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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

ABRAHAM: The Divine
Choice
Chapter 2
THE STARTING-POINT OF
RECOVERY
We begin with Abraham because
the divine plan of redemption begins with Abraham. When we open our New
Testament the first words we read are these: `The book of the generation of
Jesus Christ, the son of David, the son of Abraham.' Immediately the genealogy
begins: `Abraham begat Isaac; and Isaac begat Jacob; and Jacob begat
Judah
and his brethren.' There can be no doubt, then, about Abraham's importance.
Moreover, of all the Old Testament characters his is the name most frequently on
the lips of the Lord Jesus. `Before Abraham was, I am,' Jesus says. `Your father
Abraham rejoiced to see my day; and he saw it, and was glad' (John 8. 56, 58).
Everything began with Abraham;
he is the starting-point of everything in redemption and in the purpose of God.
The apostle Paul tells us that Abraham is `the father of all them that believe'
(Romans 4. 11). Not Adam but Abraham; for Adam is the starting-point only of
human sin. From his day onward sin reigned.
Among the men who succeeded
Adam there were, of course, those who shone as lights in the increasing darkness
of those days. Abel was good; he offered sacrifices according to God's will, but
he offered for himself alone. He was not specially chosen or prepared in
relation to the purpose of God. Enoch, too, was simply an individual in his walk
with God, and Noah was the same. None of these three was specially chosen by God
in relation to the recovery of what was lost by Adam.
Abel, Enoch, Noah, all three
worshipped God. Abraham did not; he worshipped idols. Things had gone from bad
to worse, until the men in
Ur
of the Chaldees and in all the other cities around them were idolaters. And
Abraham and Nahor and their father Terah were no different: `they served other
gods' (Joshua 24. 2). By himself Abraham was not morally the equal of any of
those three men who went before him, Noah, Enoch or Abel. By nature he was on
the same level as Adam after his fall, or as Cain. Yet he was the starting point
for divine recovery.
Through none of those who
preceded Abraham did God set Himself to deal with the situation created by sin.
Abraham was the first through whom He did this.
Between Adam and Abraham, God
worked with men as individuals. In Abraham God went further, and began to deal
with the question of racial sin. God's whole movement to undo the consequences
of the Fall began with him.
Redemption is completed and
perfected in Christ, but redemption began with Abraham. Christ is the centre and
the heart of God's redemptive purpose. Christ is the mid-point of the line of
recovery, of which the
kingdom
of
God
in fullness is the end and Abraham is the starting point. For Abraham was not
called and chosen for his own sake but for the sake of his descendants. He was
called to be God's vessel in dealing with a tragic situation, not to receive
something just for himself. To receive grace, and to transmit grace, are two
different things.
When man fell, God took no
immediate action. In Noah's day He judged the world, but He made no move yet to
redeem it. Not until Abraham did He begin to deal with the situation at its
heart. Abraham was called so that through him God might deal with the whole
terrible problem of sin.
Right at the outset of God's
call to Abraham we can see His aim clearly stated. `Now the Lord said unto
Abram, Get thee out of thy country, and from thy kindred, and from thy father's
house, unto the land that I will shew thee: and I will make of thee a great
nation, and I will bless thee, and make thy name great; and be thou a blessing:
and I will bless them that bless thee, and him that curseth thee will I curse:
and in thee shall all the families of the earth be blessed' (Genesis 12. 1-3).
Abraham was called to an inheritance, and this is a question of land. He was
called also to be a great nation, and this is a question of people. Through him
all the nations were to be blessed, and this surely indicates the moral sphere
of his call.
All God's work for His people
is connected with a land. If they were faithful, they possessed it; if not, they
lost it. From that land all enemies would be cast out, and they were to occupy
it for God. `The land' is the central thought of the Old Testament. God wants a
land for His own. It is not a question of the earth. In the Fall God lost the
earth. Nor is it a question of heaven. Of course, there was never a problem
about heaven. One day it will certainly be a question of recovery of the earth.
God wants the whole earth back, and that will be accomplished in the fullness of
His kingdom. Before that day, however, God wants a land. He wants that upon
which He can take His stand as His very own. The land is His. It is at least one
place where God can reveal Himself, can be heard and seen and can give to men
His laws. First He has the land, then He will have the earth.
Today God still has `a land'
in the earth, although it is not in one whole piece. In the past it was the
territory and the whole
kingdom
of
Israel
. Now it is the Church, wherever the Church is in local expression-in
Antioch
, in Thessalonica, in
Ephesus
. It is still `the land', because the Body of Christ stands there. God's work of
recovery begins with the land. Therefore every believer can stand for God and
for His will in the place where he lives and works. He can occupy that piece of
territory and hold it for God.
The recovery of the whole
earth is based on the recovery of those portions now. As long as the people of
God were in the land, God was `the possessor of heaven and earth'. When they
lost the land, He was called `the God of heaven' only. When Melchizedek met
Abraham after the battle of the kings, Abraham was already in the land. He could
therefore say to the king of
Sodom
, `I have lift up mine hand unto the Lord, God Most High, possessor of heaven
and earth' (Genesis 14. 22). But the time came when
Israel
lost the land, and then Nehemiah writes, `I fasted and prayed before the God of
heaven' (Nehemiah 1. 4). Because they have let the land go, therefore the earth
is lost to God.
Thus the land is not an end in
itself; it stands for the whole earth. God is thinking ultimately in large
terms. `Blessed are the meek,' says Jesus, `for they shall inherit the earth.'
This earth of ours, which will come back to God in fullness at the end of this
age, is being won back now by the meek. Just as in the Old Testament the
land
of
Israel
was a sort of token of God's claim upon the whole earth, so the different
portions where His children stand for Him now are a token of His sovereign right
to the whole earth today. God wants us not only to preach the Gospel and to
edify and build up His Church, He wants us especially to stand on this earth for
Him.
The New Testament parallel to
`the land' is the expression we find in the Gospels: `the kingdom (or rule) of
heaven'. The land was the sphere upon this earth in which God's writ ran, the
place where His power was effective. When the New Testament speaks of the
kingdom of heaven it has in view just such a sphere in the earth today where the
rule of God is effective. The question today is, does heaven reign already in
the Church? It certainly does not anywhere else.
I think we will agree that
this is more than an individual matter. It calls for God's children in a given
place to stand together subject to His rule, so that through them His rule
becomes an effective thing there. It is not only a question of the preaching of
the Gospel but also of the presence of the kingdom. The Gospel of grace is for
the salvation of sinners. The Gospel of the kingdom is intended to bring back to
God the earth which is His by right. Unless our work affects the earth in this
way, it is falling short of God's purpose.
God used much time to
establish Abraham in the land of promise. As soon as Abraham left it a little
way, to go to
Egypt
or to go to Gerar, he was in moral defeat. We spiritualize these things and
draw from them lessons about Abraham's personal walk with God, but in doing this
we may overlook something important. It is this, that God wanted the land
because God wants the earth.
Then secondly, Abraham's call
was not only a question of a land but also of a people. `I will make of thee a
great nation.' That was God's motive in calling this man to Himself from among a
world of idolaters.
Conditions had greatly changed
since Adam's day. Adam was judged and punished, and as we have said, he was not
thereafter concerned with the earth as a whole. The only demand made upon his
generation was for individual godliness. They either sought after God or they
did not. With the generation of Noah, however, something different is
introduced, namely, a law (Genesis 9. 3-6). Men were given the opportunity of
cooperating together under a law of God, or of course could choose to do so
apart from Him. From that time man became part of an organization.
Babel
is the great result of mankind's organizing itself, and from this ultimately
comes
Babylon
, the counterfeit of the Body of Christ. Then, at the beginning of the world as
we now know it, God chose out Abraham with a view to securing for Himself a
people.
In Adam's time, and in Noah's,
God dealt with the whole world. All humanity left
Eden
in Adam. In the Flood the whole world came under judgment. These were the
disastrous results of the Fall. Now we come to the time of Abraham and God is
going to begin a work that will undo the effects of that Fall. How will He do
this? He is not going to sweep the whole world back to Himself, willy-nilly. He
will work to secure a people through whom He can win the world. Abraham is the
beginning of the choice of God, and he was called not only to lay claim for Him
to a land but also to secure for Him a people.
The greater part of the Old
Testament is taken up with the record of God's people on the earth. Have we
realized what it means to say that God has a people on earth? Suppose we belong
to a business house having widespread overseas interests. How confidently we
say, `We have a man in
Tokyo
, or in Manilla,' meaning a representative in that place. That is just what God
has in His people on the earth, and that is how He would speak of them.
Immediately
Israel
turned from God to idols they lost their position as the people of God-and God
lost His people. `The land doth commit great whoredom, departing from the Lord
.... Call his name Lo-ammi: for ye are not my people, and I will not be your
God' (Hosea 1. 2, 9). They might commit other sins, and then they were a sinning
people, but still the people of God. When, however, they fell into idolatry they
were no longer His people. He had to repudiate them.
The nation of
Israel
was to be a witness to God, a people who enshrined God's presence. Where
Israel
was, Jehovah was. When their foes came against them it was God they
encountered. To deal with them they must deal with God. While
Israel
were true to God they held a unique position, apart from and superior to the
other nations. That was gone as soon as they yielded to idolatry. Where God has
a people now, He has a witness: where He has no people, He has no witness.
The call of Abraham has a
special character, unique in the Old Testament. There was nothing quite like it,
for this was God's first great reaction to the Fall. It was the beginning of His
answer to the problem of sin. Abraham was to reveal God as the Redeemer who
calls men out of a world of idolatry to faith in Himself.
What is the Church today? She
is the people of God, or in the words of Acts 15. 14, `a people for his name'.
As God once committed His purpose to Abraham so today He has committed
everything to His Church.
It is not enough therefore
just to preach the Gospel for individual salvation. That must be done, and every
one of us must seek to win men individually out of the world to faith in Jesus
Christ; but let us understand the motive behind such work. It is not just that
the sinner should be saved and should arrive at a place of security and
contentment. God wants a people for Himself, who will confess Him before men.
Every born-again child of God must be taught to take His place in that
witnessing people. For God does not deal directly with the nations today, but
through the Church which is His Body. It is to take our share in the task that
we have been called, and God desires that we should find our place there.
Chapter
3 Table
of Contents Top
of Page
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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

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