| Two
Realms
John
Wright Follette
The
eternal attitude of God toward humanity is that of a seeking God. We may think we are seeking Him, but rather,
He is seeking us. As
we expose our hearts to Him, He responds.
At times, we may even feel as though He is invading us; that
He has taken the initiative and is pushing in from every angle to
find, or discover us.
We
become acquainted with one another; but as for the real inner person,
we know very little. In
fact, we know little about ourselves.
The
Lord desires to fully possess us, to shape and mold us into the
image of His Son. As
we advance in God, the Holy Spirit will keep projecting before us
unexplored territory in our lives that we have yet to move into,
and over which He seeks domain. We say He reigns and rules in our heart,
and that may be true. But
have we given Him absolute and perfect control and possession of
all the realms within us that are yet to be possessed?
We
are but little cells within this mystical Body of believers that
has been developing and projecting itself down through two thousand
years of history. In
His time, He will lift this Body out of time and present it to the
Ancient of Days. This is the great desire of His heart.
Therefore, He desires that He will have something worthy
to present to His Father.
There
is no experience into which God leads us, no matter how profound
or revolutionizing that experience may be, that will of itself mature
us. Many are deceived because they think,
I have received, now I have.
Never allow yourself to come under the power of an experience
and then build your life around it.
This is not a question concerning
the fact of our salvation, but of how we allow God to move
and work within and through us while we are within this present
condition of time and sense.
Whatever
there is of spiritual value within us - that which we will carry
into the next age - must be acquired in the here and now. Therefore, we must ask ourselves, Has
the Lord been able to accomplish within us all that He seeks to
accomplish? After
we have been released from this present realm of temporal life,
we cannot come back to choose or decide.
We
should not be disturbed if the Lord is not using us as a missionary, or in some ministry. Unless He has given this, He is not expecting
it from us. He had
one Paul, and one Wesley.
He has one of you, and you are the only specific edition
of who you are. Since this is true, He is desirous to bring
forth all that the potential within us will allow.
Thus,
our works are the technique, or the method which He will
use to accomplish this miracle of changing us into the image of
His Son and equipping us for a higher purpose.
If He has called you to be a preacher, then preach; if He
has called you to be a plumber, then be a good plumber.
Whatever
we are called to do, we are to do it to the Glory of God,
and sing while doing it. Why
do we sing? Because
we are to say, I Thank you Father, this is what You asked of
me, and I am doing it for Your glory with all the strength I have.
We
often become entangled in the mechanism and forget the objective. We must be careful to not lose sight of
our objective. We are
to keep it always before us, our life surrendered and our whole
being moving back again to the heart of God.
We are being disciplined, educated, trained, and conformed
by the thousand and one things that the Lord throws into our pattern
of daily life experience.
We
may say, this is sacred and that is secular. To one fully committed to the Lord, everything
should be holy and sacred; there is nothing secular about it. That is common talk among people who do
not know the things of God.
Therefore, they have categories into which they place certain
experiences of life. We
never should do this. If
I am called to be a good plumber, this is a sacred calling.
What makes it sacred?
Plumbing? No,
it is the will of God.
None
of us have arrived; we are in the process of becoming,
and we will be in that process until the Lord takes us home. When we were saved, the Lord dealt with
our sin nature. He
can do that in very short order, but it takes a life time to deal
with our character.
After
we have gone through several dealings, we may feel we have arrived. Then the Lord will say to us, I have
been dealing with your sins.
I dealt with all that externally, now I want to come within,
and get a hold of you.
Truth
has a two-fold way of disturbing and moving. If allowed, truth will slay us, yet it
is the truth that resurrects us.
There are two opposing forces, and we swing back and forth
between them. The Lord
talks about death, but He also speaks of life.
He not only talks about crucifying, but about resurrection
and life also. We are to keep them together, not separated.
He
entered a certain village: and a certain woman named Martha welcomed
Him into her house. And she had a sister called Mary, who also
sat at Jesus feet, and heard His word.
But Martha was distracted with much serving, and she approached
Him and said, Lord, do you not care that my sister has left me
to serve alone? Therefore tell her to help me. And Jesus answered
and said to her, Martha, Martha, you are worried and troubled
about many things. But one thing is needed, and Mary has chosen
that good part, which will not be taken away from her.
Luke 10:38b-42 NKJ
We
should never separate Martha and Mary.
They are sisters in the same family, having different vocations.
Martha
has a valid place within us.
She represents our activities, our ministries, all the things
we do. But Mary has a place also. She represents our spiritual aspirations,
our moving toward God.
But
all we receive at the feet of Jesus must descend and find its place
in the daily activities of our lives, where it is to become a practical
reality. Otherwise, we will become unbalanced.
Thus, we are not to remain detached in even the most magnificent
revelation of life and truth.
Whenever
Martha gets up within us and busily hurries around, we
know that we will not receive a revelation from the Lord in all
that activity. We must let Mary arise within
us and sit at the feet of Jesus.
Each has their proper place and time in which to function.
Up
- Mary - Revelation.
Down
- Martha - Demonstration.
Both
are essential parts of our spiritual development and growth and
must be maintained in the right balance.
And
seeing the multitudes, He went up into a mountain: and when He
was set, his disciples came to Him: And He opened His mouth, and
taught them, saying, Blessed are the poor in spirit: for theirs
is the kingdom of heaven.
Matthew 5:1-3
When
He had come down from the mountain, great multitudes followed
Him. And, behold, a leper came and worshiped him, saying, Lord,
if You are willing, you can make me clean. Then Jesus put out
His hand and touched him, saying, I am willing; be cleansed. Immediately
his leprosy was cleansed.
Matthew 8:1-3
Jesus
went up into the mount and sat.
His disciples came to Him and He taught them, but He did
not stay there. Afterwards, He went down into the valley
among the multitudes, where He was met by a leper seeking help. Here in the valley of life, the revelations
of the mountain top became a practical reality.
The
Lord may wait for years for us to come into this balance between
our devotion and our works.
Only then will we come into the balance of being
and doing that He desires for us.
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