2013/10/22

Morning Nourishment-The Experience, Growth, And Ministry Of Life For The Body(W3-5)

WEEK 3 — DAY 5

Morning Nourishment

Eph. 1:22-23 "...Him to be Head over all things to the church, which is His Body, the fullness of the One who fills all in all.

       2:6 And raised us up together with Him and seated us together with Him in the heavenlies in Christ Jesus.

  In His ascension Christ was made the Head of the church, His Body, to express God in His fullness. Colossians 1:18 says, "He is the Head of the Body, the church." According to Ephesians 1:23, His Body is the fullness of the One who fills all in all. In Ephesians 3:19 Paul speaks of our being "filled unto all the fullness of God." All this fullness dwells in Christ (Col. 1:19; 2:9).Through His dwelling in us, Christ imparts His unsearchable riches into our being, so that eventually we shall be filled unto all the fullness of God. This makes us the expression of God, which is what the church should be. (Lifestudy of Luke, p. 665)

Today's Reading

   The Bible reveals that Christ, the Head, has ascended to the heavens. We, of course, are on earth. Then where are the Head and the Body—in heaven or on earth? The Head and the Body are one and form a universal man. But is this universal man in heaven or on earth?... With material things there are these elements [of space and time]. But with divine things there is neither the element of space nor the element of time. For Christ to be the Head of the church, His Body, is certainly not a material thing; this is altogether a divine matter. With this divine matter there is not the element of space or the element of time. Therefore, we need to see that in the divine life and in the divine Spirit, we, the believers, are one with Christ. The Body is one with the Head in the divine life and in the divine Spirit....As members of the Body in the divine life and the divine Spirit, we are not separated by space or time.We all are now in the Body.

   [In John 3:13]...the Lord says that although He came down from heaven, He was still in heaven. This means that while He was on earth, He was still in heaven. According to His physical body, He was on earth when He spoke these words. But according to His divine being, which does not involve the elements of space and time, He was in heaven.

   In the church life we should not consider the Head and the Body from a physical point of view. Rather, we need to consider the Head and the Body from the divine viewpoint. According to the divine viewpoint, we are one with the ascended Christ, and His ascension is also ours (Eph. 2:6). Here in the ascension we express Him in His fullness.

   In His ascension Christ was also made the High Priest in the heavens. Hebrews 4:14 says that we have a "great High Priest who has passed through the heavens, Jesus, the Son of God." The Lord came from God to us through incarnation, and then He went back from us to God through resurrection and ascension to be our High Priest to bear us in the presence of God and to care for all our needs (Heb. 2:17-18; 4:15). Therefore, Hebrews 7:26 says, "For such a High Priest was also fitting to us, holy, guileless, undefiled, separated from sinners and having become higher than the heavens." In His ascension Christ passed through the heavens; now He is not only in heaven (Heb. 9:24), but is also higher than the heavens, far above all heavens (Eph. 4:10). In His ascension He was inaugurated into His priestly office. When He was on earth, He did not carry on His priestly ministry as He is now doing in the heavens.

   It is significant that in the book of Revelation Christ is unveiled first not as the Administrator but as the Priest [1:13]....On the one hand, Christ is the High Priest interceding in the heavens for the churches (Heb. 7:25-26; Rom. 8:34); on the other hand, He is the High Priest moving in the churches to care for them. In Revelation 1:13 Christ is depicted as the High Priest, as shown by His garment, a garment reaching to the feet, that is, a priestly robe (Exo. 28:33-35)....As the High Priest, Christ is walking among the lampstands and taking care of them, especially of their shining by trimming the lamps. (Life-study of Luke, pp. 666-669)

   Further Reading: The Wonderful Christ in the Canon of the New Testament, ch. 10; Crystallization-study of Song of Songs, msg. 8

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