None of us can define life. We do not know what it is, what it
consists of, but we know that it exists. In many places the Bible tells
us that we are a part of the body of Christ, it also tells us that we
have the life of Christ. Many illustrations used in the Bible emphasize
this point. For example there is the illustration of the vine and the
branches.
Do we understand these verses to be describing a
real relationship or a figurative one? I take them at face value and I
believe that in doing this I am applying a meaning which is perfectly
reasonable. The fact that new agers have distorted the truth and made it
into a lie does not negate the reality of what is true. New Agers
believe that we are all inherently god. According to them we only need
to discover that we are. But the truth is that we have been made
partakers of the life of God. We are partakers of His life, whatever
that is. You and I cannot define this, but the Bible calls it the holy
spirit which is a very real, literal thing.
The new birth is not simply a human response to
motivation, it is the result of divine life uniting with human life and
the Bible teaches that this union is a literal union, as real as the
physical union between a man and his wife when they consummate a
marriage. I am not saying that it is the same kind of union. One is
physical, one is spiritual, but the fact that something is “spiritual”
does not mean that it is not real.
We do not know very much
about spiritual things, but surely we know enough to know that they are
literal – that is, they are real, not figurative. God is spirit, angels
are spirits, we have a spiritual side to our nature, are all these
things figurative or are they literal? Likewise, the spirit of God in us
is a literal thing which unites with our spirit and so we become in a
very literal sense a partaker of the actual life of God.
This
in no way denies the place of the word of God in the life of the
Christian because it is through the word that God makes us know what is
real and true. As we learn of these real spiritual things we may believe
in them and therefore experience them. Furthermore, since we are only
human with only human memories and human attention spans, we need to
feed on the word continually and to keep these things always before our
minds lest we forget. These realities are experienced by faith, but
faith is only exercised consciously , therefore, if we do not remember the truth, then we cannot believe the truth and therefore cannot live the truth.
I do not believe in “automatic” Christianity, but I do believe that
Christians are truly partakers of the very life of Christ and are
therefore a part of His spiritual body. That is, His life, His spirit
has become a part of their existence and they have become a part of His,
even if the reality of this experience can only be maintained by faith.
Two aspects of law
There are two aspects to the law, the written law (the letter) and the
living law (the spirit, or Christ). The written word is exactly that. It
is written. The only thing it can do is instruct. There is no power in
what is written, that is why it kills. However the living law works in
cooperation with the written word in the sense that when faith is
exercised in the written word, when it is believed, then what is written
becomes a reality in the life of the believer through the power of that
living word (2 Cor. 3:17).
To be governed by the written law
is an experience which leads only to frustration. This is what Paul
teaches and he is very strong in teaching it. We must make a distinction
between the administration of the law and the law itself. A man may be
perfectly able to tell me what is good, but if he can only instruct, but
not help in obtaining that good, then clearly he is not the right
person to deal with people who are weak by nature. So the government of
law is not the best even though the law is good. The government of the
spirit is far better because the spirit does not only instruct, but
enables and empowers.
If we do not believe that the spirit is
an actual literal aspect of God or an extension of the life of God, then
of course this is something which we cannot accept. But if the spirit
is a literal aspect of God which literally unites with my spirit (a
literal aspect of my being), then it is easy to understand the
difference between the government of the spirit (the New Covenant) and
the government of the law (the Old Covenant).
When Christ
unites His life with mine, I am not suddenly omniscient. I do not know
all things. I still need the word and will need it as long as I live in
this world. What changes is my nature. My nature is supernaturally
changed. This is not the result of human effort this is an act of God,
experienced by faith. But although I have the very nature, the instincts
of Christ, I do not have the knowledge of Christ and therefore I am
just a babe in Christ. Only as I feed on the word will I become mature
in knowing the will of Christ and therefore in better representing Him
in the world. This is called, growth in Christ or character development.
We have the nature of Christ, but nature is not equal to
identity. We have been made a part of His life because He has given us
of His very nature, but we still remain individuals, we have our own
identity, even though we have His life. Maybe if we could more perfectly
define life and spirit we could be better able to come to grips with
what these statements in the Bible mean.
Righteousness by Faith