TRANSFORMED INTO HIS LIKENESS WITH EVER-INCREASING GLORY
2 Corinthians 3:17&18 "Now the Lord is the Spirit, and where the Spirit of
the Lord is, there is freedom. And we, who with unveiled faces all reflect
the Lord's glory, are being transformed into his likeness with
ever-increasing glory, which comes from the Lord, who is the Spirit."
There's no human being on the planet who doesn't wish to change, or who
does not need to be changed. Men are not what their consciences are telling
them they should be. Christians discover that that longing has been
intensified, focused and energised. "Take my life, and let it be
consecrated Lord, to Thee," we often sing. We want our whole lives to
change and that, in part, is why we go to our church - to change. We don't
go to have our prejudices rearranged and confirmed. Many of us have been
drastically changed by Jesus Christ. Our understanding of ourselves, our
purpose in life, our knowledge of God is all very different from views we
once held. Every time we come to church we want to go on changing for the
better, making at least some baby steps, and, once in a while, as the Lord
blesses, we feel we have made a leap forward. But whatever happens we don't
want to stagnate. The goal is to beautiful to fall short of.
The passage above is about Christian transformation. It is saying that
there is no need for things to go on in your life as they have been.
Christians too can change, and this passage brings to us the hope of an
effectual metamorphosis, how you may become a mature, courageous, patient
and resourceful person. Not you alone but together with a vast company of
men and women - like the sands on the shores in number. A whole new
constituency is envisaged, people who have their own unique personalities
and have known their own combination of problems, who are now passing
through a range of experiences, each one of them, as the elect of God, in
the process of being divinely changed. There is, for example, an old woman
in Nepal, a student in China, a fisherman in Scotland, an African farmer,
an Australian Aborigine, and God is at this very moment in time
transforming them without destroying their own unique identity, and there
are millions like them. God alone can supervise such a mighty enterprise,
and God will bring all his divine resources to achieve it. Your
transformation as a Christian must happen because God has made up his mind.
Paul sets human change in the context of the living God, the Father, the
Son and the Holy Spirit. God is the agent of this work, and for true change
you need some understanding of the glorious living God. Consider those
breathtaking epistles of Paul, how obsessed with God he is. He piles one
doctrine and one conclusion on top of another, stringing them together with
his mighty 'therefores.' When he does that he incidentally becomes more and
more human. When you read or listen to them you are being fully human. It
is when you ignore them, and hold no New Testament teaching then you sink
down to the level of a slug or a dandelion. Trees have no doctrines.
Turnips have no catechisms. Stick insects have no dogma. Only real human
beings can know God and are transformed by God.
So Paul's pattern is to bring before the church enormously profound
teaching about God for what might seem to us to be very trivial purposes,
for two women to be of one mind, for a congregation to become more
generous, for a husband to love his wife in a worthier manner, that we all
might become gentle, forgiving, patient, pure and sweet-natured people. Yet
how difficult the attainment of such goals are. An educationalist who could
devise the way of achieving this would win the Nobel Prize. Think of Aldous
Huxley that brilliant novelist - remember how the title of his novel,
"Brave New World" slips into our speech every time the possibility is
raised of cloning people or politicians controlling society. Huxley wanted
the world to be a better place and was continually depressed at what he saw
in his chosen religion-less culture. At the end of his life he said, "It is
a bit embarrassing to have been concerned with the human problem all one's
life and that at the end one has no more to offer by way of advice that
'Try to be a little kinder.'" The world would certainly be a better place
if people were a little kinder, but how do you change people for the better
while preserving their own dignity and personhood?
The apostle does so by referring us to the acts of the living God. In other
words, he believes that if a man wants to become a better father it would
really help if he knew about the God the Father, and to be a better son to
know about God the Son, and to be a better husband to know about the dying
love of the Lord Jesus. All Christian truth must be "unto godliness." So
let us learn some extraordinary truth about God.
1. The Lord is the Spirit. (v.17).
Now we are a Trinitarian church, and this is certainly a Trinitarian
pulpit. We believe that there are three persons in the godhead. The Father
is God. The Son is God. The Holy Spirit is God. These three persons are one
God. This is the nature of the only God there is. We have no experience of
such a being in all creation about us. Everything else is one and only one.
But God is three persons and yet one God. When Paul writes here about the
Lord who is the Spirit, some believe he is talking about Jehovah, Moses'
Lord. Others believe that he is referring to the Lord Christ because Paul
speaks of him in verse 14 saying that in Christ the veil is removed, and
that Christ is the Lord being referred to here is our own view.
There is the Son of God and there is the Holy Spirit. They are both equally
God. From eternity they have been together. They never began to be, and
they always knew the most perfect fellowship and sharing. They had no
secrets from one another, and no tensions of any kind. They had the same
desires and the same purpose exactly. There is not a milligram of
difference between them. They have matchless affection for one another,
infinitely and eternally. The Son could say to the Spirit, "I love you,"
and the Spirit could say to the Son, "And I love you." Both of them loved
the Father and he reciprocated. The Son and the Spirit are not seated on
two lesser thrones at each side of the Father: there is one throne, and all
three are on the same level. The Son and Spirit fully share the Father's
glory. They all have the same attributes and perfections of God. They all
have the same functions of God such as creation, life-giving,
life-enhancing and of judgment. Both the Son and the Spirit have all the
rights and prerogatives and entitlements of God. They are all to be
worshipped as God. We sing our praises to Son and to Spirit and ask for
their presence and their blessing on our lives. The Lord and the Spirit are
equal with God. Are we all clear in our grasp of that?
Then we must go a step further and say that they are different persons, the
Son and the Spirit. One can face the other and say, "You." One can send the
other, and give certain things to the other, so although the Son and the
Spirit are equal yet they are distinct persons. Let us picture it like
this, that the Father and the Spirit, as it were, accompanied the Son to
the door of heaven and they waved goodbye to him as he came to this world
and entered the womb of Mary. The Spirit did not become incarnate. Only the
Son. The Spirit was not humbled to death even the death of the cross. It
was the Son who was crucified. The Son and the Spirit are equal but they
are distinct persons. At the Lord Jesus' baptism only the Son was baptised,
only the Father said, "This is my beloved Son in whom I am well pleased,"
and only the Spirit descended like a dove lighting on the Son.
Yet the Son and the Spirit are in total continuity. Think of the great
discourses in John's gospel where Jesus is talking of the Spirit. We learn
of their total unity. Jesus was sent by the Father: the Spirit is sent by
the Father. Jesus is the truth: the Spirit is the Spirit of Truth. Jesus is
the teacher of the disciples: the Spirit is the further teacher of the
disciples. Jesus is the witness God sent: the Spirit is sent by the Father
to bear witness. The world does not know or accept Jesus: the world does
not recognise the Spirit. So, Son and Spirit are absolutely one.
The Son and the Spirit are equally God. They are distinct persons. At the
same time they are the same in their substance. One in their being;
different in their persons. The living God is so different an order of
being from anything in his creation. Now before you say that this is over
your head you ask yourself very carefully what is it you do not understand,
because we understand that they are distinct persons so that one can love
the other - the Son loves the Spirit - there is no reason why you shouldn't
understand that, is there? And yet God is one God. There is only one God.
The Son and the Spirit and the Father are one being. You understand that?
What is it, then, that we do not understand? It is this: how is it that
they can be distinct and yet be the same? You are thinking that you are in
deep waters here, that the minister and his assistant and the elders
understand it but you don't. No. All of us understand that the Son and the
Spirit are distinct persons and all of us also understand that they are one
being. Nobody in the world has ever comprehended how the three distinct
persons can be one being.
I don't want any one of us to feel that her mental energies are in an
unusual way being over-taxed, because you older folk who left school at 14
years of age have the same capacity to understand what I am saying as those
who are completing their Ph.D.'s. The great thing to take into our minds is
this, that the Son and the Spirit are equal, and they are distinct persons,
and they are not two gods but one God. Those are the general lessons. They
are all that anybody knows about the unique mode of being peculiar to
Almighty God.
Then, in our text, we have this remarkable phrase, "Now the Lord is the
Spirit" (v.17). But the Lord Jesus alone is the Son of God. The Spirit is
not the Son. In what way is the Lord the Spirit? It cannot mean that the
second person of the godhead is the third person of the godhead. They are
and always will be two distinct persons. The phrase certainly means what
F.F.Bruce says, that "the Lord means the Spirit," but we can go a little
further than that. Certainly the Son and the Spirit are absolutely one in
the covenant of redemption. They love the same people, and save the same
people, and sanctify the same people, and intercede for the same people,
and will glorify the same people. What the Holy Spirit does is exactly what
the Lord does. The Lord does not do half the job, lay the foundation as it
were, and then the Spirit carries on from there. The Spirit's work is not
an additional or special work beyond the Lord. What the Holy Spirit does is
the Lord at work. The Son and Spirit have one name, don't they? Believers
are baptized into the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Ghost.
One name for all three persons.
We can go further yet and we can say now that the Messiah has ascended and
is seated at the Father's right hand the Holy Spirit has become entirely
the beloved possession of Christ, the bride of Christ, as it were, absorbed
into Christ, assimilated by Christ. The Lord can will the Spirit to do all
he wants him to do. He can send him forth to regenerate and make alive
these particular sinners, and sanctify others, and give strength and
comfort to yet others. The Lord can be looking at this congregation now
(and thousands like it) and he can tell the Spirit to uphold that believer,
and return to another his first love, and to instruct the people, and to
assist the preacher. Then there are unforgettable occasions when he will
pour out the Spirit on a great gathering of people, as he did in Jerusalem
at the feast of Pentecost, and three thousand are added to his kingdom.
Such outpourings, though not of that same magnitude so that three thousand
are converted under a single sermon, have occurred in the great awakenings
and revivals that have occurred throughout history. Under some particularly
blessed ministries like that of Charles Haddon Spurgeon in the Metropolitan
Tabernacle in London in the 19th century the Spirit continually came and
freed men and women from sin for thirty years. By Christ's resurrection and
ascension he, the last Adam, has become the life-giving Spirit. We are
saying that Son and Spirit are totally absorbed in one another in what they
are and in what they do. In the book of Revelation we are told that Christ
possesses the seven Spirits, that is, the Spirit in all his fulness.
So since the humiliation and exaltation of God the Son the Holy Spirit has
been shaped by the life and the ministry of the ascended God-man, Jehovah
Jesus, and the Spirit has become the Messianic Spirit. The fact that there
is a man in glory has affected all of the godhead. The omniscient Spirit
has learned through Christ the compassion of the man who once was forsaken
by the Spirit on Golgotha. The Spirit is full of Jesus Christ, and the Lord
Jesus is full of the Spirit. So the Lord comes to us in this meeting, and
we turn to him, and we experience him as the Spirit, and yet he shapes us
to be like Christ. So, the Lord is the Spirit. You cannot distinguish
between your experience of them. No one can confidently say, "This was an
experience of the Spirit not an experience of Jesus." No one can say, "This
was an experience of the Son, not an experience of the Spirit," because the
Lord is the Spirit. Every genuine experience of the Holy Spirit leads us to
confess that Jesus is Lord to the glory of the Father. In other words,
every true Christian experience is Trinitarian.
So, the life that Christ has given us is not meagre life. It is the life of
the Spirit. It does not need supplementation. It does not require an added
initiative from the Spirit that the Son failed to provide when he has come
in saving power to be your Lord. To be indwelt by the Son is to be indwelt
by the Spirit also, because the Lord is the Spirit. The Holy Spirit does
not come into our lives independently of Christ coming. He comes in Christ.
He only comes in Christ. "Having believed, you were marked in him with a
seal, the promised Holy Spirit" (Ephs. 1:13).
2. The Lord gives us Freedom by his Spirit.
"Where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is freedom" (v.17). We might expect
him to say that where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is love, or there is
truth, or there is unity. But he chooses this grace of freedom because this
is his theme in this section of the letter, the bondage of everyone who
lived under the old Mosaic covenant. The first mark of the Spirit's
presence is freedom, and then comes love and unity. Now one could say that
Paul is speaking about a geographical location. There is a place where the
Spirit of the Lord is. Of course, God the Spirit is everywhere: "Where can
I go from your Spirit? Where can I flee from your presence?" cries the
psalmist (Ps. 139:7). God is omnipresent. But that is not what the psalmist
is talking about. He knows that this keeping, sanctifying, yearning, loving
Spirit will never let him go should the psalmist try, at a time of sinful
abandon, to flee from him. "If I became a prodigal son and settled on the
far side of the sea the first person I'd meet when I got there would be the
Holy Spirit." Jonah could not escape from God by taking a boat to
Tarshish. God met him in a storm. Yes, God is everywhere, but God is
present in grace and blessing in certain places, in the heart of the
believer, and where two or three are gathered in his name, and in the means
of grace, in the gospel offer and in heaven. That is what Paul is talking
about here. We sing the hymn of John Fawcett:
Thy presence, gracious God, afford:
Prepare us to receive Thy word:
Now let Thy voice engage our ear,
And faith be mixed with what we hear.
Thus, Lord, Thy waiting servants bless,
And crown the gospel with success.
We long for the Spirit of God to come to us as we gather in the Lord's
name. Where the Spirit of the Lord is, there the captive leaps to lose his
chains. It is an absolutely basic New Testament assertion. Paul opens the
fifth chapter of his letter to the Galatians with the same ringing
declaration, "It is for freedom that Christ has set us free" (Gals 5:1). We
don't have to plead with God, "Give me liberty or I die!" God has made
every single Christian freedom. This is the birthright of every single
Christian. Wherever the saving Spirit of Christ is found there is freedom.
Now, it is true that not every Christian understands or realises that he is
free. When the American slaves were granted freedom they had to be told
clearly and forcefully about this reality. They had been slaves for so long
that their biggest problem was an on-going slave mentality. "Yes, you are
free," they had to be told until they grasped it for themselves. The New
Testament letters are telling Christians constantly of the privileges that
are theirs which they are not enjoying because they are ignorant of them.
"You are justified - declared righteous in Christ by God," they are told.
"You are adopted into the family of God. He is your father," they are told.
"You are joined to Christ - in him," they are told. All the privileges and
the implications for their lives are being opened up.
If you are a Christian, that is, if you are made alive and indwelt by the
Spirit of God, you are a free person. What does that mean? Paul is speaking
about the Mosaic covenant, as "the ministry that brought death" he
describes it (v.7), and "the ministry that condemns men" (v.9). He look at
his fellow Jews, his kinsmen according to the flesh, and he pitied them. If
they were conscientious they were off to Jerusalem three times a year. They
would use their time there to make sacrifices for their sins. It was the
only place where there was an altar. So they accumulated guilt until they
could get to the temple and buy the animal for sacrifice. Then there was
circumcision and there were the food laws. Then there were the ten
commandments and they made them aware how their moral failures brought
God's judgment upon them. They were total failures, and the next visit to
the temple was the only place of confession of sin where sacrifice could be
offered. But it never ended, that pattern of new sin and guilt and new
sacrifices. Paul did not look at their religion and say, "Wonderful sincere
religious people." He said that they were slaves. Wales has been looking,
at the beginning of 2001, at 50 million people in India thinking that if
they had washed themselves in the river Ganges at such times in a stellar
calendar their personal guilt could be washed away. Slaves to a false
religion. These are people living under a ministry of condemnation, and the
Jews I've described were living the best kind of religious life, the most
conscientious old covenant Christians, longing for the Messiah to come,
waiting for the redemption of Israel, but were also slaves. Many others of
Paul's fellow Jews were totally secularised or hellenized. They had
jettisoned all their religion, but that had given them no more freedom to
love and serve God and man.
Then the Messiah comes and established a new covenant by his life and
death. What freedom he provides:
i] from all the ceremonials of the old covenant, from the sacrifices of
animals, and earthly priests, and the food laws, and the trips to
Jerusalem, and the sabbatical structure of seven years, and the fifty years
Jubilee, and circumcision. All that those symbols had once represented he
has, all by himself, fulfilled. That bondage has come to an end. You are
free from all of that. Now we may boldly go to God immediately through his
Son Jesus Christ and cry, "Abba Father!"
ii] from the condemnation of the broken law we have been freed. Golgotha's
cross is the place where the Son of God bore all our condemnation. There is
absolutely none left. No anger and no wrath. So fear and unbelief are
banished from our minds. As Toplady asks,
From whence this fear and unbelief?
Hath not the Father put to grief
His spotless Son for me?
And will the righteous Judge of men
Condemn me for that debt of sin
Which, Lord, was charged on Thee?
No! God will not. He cannot condemn guilt which has once and for all been
dealt with totally by Christ. "Payment God cannot twice demand, First at my
bleeding Surety's hand, and then again at mine." The Christian is free from
condemnation. Look to Christ for this. Let me give you four words of
exhortation, originally given by William Jay of Bath:-
1. Don't look for something in the law which can only be found in the
gospel.
2. Don't look in yourself for what can only be found in Christ.
3. Don't look in your fellow creatures for what is only to be found in the
Creator.
4. Don't look on earth for what is to be found in heaven.
iii] from the lordship of sin we have been freed. Once sin had dominion
over us. It told us to ignore God, and live without Christ, and think
nothing of the Bible, and forget about death - and we obeyed sin. "Yes,
sir," we said. We were slaves of sin. But when Christ came by his Spirit
into our lives he snapped the chains that bound us to our old master, and
he set up his throne in our hearts. When sin told us not to pray we
refused, "No. I shall pray." When sin told us to forget about ever going to
church, we disdained sin, "No. I am going to church every Sunday." We bowed
the knee to the King of Kings. When the Lord Jesus said, "Follow me, love
your enemies, forgive seventy times seven," we bowed the knee to him. The
Spirit of Christ gave us strength to freely serve our wonderful Master. So
the righteous demands of the law are freely fulfilled by us, who are "not
being without law toward God but under the law of Christ" (I Cor. 9:21
RSV). The Christian is a free man who bows the knee to Christ. He does not
sing, "We shall overcome some day." Christ's revolution against the god of
this world has been totally successful. A new kingdom of grace has been
established on this planet, and all its citizens have overcome the bondage
of sin in King Jesus.
William Sloan was a Christian fisherman and preacher in the Faroe Islands
north of Scotland who died in 1914. One day he was rowing out in his boat
in Torshvn harbour to visit the sailors on a large ship. He was a ship
visitor for Christ. He was rowing past a new boat and he noticed its name.
It was called the "Unbendable" (in the Danish language), and as he was
rowing under the shadow of the ship he muttered that word to himself,
"Unbendable? Unbendable?" Then, out loud, he said, "Unbendable? But one day
every knee will bend to Jesus and every tongue will confess he is Lord."
There was a man who had come on deck that moment to empty a kettle over the
side, and he heard those words and they deeply convicted him, and he bowed
the knee to the Lord. "I heard these words one day," he would say, "that at
the name of Jesus every knee should bow, in heaven and on earth and under
the earth, and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory
of God the Father." The Spirit of Christ used his word to free that sailor.
Where the Spirit of the Lord is - it may be on the deck of a ship - there
is freedom.
3. The Lord Transforms us into his Likeness.
"And we, who with unveiled faces all reflect the Lord's glory, are being
transformed into his likeness with ever-increasing glory, which comes from
the Lord who is the Spirit" (v.18)
This is a wonderfully encouraging verse. "We," says the apostle to the
whole Corinthian church with all its tensions and hang-ups. He stands in
solidarity with them. "We ... are being transformed." But to make the case
absolutely clear he says, "We ... all ... are being transformed into his
likeness with ever-increasing glory." Make no exceptions where God makes
none. The weakest and the newest Christian here today is experiencing
ever-increasing transformation. Under the Mosaic covenant just one man was
outwardly transformed, but under the new covenant that blessing is the
possession of all.
What exactly is happening? This translation says that we all "reflect" the
Lord's glory, but another way of translating it is to say that we "behold"
the Lord's glory - the footnote in my version is offering that translation
when it suggests "contemplate." But again the word is often used for
looking at your reflection in a mirror, and so the King James translation
says that we are all "with open face beholding in a glass the glory of the
Lord." It is suggesting correctly that we have to wait to heaven to gaze
directly on the Lord's glory, but here on earth we contemplate a
manifestation of his glory in the inadequate reflection of polished brass.
Many scholars do think that the best translation is to 'behold' rather than
to reflect, and that is my conviction. What is happening is that all of us
to a greater or lesser extent bring into our lives some contemplation of
the Lord's glory.
This is the means of our being transformed. We are overwhelmed as we
consider our glorious Lord. We are in a living and loving relationship with
this exalted Christ, and the affect of that is that we are
steadily being transformed into his likeness. This consideration of him is
something experiential and existential - "with unveiled faces beholding our
glorious Lord." This cannot be something only at the level of the mind, of
the theological, or even the ethical. Surely this has to do with
spirituality, with devotion and ardour and adoration - if such words have
any meaning at all! The apostle is not looking back to the road to
Damascus. This transformation is not because of a historical incident in
his own personal story which no one else could possibly share, but this is
something that every single Christian experiences. So Paul is not looking
back. This is not past conversion. He is looking up. He is "looking unto
Jesus" - in the words of the letter to the Hebrews (12:1&2). He is not
remembering something here. He is concentrating as clearly as he can on the
Lord, who is no longer the man of sorrows but the Spirit. He will have
nothing coming between himself and Christ. If it is merely, as it were, a
veil on his face he will strip it away so that he can look unto Jesus with
an unveiled face.
Now you will acknowledge, I know, that there is a beauty in the pages of
the New Testament that displays to us the glorious loveliness of Jesus. As
we study this Book that it has a blessed sanctifying influence on our
lives. Sometimes when we read it we are broken by its power and
tremendously moved. Sometimes when we hear it preached we are deeply
affected by it. There is no doubt that we need fresh creative
history-of-redemption puritan preachers who can make the Saviour we find in
the gospels live again, so that our souls are stirred and our affection set
on things above as we meet him in the preached word. May God raise up such
ministers and bless his infallible word. We can be deeply moved by a new
sight of the glory of Christ, and numbers attest to this. In an interview
with John Stott he acknowledges, "God has given me in his goodness some
profound spiritual experiences both when I've been alone and even more in
public worship, when tears have come to my eyes, when I've perceived
something of his glory. I can remember on one particular occasion when we
were singing, 'At the name of Jesus every knee shall bow.' I did really
break down, because I saw the supreme exaltation of Jesus to the right hand
of the Father. I have had other profound experiences which have moved me to
the core of my being."
There was an enriching experience of the glory of God which Sarah, the wife
of Jonathan Edwards, once passed through. She once recorded in her diary,
"Thursday night, Jan. 28, was the sweetest night I ever had in my life. I
never before, for so long a time together, enjoyed so much of the light,
and 'est, and sweetness of heaven in my soul....All night I continued in a
constant, clear, and lively sense of the heavenly sweetness of Christ's
excellent and transcendent love, of his nearness to me, and of my nearness
to Him; with an inexpressibly sweet calmness of soul and an entire rest in
him. I seemed to myself to perceive a glow of divine love come down from
the heart of Christ in heaven, into my heart, in a constant stream, like a
stream or pencil of sweet light. At the same me, my heart and soul all
flowed out in love Christ; so that there seemed to be a constant flowing
and reflowing of heavenly and divine love, from Christ's heart to mine...."
"This lively sense of the beauty and excellency of divine things continued
during the morning, accompanied with peculiar sweetness and delight.... The
spiritual beauty of the Father and the Saviour, seemed to engross my whole
mind. .. I never felt such an emptiness of self-love, or any regard to any
private, selfish interest of my own. . . . The glory of God seemed to be
all, and in all, and to swallow up every... desire of my heart."
Or consider that incident recorded in the life of John Flavel, the puritan
preacher of Dartmouth who died in 1691. He tells us he was walking
somewhere one day when, "his thoughts began to swell and rise higher and
higher like the waters of Ezekiel's vision, till at last they became an
overwhelming flood. Such was the intention of his mind, such the ravishing
tastes of heavenly joys, and such the full assurance of his interest
therein, that he utterly lost all sight and sense of the world and all the
concerns thereof, and for some hours he knew no more where he was than it
had been in a deep sleep upon his bed. Arriving in great exhaustion at a
certain spring he sat down and washed, earnestly desiring that if it was
God's pleasure that this might be his parting-place from the world. Death
had the most amiable face in his eyes that ever he beheld, except the face
of Jesus Christ which made it so, and he does not remember though he
believed himself dying, that he ever thought of his dear wife and children
or any other earthly concernment. On reaching his inn the influence still
continued, banishing sleep, still the joy of the Lord overflowed him and he
seemed to be an inhabitant of the other world. He many years after called
that day one of the days of heaven, and professed that he understood more
of the life of heaven by it than by all the books he ever read."
But it is not only preachers, or their wives who can speak of experiences
like this. Alvin Plantinga is a member of the Christian Reformed Church in
America and also one of the world's leading philosophers. He's been
president of the American Philosophical Association. He's taught at Yale,
Harvard, Chicago, Calvin, Notre Dame, and elsewhere. His powers of logic
are staggering. Dr. Plantinga tells how as a young man, he left home and
went off to Harvard University.
He says, "I was struck by the enormous variety of spiritual and
intellectual opinion at Harvard, and spent a great deal of time arguing
about whether there was such a person as God... I began to wonder whether
what I had always believed could really be true. At Harvard, after all,
there was such an enormous diversity of opinions about these matters, some
of them held by highly intelligent and accomplished people who had little
but contempt for what I believed."
But it was there on the campus at Harvard that something happened.
Plantinga writes, "One gloomy evening I was returning from dinner. It was
dark, windy raining, nasty. But suddenly it was as if the heavens opened; I
heard, so it seemed, music of overwhelming power and grandeur and
sweetness; there was light of unimaginable splendour and beauty; it seemed
I could see into heaven itself; and I suddenly saw or perhaps felt with
great clarity and persuasion and conviction that the Lord was really there
and was all I had thought. The effects of this experience lingered for a
long time; I was still caught up in arguments about the existence of God,
but they often seemed to me merely academic, of little existential
concern."
Plantinga goes on to say "Such events have not been common subsequently and
there has been only one other occasion on which I felt the presence of God
with as much immediacy and strength. That was when I foolishly went hiking
alone off-trail in really rugged country getting lost when rain, snow and
fog obscured all the peaks and landmarks. That night, while shivering under
a stunted tree in a cold mixture of snow and rain, I felt as close to God
as I ever have before or since. I wasn't clear as to his intentions for me
and I wasn't sure I thought I approved of what his intentions might be (the
statistics on people lost alone in that area were not at all encouraging),
but I felt very close to him; his presence was enormously palpable."
You may not have had such astounding experiences at all. That doesn't mean
that there is something wrong with you. The Spirit of God moves in many
different ways. The Spirit does not give to all the same kind of
experience. But every Christian needs to be looking unto the same Lord, the
same Word of God, and the same Saviour, and to be longing for this
ever-increasing glory. You and I need faith in the Lord not faith in
experiences. God is real. The Bible is true. Jesus lives. His Spirit is at
work whether or not we have that overwhelming, almost tangible sense of
God's nearness that John Stott, John Flavel, Sarah Edwards and Alvin
Plantinga once had. Thank God for every baby step. What would Joni
Eareckson Tada give to be able to make a baby step?
Irwin Shaw wrote a short story called The Eighty-Yard Run. As a college
freshman, at his first football practice, he broke loose for an 80-yard
touchdown run. His team-mates looked at him with awe. His coach said,
"You're going to have quite a future around here." His girlfriend hugged
him excitedly after the practice. Life was going to be completely
satisfying and rewarding.
But what was his future? His football experience was disappointing. His
marriage sours. The pain of failure is even greater because he remembers
thinking on that 'perfect day' many years before that life would always be
that way. But life doesn't stand still. There isn't a once-for-all
experience. Winston Churchill once said, "Success is never final. Failure
is never fatal.
It is courage that counts."
There are going to be bad days. Every month there is not a preacher who
doesn't fall on his face and groan over a sermon. It is one of the means
God uses to remind him of his weakness. Those public failures - letting
down a congregation of people who love him - aren't endings. They are
avenues to beholding the glory of the God-man more widely and more deeply.
It is in the contemplation of the Lord Jesus Christ that transforming grace
is given. In other words I am saying that Paul did what his Master told him
to do; "Go into your room, close the door and pray to your Father, who is
unseen. Then your Father, who sees what is done in secret, will reward you"
(Matt.6:6). The great reward you ask from God is to see more and more of
the glories of Christ, and you plead this promise, "how much more will your
Father in heaven give the Holy Spirit to those who ask him" (Luke 11:13).
Think of the longing in Horatius Bonar's lines:
More of Thyself, O show me hour by hour,
More of Thy glory, O my God and Lord;
More of Thyself, in all Thy grace and power;
More of Thy love and truth, incarnate Word.
Paul centred his thoughts and affections on the heavenlies. It was there
that the Lord who is the Spirit lives and reigns, and where he is
accessible to every one of his people. From there he sends forth the Spirit
which changes sinners into his glorious likeness. As we behold him we are
gradually transformed into the same image, even as by the Lord the Spirit.
But the transformation does not come by the length of time you spend in
communion with God. I am not crying at you, "Pray another three hours! Get
thee to a nunnery!" Neither does it depend on the vividness with which we
remember the incidents in the life and the teaching of the Lord, or as we
remember the great visitations of God in the past to his congregations or
to individuals. Transformation comes directly from the Lord, who is the
Spirit. It is only by the present power of Christ that the ever increasing
glory is known. You think of the opening words of the 91st Psalm, "He who
dwells in the shelter of the Most High will rest in the shadow of the
Almighty." It is evident that the psalmist is speaking there of drawing
very close to God, and remaining there in the sheltering protection of
Jehovah, and then finding himself even closer, resting in the very shadow
of the Almighty.
Think again of the apostle Paul praying for the whole Ephesian congregation
and asking this: "I pray that you, being rooted and established in love,
may have power, together with all his saints, to grasp how wide and long
and high and deep is the love of Christ, and to know this love that
surpasses knowledge - that you may be filled to the measure of all the
fullness of God" (Ephs.3:18:19). Surely he is not talking about memorising
the gospels, or theological knowledge - important as these things are. He
is talking about experiential knowledge of Christ's love and being
overwhelmed by it - it is too high for him to see the top. It reaches up
and up and up. The first-born seraph tries in vain to sound its depth. It
is too deep. Its breadth is as far as the east is from the west. How
extraordinary is the love of God, and we need power to grasp more of it.
Count Zinzendorf said, "I have one passion: it is He and He alone."
A man once came to someone who was the very greatest preacher I ever heard.
It was after the evening service and he said to him, "You know what bothers
me? That I can sit and listen to what you have been saying, and be so
unmoved." I felt that concern, almost an anger, as I saw students at
Westminster Seminary attending the lectures of the one man who was most
full of God of all the men I have met, John Murray. Some of these students
were taking notes, and answering his examination questions, and yet were
not being transformed by the process, still having a small view of God, and
of his salvation and were being worldly-minded in their conversations - not
that I benefited from that privilege as I should have. But there is this
matter that the apostle is praying about - "to know this love that
surpasses knowledge - that you may be filled with all the fullness of God"
I once heard a very great sermon, and I thought to myself that whenever
there would be a true revival of religion that the preaching would be like
that. But there were Christian people listening to it who remained unmoved
and even critical. So it was on the day of Pentecost. There were some in
Jerusalem who said that the apostles were full of new wine.
So we are to be obeying what the New Testament says to every Christian
again and again, to long for a closer walk with God, and for a pure heart,
to be filled with the Spirit of God, to let the word of God abide in us
richly, to present our bodies as living sacrifices to God, to be putting on
the Lord Jesus Christ, to dress in the whole armour of God, and so on, and
so on. Those commands are amongst the clearest parts of divine revelation.
Dr Lloyd-Jones points out, "You read the lives of godly people. When you
see the kind of life they were enabled to live, you will feel, 'Oh that I
were like that!' You will discover that the reason for their living as they
did was they always set the Lord before them. And so you read that when
they were taken desperately ill, or when bereavement and sorrow came, it
did not disturb their equanimity, they were not finally upset. They were
not inhuman, they did feel those things and they felt them very acutely;
but they did not lose their balance. They did not feel that everything was
lost and gone. And when wars came, and trials and calamities, they did not
feel that everything had collapsed. Not at all! They went on and there was
a kind of added sweetness and beauty about their lives and a still greater
joy and peace. That is what you find as you read their biographies, and you
will find their secret was that they spent a great deal of time every day
in reading the Scriptures and in praying to God. My dear friends, is this
not the trouble with so many of us today?" (D. Martyn Lloyd-Jones,
"Enjoying the Presence of God," Crossway Books, 1991, p.134)
That is what Paul is speaking about here when he talks of being transformed
into the Lord's likeness with ever-increasing glory. David said, "I have
set the Lord always before me" (Ps.16:8). There is basic training for the
Christian in the recollection of God. I am to do such things as to
appropriate the Lord who is the Spirit at the beginning of a day, and I
train my mind to turn to him whenever I can. Dr Lloyd-Jones again puts it
quite simply like this: "I say to myself, God is and I am, and God is
there. God is eternal being and life and reality. He is not a mere term or
a philosophic concept - God is. He is a Person, and I want to go into his
presence. I want to know Him; I want to speak to Him. I am going to
approach Him, as I may decide to visit a friend. I am going to visit God
and commune with Him; I am going to have fellowship with Him" (op cit
p.133). It is as we draw near to God that he draws near to us and we begin
to behold the Lord's glory and are being transformed into his likeness with
ever-increasing glory.
Let me use this illustration. I am visiting a man in the hospital and we
are talking intimately and happily together. Then suddenly I notice that
his face has lit up, that he is beaming, that there is joy and brightness
about him that was not there before. I am pleased, but realise that he is
not looking at me. He is looking over my shoulder at someone who has
entered the ward coming to him. It is his wife, and she is beaming too as
she looks at her beloved. Their faces are shining. So it is that we reflect
the Lord's glory and are being transformed into his likeness as we know his
coming to us and we enter into his presence.
So it is by drawing near to the Lord and looking unto him that this
transformation takes place. Are we walking with God? Are we getting
disdainful of the experiential in our faith? Have we reached the point when
we are sighing with William Cowper:
O for a closer walk with God,
A calm and heavenly frame,
A light to shine upon the road
That leads me to the Lamb!
There have been times of nearness to the Lord in the past, and we long for
them again. So we must go to him and seek him with an unveiled face. Take
off the mask. Pour contempt on the pretence. Be real with God and discover
again something of the glory of the Lord from the Bible and meditation and
reading and prayer. All through our lives this is happening in our hearts
and souls by the inward working of the Spirit.
Go to God continually. Look unto Jesus! For every look at your sin take ten
looks at Jesus, M'Cheyne reminds us. May God must come to us! This
ever-increasing glory comes from the Lord. The exercise of blessing is
optional with God. We can cry, and we can arrange weekly prayer meetings
for revival, but the ever-increasing glory, says the apostle here, "comes
from the Lord who is the Spirit." This is his grand prerogative. The
account of the day of Pentecost in Jerusalem begins with the word
'suddenly.' The sound of the rushing mighty wind came as an utter shock to
everyone there. There are times when the Lord who is the Spirit comes in
utterly unpredictable ways - at an 'ordinary' prayer meeting, in a little
chapel on a Sunday night with no announcement made of anything special but
then increasingly, as the service continues, there is a consciousness that
this is no ordinary meeting at all, and the whole congregation and the
neighbourhood are changed for years to come. And I want to plead with you
to have a place in your theological universe for events like that which
come from rent heavens and are a result of the pure vertical descent of the
Lord who is the Spirit.
But let me remind of the great words of encouragement with which we began
this section: "we ...all reflect the Lord's glory." We all are being
transformed whether such peak experiences are ours or not - every single
lamb in Christ's flock, and to what a likeness! "Into his likeness." Think
of it! All the divine insights of the aesthetic and all of omnipotence has
come together to make the Lord who is the Spirit the most beautiful being
that heaven and earth has ever seen. The glory of an angel compared to his
is like comparing a toad to a young girl. Christ is the loveliest of ten
thousand. That is, he is ten thousand times lovelier than the archangel,
and we are being transformed into his likeness. You cannot believe it for
it is so breath-taking, yet this is what we are told. God so loves his Son
that he has determined to fill heaven with a countless multitude of men and
women each one of whom is like the Lord Jesus.
I was sympathising with one of our young women this week whose unborn child
has died in the womb and I was saying to her that waiting for her in glory
just inside the gates of splendour in perhaps fifty years time there will
be a being of inexpressible wonder who will introduce itself to her as her
own child. There will also be some of our mentally-handicapped friends
there, now so inarticulate but in that place the power of God will have
transformed them in mind and body. How mind-blowing the sight of them will
be. But most of all of ourselves! That we should be like him!
Glorification is effectual in all the elect of God. It must be. It is the
last link in the golden chain.
I believe in the great power of the word of God preached to us week by week
to lift up Christ before us, and transform us, if it is only as much as a
baby step today. He does not cease this work. He does not neglect us. We
are in God's hands and he is working to will and to do of his good pleasure
in us. He will change us into the glory of Christ. He has made up his mind.
Such experiences as Flavel's and Sarah Edwards' and Plantinga's were rare
even for those men, but I am pleading with you to be filled with hope for
what God is able to do and has done in the past in transforming a grey
depressing godless community into a place where Jesus dwells. "And we, who
with unveiled faces all behold the Lord's glory, are being transformed into
his likeness with ever-increasing glory, which comes from the Lord, who is
the Spirit."
28 January 2001 GEOFF THOMAS
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