|
| |
Changed Into His
Likeness
by Watchman Nee
We
all, with unveiled face, beholding the glory of the Lord,
are being changed into his likeness from one degree of glory to another.
2 Corinthians 3,18, RSV

Chapter 14
THE DIVINE WOUNDING
Isaac's life was peaceful, with
no strivings. Jacob's way was Isaac's long struggle throughout. For Isaac
everything went easily; Jacob found even the simplest things presenting
difficulties. God is the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, all three; so we
cannot have Isaac without Jacob, nor, praise God, Jacob without Isaac.
We ourselves are in the
position of both. From the Lord's side we are rich, complete in Christ. Yet
because of our own natural strength, God's hand has a chastening and formative
work to do upon us. We cannot escape the discipline, but equally surely we shall
never be without the absolute fullness of divine bestowal. If there is a
difference in the discipline it is because some of us have more of Jacob to be
dealt with than do others. That is all!
Proverbs 13. 15 tells us that,
`the way of transgressors is hard', that is, tough or rugged. Jacob's way was
like that because he was like that. The hard, rugged self in Jacob required a
lot of time for God to deal with it, and many of us will be little use unless
God has taken that time to handle us. Jacob was a usurper and a cheat. God will
not let such a man escape.
Some ask why God spent so much
time on Jacob, as though it were an easy thing to deal with any man! To receive,
as Isaac received, is something done in a minute. We enter into the inheritance
immediately our hearts respond with a Thank - you to what God reveals. But
Jacob's difficulty is a lifelong thing. As long as we live, our natural strength
pursues us. It is always being dealt with by God, though there is a time when
this is specially true.
Those who do not know
themselves do not know Jacob. We need to be aware how the flesh always takes
care of itself, cheating others to do so and being cheated-if we are going to
understand this man. For with all God's dealings with him in Laban's home, still
Jacob was largely unchanged. Cheating, scheming, planning, were still in his
character.
But as we have seen, after
twenty years and with the birth of Joseph, Jacob bethought himself of home (30.
25). Then it was that for the first time in Haran God spoke to him. `Return unto
the land of thy fathers, and to thy kindred; and I will be with thee.' `I am the
God of Bethel, where thou anointedst a pillar, where thou vowedst a vow unto me:
now arise, get thee out from this land, and return unto the land of thy
nativity' (31. 3, 13). So Jacob prepared himself to go.
But Laban was not likely to let
him go easily. In spite of everything, God had blessed Laban for Jacob's sake.
So Jacob left secretly, and Laban followed him. But it was God who had sent
Jacob back, and God protected him. At God's time He sets us free. When the
testing has accomplished its purpose, God lets us go, and no man, not even Laban,
can keep us.
When Laban eventually caught up
with Jacob they made a covenant together. Laban was respectful and he swore by
the God of Abraham and of Nahor. Jacob swore, however, by the God of his father
Isaac (31. 51-53). He bore witness to the fact that God's promise was according
to God's choice.
Then Jacob offered a sacrifice
(31. 54). Laban had none. Something surely had happened to Jacob. When he went
out first it was his mother who sent him. Now God sends him home, and he goes.
He has learned to recognize God's voice. Discipline had not changed him much,
but he had at least advanced into wanting God. In his early years he had wanted
only God's purpose, because it fitted in with his desires. He wanted God's will,
but not God Himself. Now at last he had some desire for Him. He had heard His
voice, and now he sacrificed.
`And Laban departed, and
returned unto his place. And Jacob went on his way, and the angels of God met
him. And Jacob said when he saw them, This is God's host: and he called the name
of that place Mahanaim' (31. 55 - 32. 2). Jacob had left Laban, having been
protected from him by God. Now angels met him. God had opened Jacob's eyes to
see that just as He had delivered Him from Laban, so He would deliver him from
everyone else. The name Mahanaim means `two companies'. Not you alone, Jacob,
one company-but always God's company with you. It was not that the angels had
just arrived, but that Jacob's eyes were at last opened to see them. `Fear not:
for they that be with us are more than they that be with them. And Elisha prayed
and said, Lord, I pray thee, open his eyes, that he may see. And the Lord opened
the eyes of the young man; and he saw: and behold, the mountain was full of
horses and chariots of fire round about Elisha' (2 Kings 6. 16, 17).
At this point we may well ask,
Could all the conditions possibly be more favourable for Jacob? He had God's
command, God's promise, God's protection, and now a vision of the angels with
him. Surely this was enough to make anyone trust God! But Jacob was still Jacob.
God's grace does not alter the flesh. So in the following verses he sends a very
lowly, flattering message to his brother Esau. `My lord . . . thy servant . . .'
he says (32. 3, 4). He had already forgotten God's call and His grace and His
protection. He thought his own specious words could somehow change Esau. That
was Jacob still, just the same as he ever was!
But Esau started out to meet
him with four hundred men. What did that mean? Good or bad? It struck dismay in
Jacob's heart. Clever people have many worries; schemers pile up troubles for
themselves. Those who think and contrive, and do not trust and believe, find
themselves like Jacob, `greatly afraid' and `distressed' (32. 7).
Jacob's one problem, as always,
was what to do! But, trust him, he still had plans! God had sent him now to
Canaan, so he could not flee back to
Mesopotamia
. Yet he dare not let God look after the results of his obedience. How many of
us obey God by the front door, and make preparations to retreat by the back!
Jacob tried both to obey God and at the same time to escape his brother.
In his fear and distress, we
are told that Jacob `divided the people that was with him, and the flocks, and
the herds, and the camels, into two companies' (32. 7). Here we find the same
word mahanaim that occurred in verse 2. Jacob has substituted his Mahanaim for
God's. There had been one earthly company and one heavenly one, but he divided
his earthly company into two ! So, perhaps, he would impress his brother, who
would scarcely have eyes for the unseen!
Now in verses 9-12 we have
Jacob's first real prayer. He has made some progress, though it has not yet
reached a high level. In his early years it was all scheming and bargaining, and
no prayer. Now it is both scheming and prayer. Yet if we pray we need not
scheme. If we scheme there is often no meaning in our prayer. But Jacob still
did both; on the one hand he trusted God, on the other hand he did the work
himself! To trust God completely would be too reckless, for suppose God's words
fell empty to the ground! How like us he was! Of course I am a Christian, so I
must trust God; but to trust Him fully and completely is taking too great a
risk.
So Jacob elaborated his plans
(32. 13-18). Remember, this man had just prayed! This stratagem, however, was to
be his masterpiece. Of course he knew his brother, that he was a hunter, so he
truly faced the most dangerous crisis of his life. Never before had he expended
so much thought and effort as he put into this. After all, more than his
possessions, his very life itself depended on the outcome.
But Jacob was equal to the
situation. He who had been through all these years of God's discipline could
still summon the wits to produce an answer. In a series of mollifying gestures
he would let everything go if necessary to Esau, and so at least save his skin.
It was a great scheme, the best he had ever made. Moreover, he believed in his
own plans and trusted to them-and yet he had prayed! He looked to God and made
the most elaborate preparations.
It was on that night that God
met him. There had never been a night when he was more afraid. On previous
occasions it did not so much matter whether he succeeded or not. This time it
was a matter of life and death to him. He had used all his wits, all his
strength, to meet a most difficult situation, and everything hung on the
outcome.
All the others had passed on
across the ford. Remaining behind on this side, `Jacob was left alone' (32. 24).
Here at Peniel God met him face to face. `There wrestled a man with him until
the breaking of the day.' Now it was that Jacob put forth his utmost strength.
It was not Jacob who wrestled,
but God who came and wrestled with him, to bring about his utter surrender. The
object of wrestling is to force a man down until he is unable to move, so that
he yields to the victor. Yet of God it is said that even here, `He prevailed
not' (v. 25). Jacob possessed tremendous natural strength. Many of us know all
too well what this means. We can still do so well ourselves; we employ all sorts
of natural skills for our self-protection. It is as if God were defeated.
Defeat is defeat. When you or I
are defeated it means `I cannot', `I yield'. Yet being as we are, we have
another try. God may overthrow our plans again and again, but we don't admit
defeat, we do not give up. We just think we have not planned well enough, and
the next time we must do better. `Is any thing too hard for the Lord? the angel
had exclaimed to Abraham (18-14). But it is almost as if we say to the Lord, `Is
anything too hard for me?'!
One day we must acknowledge
defeat, confessing that we know nothing at all and can do nothing at all. Jacob
had not come there, and still thought he knew Esau! For this last step
therefore, something more than discipline was necessary. Discipline brought him
as far as Peniel, and it brings us to the place where God can touch us
fundamentally. But beware of boasting of God's disciplinary dealings, for until
the question of our natural strength is finally settled, this kind of talk can
only increase our pride.
Wrestling illustrates God's
method of dealing with us. It is finally to weaken us so that we cannot rise.
God has His way of doing this with each of us. Jacob was stronger than most, but
God conquered. Had He used other means it might have meant a further twenty
years. But when Jacob would not yield, God `touched him'. With a touch He did
what great strength would not do.
The thigh is the strongest part
of the body, a fitting type of our point of greatest natural strength. There
must come a day when God dislocates that thigh, totally undermining and undoing
our strength of nature. Your strong point and mine may be quite different from
Jacob's. Ambition, boasting, emotion, self-love-each of us has his own, but for
each of us this dislocating work is a definite crisis of experience.
With some of us, as we said,
the trouble is a readiness to expose spiritual things. In all our work and life
and conduct, the fruits are brought out on the surface and displayed. Exposure
is in such a case the nerve-centre of our natural strength, and God must touch
that. Self is dominant there. People's mistakes vary, and many of us have never
seen where our nerve-centre is. But generally all our mistakes spring from one
inner principle, and when all symptoms point to one disease, that is our
`thigh'. May God open our eyes to see the nerve-centre of our natural strength,
for when that is touched, then there will be fruitfulness.
One touch-and Jacob was lamed.
He could no longer wrestle; he was powerless. Dawn came, and he said to God, `I
will not let thee go.' But when any member, even a finger, is dislocated, the
whole body is put out of action. Speaking physically, if God had wanted to go,
He could perfectly well have gone off and left Jacob there. Jacob could not
possibly have held Him.
But now that Jacob was truly
weak the Wrestler could not leave him. For Jacob depended on Him. It is when our
thigh has been touched that we can hold God the closest. We are strongest when
we are weakest (2 Corinthians 12. 10). From man's standpoint this looks
impossible, but it is divine fact. It is small faith that accomplishes great
things. `I cannot hold thee, but I can plead with thee! I can scarcely even
pray, yet I can plead. I have no faith, yet I believe!'
With an abundance of natural
strength we are useless to God. With no strength at all, we can hold on to Him.
God's response to Jacob was amazing. 'Thy name shall be called no more Jacob,
but
Israel
: for thou hast striven with God and with men, and hast prevailed' (32. 28). Ten
years experience looked like defeat for Jacob, but God said he had prevailed.
This is what happens when we surrender, beaten, at God's feet.
`And Jacob asked him, and said,
Tell me, I pray thee, thy name. And he said, Wherefore is it that thou dost ask
after my name? And he blessed him there.' Jacob wanted to know who had done
this, but he was not told. Jacob did not know who the Wrestler was when He came,
and he knew no more when: He went. He just knew that his own name had been
changed-and that he limped! This is the only time in Scripture when God declined
to reveal His name to a servant of His.
Those touched by God do not
know what has happened. When it really takes place, we don't know what it is.
That is why it is so difficult to define, for God does not want us to wait for
an experience. If we do we shall not get it. God wants our eye fixed on Him, not
on experiences. Jacob only knew that somehow God had met him, and that now he
was crippled. The limp is the evidence, not merely the witness of the lips. We
are to look to God to do the work in His own way and time. The result will be
evident in us, and there will be no need to talk about it.
Chapter 15
Table of Contents
Top of Page
-
Now
to Him who is able to keep you from stumbling, and to make you stand in
the presence of His glory blameless with great joy, to the only God our
Savior, through Jesus Christ our Lord, be glory, majesty, dominion and
authority, before all time and now and forever. Amen. Jude
1:24-25

Webservant
for TwoListeners.org
a
non-profit project for the edification of Christians worldwide
|