2013春季长老
总题:为着基督身体之生命的经历、长大与职事
Message Four Growing in Life by Dealing with the Spirit
Scripture Reading: Psa. 51:10b, 12, 17a; Prov. 16:18-19; Isa. 57:15; 66:1-2; 1 Pet. 3:4; Gal. 6:1; 1 Cor. 4:21; Matt. 5:3; Luke 9:54-56
I. To deal with the spirit is not to deal with the spirit itself but to deal with the passage of the spirit—Luke 9:54-56; 1 Pet. 3:4:
A. The regenerated spirit, the innermost part of our being, is pure and undefiled; however, surrounding the spirit are the soul and the body, both of which have been mixed with the wicked elements of Satan and are thus filthy and corrupt.
B. Therefore, when the spirit comes forth and passes through the soul and body, it becomes contaminated by this filthiness and corruption; hence, when being manifested, the spirit bears certain filthiness, corruption, impurity, impropriety, and various other undesirable conditions.
C. We judge the characteristics of the spirit by the characteristics of the things that are attached to it; the kind of person we are produces the kind of character-istics our spirit carries; when our spirit is released, it expresses the tastes and colors of our very person; thus, the quality of a man determines the quality of his spirit.
D. If a person is proud in his soul, the spirit also manifests itself in pride; if a person is angry in the flesh, his spirit also reveals the anger.
E. We often encounter the spirit of anxiety, the spirit of jealousy, a rebellious spirit, a coarse spirit, a crooked spirit, a boastful spirit, a dominating spirit, or a rude spirit, all of which are not the problems of the spirit itself but the defil-ing influence of the undesirable elements of the soul and body upon the spirit as it passes through them; we can tell the kind of defilement from the kind of spirit, and the kind of spirit reveals the kind of man.
F. If our motive is impure, the spirit is also impure when released; if our intention is not clean, the spirit coming forth is also not clean; with the purpose of heart for self-glory, the result is a showy and boastful spirit; a competitive motive causes others to touch a competing and striving spirit.
G. Whenever we are about to act or speak, not only do we need to inquire whether what we are about to do is right or wrong, good or bad, but we must also dis-cern whether or not our inner intention is clean, our motive is pure, and our aim is wholly for God.
H. We need to check if there is any selfish purpose behind our action or any self-inclination; this kind of dealing is dealing with the spirit.
I. For this reason we need not only to have our flesh, self, and natural constitu-tion broken so that the spirit can come forth, but we must go one step further and deal with all the negative purposes of the heart, undesirable intentions, impure inclinations, improper will, and mixed emotion to the end not only that the spirit can come forth but also that it may come forth in an upright, clean, and pure manner.
J. The practical way to deal with the spirit is to condemn all the mixtures, to remove them by the power of the Holy Spirit, and to take the initiative to apply the cross and crucify the passages of the spirit, including our flesh, our self, our natural constitution, our purpose of heart, aim, intention, inclination, motive, etc.—Rom. 8:13; Gal. 5:24.
K. God arranges all circumstances and things in our environment for the purpose of dealing with the self and destroying it; in this way, by the discipline of the Holy Spirit, the quality of our spirit is enhanced and purified—Matt. 10:29-31; Rom. 8:28-29.
L. If all the brothers and sisters have an excellent, sterling, pure, weighty, and noble spirit in its quality, they will mutually supply one another, and the church will be rich—cf. Dan. 5:12; 6:3.
II. To be useful in building up the Body of Christ, we need to have a proper spirit:
A. In Luke 9 James and John asked the Lord whether they should command fire to come down from heaven and consume the village of the Samaritans who had rejected Him (v. 54); but the Lord rebuked James and John, saying, "You do not know of what kind of spirit you are. The Son of Man has not come to destroy men's lives but to save them" (vv. 55-56):
1. The disciples were wrong in their spirit because their motive was one of hatred; the Lord's spirit is a spirit of saving men's lives, not destroying them.
2. Brother Watchman Nee said that a person should not only do the right thing but also do the right thing in the right way and in the right spirit.
3. For our conduct to be constructive, edifying, and useful in building up the Body of Christ, we must be right in the thing that we do, right in our way, and right in our spirit; whenever we are about to do anything, we should ask ourselves what kind of spirit we have.
B. A seeking saint should be poor in spirit and pure in heart—Matt. 5:3, 8; Isa. 66:2:
1. To be poor in spirit means that we are humble, acknowledging that we have nothing, know nothing, can do nothing, and are nothing; without Christ as the life-giving Spirit, we are nothing—cf. Gal. 6:3.
2. To be poor in spirit is to be emptied in our spirit, having nothing preoccupy-ing us in the depth of our being; to be pure in heart is a matter of motive; it is to be single in purpose, to have the single goal of accomplishing God's will for God's glory—1 Cor. 10:31.
C. We must have a steadfast spirit—Psa. 51:10b:
1. A steadfast spirit is a spirit that is immovable, unshakable, standing con-stantly as something firm and steady—cf. 1 Cor. 15:58.
2. In his repentance and prayer for restoration, David prayed that the Lord would renew such a spirit within him.
3. We need a steadfast spirit, which is always firm, constant, immovable, and unshakable, so that we can never be tempted, seduced, or misled.
D. A repentant believer has a willing spirit—"Restore to me the gladness of Your salvation, / And sustain me with a willing spirit"—Psa. 51:12:
1. As a believer, we should always have a willing spirit for the things of the Lord and for the things of the church.
2. A willing spirit in the things of the Lord's interest depends upon the joy of salvation; when we have the joy of salvation, we spontaneously will have a willing spirit to go along with the Lord; what the Lord wants, what the Lord desires, what the Lord asks of us, we will have a willing spirit to answer, to obey.
3. When we have joy in God's Spirit, we will be happy to do whatever can please the Lord—Rom. 14:17.
E. In Psalm 51:17a David said that the sacrifices of God are a broken spirit:
1. A broken spirit is a spirit that repents, that feels very sorrowful for any sinfulness; in other words, a broken spirit is a real repenting spirit.
2. To be broken means not to be whole; it means that you do not consider yourself as being whole, perfect, and complete; when your spirit is repent-ing, your spirit is broken, contrite, and sorrowful.
F. We need to have a meek and quiet spirit:
1. First Peter 3:4 says that the hidden man of our heart is a meek and quiet spirit; Galatians 6:1 says that we need to restore a fallen brother in a spirit of meekness; in 1 Corinthians 4:21 Paul asked the Corinthians if they wanted him to come to them with a rod or in a spirit of meekness.
2. "Blessed are the meek, for they shall inherit the earth"—Matt. 5:5:
a. To be meek means not to resist the world's opposition but to suffer it willingly; the world's way is to fight, to strive, and to defeat others to gain some possession, some inheritance.
b. Regardless of the situation, we should be meek, not fighting against others; meekness means not fighting for ourselves.
G. God desires to dwell with people who have a contrite and lowly spirit—Isa. 57:15; 66:2; cf. Prov. 16:18-19:
1. If we are contrite and lowly in our spirit, we are broken in our spirit, and we can enjoy God's presence; God is then with us and even dwells with us.
2. "Thus says the high and exalted One, / Who inhabits eternity, whose name is Holy: / I will dwell in the high and holy place, / And with the contrite and lowly of spirit, / To revive the spirit of the lowly / And to revive the heart of the contrite"—Isa. 57:15.
3. "Thus says Jehovah, / Heaven is My throne, / And the earth the footstool for My feet. / Where then is the house that you will build for Me, / And where is the place of My rest? / For all these things My hand has made, / And so all these things have come into being, declares Jehovah. / But to this kind of man will I look, to him who is poor / And of a contrite spirit, and who trembles at My word"—66:1-2.
4. The dwelling place that God desires to have is a group of people into whom He can enter, a group of people with a contrite and lowly spirit:
a. God intends to have a dwelling place in the universe that is the mingling of God and man, in which God is built into man and man is built into God, so that God and man, man and God, can be a mutual abode to each other (John 14:2, 20, 23; 15:4; 1 John 4:13); in the New Testament this dwelling place, this house, is the church, which is God's habitation in the believers' spirit (Eph. 2:22).
b. The ultimate manifestation of this universal building, this universal house, is the New Jerusalem; in this city God is in man, taking man as His dwelling place, and man is in God, taking God as his habitation— Rev. 21:3, 22.