Thursday, August 9, 2018

The Believer’s Experience

But how can a believer see what  God has seen?  God is so adamant against the flesh and its every  activity; yet the  believer  appears to reject only its bad features while  clinging affectionately to the flesh itself.  He does not reject categorically the whole thing: he instead continues to do many things in the flesh: he even assumes a selfconfident and proud attitude  about it  as though  he were now rich with God’s grace and qualified to  perform  righteously. The believer literally is making use of his flesh. Because of such self-deceit the Spirit of God must lead him  over the most shameful path  in  order  to make him know his flesh and attain  God’s view. God allows that soul to fall, to weaken, and even to sin, that he may understand whether or not any good resides in the flesh.  This usually happens to the one who thinks he is progressing spiritually. The Lord tries him  in order that he may know himself. Often the Lord so reveals His holiness to such a one that the believer cannot  but judge his flesh as defiled. Sometimes He permits Satan to attack him  so that, out of his suffering, he may perceive himself.  It is altogether  a most difficult lesson, and is not learned within  a day or night. Only after many years does one gradually come  to  realize how untrustworthy is his flesh. There is uncleanness even in  his best effort. God consequently lets him  experience Romans 7 deeply until he is  ready to acknowledge with Paul: “I know that nothing good dwells within me, that is, in my flesh” (v.18). How hard  to learn to  say this genuinely!

If it were not for countless experiences of  painful defeat the  believer would continue to trust himself  and consider himself able. Those hundreds and thousands of defeats bring him to concede that all selfrighteousness is totally undependable, that no good abides in his flesh. Such dealing, however, does  not terminate here. Self-judgment must continue. For whenever a Christian ceases to judge himself by failing to treat the flesh as useless  and utterly detestable but assuming instead even  a slightly self-flattering  and vainglorious attitude, then God is compelled to run him  again  through fire in order to consume the dregs.  How few are they  who humble themselves and acknowledge their uncleanness! Unless  such a state is realized God will not withdraw His dealings. Since a believer cannot be freed from the influence of the flesh for  a moment, he  should never cease exercising the heart to judge himself; otherwise he will step once more into the boasting of the flesh. Many suppose the Holy Spirit’s conviction of sin pertains just to the people of the world, for does He not convict them  of their sins into believing the Lord Jesus?  But  Christians ought to know that such operation of  the Holy  Spirit is as  important  in  the  saints as it is in the sinners. Out of necessity He must convict the saints of their sins, not merely once or twice but daily and  incessantly.  May we more and more experience the conviction of the Holy Spirit so  that  our flesh can be put under judgment unceasingly and never be able to reign. May we not lose, even for a moment,  the true picture of our flesh and God’s estimation of it. Let us never believe in ourselves and never trust our flesh again, as though it  could ever please God. Let us always trust the Holy Spirit and at  no  time yield  the slightest place to self. If ever there was one in the world who could boast  of his flesh that person must be Paul, for as  to righteousness under the law he was blameless. And if  any could boast of his flesh following regeneration, it certainly must be  Paul again because he has become an apostle who has seen the risen Lord with his own eyes and who is used greatly by the Lord. But Paul  dare not boast, for he knows his flesh. His Romans 7 experience enables him  to realize fully who he is. God already has opened his eyes to see via his experience that there dwells in his flesh no good, only sin. The self-righteousness of which he boasted in the past he  now knows to be refuse and sin. He has learned  and learned  well this  lesson; hence be dare not trust the flesh again. But with this lesson he  does not in any wise cease. No, Paul continues to learn. And so the  Apostle declares that he can “put no confidence in the flesh. Though I myself have reason for confidence in the flesh  also. If any  other man thinks he has reason for confidence in the flesh, I have more” (Phil. 3.3-4). Despite the many reasons he can marshal for trusting  his flesh (vv. 5-6),  Paul  realizes how God regards it and well  understands how absolutely undependable and untrustworthy it  is. If we continue reading Philippians 3 we shall discover  how  humble Paul is with  respect to trusting in himself: “not having a  righteousness of my own” (v.9): “that if possible I may attain the  resurrection from  the dead” (v.11) : “not that I have already obtained  this or am  already perfect; but I press on  to make it my  own, because  Christ  Jesus has made me  his own” (v.12). Should a believer aspire  to attain spiritual maturity he must preserve forever that attitude which the Apostle Paul maintained throughout his spiritual  walk; namely, “not that I have already attained.” The Christian dare  not entertain the slightest selfconfidence, self-satisfaction or self-joy, as though he could trust his flesh. If the children of God honestly  strive for the life more abundant and are ready to accept God’s assessment of the flesh, they will not esteem  themselves stronger and better than others, notwithstanding their extensive spiritual progress. They will not utter such words as “I of course am different from  the others.” If these believers are disposed to  let the  Holy Spirit  reveal to them God’s holiness and their corruption and do not fear  to be shown too clearly, then hopefully they will come to perceive  by the Spirit their corruption at an earlier time, with perhaps a consequent lessening of the painful experience of defeat. How lamentable  it is, though, that even when one’s intention may not be to trust the  flesh, there  may yet lurk beneath the surface some little impurity, for such a one still thinks he has some  strength. In view of this, God must permit him  to encounter diverse  defeats in order  to eliminate even that little confidence in himself.

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