John 6:53 Then Jesus said unto them, Verily, verily, I say unto you, Except ye eat the flesh of the Son of man, and drink his blood, ye have no life in you.
Let us remember that this way is a way that is a constant offense to the flesh, to the natural man.
Let us remember that this way is a way that is a constant offense to the flesh, to the natural man.
The Jews strove with
one another, saying, "How can this Man give us His flesh to eat?"
But
not only did Jews, the religious people in their religious
self-satisfaction, strive together, but it is also written, "Many
therefore of His disciples, when they heard this, said, This is a hard
saying; who can hear it?"
Even disciples could not go on sometimes.
When
they came face to face with the implications of such a saying, they
were no longer willing to be associated with Him on a basis of that
kind.
The flesh loves to have it in itself to be doing, to be laying the
plans, arranging the programs, organizing the work, superintending it,
and getting it going.
The flesh revels in that, and when you come and
say to that whole order of things, "The way of God is the way of utter
dependence and faith, with the Holy Spirit in entire charge.
And you
must keep your hands off and be willing to do only what the Lord tells
you and no more," (that which is meant by the declaration, I can do
nothing out from Myself") it is an offense to the natural man, even in
religious matters.
We come up against that constantly, do we not? It is
the difference between meeting together as they did at Antioch to pray
things out and get the Lord's witness as to His will, and having a
committee meeting to discuss a proposal and make plans.
If the natural
man is not doing the whole thing, and arranging it, and ordering it, and
running it all, he cannot think that progress can be made at all.
Unless you come out with your plans, and announce your programs, and
declare what you are doing, and present your statistics, the naturally
minded Christian thinks that nothing is being done.
It is possible to
have wonderful things done without any of that kind of activity.
We cite
such a thing purely as an illustration. Application can be extended in
many directions, but this is just to help out the thought.
The whole
accomplishment of God in Christ is on the basis of Divine Life mediated
through faith.
That is another way of saying that Christ has to be the
basis of everything in a spiritual way.
This is an offense to the flesh,
but a satisfaction to the Spirit.
~T. Austin Sparks~
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