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Chosen no: R-626 a, from: 1884 Year. |
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Transformed.
"Be not
conformed to this world: but be ye transformed by the renewing of your mind,
that ye may prove what is that good, and acceptable, and perfect will of
God."--Rom. 12:2.
It should be noticed here that these words of
the Apostle are not addressed to the unbelieving world, but to those whom he
recognizes as brethren, as shown by the preceding verse--"I
beseech you therefore, brethren,...that ye present your bodies living
sacrifices, holy and acceptable unto God."
It is the prevailing idea among Christians that
when a man is converted or turned from sin to righteousness, and from unbelief
and opposition to God to faith, obedience and reliance upon him, that is the
transforming Paul meant. Truly it is a great change--a transformation,
but not the transformation that Paul here refers to. That is a
transformation of character; but Paul refers to a transformation of nature
promised to believers during the Gospel Age, on certain conditions, and was
urging believers to fulfill those conditions. Had such a transformation
of character not already taken place in those whom he addressed, he could not
have termed them brethren--brethren, too, who had something "holy and
acceptable unto God" to offer in sacrifice. Only those who are justified
by faith in the ransom are reckoned of God as holy and acceptable.
This transformation of nature will result
to those who during the Gospel Age present their justified humanity a living
sacrifice, as Jesus presented his perfect humanity a sacrifice--laying down all
right and claim to future human existence, as well as ignoring present
human gratification.
The first thing to be sacrificed is our human
will; and henceforth we may not be guided either by our own or by any other
human will, but only by the divine will. Gradually then the divine will becomes
our will, and we reckon the human will as not ours, but as the will of another,
to be ignored and sacrificed. The divine will now having become our will, we
begin to reason, to judge, to think, from the divine standpoint: God's plan is
our plan, and God's purposes and ways are ours.
None can understand this transformation who have
not in good faith presented themselves as sacrifices, and in consequence come
to experience it. Hitherto we might enjoy anything that was not sinful, for the
world and all its good things were made for man's enjoyment; the only
difficulty was to subdue the sinful propensities. But the consecrated, in
addition to the effort to subdue sin, must sacrifice the present good things
and devote all their energies to the service of God. As through sacrifice we
daily realize that this is not our rest, that here we have no continuing city,
our hearts and hopes are turned to that "rest that remaineth for the
people of God." And that blessed hope in turn quickens and inspires to
continued sacrifice.
Thus through a sanctified will the mind is
renewed, transformed; and the desires, hopes and aims begin to gravitate toward
the spiritual and unseen things promised, while the human hopes, etc., die. Those
thus transformed are reckoned as "new creatures," begotten of God and
partakers to that extent of the divine nature.
Mark well the difference between these new creatures
and those who are only justified. The latter class is still of the earth
earthy, and their hopes, ambitions and aims are such as will be fully gratified
in the promised restitution of all things. But the former class is not of this
world, even as Christ is not of this world, and their hopes center in the
things unseen, where Christ sitteth on the right hand of God. The prospect [R626 : page 5] of earthly glory, so enchanting to
the natural man, would not now be a satisfying portion to those begotten of
this heavenly hope--to those who are now sharers of the divine mind.
We see, then, that it is a mistaken idea, though
a common one, that all good men, such as Abraham, Moses, and the Prophets, were
begotten of the spirit.
This new divine mind is now the earnest of our
inheritance of the complete divine nature--mind and body. Some may be a little
startled by this expression, a divine body; but we are told that Jesus is the
express image of his Father's person, and that the overcomers shall be made like
unto his glorious body. "There is a natural [human] body,
and there is a spiritual body," and we have no idea that either our divine
Father or our Lord Jesus are only great minds without bodies. They are glorious
spiritual bodies, though it doth not yet appear how great the glory, and shall
not until we also shall share the divine likeness.
While this transforming of the mind from human
to spiritual is a gradual work, the change from a human to a spiritual body will not be gradual, but instantaneous. (1 Cor. 15:52.)
It may be difficult for some to see in this
change of mind the beginning of a change of nature; but a little consideration,
we think, makes it very clear. That there is a change of nature for the church
is scriptural truth; and it is also as clearly taught that the change of this
class begins here and is completed in the resurrection. (2
Cor. 1:20-22; 1 Cor. 15:52.)
Now, as Paul says, we have this treasure (the
divine mind) in earthen vessels, but in due time the treasure shall be in a
glorious vessel, the spiritual body.
The Scriptures show us that the human nature is
a likeness of the spiritual (Gen. 5:1). For
instance, man has will, so have God and angels; man has reason, so have they;
man has memory, so have they. The character of the mental operations of each is
the same. With the same data for reasoning, and under the same circumstances
these different natures are able to arrive at the same conclusions: hence God
can say to men, "Come, let us reason together."
Though the mental faculties of both natures are
similar, yet we know that the spiritual nature has powers beyond and above the
human--powers, we think, which result, not from different faculties, but from
the wider range of the same faculties, and the different circumstances under
which they operate.
From all that we can gather, we conclude that
the human nature is a perfect earthly image of the spiritual nature, with the
same faculties, only confined to the earthly sphere, with ability and
disposition to discern only so much beyond it as God sees fit to reveal for
man's benefit and happiness.
The divine is the highest order of the spiritual
nature; and how immeasurable is the distance between God and his creatures! We
are only able to catch a glimpse of the glory of the divine wisdom, power and
goodness as in panoramic view he causes some of his mighty works to pass before
us. But we can measure and comprehend the glory of perfect humanity. Truly there
is a vast difference between the divine and the human nature; but, as the
Scriptures teach, there is a likeness, else God and man could have no
communion, no fellowship. It is because there is not a likeness of God in the
lower animals that they cannot know or commune with him.
With these thoughts clearly in mind, we are able
to more fully understand how the change from the human to the spiritual nature
is effected--viz., by carrying the same mental powers over to higher
conditions. When clothed with the heavenly body we shall have the heavenly
powers which belong to that glorious body. We shall also have the range of
thought and scope of power which belongs to it. The change of mind from human
to spiritual which we experience here we see is the beginning of that change of
nature. True it is but a very small beginning, but the begetting, as this is
termed, is always but a faint, a small beginning; yet it is the earnest or
assurance of the finished work. (Eph. 1:13,14.)
Some have said, How shall we know ourselves when
changed? How shall we then know that we are the same beings that lived and
suffered and sacrificed that we might be partakers of this glory? Will we be
the same conscious beings? Yes, most assuredly. The Scriptures declare that if
WE be dead with Christ, WE shall also live with him. (Rom.
6:8.)
Changes which daily occur to our human bodies do
not cause us to forget the past nor to lose our identity, so the promised
change from human to spiritual bodies will not destroy either memory or
identity, but will increase their power and range. The same divine mind that
now is ours, with the same memory, the same reasoning powers, etc., will then
find its powers expanded to immeasurable heights and depths, in harmony with
its new immortal or incorruptible body, and memory will trace all its career
from earliest human infancy, and we will be able by contrast to fully realize
the glorious reward of our sacrifice. But this could not be the case if the
human were not a likeness of the spiritual.
These thoughts may help us also to understand
how Jesus, when changed from spiritual to human conditions, viz., a human body
and earthly limitations, was a man; and though it was the same being in both cases, under the first conditions it was spiritual; under the second
condition it was human.
Because the two natures are separate and
distinct, yet the one is a likeness of the other, therefore the same mental
faculties (memory, etc.) being common to both, Jesus could remember his former
glory which he had before becoming a man, but which he had not when he had
become a man, as his words prove-- [R627 : page 5] "Father,
glorify me with the glory I HAD with thee before the world was" (John 17:5), the glory of the spiritual nature. And
that prayer is more than answered in his present exaltation to the highest form
of the spiritual, viz., the divine nature.
Referring again to the words of our text, we
notice that Paul does not say, Do not conform yourselves to this world, but
transform yourselves into the divine likeness; but he says, "Be not
conformed...but be transformed." That is well expressed, for we do
not either conform or transform ourselves; but we do submit ourselves either to
be conformed to the world by the worldly influences around us, or else we
submit ourselves to the will of God, to be transformed by the heavenly
influences exercised through his word and his spirit.
You that are consecrated, what influence are you
submitting to? The transforming influences lead to present sacrifice and
suffering, but the end is glorious. If you are developing under these
transforming influences, you are proving daily what is that good and acceptable
and perfect will of God. To such the will of God is made plain. May grace
divine enable us to walk according to the will of God through suffering, until
ushered into the promised glory--until fully transformed into his glorious
image!
W.T. R-626a : page 4 - 1884r