2003感恩节
总题:主对生命的恢复并借生命的恢复
总题:主对生命的恢复并借生命的恢复
Message Five The Way of Life—the Way of the Lord's Recovery
Scripture Reading: Matt. 7:13-14; 2 Cor. 3:6; Rev. 22:1-2
I. The way of the Lord's recovery is the way of life; we need to know the intrinsic essence of life in the Lord's recovery—Psa. 16:11; Jer. 21:8; John 1:4; 10:10b; 14:6; 1 Cor. 15:45b; Rom. 8:2, 10, 6, 11:
A. The intrinsic essence of the Triune God is the divine life—God the Father is the source of life (John 5:26), God the Son is the embodiment of life (1:4), and God the Spirit is the flow of life (4:14b; 7:38-39a).
B. The intrinsic essence of the New Jerusalem is the divine life—God the Father is the light of life (Rev. 21:23; 22:5), God the Son is the tree of life (v. 2), and God the Spirit is the river of life (v. 1).
C. God builds the church to prepare the bride of Christ for the building of the New Jerusalem by the divine life, the resurrection life—the flowing, transforming, and building life—Gen. 2:22; John 19:34; Psa. 36:8-9.
II. The unique way for the daily life of God's people and for their fellowship with God and with one another is the divine life flowing in the divine nature—Rev. 21:21b; 22:1-2; 1 John 1:3:
A. The street of the holy city is pure gold, symbolizing the divine nature, and the river of water of life proceeds in the middle of the street—Rev. 21:21b; 22:1.
B. Where the divine life flows, there the divine nature is as the holy way by which God's people walk; and where the holy way of the divine nature is, there the divine life is flowing—2 Pet. 1:4; John 7:38-39.
C. The street connected to and coming out of the throne is a "fellowship street"; the divine fellowship brings God to all His redeemed people in order to bring them back to Himself as their throne for His golden administration within them—Rev. 21:18b; 22:1-2; 21:21b; cf. Ezek. 1:22, 26; 1 Kings 10:18.
D. When we walk and move in the divine nature of God, we are brought under God's golden administration to enjoy the flow of life and the supply of life— Rev. 22:1-2.
III. We should live according to the principle of the tree of life, the principle of dependence, not according to the principle of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, the principle of independence—Gen. 2:9, 17; Rom. 8:6:
A. That God is our food, signified by the tree of life, means that we must depend on God continually; the tree of knowledge indicates independence.
B. Knowledge or religion means to be good and to do good, to worship God or to work for God, without having the living presence of God—John 5:39-40; 15:5b.
C. In the eyes of God, the greatest sin is independence; independence is a spiritual insulation, disconnecting us from the life of God—Eph. 4:18.
D. We must learn to depend on the Lord continually, living constantly in direct contact with God—2 Cor. 1:12; Heb. 11:8; Matt. 6:28; cf. 1 Kings 7:17-19; S. S. 8:5a; 2 Chron. 16:12; Isa. 50:10-11.
IV. In our service to the Lord, we must reject our natural enthusiasm, natural strength, and natural ability; our service must be life flowing out of us as a ministry of life to others—John 7:38; 2 Cor. 3:6; 1 John 5:16a:
A. We must be burning in spirit with the fire of God's life; we should not serve with strange fire, signifying the natural enthusiasm not dealt with by the cross and not in resurrection—Exo. 3:2; Luke 12:49-50; Rom. 12:11; Lev. 10:1:
1. Strange fire in the priestly service, a sin of presumption, causes death before God—9:24; 10:1-2.
2. The offering of strange fire might have been related to the drinking of wine; drinking wine signifies the overenjoyment of the worldly, natural, or physical, material things—vv. 8-9.
3. When the priests are drunk, they lose the discernment of holiness and are unable to teach God's people—vv. 10-11.
B. Our natural strength and ability need to be dealt with by the cross to become useful in resurrection for our service to the Lord—Phil. 3:3:
1. After being put aside by God for forty years, Moses learned to serve God according to His leading and to trust in Him—Exo. 2:14-15; Acts 7:22-36; Heb. 11:28.
2. After becoming a complete failure, Peter learned to serve the brothers by faith and with humility—Luke 22:32-33; John 18:15-18, 25-27; Matt. 26:69-75; 1 Pet. 5:5-6.
V. In the decree of the kingdom's constitution, Christ displayed the two possible ways of people's life and work before God—Matt. 7:13-14, 21-27:
A. The broad way leading to destruction is according to the worldly systems, satisfying the natural tastes, to get the crowd, to maintain a career of man, and to achieve man's enterprise—Matt. 13:31-33; Rev. 2:13, 20; 17:4-5.
B. The constricted way leading to life is according to the divine regulations, fulfilling the spiritual requests to bring in God's elect and to bear the testimony of Jesus Christ, carrying out God's economy for the building up of the Body of Christ—Rom. 1:9; Heb. 11:5-6; Rev. 1:1-2, 9-10.
C. The way that leads to a living reward in life is the Way (Acts 9:2; 19:9, 23; 22:4; 24:22)—the way of the truth, the straight way, the way of righteousness (2 Pet. 2:2, 15, 21), the way of peace (Luke 1:79; Rom. 3:17), the way of salvation (Acts 16:17), the way of God (Matt. 22:16; Acts 18:26), and the way of the Lord (John 1:23; Acts 18:25); it is slandered as the way of heresy (24:14).
D. The God-ordained way is to have a living and working which are always narrow and constricted, according to the pattern of the Lord's indescribable life and ministry—John 5:19; 4:34; 17:4; 14:10, 24; 5:30; 7:6, 18:
1. We in the Lord's recovery must walk in our spirit; walking in spirit restricts us, causing us to live a normal, Christian life and making us vital, healthy believers—Rom. 8:4; Gal. 5:16, 22-23; 1 Thes. 5:16-18.
2. We must learn to restrict ourselves in our labor according to the measure of the rule which the God of measure, the ruling God, has apportioned to us—2 Cor. 10:13-14; John 15:5; Acts 20:19-20, 31.