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John's Creation (17) In the previous article (Tidings, 5/2002) we posed the question:
It does indeed seem, at surface consideration, unlikely that the creation sequence would provide exhortation to the disciple, yet, once translated into its spiritual components, there is a clear developmental guide present for the individual believer. Observe the spiritual creation model, shown in Table 1, and consider how the believer is best advised to follow the steps in sequence. (Justifications establishing the spiritual equivalents themselves have been formulated in the preceding articles and are not repeated here.)
Table 1: The natural components of the creation sequence listed alongside their spiritual equivalents.
Disciple’s Day 1: Understanding
Disciple’s Day 2:
Baptism It is instructive that baptism is stage two in a creative series of six: i.e. very early on in the sequence. All too often baptism is seen as an “end”: a state of achievement in discipleship. The creation pattern demonstrates that the majority of the disciple’s work (four days of six) lies beyond this point; thus it is advisable for the disciple to consider that baptism should not be overly delayed. It is best that we remember our Creator, and what He has done for us, in the days of our youth (Eccl. 12:1); and that remembrance be shown in the positive response of baptism, since there is so very much to be done in His service beyond this point.
Disciple’s Day 3:
Communion Secondly, communion’s appearance on Day 3 demonstrates fellowship only exists between those who have seen the light and passed through the waters of baptism. We do not ourselves determine with whom we have communion. We might like to expand our community to include any we consider a ‘nice’ or ‘Christian’ person; or we might like to reduce our community to those baptised of whom we personally approve. Yet this is not a matter determined at our discretion: communion (Day 3) can only exist – and conversely must always exist – between all those and only those who have walked the path through illumination and baptism.
End of the first
cycle
Disciple’s Day 4:
Responsibility Partly this is because it is a calling contrary to all the philosophies of this present world that influence us daily, that invite us to focus upon ourselves, meditate within ourselves, study ourselves, challenge ourselves, better ourselves and endlessly absorb ourselves within ourselves. From the puerile ‘20-question’ test of the popular magazine to the furthest depths of modern philosophy, the object of all these exercises is inevitably the same: to attend oneself – and that is the secret of popular appeal, for man has always been, and remains to this day, self-fascinated. But the message of the true God, the One God, invites and commands the disciple to set self-focus aside and focus upon, deduce, and respond in loving service towards, the needs of others. Failures in this department can exist on the scale of a church, as well as the individual. Often the church recognises the importance of preaching, and non-members feel highly valued with attention. Upon joining the church in baptism those same individuals can sadly be wholly passed over, no longer holding the high status of a ‘targeted acquisition.’ Conversely new members may be immediately pressured into working toward the various efforts of the church itself. While new members of the body of Christ do indeed need to recognise that they have undertaken a life in service to others, not themselves, it is also a certainty that the existing ‘older’ members of that church have every responsibility in allowing and enabling new members to effect that transition for themselves, while providing the caring support of a loving family throughout. For all of us, the execution of service to the needs of our brethren will populate the heaven we established with our understanding of the Gospel. These will be, indeed must be, the sun, moon and stars that govern our night and day.
Disciple’s
Day 5: Death The death itself is an absolute rejection of one’s nature, a realisation that, contrary to all human philosophy, we are not ‘good’ after all and those who would see ‘good’ prevail must ultimately suffer, and applaud, destruction of the human spirit. Paul’s impassioned cry: “O wretched man that I am! Who will deliver me from this body of death?” (Rom. 7:24 RSV) shows true discernment of this thought, and is a far deeper cry from the heart than can be appreciated by cursory reading. It is significant that this writing is not from a new convert; the letter to the Romans is one of Paul’s last writings (exact dating varies between AD 56-59, but all agree the letter was written during his last missionary journey). For those in Western civilization, this is a particularly hard development because it requires an emotional response to the call of Christ. Western civilisation is currently steeped in the worship of the brain, being happily drawn toward, even worshipping, anything with the scent of intellectualism. Intellectualism can pose a dangerous spirit in the disciple’s life, and over-focus thereon will stunt the growth of the necessary humility and devotion of the heart toward his Maker. Discipleship requires the abandonment of the reliance upon all the tools of man to solve his own manifold problems: for spiritual locks will not be turned with natural keys. One cannot be reborn with the Spirit in one’s heart until it is cleared of self-reliance, so that the regenerate may truly “Abba” “Father” cry (Rom. 8:15).
Disciple’s
Day 6: Rulership Once again the order of days is essential: Day 6 can only follow Day 5. The disciple can only rule in the spiritual community if he has truly “died” to Christ, a condition easier to recognise than to describe. The disciple who has undergone the elevation of baptism, but not the later counterpart of death in the humbling waters beneath, is not well equipped to rule in God’s house.
Disciple’s Day 7: Perfection …
It is a futile, even misleading, exercise to attempt to predict the form of the plant from the physical characteristics of the seed. One could never look at an acorn, for example, and deduce the form (or the size!) of the oak tree that would subsequently appear! The acorn does not bear the slightest resemblance to the tree in either its size, constituents or complexity. Similarly, we regard only acorns (our mortal selves, with our finite, human minds), and God has promised that from the acorns that faithfully die in the soil of His love and goodness, some new thing will grow. But we can no more hope to deduce or extrapolate what form that final joy will take than we could deduce the size and shape of an oak tree from seeing only the acorn.
…and
beyond Finally, the ultimate completion: God is all, and in all. We shall not pretend to have an explicit understanding of what that means but we shall look toward it in all hope and joyful expectation! What more need we say? May God be praised in all those good things He has planned for us. John Pople |
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