves, then we would have to oscillate despairingly between them and
take them for granted as our normal experience.
The truth is that our God-created human self is merely a neutral
vessel, or container. In Romans 7:19 Paul described it as being in itself
neither the good nor the bad, which he was only then discovering was the sin
dwelling in him. It is merely the fruit producer of whichever vine it is a
branch, and can never be a branch of both at once (Rom 6:20-22). And though
vast numbers of God's people still labour under that mistaken interpretation of
Paul's present tense, we say he boldly stepped back in order to identify
himself as a true intercessor with what all believers must go through to find
their permanent deliverance. So he is now saying, "I see myself with you.
I am back with you confronting that old outer law, to which in actual fact I am
dead." In order to underline the final necessary confrontation with the
law and its final depth surgery on him, as on us all, Paul describes in detail
his past dramatic experience. It was the sudden impact of that tenth commandment,
with its "Thou shalt not covet," which so rudely awakened him. he had
been blissfully ignorant of its having any personal impact. "I was alive
without the law once," he says (Rom 7:9); and that is how all the world
lives until confronted by the law. Paul had been "delighting in the
law" (Rom. 7:22), as every new-born of the Spirit delights. But under the
lie of independent self, when that "Thou shalt not covet" struck him,
he blindly thought: "No, of course I won't and don't." He was under
that fatal delusion of us all that there is such a thing as self-management and
selfcontrol.
TROUBLE WITH "I"
Then the blast hit him. Paul found an inner uprising over which he
had no control, which he named sin and which "wrought in me all manner of
concupiscence" (Rom 7:8). he was devastated, not that there were these sin
drives, but because he thought he ought to be able to control them. That was
his condemnation and bondage.
This is how Paul put it: "In my newly-born and responsive
condition, in which my whole desire is to fulfill the law and produce the fruit
of the Spirit, there is this disturbing experience that when I want to do good,
there is an evil presence controlling me (Rom 7:22). Yes, I want to and will
live by God's law. I would do the good and not the evil [repeated in verses 15,
16, 18, 19, and 21], but I am driven by this humiliating condition to say that
something grabs and enslaves me.
"I am carnal and sold under sin," Paul continues (Rom
7:14), "and there seems to be no escape. Here is the law, which I delight
in, hammering at me with its godly standards. But I find myself helpless and
hopeless. I have the will; but there is nothing in my flesh -- my human makeup
-- which has the capacity to combat this negative power drive, which has me in
its grasp (Rom 7:18). I am a wretched man (Rom 7:24): newborn, but still as sin
slave! Where lies the trouble? Is there a remedy?"
The trouble is in that deceived, independent "I"
(popping up thirty-two times in those nineteen verse) -- the enormous delusion,
which the law came to expose. Independent self reaction is first of all Satan's
delusion about his own created selfhood, and then the lie which he imparted to
us all at the Fall.
SELF-EFFORT IS SATAN-EFFORT
We are all forms of God's fire-self, the self of infinite desire.
But God, by the begetting of His Son, transmuted His fire-self into the
Light-self which is eternally the Self of other-love. Satan, however, turned
his self of fiery desires into the consuming love of self-for-self, and
imparted his own fallen nature to us as though it were ours.
So all self-effort is actually Satan-effort, whether good or bad
in appearance. Paul's good self-efforts to combat his uprising sin desires,
unknown to him, were still Satan masquerading as Paul. And our desires and
self-reactions, good or bad, are still Satan's self-for-self expressed as us.
Paul described his experience this way: "When I would do good, evil is
present with me" (Rom 7:21).
The great light is lit when we finally see that our precious
humanity has every ability to respond on soul and body level; but the forms the
responses take are not ours. There is no such thing as plain self-reactions.
Through the Fall, our responses formerly expressed Satan's self-for-self
nature, whether in apparent good or evil form. But now through Calvary, having
learned that our Romans 7 delusion of independent self-reaction is Satan, our
responses express Christ in His self-for-others nature. This is who we really
are, as we shall see further in Romans 8.
SLAIN BY THE DELUSION
In his self-delusion Paul was so ashamed and humiliated that he
said he was like a slain man (Rom 7:7-11). In fact, that was what had happened.
He had been slain by the delusion that he was an independent self who could
manage himself, when there is no such thing and it was really Satan's
self-effort. So he said, "Sin, taking occasion by the commandment [as if
he could obey it], deceived me, and by it slew me" (Rom 7:11).
What a universal deceit in all us humans, and what an exposure and
deliverance! The shame and humiliation of Paul's defeat was just the necessary
negative God used to make him desperate enough to find the answer, and thus
that final usefulness of the law in exposing the lie of self-effort. So down
Paul had fallen by the exposure of his self-relying self, not yet knowing that
self-effort is Satan.
Having used his own dramatic experience the underline the
necessary negative operation of the law on us, Paul then asks, "Does such
an exposure by the law make it a death-dealing and dangerous weapon? The very
opposite!" (Rom 7:12-14). Only by that sharp, personal law exposure of his
helpless self in response to those self-gratifying desires could the roots of
the independent-self lie be exposed. At first he struggled, wrongfully condemning
himself instead of Satan-sin. But this drove him to the great final discovery:
not of an evil human self, with the false self-condemnation, but to the great
light of a right, God-made human self, with the sinner in him really being the
sin spirit.
Paul knew, by the revelation he had when in Arabia (Gal
1:11,12,17), that Satan-sin had been cast out by Christ's body death on Calvary
(2 Cor 5:14,21). (We shall explain this in detail in Part III). But he had not
yet come to the necessary point of personally appropriating that tremendous
fact. He was still confused by the self-condemnation of false, independent
self, instead of laying the rightful blame on sin. So by the use of the vivid
present tense, as though he were a young, struggling believer, he underlines
the value of the law in its disturbing effects on "me, me, me!" But
finally there would be a right adjustment of the human "me" (See Part
III).
A DESPERATE DISCOVERY
Have not I, like Paul, vainly thought there should be some way in
which I could combat and overcome this evil bias in myself? Does not the whole
world operate by doing its own stuff? Isn't "I must," "I
can," "I will," or "I'm going to" the sole, absorbing
incentive of human living?
Yes it is. That is humanity's vast, lost, blindness, even though
sin is not imputed when law hasn't yet confronted us (Rom 5:13,14). All of us
in this fallen world, with no exceptions, really live by that Satan lie, with
which we were inoculated at the Fall: that self by itself, in its apparent
independence, can run its own life.
While in our deceived, self-relying state -- "living in
pleasure [and yet] being dead while we think we live" (1 Tim 5:6) -- we
have to be confronted with the law and the standards by which the universe was
created to function.
These laws were first embodied outwardly for our enlightenment in
those Ten Commandments, from which any deviation finally brings total
destruction. We are forced to accept the realization that first we didn't
(conviction of sins), and second we cannot fulfill it, which is the final
discovery of this Romans 7 chapter.
Why are we not able to keep the law? It is because we created
humans can only function by the deity self who manifests his nature through our
forms: our Creator-Father's "divine nature" (2 Pet 1:4), or
alternatively, so that we might experience and get the opposite into focus,
Satan's self-for-self nature (Eph 2:1,2). Always, we humans are vessels,
branches, slaves, body-members; or in modern terms, we are computers, who can
only develop what is programmed into us. There never was such a thing as a
created selfhood which could operate by itself.
Paul, recounting in this Romans 7 crisis statement his former
experience, was compelled to discover that he could not manage himself. And now
we all, with whom Paul links himself, are compelled to discover that we cannot
manage ourselves. "To will is present with me; but how to perform that
which is good I find not" (Rom 7:18). Precisely. Yes, I am a slave,
"sold under sin" (the nature of self-for-self), with no escape.
However much I want to, resolve to, or try to keep God's law, I CANNOT because
I was never created with the ability to manage myself. I am a managed person.
Through the law's impossible demands on me, I have to discover
that I started my human life in sin. "In sin did my mother conceive
me" (Ps 51:5), as a slave, a branch, and a vessel. Of whom? Of that false
upstart "god of this world," that "spirit working in the
children of disobedience" (Eph 2:2). he is that "spirit of
error," that "father of lies," that devil "who sinneth from
the beginning"; and it is his lusts I have been doing and can't refrain
from doing (Jn 8:44).
Then at last, as Paul says in Romans 7:14-25, I am driven to my
limit. I am finally among the desperate ones who seek the highest and then I
find I can't reach it. The poet Browning wrote, "A man's reach must exceed
his grasp, or what's a heaven for?" But in my desperation, at last I can
see my deceived limitations. A tremendous seeing!
I see plainly now that the disrupter is not the law, for the law
is "spiritual" (Rom 7:14). And it is not "me," because I
hate these things I do. It is the intruder: the sin that dwells in me! Paul
says that twice (Rom 7:17,20). This is a radical revelation, because all my
trouble and the whole world's trouble is the deception that we are the
operators of our lives. We are not! We are the containers, the manifesters, the
vessels of wrath or mercy (Rom 9:22,23).
A vast weight, which burdens every believer in his false
self-condemnation, lifts off us when this understanding comes. In our former
delusion we would say: "I'm the culprit. I'm the trouble. I'm ashamed of
myself. I should be better." No. That is a lie, and a delusion; it never
was I. The whole intent of the cries of "I, I, I," in Romans 7:14-25
is that I don't like myself. I hate what I'm doing, when actually I am a
God-made, beautiful self (Gen 3:26-28). At last I see it; and I had to be
brought to my limit to be able to see it.
A BIG DIFFERENCE
All the world's people, including us the born-again, have always
taken it for granted in their delusion that they were self-operating and
therefore self-responsible persons, who could and would improve themselves. And
at last I find that there never was such a person! Now I see I was always a
slave of Satan-sin - "sold under sin"- and it is he who is to blame.
In my unsaved days I went along with Satan's sin activities. In my saved days I
have hated my slavery, been ashamed of it, and wrestled vainly against it.
Sin is the "other law in my members, warring against the law
of my mind and bringing me into captivity to the law of sin in my members"
(Rom 7:14-23). Now I have it clear that it is not I, but this evil power
controlling me. Paul cries out for us all, as he had cried out for himself,
"Am I tied and bound to this death in my body, or is there a
deliverance?" (Rom 7:24). At last I have come to my limit. In my hatred of
this intruder of my body, I find that I am not to blame, but sin. Is there a
deliverance from sin for me?
Now I can see what Paul had already revealed in it completeness in
Romans 6:1-13, and which had become his own liberation. Yes, thank God, there
is deliverance for me now by the personal application in my desperate need of
what I had accepted in my head and reckoned on as told to do (Rom 6:11). But
while I remained ignorant of there never having been such a thing as human
self-effort or human independence, I had not realized that all my own efforts
to live a victorious life were really Satan expressing himself as me. And I had
not realized that until I had made such a failure of attempts to live it. Only
then was I ready to see that the only way to live the life is if Christ live my
life as me, in place of that self-effort which was really Satan --
"good" or bad.
Paul had explained the key to total liberation (Rom 6:1-13), and
we had reckoned on it as fact as best we knew how. It was this: my death in
Christ's death to indwelling sin power, and my life in freedom from that power
in His resurrection. But now I also have the human self in true focus as only
the container and expresser, but never the originator. So I could see that the
death and resurrection union with Christ which I had reckoned as fact and not
He AND me in action in place of Satan and me, but only He AS me, and I the
human expresser, replacing only Satan as me, and I as his expresser.
The big difference and final liberation comes when, after my
exposure by the law, I have myself in my true eternal relationship to Him: not
as kind of co-living with Him (or formerly Satan) as two on the same level of
action, but as only He living His life in me as me. I now spontaneously,
delightedly, and easily express Him with all the vigor of my God-endowed
humanity. That is different! Seeing this as my total life, I move in from
reckoning to realizing. Yes, I thank God through Jesus Christ me Lord (Rom
7:25).
FREE AT LAST
The doors of my prison swing open by this one key turned in the
lock! It is now possible for me, as it was with Paul, to do one simple thing.
And it is not some self-effort act of consecration, as if getting out of the
prison depended on me. But it is recognizing, by heart affirmation now combined
with my understanding, that I have always been a person released from sin, as
from sins. Jesus settled that 2000 years ago on Calvary in His body death, in
addition to His blood death. But I have been slow to recognize and receive what
He had settled for me, as me, because I still had that Romans 7 delusion about
myself.
But what is that prison? I had to find what I was blinded to at
first: my only prison was myself. Taken captive by my false owner, as we all
were at the Fall, I had been deceived into thinking I managed myself, as he
thinks he manages himself.
THE LIE OF LIES!
So down I had to fall in my many failures of self-management,
compelled to follow in many false directions, until at last it dawned on me
that actually I was the one who was managed and utilized by my thieving owner.
At last, in my misery, I was ready to call for help. Was there any way out of
this prison? It was already provided. My True Owner had already paid the full
redemptive price to release me, so that the false one has no further claims on
me. So now I am joyfully free from that wearisome lie of self-management (which
in fact never was), and love every new interest and enticing adventure of my
True Owner. He is really not so much Owner, as Father and Lover. And along with
multitudes of other freed prisoners, I share with Him in His simple multiple
plans for the blessing of His whole huge universe.
With the veil of that independent-self lie removed, I can and do
see that Christ freed me, a servant who had changed his owner - not change of
me, but change of Him! I AM free. I just recognize, affirm, and thankfully
praise. I say, along with Paul in Romans 8:1, that there is no more
condemnation, because there is no illusory self-effort self to be condemned.
The reckoning of Romans 6:11 is now Paul's and my word of realization in Romans
8:2 -- the law (principle) of the Spirit of life in Christ has entered and
indwells me as He did Christ in the tomb, and has set me free from those lying
claims of the law of sin and death. No longer a prisoner, I am now free forever
in Christ by His body sacrifice on my behalf (Rom 8:3).
The Spirit bears witness to what I affirm in faith (1 Jn 5:10).
Once I affirm, the settling in of that witness is His timetable. For me, it was
two years; for my wife, it was two weeks. But hold steady, maintain your
affirmation, and HE makes you a knower.
Part Three: The Lost Secret
In this final part of our Romans 6 to 8 -- Paul's key to the
liberated life -- let us start by reviewing briefly what has been said in the
previous two parts. In essence, the lost secret now revealed is that we humans
were never created to be self-dependent or self-operating. There is no such
thing as am independent human self. We were marvelously created in God's
likeness to function spontaneously as expressers of Himself. Ultimately we will
manage His universe as co-heirs with His Son, permanently operating in His
perfect other-love nature.
But by the law of the universe, referred to in the previous
sections, we understand that nothing can function except by having its
opposite, just as light operates by swallowing up darkness. So we can only know
and operate of human personhood by being confronted with the opposite: the
false deity of the opposite of sin" nature, which is self-for-self.
We started our fallen human lives from the Garden of Eden by being
occupied by that false deity and expressing his nature as though it were ours.
Then our Saviour Christ, in His other-love nature, took our place as our Last
Adam, representing us in His Calvary death and being "made sin" as
us. In that death as us, out went that sin-spirit; and in His resurrection as
us, in came His Spirit of self-giving love.
COMING HONEST
Paul's main point then, in Romans 6 and 7 has been to expose how
we were deluded by Satan into thinking that we were self-operating selves. In
actuality, however, it was Satan expressing his self-for-self (sin) nature as
us. Then Paul tells us at length how God sent the law with its requirements to
expose us when we come honest. We first had to learn that we had not kept the
law as lost sinners, and then that we could never keep it because we have never
been independent self-relying selves. We were deceived by Satan to think we
were, but actually we were only expressers of Satan's self-for-self nature.
In unfolding the value of the law in Romans 7, Paul makes a unique
contribution to exposing and removing the main blockage to effective Christian
living. At last, in our agony and desperation at our failures, light dawns upon
us. We are then capable of seeing that the evil was not in our beautiful,
God-created humanity, but in the lie of the independent self (sin dwelling in
us). Through Calvary, we now move in by faith to see and recognize that it is
He, the Spirit of Truth, expressing Himself in our vessels -- branch containers
-- in us and by us, in place of that evil one.
So by faith in the revealed fact, we find ourselves free just to
be our human selves with no fears or condemnations. Through the Spirit's
certain inner witness, we are expressers of Him: Christ in us as us. And now,
after a brief law interlude, we go into chapter 8 of Romans, not as in our
walking-Satan forms, but as walking Christs -- "more than
conquerors."
A CRISIS MOMENT
Now we move with Paul into Romans 8. Here he comes right out with
who he is. What he said he had "reckoned" on in Romans 6:11, he now
says he "realizes" (Rom 8:2). The governing principle, "the law
of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus," has set him free. So there is a
settled knowing. In "reckoning," you SAY it is so; in
"knowing," you KNOW it is so. There is a crisis moment. The lives of
the great men of the Bible -- Abraham, Jacob, Moses, Joshua, David, right
through to Jesus Himself -- bear witness to this knowing.
So do I know? And how do I know? I began my new knowing at my new
birth, and the Spirit bore witness. Now this is a total knowing. If you have
seen this change through Calvary, from being Satan-sin indwelt and Satan
expresser to now being Christ indwelt and Christ expresser, then be sure you
have spoken the word of faith and recognition, as Paul did. "The law of
the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus," he says, "has set me free."
And in Galatians he proclaims, "I have been crucified with Christ:
nevertheless I live; yet not I, but Christ lives in me."
Say YOUR word now, and say it to someone else! Then what you say echoes
back to you, and you know (1 Jn 5:10). Maybe you cannot yet give a date for
when you received that knowing, just as I mentioned (in Part II) about Pauline
and myself. Only be sure not to pull back, if you do not yet know. What you
have said, you have said. You stand on such a word as Galatians 2:20 or Romans
8:2, and God in His time makes you a knower.
THE CHANGE
Now at the summit there is no condemnation. We are freed from that
false self guilt, for there is no wrong human self! We are Spirit people in
outer bodies. There is nothing to condemn (Rom 8:1). Our human selves are fixed
expressions of the Deity Self, where we were formerly fixed expressions of that
false deity self. That is the change.
Law (principle) is the way a thing works, and works no other way.
We used to be under Satan's law with no escape, and now we are under Christ's
law with no escape. There is this change of governing principle controlling our
lives. Strong terms! (Rom 8:2). That makes it easy and normal to walk this new
way.
On Calvary, Christ put the old sin indweller behind bars on death
row (condemned sin in the flesh), from where he is able only to shout at us.
That old law standard, which had seemed unattainable, is now our normal way of
living -- "the righteousness of the law fulfilled in us" (Rom 8:3,4).
This is the Sermon on the Mount top standard of living, and the one who lives
it in us is "the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus."
SPIRIT PEOPLE
Paul lays unique emphasis on life being the Spirit in us. Nowhere
else in the New Testament is this said in such plainness. There are fifteen
mentions of the Spirit in Romans 8, in place of those many "I's" in
the previous chapter. Paul says, "Get this clear: we are now Spirit
people. Christ is living our life. We are walking His way (Rom 8:3). We think
His thoughts" (Rom 8:5,6). He in us counteracts those former self-for-self
thought patterns, which set us at enmity with God.
"IF you walk after the Spirit and not after the
flesh..." Paul begins, for he could not speak our word for us. But
speaking for ourselves we say, "SINCE we walk that way..." Again,
when Paul says in 8:11, "IF the Spirit dwells in you,..." we say,
"He DOES dwell in us." And the Spirit puts those old body habits to
death (Rom 8:13).
DAILY LIVING
Because we live in a world of self incitement all around us, to
which our normal humanity (our flesh) has been formerly geared to respond, Paul
does lay stress on walking after the Spirit and not after the flesh. Does that
mean we had better be very careful, for surely we are inclined to flesh
walking? The lie again! That would be guarding against independent self
uprisings which might respond to those "ought to's." But that is not
our Spirit drive. We don't walk fearfully, as if we still plenty of flesh. No!
Our human selves are now Spirit kept and Spirit driven.
Certainly there are flesh pulls -- sin's self-for-self nature
getting at us through all the world's atmosphere around us. But we don't resist
them by any false self-effort. We recognize and admit them, but then we affirm
who we ARE and know we are -- Spirit expressers, Christ in our forms; and our
faith affirmation puts to death those "deeds of the body" (Rom 8:13).
Light swallows up darkness. [See Norman Grubb's leaflet entitled "How to
Handle Temptation".]
The Spirit, says Paul, also now permeates our physical bodies,
though we remain mortal. The Spirit is the Quickener. So we walk not as body
fussers. We accept where there are physical infirmities, but our bodies are His
Temples; and in freedom of faith - not in negative unbelief or foolish
questioning -- we often experience His quickenings and healings (8:11).
The normal background to our daily lives is the Spirit's witness
with our spirits that we actually are God's children (8:16). By the Spirit we
are at home now with our Father/"Daddy," which is very difficult from
our former fears of Him in our old false self-condemning life (8:15). We are
naturally Spirit-led in the affairs and decisions of our lives, and take that
for granted (8:14).
PERMANENT TENSION
From the moment in Romans 8:17 when he opens up the incredible
destiny of us humans being co-inheritors of the universe with God's Son, Paul
changes the tone of what we are to experience in our daily lives. This comes as
a shock, until we see at the end of the chapter that those are devastating
conditions in which we, as sons, operate triumphantly as "summit"
people.
For the glory living, which will be our permanency through
eternity, is first built strongly on a continual "suffering"
condition. That sounds terrifying, until we find by experience that there is
glory now in the suffering (Rom 5:3-5). The coming "exceeding weight of
glory" is the product of these earthly "afflictions," which Paul
called "light"! (2 Cor 4:17). These "sufferings" are first
on a physical level. Face it, Paul says, the animal and material creation
around us is engulfed in suffering -- "red in tooth and claw" --
living in permanent tension. And that, Paul continues, is a Godordained
necessary opposite to the "glorious liberty," which will swallow up
the "groanings." The deliverance will come through the sons of God,
but the methods are not explained in detail (8:19-22).
Then Paul makes very plain that physical perfection on our human
body level is not for our present life: a warning note to those who offer
complete physical healings and major on a physical healing ministry. Paul tells
us that our bodies remain corrupted and mortal. The replacement of corruption
by incorruption is only at the Lord's coming (1 Corinthians 15:42-44;52-55).
meanwhile, let's not fool ourselves on the physical level. We
"suffer" with all the creation, and our "salvation" on that
level is by hope, not faith. It is a prospect not within our present reach
(8:23-25).
UNSHAKABLE CONFIDENCE
Added to the physical sufferings, we live in a sea of frustration
of every kind, and inhibitions we cannot handle by ourselves. We are
"compassed by infirmity" and "groan" in distressing
experiences, about which we do not even know how to pray for deliverances
(8:26-27).
Obviously, Paul is now speaking of the varied disturbed conditions
of our daily living: not just the physical, but family problems, economic
shocks, fatalities, social problems in our communities, crying needs of every
kind, malicious personal hurts, family losses, and whatnot.
In these distresses we "groan"; but we people of the
Spirit know that the Spirit Himself is carrying our groanings to the Father in
intercession. This gives us our one solid unshakable confidence that, however
totally confusing and apparently humanly inextricable, ALL THESE THINGS are
actually working out for GOOD. Meanwhile we love our God, no matter how painful
the situations, because we know the path of our calling, with outcomes always
GOOD, GOOD, GOOD! What a word of faith, which has upheld millions! We might say
that the air is full of verbal quotings of Romans 8:28, that great favourite.
TRAINING YEARS
Then Paul goes a glorious step further. He opens up the hidden
purpose behind our sufferings and disturbed conditions. "Your destiny is
to be a Co-Son with the Son in the development of His vast universal
inheritance!" So these are necessary TRAINING YEARS on earth. "You
have begun recognizing and realizing that you already are Christ in your human
form (Gal. 2:20; Col 3:4); and it is necessary that you are brought, by the
maturing grace of the indwelling Spirit, to exact conformity to Him." What
a destiny! What a conformity, which John also foresaw (1 Jn 3:2). So there is a
steady gradual conforming process in action by the Spirit, who is already
indissolubly joined to our spirit (1 Cor 6:17). And we are being "changed
into His likeness from glory to glory" (2 Cor 3:18).
See Stages of Christian Growth when you are finished here: Click
See Stages of Christian Growth when you are finished here: Click
We must not confuse God's transforming operations, taking place in
us through those constant trials and pressures (which James said are used to
establish us "perfect, wanting nothing" [Ja 1:2-4]), with the total
basic transformation already taken place. We escaped from the lying independent
self outlook of Romans 7 into the permanent liberation of Romans 8:1-2 by our
faith recognition of the finished work on Calvary. Growth in conforming us to
the image of Christ, which Paul is now speaking about (8:29), is the
spontaneous development of Christ fixed in us as us: union fact.
Folks often do try to escape the necessity of the crisis and
exchange of the independent self lie of Romans 7 for that glorious fact of
Christ having replaced Satan as the fixed one now living our lives, by majoring
on the subsequent changes conforming us to His likeness. These changes are
constantly taking place in us merely as products of that crisis. They are not
to be mistaken for it or used as a gradual improvement method, as though to
escape from the rugged confronting of the necessary faith crisis.
POINTING FINGERS
Se we go on now, Paul says (8:30-39), through these processes
being fulfilled in us under the cloak of human pressures. We are being
conformed marvelously through predestination, justification, even to present
glorification (8:29,30). There is a glory even in our attitudes and on our
faces, which really glow like Moses as he came down from the Mount; and others
see it. And in this transforming process we are bold. We take ourselves to be
blameless as God's chosen ones. We neither live in false self-condemnation
(8:1), nor are we disturbed by the pointing finger of others: certainly not of
the world, but also not of our brethren.
We all need to learn plenty about not pointing fingers at our
brothers in Christ, when we may think they don't measure up. See Christ in our
brothers, and leave the Great Transformer to get on with His transforming work
in them as in us. Where anything does disturb us, let our contribution be faith
in God-in-action in our brother (8:31,33,34). We need a new quality of
boldness, both about who we NOW ARE -- walking Christs in place of walking
Satans -- and of saying and seeing the same faith of our Christ-indwelt
brethren!
"MT. EVEREST" SCALED
The conforming process also includes appearances of need sand
necessities of life abundantly supplied by Him, who "spared not His own
Son, but delivered Him up for us all" (8:32). But does Paul sum up his
great victory chapter by our being immersed in a sea of prosperity and
popularity? Just the opposite! His summation includes the rough, rough seas of
every form of outer distress, persecution, material necessity, and subjective
assault -- "killed all the day long" and "accounted as sheep for
the slaughter." Constant physical dangers dogged Paul, and today most
likely face modern-day oppositions to our "pilgrim" walk, and
experience, as did Paul, by lost reputations as Christ's fools (8:35,36).
Do we wilt? Do we question, "Why does God allow that?"
Do we murmur about hard experiences, manifesting more disturbed feelings than
enjoyment and praise? Paul used just one word: "conquerors." He
stands, as it were, on HIS Mt. Everest, having scaled the jagged peaks of
suffering and persecution (2 Cor 11:21-31) which had defied his ascent. How?
Because it was Christ in Paul's form. A prisoner of Nero? No, a prisoner of the
Lord; and his fiery trials were called the "sufferings of Christ" (1
Pet 4L12,13). Even Jesus Himself, when suffering came to Him by Satan's agents,
called it "the cup which my Father hath given me" (Jn 18:11).
"COME ON UP"
So by faith we see Christ in the garments of our outer tragedies
and maltreatments, and stand on OUR Everest summit as "conquerors."
And more than standing as "conquerors," Paul says we stand as
"MORE than conquerors" (8:37). We have the extra -- "the cups
running over" -- to help others climb their summits, when our own inner
conquests are complete.
To all toiling climbers, we call out, "Come on up. Drop your
heavy equipment." We invite them to step out by faith right where they are
now, and they will find by a miracle, grace leap that they are already on the
Summit. Christ has already carried them there in His own crucifixion,
resurrection, and ascension two thousand years ago. And the Spirit, Who came at
Pentecost, will cause them to know their eternal inseparable love-union with
the Father and Christ living in them as them -- MORE THAN CONQUERORS!
TO SUM IT UP
The main point has been the startling discovery that we have had
really only one problem since the fall of man, and that has been our vast
delusion about ourselves -- the lie of Satan concerning his own independence
which he has imparted to us concerning ourselves. As a consequence, even when
we are sinners saved by grace and in the new birth of the Spirit, and we have
been taken further in the sixth chapter to know that through Christ's death and
resurrection the control of us by Satan in his sin nature has been replaced by
the control of Christ, we still deludedly regard ourselves as independent
persons responsible for living our new way of life and therefore equally
responsible for living our new way of life and therefore equally responsible
for discarding the old.
The shock then comes when Paul says that old way of life will have
no further control over us because we are "not under the law, but under
grace." But our immediate reaction is, "Why, that is putting the cart
before the horse! Don't we need the law to stop us from responding to the pulls
of that old life? Take away the law and we shall be caught out again."
"Not so," says Paul. "The opposite is true. Your great basic
deception is that we are self-managed selves. Therefore what the law will do while
you are still under that delusion, is to expose your helplessness and that you
never were created to manage yourself, and your old sin-manager will take
advantage of the law to show you that you can't obey it, but keep obeying him.
But because you are too blind to see this until we have been shocked into it,
first I will show you some facts."
Then Paul drives that home by three illustrations which certainly
settles the matter when our eyes are sufficiently opened to see these facts;
but actually they are not until we have had the necessary radical shock. But
anyhow here are those three plain facts. First, we all are slaves and therefore
compelled to do what our owner demands of us, and there is no middle condition
in which we are just independent free humans. Second, we are branches and bear
the fruit f the tree of which we are a part, and there is no such thing as we
being independent, and not branches of either of the trees. Third, we are
married wives under the marriage bond of our husbands and bearing his children.
If our marriage is dissolved by the death of either husband, then we are
immediately married to the other husband. We never were just single and
unmarried. All of these illustrations, of course, mean that we are slaves,
branches, wives, formerly of Satan in his sin nature, but now are the same to
Christ in His holy nature, and there never has been a JUST OURSELVES in
imaginary activities of our own.
But that point must be driven home never to arise again -- that in
actual fact we never were self-operating and never did or could manage our own
affairs: and it was in that point the Satan has so grossly deluded us, as he
himself is deluded. So that shock has to come, as Paul tells of it in his own
experience, and the means in his own experience was the impact of that pouter
law on him. So down came the law on newborn Paul in it tenth "Thou shalt
not covet" commandment: and because he was very much alive to that
illusion of independence, back came his quick response, "Of course I won't
and don't covet. I am a new man in Christ." And he found all kinds of what
he called "concupiscence" very much alive in him which he could not
resist. He surely fell flat on his face and called himself a "slain
man."
But Paul had made a unique discovery, to which he refers as his
special revelation in his Galatian letter, when he spent three years alone in
the Arabian desert. It was that there is this sin virus deposited in us since
the Fall (to which he refers in Romans 5:12-21), and that as our Lord Jesus
Christ has represented us on the cross, His body was as ours in God's sight, as
though the sin-expresser just like ours ("made sin"); and when he
died, out went that sin spirit and so out out of us, and in the tomb in His
resurrection in came His own Spirit, and so into us.
Now with the impact of the law and his inability to obey it through the apparent power of indwelling sin, he saw the great lie of the independent self, and that he was only able to respond to the drives of the false deity in him and the lusts, and it was the impact of the law with its demands that awakened him to this delusion. But now he also saw the great deceit of sin on him, because in Christ the sin-indweller had been replaced by the Holy Spirit indweller, which had been revealed to him in Arabia. So now suddenly he saw his freedom. All he had to do was to recognize and affirm as fact in himself that "the law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus has set me free from the law of sin and death," and now the Spirit already in him since his new birth inwardly confirmed that to him.
Now with the impact of the law and his inability to obey it through the apparent power of indwelling sin, he saw the great lie of the independent self, and that he was only able to respond to the drives of the false deity in him and the lusts, and it was the impact of the law with its demands that awakened him to this delusion. But now he also saw the great deceit of sin on him, because in Christ the sin-indweller had been replaced by the Holy Spirit indweller, which had been revealed to him in Arabia. So now suddenly he saw his freedom. All he had to do was to recognize and affirm as fact in himself that "the law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus has set me free from the law of sin and death," and now the Spirit already in him since his new birth inwardly confirmed that to him.
So the key had been turned in the lock by the exposure of the lie
of independent self through the law. This was the great value of the law for
him and us. The claims of the law exposed the lie of his supposed ability to
respond to it as though independent. The other lie now exposed to his new born
self was that sin power still had its right and presence in him. No. "Dead
to sin" in Christ and now alive in Christ to live by the Spirit.
As simple as that when the law had done its Romans 7 work by
forcing Paul to find that there never was a Paul-self who could obey that law,
and this his Arabian revelation of the body death of Jesus representing us and
body resurrection, took Paul right out of Romans 7 into Romans 8 liberty. Then
he shares what follows as the fruit of that liberty outlined in chapter 8 in
the Spirit-operated life, in the glory of the family relationship with the
Father and the Son, the sharing of the eternal inheritance, and the present
prolonged period in which we still have the full impact of the consequences of
the Fall on our humanity and world conditions, and live the life of overcoming
faith, as Jesus Himself did.
The sufferings of this present life give us our great constant opportunities for the conquests of faith in every kind of adverse conditions. In the walk and warfare of faith we are experiencing new ways of proving the goodness of God in all kinds of deliverances, though sometimes the highest is that martyrdom and extremity of suffering in the faith of the resurrection, as is says in Hebrews 11:35-38, "of whom the world was not worthy": and in all these the watching hungry world is seeing the inner victories outwardly demonstrated in peace, joy, hope, faith, and love for our enemies, by which Christ is manifested in our bodies "whether by life or by death," and countless others have been inspired to follow the same way.
The sufferings of this present life give us our great constant opportunities for the conquests of faith in every kind of adverse conditions. In the walk and warfare of faith we are experiencing new ways of proving the goodness of God in all kinds of deliverances, though sometimes the highest is that martyrdom and extremity of suffering in the faith of the resurrection, as is says in Hebrews 11:35-38, "of whom the world was not worthy": and in all these the watching hungry world is seeing the inner victories outwardly demonstrated in peace, joy, hope, faith, and love for our enemies, by which Christ is manifested in our bodies "whether by life or by death," and countless others have been inspired to follow the same way.
Some thoughts for you to consider. The Law as presented here represents the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil, the pairs of opposites, blessings and cursings of Deuteronomy chapter 28.
Jesus Christ represents the Tree of Life, which is unity, oneness. God All in all in our lives: Now.
The blessing of the Lord--it makes [truly] rich, and He adds no sorrow with it [neither does toiling increase it], (Proverbs 10:22 AMPLIFIED Bible).
Marion D. Williams