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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

Chapter 3
CALL AND RESPONSE
THE divine activities in this
age can be shown to have two great aspects, the direct work of God according to
His eternal purpose, and His remedial work of redemption. In the revelation of
Scripture these two interlock. We may distinguish between them, but we cannot
separate them. God's work of recovery contains both a remedy for sin and a
reaffirmation of His eternal purpose for man.
Even when God is dealing with
the first step of justification He has the goal always in view. That is why we
are told in Galatians 3. 8 that the scripture, `foreseeing that God would
justify the Gentiles by faith, preached the gospel before hand unto Abraham,
saying, In thee shall all the nations be blessed'.
Abraham was the first man to
receive the call of God. He was called because he was chosen; the call implies
the choice. And he was chosen for no other reason than that God was pleased to
choose him.
In the Book of Genesis God
makes three beginnings, with Adam and his creation, with Noah after the Flood,
and with Abraham at the time of his call. Noah was sent forth into the new world
which he was appointed to govern. His generation saw the beginning of organized
social life, of law between man and man. God's legislation through Noah was
designed to give that new world a moral character, from which, however, it
turned away.
Abraham's task was a different
one. He was not called either to administer or to legislate for the nations of
this world; indeed, he was to turn his back on the world. He already had a
country of his own, but it was his only to leave. He had a kindred-to leave. He
had a home-to leave. He looked for the city which has foundations (Hebrews 11.
10); he himself had no city. He was a pilgrim. Unlike Noah, he was to establish
and to improve nothing. Noah had a task to do, to establish order and to give
divine instruction to the world. Abraham in his life gave nothing to the world.
He was a pilgrim, called to pass through it. His links were essentially with
heaven.
Abraham was called out of the
world. `By faith Abraham, when he was called, obeyed to go out unto a place
which he was to receive for an inheritance; and he went out, not knowing whither
he went' (Hebrews 11. 8). There is no call except to come out.
Abraham was at home in the
world with its established order, its advanced culture, its justifiable pride of
attainment, and he was called to come out of that world to fulfil the purpose of
God. That is the divine calling. There had been nothing wrong with Noah's way of
dealing directly with the world in order to improve it; it had been God's
appointed way for Noah. But when it led nowhere, and when accordingly God set
Himself to His long term task of recovery, He began with the call to Abraham,
not now to improve the world but to come out of it.
Today God's principle of
working is that of Abraham, not of Noah. At
Ur
of the Chaldees it was not that God had forgotten the world but that He was
going to deal with it through Abraham, and no longer directly. Through this one
man He would deal with the whole world. Abraham was the vessel into which God's
wisdom and power and grace were now deposited, in order that through him God
might open the door of blessing to all men.
How then, we may ask
ourselves, should one chosen as God's vessel for so great a task know His God?
For the responsibility resting upon this one man was tremendous. To use man's
finite way of speaking, the whole plan of God, the whole divine will and purpose
for man, depended on Abraham. It stood or fell with him. Need we wonder, then,
that Abraham had to go through so much trial and testing in order to bring him
to know God, so that men could speak of `the God of Abraham', and so that God
could call Himself by that name without moral violation?
Abraham, we saw, is the father
of all them that believe. This is an interesting expression, for it shows us
that all spiritual principle is based on birth, not on preaching. Men are not
changed by listening to some doctrine or by following a course of instructive
teaching. They are changed by birth. First God chose one man who believed, and
from him were born the many. When you meet a man who believes and who is saved,
you become aware that he has something you have not got. That something is not
just information; it is life. He has been born again. God has planted living
seed in the soil of his heart. Have we this living seed in us? If we have, then
we must give birth to others. Paul spoke of his sons in the faith. He was their
spiritual father, not merely their preacher or counsellor.
The nations are blessed
through Abraham, not because they hear a new doctrine but because they have
received a new life. The new Jerusalem will witness the perfection of that
blessing of the nations. It was Abraham's privilege to begin it.
Abraham's story falls
naturally into two parts: his call (Genesis 11-14) in which the land is the
central theme; and his posterity (Genesis 15-24) in which of course Isaac
figures predominantly. We begin with the first of these.
We shall best understand the
call of Abraham if we see it in its proper setting. `The God of glory appeared
unto our father Abraham, when he was in Mesopotamia, before he dwelt in
Haran
' (Acts 7. 2). Nimrod the mighty rebel had established his kingdom in
Babel
. His subjects had set up their great tower in the
land
of
Shinar
, and they had been scattered. The nations everywhere had not only forgotten God
but, as we have seen, were idolaters. The whole world worshipped false gods, and
Abraham's family was no exception. In this Abraham was very different from Abel
and Enoch and Noah. They seem to have been men of backbone, strikingly different
from all those around them. They stood out against the stream and refused to be
dragged along by it. Not so Abraham. He was indistinguishable from those around
him. Were they idolaters? So was he. Why, after all, should he be any different?
The work of God started with
such a man. Clearly then it was not in him, in his upright character or in his
moral determination that lay the source of his choice, but in God. Of His own
will God chose him. Abraham learnt the meaning of the fatherhood of God. This
was a vital lesson. If Abraham had not been just the same as all the rest, then
after his call he could have looked back and based his new circumstances on some
fundamental difference in himself. But he was not different. The difference lay
in God, not in Abraham.
Learn to recognize God's
sovereignty. Learn to rejoice in God's pleasure. This was Abraham's first
lesson, namely that God, not himself, was the Source. Our salvation is entirely
from God; there is no reason in us at all why He should save us. And if this is
true of our salvation it is true of all that follows from it. If the source of
our life is in God, so also is everything else. Nothing starts from us.
From Acts chapter 7 we learn
that Abraham was called by God while he was yet in
Ur
of the Chaldees, before he came to
Haran
. In his first words before the Jews' council Stephen begins from this fact.
`Brethren and fathers, hearken. The God of glory appeared unto our father
Abraham. Then came he . . . and dwelt in
Haran
.' That was enough. The .man who sees that glory knows he must respond. He
cannot do otherwise. Stephen himself was in a tight corner when he said these
words; but at the end of his terrible experience we are told (verse 55) that
being full of the Holy Ghost he looked up steadfastly into heaven and saw the
glory of God, and Jesus standing on the right hand of God. He who appeared to
Abraham at the beginning and He whom Stephen saw at the end were one and the
same God of glory. In the final issue, what is an extra stone or two to one who
sees the glory of God?
Both the call of Abraham and
the reason for his response lay in God. Once behold the God of glory and you
must believe, you cannot do otherwise. Thus it was by faith - faith in the God
of glory - that Abraham, when he was called, obeyed to go out.
But, you say, my faith is too
small. I could never have faith like Abraham's!
This is where Genesis chapter
11 comes to our help. If it were not for Stephen's words in Acts we should never
know that God had called Abraham while he was still in
Ur
of the Chaldees. If we only had the account given to us in Genesis we would get
a different impression. In Genesis 11.31 we read: `And Terah took Abram his son,
and Lot the son of Haran, his son's son, and Sarai his daughter in law, his son
Abram's wife; and they went forth with them from Ur of the Chaldees, to go into
the land of Canaan; and they came unto Haran, and dwelt there.' It seems clear
that the events described in this verse follow after the call spoken of in Acts
7.2 and Hebrews 11. 8. He had heard the call and believed yet Terah, we are
told, took him out. That was the size of Abraham's faith at the beginning. He
left his country, but he only left part of his kindred and none of his father's
house. It was his father who led him forth. We do not know how it happened, but
the one who was not called became the one who led out, and the one called out
became the follower.
Noah took his family into the
ark with him, his wife, his sons and his sons' wives, all of them. He was told
to do so; and what he did was right, for the situation there was different. The
ark typifies salvation, and salvation is designed to embrace every individual
man. The more there are who come into Christ by faith, the happier we ought to
be. But Abraham's bringing with him (or accompanying) his parents and their
grandson
Lot
, was wrong. For here it was not a matter of amassing individuals for salvation.
Abraham was called to be himself a chosen vessel in relation to God's purpose, a
purpose designed to bring blessing to all the families of the earth. There was
no way of taking with him into this purpose others who were not so chosen.
Abraham believed, but his understanding was faulty and therefore his faith was
deficient. In other words, he was not an exceptional believer; he was just like
us!
In the event Abraham was taken
by his father only a part of the way to
Canaan
; then the movement stopped. `They came unto
Haran
, and dwelt there.' He had heard God's call, but he did not appreciate the goal
to which that call was leading, and so he saw no reason to pay such a price of
loneliness. This explains why we murmur when God deals with us. Remember again,
this is not the history of how a man was saved but how he became a vessel unto
honour. A valuable vessel or a well-finished tool cannot be created without a
high price being paid. Only poor quality goods can be produced cheaply. Let us
not misunderstand God's dealings with us. Through Abraham God wanted to
introduce a whole new economy in His relations with man, but Abraham did not yet
appreciate this fact. Nor do we know what God wants to do with us. If He uses
special trials and testings it is surely for a special purpose. If our hope is
truly in God, there is no need for us to ask why.
So Abraham `came out of the
land of the Chaldeans and dwelt in
Haran
'. He thought it quite sufficient to go only half-way. Yet the time in
Haran
was time wasted. Terah means `delay', `duration'. The years of Terah's life ran
out and they were years in which God did nothing.
Then, when Abraham was already
seventy-five years old, there came to him God's second call. `Get thee out of
thy country, and from thy kindred, and from thy father's. house, unto the land
that I will show thee' (Genesis 12. I). Abraham had shown himself less than
thorough in his obedience so far, but God, praise His name! did not let go His
hold upon this man. `From thence, when his father was dead, God removed him into
this land, wherein ye now dwell' (Acts 7. 4). With tears we thank God for that.
In
Haran
everything comes to a standstill, but nothing is more precious than the divine
persistence. That is why we are Christians today; that is why we continue. God's
patient persistence with Abraham brought him to
Canaan
. Do not let us be ashamed to admit that in this life of call and response,
nothing is of ourselves, all is of God. We would stay on in
Haran
for ever, but the divine perseverance would not let go of us. What amazing
grace, that Abraham could still become `the father of all them that believe',
even after the wasted years at
Haran
!
`And Abram took Sarai his
wife, and Lot his brother's son, and all their substance that they had gathered,
and the souls that they had gotten in Haran; and they went forth to go into the
land of Canaan; and into the land of Canaan they came' (Genesis 12. 5). God had
said, `Come into the land which I shall shew thee' (Acts 7. 3), and now at last
he arrived. Abraham's coming into the land was of great significance. It was not
a question of his owning a piece of territory, for in fact he owned none, but of
the power of God taking possession of the whole
land
of
Canaan
. And where God's power took possession, there Abraham had his inheritance.
And so it is with us today;
for this is the point, that our inheritance is the ground we take and hold for
God now. We are called of God to a given situation, to maintain there the
sovereign rule of heaven, and where the kingdom of heaven is thus effective,
there is our inheritance. This is the sorrow of our day, that God's people do
not know how to maintain God's power on the earth. They know individual
salvation, but they do not know the government of God. And yet our inheritance
is bound up with this; we cannot separate our inheritance from God's power.
Unless God's rule is established and His enemies are overthrown, we have no
inheritance. Remember Samson's riddle: `Out of the eater came forth meat, and
out of the strong came forth sweetness' (Judges 14. 14). It is when the lion is
slain that we discover the honey.
The kingdom of heaven means
that, on the one hand, God is King. Despite all appearance to the contrary, He
has dominion on the earth. And on the other hand it means that He is ours. This
God is our God for ever and ever. Do we know what it is to affirm this fact
today, by faith, here in the place where He has set us?
`And Abram passed through the
land unto the place of Shechem, unto the oak of Moreh. And the Canaanite was
then in the land' (12. 6). These place-names are interesting. Shechem means `a
shoulder', and may contain the idea of obedience. Moreh means `a teacher' and
suggests understanding and knowledge. How striking it is that these two ideas
should be brought together here in the record, for Jesus Himself said, `If any
man willeth to do his will, he shall know' (John 7. 17). All knowledge is the
outcome of obedience; everything else is just information. It is when we do His
will that we see His will. Abraham had arrived in the land, and now he began to
know why.
For here the Lord appeared to
him, assuring him that he was on the right road. `Unto thy seed will I give this
land,' He said. This entire land, no less, was his inheritance. Now for the
first time we are told that Abraham sacrificed, building an altar to the Lord
who had appeared to him. These altars are altars of burnt offering, not of sin
offering. They represent Abraham's- total committal of himself to God. A man
cannot do that until he has first seen Him. But as was true of Abraham, to see
Him once is enough. It draws out from us everything we have.
Abraham did not come to rest
at Shechem. `He removed from thence unto the mountain on the east of
Bethel
, and pitched his tent, having
Bethel
on the west and Ai on the east: and there he builded an altar unto the Lord,
and called upon the name of the Lord' (12. 8). Here is a second altar. Abraham
built the first on his arrival in
Canaan
, when he saw God, understood, and gave himself. The second he built in the
place where he pitched his tent, the place which he made his dwelling place. In
doing so he confessed that God had brought him to rest here.
After his visit to
Egypt
he came back to this second altar. This was the place where God wanted him to
be. It was a token of the eventual accomplishment of all God's purpose.
His tent was pitched between
Bethel
and Ai. Again the two place-names are significant.
Bethel
means `the house of God'; Ai means `a heap of ruins'. His dwelling lay between
them, with
Bethel
to the west and Ai to the east. Remember that later on in
Israel
's history the tabernacle of the testimony opened eastwards, so that a man
entering it faced west. Here at Abraham's dwelling place if a man faced towards
the house of God his back was towards a heap of ruins.
This has a lesson for us. Ai
reminds us that the old creation is under judgment.
Bethel
, not Ai, is the place where Abraham dwells (13. 3), the place where through him
the power of God will be felt throughout the land. And
Bethel
is the house of God, or in New Testament terms, the Church, the Body of Christ.
Individuals cannot bring to bear upon the earth the sovereign rule of heaven;
only the Body, the fellowship of believers in Christ, can do this. But to come
to this we must leave behind us that heap of ruins! We bring the kingdom of
heaven into this earth only when our natural strength has been brought to naught
at the Cross and we are living by the common life of the one new man in Christ.
This is the witness of
Canaan
.
Chapter 4
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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