6-6 The Unity of God
There is no doubt that one of the major aims of Christianity is to develop
a mind which is fixed upon the Lord Jesus. Yet because of the nature of
God manifestation, this means that in some ways we have to consider both
God, with whom Christ was and is one in spirit, and also the body of Christ;
for we are also one with Christ, as He is one with God (Jn. 17:21). Thus
the act of breaking bread is not just a statement of our relationship
with the Lord Jesus (although of course it is that); it has meaning in
terms of our relationship with God too. It is a re-affirmation of our
covenant with Him, fulfilling the types of some of the Mosaic sacrifices,
which spoke of a man's relationship and commitment to God the Father.
So whilst we must ever grow in our appreciation of the unity between Christ
and the Father, the supremacy of God's manifestation in Him, we must not
let this drive out our awareness of both the Father and our brethren and
sisters, the body of Christ.
I want to consider the teaching of Mark 12:28-31. Jesus was asked which
was the first (i.e. the most important) commandment; we would expect Him
to just recite one of them, and to say 'Well, there you are, that's my
answer; that's the first one, either numerically, or in terms of importance'.
But in reply to this request to name just one of the ten commandments,
He actually quotes two of them. "Jesus answered him, The first of
all the commandments is, Hear, O Israel, the Lord our God is one Lord:
and thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all
thy soul, and with all thy mind, and with all thy strength: this is the
first commandment. And the second is like, namely this, Thou shalt love
thy neighbour as thyself. (Now notice this bit) There is none other commandment
greater than these ". There is no greater command (singular) than
these two . So Jesus saw those two commands as one, the greatest, most
important principle of our life before God. Yet He begins by speaking
of the unity of God as expressed in His memorial Name, Yahweh your elohim,
and says that this is what will lead to us loving God with all we have,
and also to our loving our neighbour as ourselves. The Lord is saying
that if we really appreciate this idea of the unity of God, that Yahweh
is our God, then we will therefore love God, and also our neighbour. So
what does it mean, to love our neighbour as ourselves? In the context
of the Decalogue, the neighbour of the Israelite would have been his fellow
Israelite, not the Gentile who lived next door to him. The command to
love our neighbour as ourselves is elsewhere given an equivalent under
the new Covenant: to love our brother or sister in the ecclesia as ourselves.
Gal. 5:14 and James 2:8 quote this command in the context of ecclesial
life.
So to love God and Christ is to love our neighbour as ourselves. This
is because of the intense unity of God's Name. Because our brethren and
sisters share God's Name, as we do, we must love them as ourselves, who
also bear that same Name. And if we love the Father, we must love the
Son, who bears His Name, with a similar love. The letters of John state
this explicitly. If we love God, we must love our brother; and if we love
the Father, we must love the Son. This is why we must honour the Son as
we honour the Father (Jn. 5:23); such is the unifying power of God's Name.
So the Father, Son and church are inextricably connected. Baptism into
the name of Christ is therefore baptism into the Name of the Father, and
associates us with the "one Spirit" (Mt. 28:19; Eph. 4:4). In
the same way as we cannot choose to live in isolation from the Father
and Son, so we cannot separate ourselves from others who bear the same
Name. The Scribe well understood all this: "There is one God...and
to love him...and to love his neighbour as himself, is more than all whole
burnt offerings and sacrifices" (Mk. 12:32,33). Those whole offerings
represented the whole body of Israel (Lev. 4:7-15). The Scribe understood
that those offerings taught that all Israel were unified together on account
of their bearing the same Name of Yahweh. We must love others who bear
that Name "as ourselves", so intense is the unity between us.
In some ways, we should lose the sense of our own human personality; we
should somehow be able to have the same spiritual interest in others (for
this is true love) as we do for ourselves. So this sense of true selflessness
which we would dearly desire is connected with an appreciation of the
doctrine of the intense unity of God and of His Name, and of the glorious
principle of God manifestation.
By sharing the one Name, we are one together. 1 Jn. 3:23 associates believing
on the Name with loving each other; and in Jn. 17:11 Christ prays
that God will keep us all as one through His own Name. If you get
hold of one of the Bible analysis programs on a computer, you can
find all the places where God's Name is associated with unity. There
are so many of them. Quite often God's Name is connected with His
being "the Holy One " (Is. 29:23; 47:4; 54:5; 57:15; 60:9;
Ez. 39:7). God being the Holy One is a further statement of His
unity (1). Of course, we are speaking of ideal
things. False doctrine and practice, the uncertainty of knowing
exactly who carries God's Name, these and many other limitations
of our humanity make it hard to achieve the unity which this theory
speaks of. But the unity we do achieve is a foretaste of the Kingdom;
unless we love this idea of unity, we will find ourselves out of
place in the Kingdom. "In that day there shall be one Lord,
and His Name one" (Zech. 14:9). It may well be that Eph. 4:4-6
is alluding back to this verse; this passage inspires us to keep
the unity of the Spirit, because here and now "there is one
body, and one Spirit...one Lord ...one baptism, one God"; in
other words, Paul is saying that the unity of the Kingdom, as spoken
of in Zech. 14:9, must be found in the ecclesia of today.
It's so easy to write these words, to read of these things. But do we
really believe that we, and our brethren, do really bear this glorious
and fearful Name? If we do, we will be meeting with them as far as possible,
travelling to meetings, thinking of them in our daily work, writing to
them, fervently praying for them, doing all we can to mend breaches between
us, overcoming the selfishness of indifference, loving our brethren as
we do ourselves. Now here is something to rise up to, to shake us out
of the polemics, the academics, the spiritual indifference, which can
come to fill much of our spiritual lives. All the fullness of God dwelt
in Christ (Col. 1:19; 2:9); "and of his fullness have all we received"
(Jn. 1:16). God's fullness, the full extent of His character, dwelt in
Christ, and through His Name which speaks fully of that character, that
fullness of Christ is reckoned to us. And so, in line with all this, Eph.
3:19 makes the amazing statement. And it is amazing. We can now "be
filled with all the fullness of God". Let's underline that, really
underline it, in our hearts. We can be filled with all the fullness of
God. Filled with all the fullness of God's character. Our poor, small,
limited minds try to rise out of their spiritual squalor to get a handle
on this.
There is a clear connection between this idea of the fullness of God,
and Ex. 34:6, where God proclaims His Name to be "Yahweh, a God full
of compassion", grace and His other characteristics (see R.V.). So
by bearing God's Name, we have His fullness counted to us. As Christ had
the fullness of God dwelling in Him in a bodily form (Col. 2:9), so the
church, as the body of Christ, "is (Christ's) body, the fullness
of him (God) that filleth all in all" (Eph. 1:22,23). So you see
the intensity of our unity; we are the very body of Christ, He exists
in and through us (although of course He still has a separate personality).
Likewise, the fullness of God is in Christ and thereby in us. We are not
just one part of God's interest, our salvation is not just one of His
many hobbies, as it were. He only has one beloved Son; He was sent to
this earth for our salvation. The fullness of God, even though we scarcely
begin to comprehend it, dwelt fully in Christ, and is counted to us. We
really should have a sense of wonder, real wonder, at the greatness of
our calling. How can we be so indifferent to it? How can we be prepared
to enter so little into the depths of these things, when God's word is
so full of His self-revelation, that we might know His Name. Ps. 91:14
implies that our love of God is expressed in seeking to appreciate His
name:
"Because he hath set his love upon me therefore will I deliver
him:
because he hath known my name I will set him on high".
To know Him is to love Him, and to want to be like Him; there is something
compulsive and magnetic about who He is. The knowledge of God elicits
quite naturally a merciful spirit (Hos. 6:6). To “learn righteousness”
is the result of beholding [after the pattern of Moses] the majesty of
the Name (Is. 26:10). And so Is. 46:5-9 appeals for Israel to repent simply
because God really is God; they were to “remember this” that
they already knew, and “bring it again to mind” that God is
really the great eternal, and His Name is as it is. And they that know
His Name will put their trust in Him, day by day, as we cough and hack
our way through these few years towards His eternal Kingdom. Then God
will be "all in all" (1 Cor. 15:28), through the full expression
of His Name. But Eph. 1:23 says that right now, all the fullness of God
fills "all in all" in the church; in other words we should now
be experiencing something of that total unity which will then be physically
manifest throughout all creation.
The intense degree to which God's Name really is called upon us is brought
out in Is. 64:4. There we are told that no man has perceived "O God,
beside Thee" what has been prepared for the saints. These words are
quoted in 1 Cor. 2:9,10 concerning us, with the wondrous statement that
God has revealed these things to us by His Spirit. Yet Is. 64:4 says that
only God alone knows these things. But Paul says that they are also known
by us, through God's Spirit. So through our association with the one Spirit,
the one Name of Yahweh, what is true of God Himself on a personal level
becomes true of us. Such is the wonder of the way in which His fullness
dwells in us. God's Name alone is Yahweh (Ps. 83:18), yet this Name is
now called upon us.
Such was the Lord's unity with us then that He personally carried our
sins, He was so deeply connected with us and our sinfulness that He had
to offer for His own salvation "that it might be for us". Bro.
Roberts goes on (in The Blood of Christ) to make the point that it is
impossible to separate Christ from the work He came to do; there was no
effective division between the work He did for Himself, and that which
He did for us. The same spirit is found in the encouragement to the Christian
husband to sacrifice himself in every way for the wife's salvation. It
was shown by the good Samaritan (cp. Jesus) risking his own safety to
save the wounded man of humanity; the shepherd stumbling about in the
dark mountains looking for the lost sheep of the church; and also by Moses,
when he was willing to risk his own salvation for that of others (Ex.
33:32). He really understood the spirit of unity which we are speaking
about. He wanted to see God's glory, whether it was manifest in him or
others was to some degree irrelevant. This is a great challenge for us.
Our attitude to rejection at the judgment should be that if we personally
cannot glorify God's Name, then we hope for rejection and destruction,
as quickly as possible. We should wish to see our brother saved every
bit as much as we wish for our own salvation; this is loving our neighbour
as ourselves.
We have spoken of theory. We have looked to the heights of idealism.
After reading this you will, in a few hours, at most, be back in the real
world of sin and failure, of apparent inability to attain even the smallest
ideals. But the very height of these things should itself be like a great
crane, to lift us up from our lowness. We can capture some sense of this
"all in all" presence of God in our lives, we can grapple with
our own self-centredness, the Truth really can permeate our thinking-
if we let it, if we do our part to saturate our thinking with His word,
to fill our lives with behaviour patterns and habits which allow us to
live out this unity of which we have been speaking.
Notes
(1) Perhaps Jesus was referring
to this in Jn. 17:11: "Holy Father, keep through thine own
Name those whom thou hast given me, that they may be one ".
In this case, Jesus is implying: 'Help them to be one, so that they
might all come together with me as well in the Name of the Holy
One of Israel'.
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