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The Essential Newness of the New Creation - Part 1
by
T. Austin-Sparks
"Thou hast heard it;
behold all this; and ye, will ye not declare it? I have
shewed thee new things from this time, even hidden
things, which thou hast not known. They are created now,
and not from of old; and before this day thou heardest
them not; lest thou shouldest say, behold, I knew
them" (Isaiah 48:6-7).
"Wherefore if any man is in Christ, there is a
new creation: the old things are passed away; behold,
they are become new" (1 Corinthians 5:17 - R.V.
margin).
"And no man putteth a piece of undressed cloth
upon an old garment; for that which should fill it up
taketh from the garment, and a worse rent is made.
Neither do men put new wine into old wine-skins: else the
skins burst, and the wine is spilled, and the skins
perish: but they put new wine into fresh wineskins, and
both are preserved" (Matthew 9:16-17).
Familiarity with words and ideas very often takes
something from their value. Few passages in the New
Testament are more familiar to us than 2 Corinthians
5:17: "Wherefore if any man is in Christ, there is a
new creation...", but the full force of the one
governing word there has, I am quite sure, not fallen
upon our hearts, and we have still very much to learn as
to that essential newness of the new creation in Christ.
Indeed, we may say that many of our troubles, our
difficulties, our weaknesses, our failures, our problems,
our perplexities, are the result of our having failed to
grasp sufficiently the import of that one word
"new". We have, very largely, proceeded into
the new creation with a good deal that is old, or we have
tried to do so, and we have discovered sooner or later
that that cannot be done and we are attempting an
impossibility. So it may be quite profitable for us to
dwell for a little while upon this essential newness.
We begin by reminding ourselves, or acquainting ourselves
with the fact that there are two sides to the new
creation. There is the vessel, and there is that which is
put into the vessel. It takes both of these to constitute
what is called the "new creation", the human
side, and the Divine side, but while newness applies to
both sides, the newness is not the same newness. There
are two main words which are translated into our English
word "new", and we are perhaps familiar with
the difference between them. One implies something which
is fresh, not necessarily just originated, but bearing
the mark of freshness. The other word implies more
strictly something which is quite recent, and which was
not necessarily there before; it is not new in the sense
that it has just come in; it is not something revived but
something new. It is interesting to notice that the Holy
Spirit uses the two words in connection with the two
sides of the new creation.
In this vessel in Matthew 9 you have both words used. As
to the wine-skins (translated in the Authorised Version
as "bottles") the word used is that which
implies freshness. When the Lord Jesus speaks of new wine
He uses the other word, that is, something which is quite
new, quite recent. When you pass to the passage in 2
Corinthians 5 and it is stated that: "...if any man
is in Christ there is a new creation; the old things are
passed away: behold, they are become new," there the
word which means freshness is used twice. That is
strictly consistent with the truth as to the real nature
of the new creation.
You are dealing, first of all, with the vessel. Now, as
vessels in the new creation we are not something which
never was before, something quite recent. The vessel of
the new creation is our old spirit brought back into
life. Our human spirit fell out of fellowship with God,
and that meant spiritual death. The new creation activity
is to bring back the human spirit from spiritual death
into life, and it is the same spirit, raised in union
with Christ, becoming the vessel of the new creation.
That is, however, only half of the process. Something
which was never in that spirit before is deposited in it;
a life which is not fresh but new, recent, absolutely
new, which was never in the human spirit before, is now
put into that vessel, and that which is so completely
new, says the Word, is never put into an old wine-skin.
That vessel has to be made fresh, has to be brought into
a state of life in order to be the receptacle of this
utterly new life of the Spirit of God.
These are the two sides of the new creation. The point is
that, first of all, something has to be done in the
vessel, as well as something having to be put into the
vessel.
That is a principle, to which God has bound Himself and
which governs Him in all His activities. It applies in
every direction where Divine work is in view. God never
builds His new thing upon an old foundation. He never
uses the old thing as the material for His new work. That
has to be completely renewed. That He does not put HIS
life, His new wine, into old skins is a truth which
relates not only to regeneration, to our salvation, to
the new creation man, but it also applies to every work
of God. Whenever God does a thing the characteristic is
newness. Although there may be an old vessel, that vessel
has to be made fresh in order to effect God's end.
That applies to truth as much as to anything else. It may
be Divine doctrine, God-given revelation, that which at
one time, by the Holy Spirit, was living truth; but that
can never be taken up at any subsequent date or period of
time and used again unless it becomes fresh in the
experience and life of those who come into it. It is just
there that a very great many of the mistakes have been
made: that what in the way of revelation was a living
revelation so long ago has been adopted as truth without
that subsequent generation, or those subsequent
generations, coming into the living reality thereof. That
is vital.
It applies to the new creation man, you cannot bring the
old creation man over into the new creation without his
becoming fresh in a living way. That applies to truth,
revelation and doctrine. You cannot carry it on unless it
is perennially fresh. Ezekiel's vision of the river and
the trees on either side - very many trees whose leaves
never fade and whose fruit is continuous - is simply a
revelation or a vision of the Testimony being maintained
by the principle of life in freshness right down the
whole course of the ages. Truth has to be like those
leaves which never fade. Truth has to be like that fruit,
luscious fruit which is always there. All doctrine is not
like that, but unless it is like that its essential
element has gone. It is the essential newness of what is
of God.
Every fresh step of God is marked by this freshness, this
newness. God may have done that same thing again and
again in the course of history, but the next time He does
it, it is as though it had never been done before in the
case of the people in whom He does it. That is the glory
of things.
We have seen this work in simple ways. Some of us have
been so familiar with certain things, and we have said
those things again and again. To us they were living
realities, but we have known of certain people who have
heard them, who have listened to them, who have been
under the ministry by which those things have been
declared again and again over a course of, perhaps,
years, and then suddenly, as by a touch of the Spirit,
they have seen them, they have caught the inner sound,
the truth has broken upon them and has become living to
them. The result was that they commenced to talk about
those things as though no one in all the world had ever
heard them before, and as though the very person who had
been talking about them for years did not know anything
about them! It is just like that. That is the living
Testimony. It is the freshness of things, and things must
be like that to be of God, for what is really of God is
like that. It is not that we hold the truth, but that we
have the life of the truth.
What is true in the case of the new creation man, and in
connection with truth or doctrine, revelation or light,
is also true in the direction of the work of God - what
we call Christian work. For everyone who enters into the
Divine vocation, the calling to service, it ought to be
as though there had never been any Christian work before.
It ought to be as though they were the first ever
commissioned. In their spirit, in their outlook, in their
passion, it should be as though they were right at the
beginning of things, as though the Christian activity,
the Christian Gospel, was only just starting on its way.
That is the consciousness which they should have, and
that is just the opposite of entering into a
longstanding, accepted, crystallized system of Christian
work and becoming a part of a great existing machine. The
freshness about things should be of this character: that
in our service we are conscious that the hand of God has
come upon us as though it had never come upon any other
person, and as though no one else had been called but
ourselves. I do not mean that to be taken in a wrong way
- that we are the only ones - but that this thing is such
a living, tremendous reality to us that we feel as though
nothing had ever been done for the Lord before.
Do you understand what we mean by that? Christian work
has become an order, as we have called it, a crystallised
system of Christian enterprise, activity, organised work,
and people are called upon today to enter into it, to
take it up, and they do so and become a part of a great
Christian machine for accomplishing a certain purpose.
Then they go into some kind of a factory to be turned out
a Christian worker. You are not surprised that these
factory-turned-out workers have not got that thing by
which men and women today are fed and brought into the
full glory, beauty, grandeur and magnificence of Christ!
No! The work of the Lord is something which, to the one
who is apprehended of Christ Jesus, is as though there
had never been any Christian work before. There is the
freshness of life about it.
This applies to the thing which God does, for when He
does a thing there is that about it which is fresh, and
there is the sense that here is some thing which, as an
element, makes this work of God a new work.
God must have newness of every kind in His vessels. If
the vessel, or the vehicle, is a man; if the vessel, or
the vehicle, is a revelation; if it is a collective
instrumentality, or some piece of work which God is doing
in the world, when it is of Him it bears that hallmark of
freshness. There is no staleness about it, nor death. It
throbs with vitality.
I believe the Lord has a very definite object in our
being led to this thought at this time. Undoubtedly the
need today everywhere is just this sense of God in a new
way. There is plenty of work, plenty of doctrine, and
there are many Christians; but, oh, for this sense of
God, this sense of keenness, freshness, vitality, and
knowledge of God in all. THAT IS THE NEED. Without
it things will go on as they are, and they are very dead,
and tragically weak and ineffective.
The measure, then, of the newness of the vessel will be
the measure of the newness of what God puts into it. God
demands the newness of the vessel in order to commit
Himself to it.
Look at that passage from Isaiah 18: "I have shewed
thee new things from this time, even hidden things, which
thou hast not known. They are created now, and not from
of old; and before his day thou heardest them not; lest
thou shouldest say, Behold, I knew them." Is not
that the attitude today toward a great deal? 'Oh, yes, I
know it all! I know, there is nothing new about that! The
doctrine and everything else, yes, I know it! We have
heard that before! We know it! There is nothing new about
that!' Dear friends, if you have caught the inner
significance of this you are not talking mentally like
that! You are seeing, and as you see you are feeling
intensely that there is this need everywhere today. You
have the intelligence of a living insight, and you know
quite well that there is no hope whatever in simply
propagating doctrine and truth and trying to do the old
work in the old way. The need is not more work, more
doctrine, more truth and more light so much as more of
this living element in all.
There are two sides. There is the vessel, and there is
that which is in the vessel. The vessel may be quite a
good vessel doctrinally, and in other ways, but there
needs to be also the deposit in the vessel, the new wine.
So the Word says here quite clearly that there is a
hopelessness about the old, and all the hope lies in the
direction of renewal and freshness on the one hand, and
of God's living, new deposit on the other hand.
What is the ultimate conclusion about this? It is the
conclusion to which 2 Corinthians 5:18 comes: "But
all things are of God..." That allows the statement
"...we thus judge, that one died for all, therefore
all died; and he died for all, that they which live
should no longer live unto themselves, but unto
him..." That is the one side: everything having died
as to its own self-productiveness. It cannot produce this
Divine end and result. It has died to its own
productiveness, and now it is unto Him, and when it is
all unto Him then all things are out from God. When all
things are of God, all things carry this vital element,
this essential freshness of a new creation.
You and I should have heart exercise about everything
that the Lord has brought to us. Do we really do that? Do
we go back over what has been said and say: 'Now the Lord
said such and such, and this and that comes out of it.
What am I going to do about it? Do I know that in a
living way? Does that really represent the Lord's mind
for me, and His people? Is that something that the Lord
desires for all His own? If so, on any one of these
matters I must get before the Lord and definitely be
exercised in heart about it.'
Piled up, mountains high, are words, language, teaching,
truth and light, and the percentage of living, effective
value in it all is all too small. If there is one thing
about which we should lay hold of the Lord it is this:
'Lord, keep this Testimony a living thing! Do not let it
become mere doctrine, mere truth, something to be passed
on which will be taken up by others and talked about, and
the phrases and terminology used. God forbid that that
should be!'
The point is the essential newness of all that is out
from God; the essential newness of that which proceeds
from the Lord, and which is really related to the Lord;
and freshness on the part of those who are concerned, and
newness on the part of that which is coming out from God
Himself. Let us pray very much about that, because that
is the very essence of our ministry, and not only of our
life and what we call our Testimony. Bread must have
vitamins in it, and it is the same in spiritual food, for
there must be a living attribute. There must be the
newness; not old things dead but - it may be old things -
living. "Therefore every scribe who hath been made a
disciple to the kingdom of heaven is like unto a man that
is a householder, which bringeth forth out of his
treasure things new and old" (Matthew 13:52). But if
he brings old things out there is a newness about them
that conveys the impression that they never were before,
something, at any rate, which is altogether fresh.
The Lord maintain us, and all with which we have to do,
in that essential freshness and newness which is the
hallmark of Himself.
From
"A Witness and a Testimony" September-October
1969.
[
Chapter 2 ]
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