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CHAPTER FIVE

THE SPIRIT AND THE WORD
IN THE ORGANIC BUILDING UP
OF THE CHURCH

Scripture Reading: Acts 13:52; 6:5a; 11:24; 2:17; 1:8; 2:4; 4:8, 31; 13:9; 5:20; 6:7; 12:24; 19:20; 6:2; 8:4; 13:46, 44

In these days the Lord has been leading us into the vision and realization of the organic Body of Christ. The church as the Body of Christ is organic. The New Testament shows us that God’s intention is to gain an organic Body for Christ. The church as the organic Body of Christ should be built up.

To build up our physical body is different from building up a house because a house is lifeless, inorganic, whereas our physical body is altogether organic. Anything that is organic is born of life and grows with life. We were born of our parents with life, and then we began to grow. The growth of our organic physical body is the real building up of our body. A new born babe’s growth into a husky man is his being built up. This husky man was not built up organizationally but organically. He grew by eating organic food. His growing up gradually was his being built up gradually. The procedure or process of such an organic building is hard to explain. For the growth, the building up, of our physical body, we need to eat and to drink. Without eating and drinking, our body cannot grow. This means that for our body to be built up, we need food and drink. We need the eating and the drinking to take in something organic into our being. Then we can grow.

Now we need to consider how the church as the organic Body of Christ is built up. We may not be clear about this because we may consider the church merely as a congregation, an assembly, or a gathering, but we need to see that the church is the Body of Christ. Since it is the Body, it is organic. The building up of the church is not a lifeless building but an organic building. This building is the growth of life, and for the growth of life there is the need of the supply of life. We need to be supplied with Christ as our food and drink. In the New Testament, our spiritual food is the divine Word and our spiritual drink is the Spirit. In the organic building up of the Body of Christ, we need the Spirit as our spiritual drink and the Word as our spiritual food. God has ordained a way to give Himself to us according to His economy. He gives Himself to us in two forms—in the form of the Spirit and in the form of the Word. This is why the New Testament stresses the Spirit and the Word.

THE SPIRIT

God wants to have a Body for Christ, but how can He do it? The only way this Body can be produced is by God dispensing Himself into us, His chosen ones. God’s intention is to have all of us built up together as the Body of Christ by the dispensing of Himself into our being. Not many Christians realize that God has been dispensed into them and that He wants to continue dispensing Himself into them. Now we need to consider how God can be dispensed into our being.

The Bible tells us that God was incarnated (John 1:14). He lived on this earth for thirty-three and a half years. Then He went to the cross and accomplished an all-inclusive death, a death that solves all of our problems and takes care of all our needs. We have the problems of sin, sins, the world, the flesh, the old man, the natural man, and the old creation. In addition to these things, the enemy of God, Satan, is indwelling our flesh. But Christ died on the cross, and His unique, all-inclusive death dealt with all of these negative things. After three days, He rose up and entered into resurrection. In resurrection He changed into another form by becoming the life-giving Spirit.

First Corinthians 15:45b says that the last Adam, Christ in the flesh, became a life-giving Spirit. The Savior who died on the cross in His physical body, became a life-giving Spirit in His resurrection. He is the all-inclusive One. As the One who died on the cross, He took away all of our problems, and as the One who is the life-giving Spirit, He is qualified and capable of imparting Himself into us as our life. Today this One is within us. The very God in whom we believe and whom we worship is the life-giving Spirit in our spirit (2 Cor. 3:17; 2 Tim. 4:22; Rom. 8:16). We all need to declare, “Jesus Christ is in me!” (2 Cor. 13:5). Jesus Christ is the very God embodied in man. This man died on the cross for the accomplishment of an all-inclusive redemption, and He has entered into resurrection to become the life-giving Spirit. Today He is the all-inclusive Spirit in our spirit.

According to the divine revelation in the Bible, our God is triune. Our God is one, yet He is the Father, the Son, and the Spirit. God is one, yet He is three. He is three-one. The Spirit of Jesus Christ, who is Christ Himself as the life-giving Spirit, is the consummation of the Triune God. He is God reaching us. At one time, God dwelt far away from us in unapproachable light (1 Tim. 6:16), but then He came to us in incarnation. He went to the cross to die for us, and in resurrection He became a life-giving Spirit to enter into us. Now in us He is the consummation of God, the reaching of God to us. The Spirit is God reaching us. Because we have the Spirit within us (Rom. 8:9), we have the Son and the Father within us (John 14:20; Eph. 4:6). The Spirit of the Triune God is His consummation, His reaching us. This Spirit is infusing us and dispensing Himself into us. He is infusing His riches into our being.

Since we have believed in the Lord Jesus, we have been changed inwardly. The Lord is within us changing our disposition and our character. This change is called transformation. We are being transformed from our natural image to the glorious image of the Divine Trinity by God’s dispensing of His essence and riches into our being to change us dispositionally (2 Cor. 3:18). We are being transformed inwardly, not corrected outwardly. We have been and are still being transformed by God with His essence, and His essence is the Spirit.

In the New Testament the consummated Spirit of God, who is in us, is likened to the air (John 20:22). When we have air in a room we may not sense it, but if the room is short of air, we will surely sense it. The Spirit is like the air that we cannot see but sense. We can sense that there is something within us which we did not have in the past. This is a person, the Spirit of God. Sometimes we may be happy, and at other times we may be low, but we have the sense that there is another One within us who is dear, near, and precious. Sometimes when we are weak, this One strengthens us. We need to experience the many aspects of the dear, precious presence of the one all-inclusive Spirit. When we offend Him or grieve Him, it is hard for us to be happy because He is not happy within us.

We can enjoy this Spirit by praying, and we pray by calling on the name of the Lord Jesus (Rom. 10:12). We need to call, “O Lord Jesus.” We must learn to pray by inserting “O Lord Jesus.” If we call on the Lord for five minutes, we will be happy. If we continue to call for another five minutes, we will be excited and out of ourselves. Whenever we turn our prayer into calling on the Lord, we will be enlivened. Calling on the Lord makes us alive. We all need to find a time to call on the Lord. We can even call silently and inwardly when others are around. This is the way to exercise ourselves to enjoy God’s essence, and God’s essence is the Spirit in our spirit.

The way to exercise our spirit to touch the Spirit is to call on the name of the Lord Jesus. When we call “O Lord Jesus,” the very Spirit that indwells our spirit will be stirred up to anoint us with Himself as the ointment. By this inward anointing, the Spirit dispenses the riches of God’s divine essence into our being. By this anointing, we are fed, nourished, satisfied, supplied, and supported, and we grow with the divine essence of God. In order to grow, a young child must eat and drink. We must take in the divine essence of God so that we can grow with the growth of God (Col. 2:19).

To grow with the divine essence of God, we need to be filled with the Spirit essentially and economically. The essential Spirit dwells in us as our life and person (Acts 13:52; 6:5a; 11:24), and the economical Spirit has been poured out upon us as our power and authority (Acts 2:17; 1:8; 2:4; 4:8, 31; 13:9). How can we be full of the Spirit inwardly and filled with the Spirit outwardly in our experience? We have to pray by always inserting, “O Lord Jesus.” Sometimes I am very busy, but even while I am putting on my shoes, I can call, “O Lord Jesus.” Whenever we call on the Lord Jesus, we are fed, nourished, and supplied. This is the way to gain the divine essence for our enjoyment. When we call on the name of the Lord Jesus, our spirit is exercised, and the divine Spirit within our spirit anoints us with all the riches of the divine essence. Then we will grow, and this growth is the building up of the Body of Christ. When we are built up in the Spirit, that means that a part of the Body of Christ is built up. As we all exercise to call on the Lord, the entire Body of Christ is built up by the growth in life through the enjoyment of the rich essence of God in our spirit.


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The Practical and Organic Building Up of the Church   pg 13