| The
Cross of Christ and The Manifestation of His Kingdom
Paul
Sexton
We
are living in a time of unfolding revelation and disclosure. This is an hour in which the wicked will
openly do wickedly; but they who have the Spirit of wisdom and revelation
shall be wise, and they will openly experience a greater measure
of the Lords presence.
A
right attitude of heart is a prerequisite to His abiding presence,
and for the understanding of end-time events, which are available
to us at this present time.
The
truth of our union with Christ in His death, burial, and resurrection,
is fundamental to the ultimate realization of His purposes in us. We must see ourselves raised up together
with Him, and seated with Him in the heavenlies. This must be more than doctrinal knowledge
or mere mental ascent to truth; it must come to us by revelation
of the Spirit of God.
From
the beginning, it has been the purpose of God to have a medium by
which to express Himself.
God is the great Self of the universe, but He is
not selfish. Rather, He fulfills Himself in giving.
It
was the love of God that prompted Him to make man in order to share
Himself. Adam was,
by his creation in the image and likeness of God, a reproduction
of God. He was created with all the potential
that we see realized in the Lord Jesus Christ. Jesus always did those things which pleased
the Father, whereas Adam defaulted through disobedience to the word
the Lord had given him in the garden.
Implied
in the command to Adam and Eve was the knowledge of the Divine will,
but they violated that will by their disobedience, and they forfeited
all that the Lord had capacitated them potentially to be.
But God in His wisdom had foreordained a plan by which He
could recover through the incarnation all that His original
intent for Adam had included.
God has never rescinded His original purpose in making man.
It has all been recaptured for us in our union with the Lord
Jesus Christ.
In
order for us to participate in Gods purpose, He had to dispense
with our old man, the Adamic nature.
Thus, the essential need for the Cross, by which God has
destroyed all that was imposed on us through the failure of the
first man, Adam. He gathered up all of mankind in Himself,
and eternally dispensed with our fallen nature in His death on Calvary
(Romans 5:10-21).
There
is a death side and a life side to the Cross,
and each of these must be understood and appropriated in proper
balance. An over-emphasis on the death side of
the Cross will arrest our spiritual progress through a subtle form
of legalism, which negates the operation of the Spirit of Life in
the believer. But if on the life side, we ignore or
exclude the deterring aspect of the Cross, we lose its power to
deal with our fallen nature.
The measure to which we embrace the Cross determines the
measure of the Life of Christ that will come forth from
us.
It
is a principle throughout all creation that life comes out of death. At the foot of a great tree lies a grave
in which the life of a seed was lost.
Thus it is with us; we can never dispense with the Cross,
for life springs forth from a grave.
You
and I are earthen vessels in whom has been made a deposit of the
eternal purpose of God, as embodied in the Christ who now lives
in us and finds His expression through us.
The new creation life originates and has its being in the
One Who is Life. It is born through the Cross; the old
is shed off through His death upon the cross.
God
covets the inimitable features and characteristics of our soul,
and yearns to combine them with the beauties of His own person. He does not intend to destroy our personality,
rather, He intends to conform it to His own image and fill it with
the expression of His life.
God
longs to redeem our soul; but the soul is the seat of our independence,
pride, and rebellion. Independence
finds its assertion through our soul, until we have experienced
the work of the Cross, and are made aware of our weakness.
Most of us are too strong.
Therefore, God subjects us to things that weaken us. His dealings bring us into extremities,
which we would rather resist; but in them we come to appreciate
the Lord. Only as we are broken and weakened, only
as we come to that crisis and are thoroughly convinced that in
my flesh dwelleth no good thing, can God use us.
This
does not mean that we are to sit and do nothing. There is a terrible snare in that. Many people have wasted years of their
lives because they abide by this principle: I can do nothing
of myself, and the Lord does not seem to be speaking, so therefore
I cannot be a witness because I have no leading.
The
Lord does not intend us to be a do-nothing kind of person. We are to resort to prayer and waiting
upon the Lord, expecting the Spirit to initiate His activity through
us. In communion with God, the Spirit within
us will be active. Moving
in the Spirit will become so habitual that we will scarcely realize
that it is God within us precipitating the activity.
This
is a day in which the Lord alone shall be glorified. He has a people who want it so, and who
will abide by the principle of the Cross, that it might be so.
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