腓立比书晨兴圣言 第三周:以基督为我们的榜样(腓立比书二 5~30)

晨更经节 —  1 月 17 日 – 1 月 23 日

腓立比书晨兴圣言 第三周:以基督为我们的榜样(腓立比书二 5~30)

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Philippians – Week 3

Morning Watch —  January 17 – January 23, 2022

Taking Christ as our Pattern
Philippians 2:5-30

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Corporate Reading of “How to Enjoy God and How to Practice the Enjoyment of God” Chapter 9 – Sections:
Enjoying God; Through Taking In The Spirit; Being Drunk With The Holy Spirit (paragraphs 1-3)
Through Taking In The Spirit; Being Drunk With The Holy Spirit (paragraphs 4-7)
Everything Concerning God Being In The Spirit (paragraphs 1-8)
Everything Concerning God Being In The Spirit (paragraphs 9-15)
Assimilating The Spirit Being To Enjoy God As One’s All

How to Enjoy God and How to Practice the Enjoyment of God, Ch. 9, Sec. 3 of 3

ASSIMILATING THE SPIRIT 
BEING TO ENJOY GOD AS ONE’S ALL

If we learn to assimilate God in our spirit, we will experience Him as everything, and He will be whatever we need. As we assimilate Him this way, we will discover that God is our comfort when we need comfort. He is our power when we need power. He is the word when we need a word. He is light when we need light. He is our patience when we need patience. He is love when we need love. He is holiness when we need holiness. He is our way when we need a way. He is wisdom when we need wisdom. All parents need forbearance toward their children. Once we receive God, He becomes forbearance to us. All children need to honor and obey their parents. Once we receive God into us, there is honor and obedience. Our God is everything to us according to our need. When we assimilate Him, He is whatever we need. This is wonderful!

In a traditional wedding a pastor, based on the Scriptures, asks the husband to love his wife and the wife to submit to her husband. However, it is difficult to find a married couple who truly love one another and are obedient to one another. This is because the love that the husband needs in order to love his wife is not something that issues from teachings, nor is the obedience that the wife needs in order to obey her husband something that issues from instructions. Love is simply God Himself, and submission is also God Himself. When a husband exercises his spirit, even a little, to breathe in God, he cannot help but love his wife. Even the most unlovable wife becomes lovable. This is because God Himself is simply love. In the same way, if the wife breathes in God, the Triune God—the Father who is in the Son and the Son who is the Spirit—enters into her. There is no need for teaching; she will simply obey in an absolute way. When God enters the husband, He becomes the sweet love in the husband, and when God enters the wife, He becomes the absolute submission in the wife.

Have we ever noticed the number of times the Bible speaks of what God is? God is light. God is power. God is food. God is the living water. God is healing. God is peace. The Lord said that He is the way, the truth, and the life. He is the light of the world. He is everything. Do we need boldness? God is our boldness. We are not bold because we do not have God. When we are filled with God through drinking, we will be bold. We do not have eloquence because we do not have God. In Greek the word eloquence is the same as the word for speaking. Speaking is the Word, and the Word is God; hence, eloquence is God. When we say that we do not have eloquence, we are saying that we do not have God. The brothers who give messages should no longer complain that they do not have eloquence. Saying that they do not have eloquence proves that they do not have enough God. When we are filled with God, we will surely be full of eloquence and utterance. Do we need to be persuasive? God is our persuasiveness. We do not need to worry whether our speaking is eloquent or persuasive if we are filled and satisfied with God before we speak and if we continue to breathe Him in while we speak. I do not need to speak too much regarding this. Our lack of anything is a sign of our lack of God. As long as we are filled with God, we will not lack anything. God is everything. The apostle Paul says that he could do all things through the power of the One who empowered him (Phil. 4:13). God is everything. There is nothing that He is not. As long as we enjoy Him, assimilate Him, and abide in Him, we can do all things. The key lies in our receiving God with our spirit. We need to learn to receive God all day long with our spirit. We need to learn to exercise our spirit even when we are walking on the street. In our busiest moments we need to learn to fellowship with God in our spirit. Please do not misunderstand me, but we need to learn to exercise our spirit even when we lose our temper. If we learn to fellowship with God in our spirit while we are losing our temper, our temper will vanish. Whenever we are about to lose our temper, we should take a deep breath of God, and the temper will surely disappear.

Therefore, in any circumstance and at any time, we need to learn to contact God and enjoy Him in our spirit. God is the omnipresent Spirit. He is also the all-pervading Spirit; no place is too distant for Him to reach. No matter what our condition is, He is willing to draw near to us. Even when we think that we are at our worst, He is willing to be received by us. We should realize that we can receive Him and touch Him in our spirit, even at our lowest moments. Once He enters, all our problems are solved. I believe we now understand that even though we may have myriads of needs, our unique solution is the living God. He is everything. He is the solution to whatever we need. He is all in all!

How to Enjoy God and How to Practice the Enjoyment of God, Ch. 9, Sec. 2 of 3

EVERYTHING CONCERNING GOD BEING IN THE SPIRIT

Those who came to the Lord Jesus when He was on earth thought that He was a Teacher, a Rabbi, and that He came to teach men how to behave. However, the Lord Jesus showed them again and again that He did not come to teach men. He was not a Teacher or a Rabbi. He is life; He is the bread of life. He came to be eaten by men as food, not to teach men. Hence, He often spoke of being eaten by men. Sometimes He used parables, and other times He spoke in plain words. The clearest passage is in John 6 where the Lord said to the crowd around Him that His flesh is true food and His blood is true drink, that those who eat His flesh and drink His blood have eternal life, and that those who eat Him will live by Him.

When the people heard this word, they did not understand it. They thought, “How can this man be eaten? How can we eat His flesh and drink His blood?” The Lord went on to explain that it is the Spirit who enlivens, gives life, and that the flesh profits nothing. When He said to eat His flesh and drink His blood, He was not referring to His visible flesh, because His visible flesh cannot give life. It is the Spirit who gives life. The Lord Jesus clearly explained that we can eat Him by turning to our spirit, because He is the Spirit. In order to eat the Lord, drink Him, and enjoy Him, we must turn to the Spirit in our spirit.

The Lord said that He is the Spirit in John 6, and when speaking to the people concerning drinking Him in chapter 7, He again spoke of being the Spirit. To eat Him is to eat Him as the Spirit, and also to drink Him is to drink Him as the Spirit. Both eating and drinking are matters in the Spirit.

We need to know that God is Spirit in His essence. When the Lord Jesus spoke to the Samaritan woman, He said that the proper worship is neither in this mountain nor in Jerusalem, but that God is Spirit, and those who worship Him must worship Him in spirit. Fundamentally, God is Spirit. It is difficult to eat and drink God if we consider Him to be something visible or physical. We need to see that God is Spirit. If we understand this, it will not be difficult for us to receive God and assimilate Him.

Today our God is not merely the Holy Spirit. Much more can be said about Him. One day the God who is Spirit entered into humanity. God was born of woman and became a man. This is Jesus, the incarnated Word. At this point God the Spirit entered into humanity and was mingled with man. He put on human flesh and took the form of man. He lived a human life for thirty-three and a half years. It was a perfect human living. This was the first step.

In His second step He died on the cross. In His death on the cross He bore our sins. He shed His blood to deal with our sins before God. While He was being judged and crucified on the cross, sin itself was being judged and crucified. On the one hand, He dealt with the problem of our sins before God. On the other hand, the sin that dwells in us was judged as well. On the cross He also crucified our flesh, the old creation, and He judged Satan and the world. He tasted death for us and destroyed the power of death. His death on the cross dealt with these six things: sins, sin, our flesh, which is the old creation, Satan, the world, and death. These six things were dealt with on the cross through the death of the Lord Jesus.

In His third step He came out of death in resurrection, fully overcoming and transcending the realm of death to enter into God. When He entered into God, He entered into God with His humanity. When He ascended to the heavens, His humanity was also raised to the heavens.

Finally, in His last step, in His resurrection and ascension, the Lord became the Spirit. God who is Spirit was incarnated to be a man on earth. He was fully mingled with man. He passed through human living and was crucified on the cross, settling the problem of man’s sins and solving the problems related to sin, the flesh, Satan, the world, and even death. In other words, He dealt with everything that stood in the way of God. Then He walked out of the realm of death and entered the realm of resurrection and ascension, bringing His humanity with Him into God. Our God has now become this Spirit. All the processes, the steps, and the elements in God are now all-inclusively in the Spirit. The Holy Spirit is no longer so simple. Within Him are many things. Within the Spirit is the Father, the Son, incarnation, union with man, human living, crucifixion, and the termination of sins and sin itself. Within this One there is the solution to the problems of the flesh, Satan, the world, and death. There is victory over death in resurrection. Within this One is also our entrance into God through the bringing of humanity into God through ascension. Today all these items are included in the Spirit.

We should remember that the God we touch today is this Spirit. The God whom we breathe in and whom we take in by eating and drinking is this Spirit. The Father is in Him, and the Son is in Him. Incarnation, union with man, human living, and crucifixion are all in Him. The termination of sins, the solution to sin and the problems of the flesh, Satan, the world, and death are also in Him. Resurrection is in Him. Man’s being in God and man’s being brought into the heavens are all contained in Him. All these processes and all these elements are now included in Him.

As an example, we may add grape juice and sugar to a glass of water. Then when we drink, we receive grape juice, sugar, and water. All these ingredients are contained in this drink. Now the Father is in the Son, and the Son is in the Spirit. Hence, everything of the Father is included in this Spirit, and all the experiences and attainments of the Son are also included in this Spirit. We can say that everything that the Triune God is and has done is included in this Spirit. Hence, it is convenient and expedient for us to eat and drink God, because He is now the Spirit. As long as we breathe in the Spirit, we can eat and drink God.

We need to see that God is Spirit. He has passed through incarnation, human living, death, resurrection, ascension, and glorification. All these items are now in the Spirit. The Lord said that it is the Spirit who gives life. He also said that to receive the Spirit is to drink Him. Hence, eating and drinking depend on the Spirit. The Lord also said that God is Spirit, and those who worship Him and contact Him must do so in spirit. God has given Himself to us as our food. He desires to enter into us to be our everything. He desires that we eat Him and drink Him. But how do we eat Him and drink Him? His words make it clear that eating and drinking are in the spiritual realm, not the physical realm. The physical flesh profits nothing. It is the Spirit who gives life. All we need to do is learn to exercise our spirit to contact God.

In order to receive anything, we need the proper organ. We receive sound with our ears, colors with our eyes, food with our mouth, and air with our lungs. It is clear that we need to use the proper organ to receive anything. Because God is not an object, there is no way for us to receive Him with our physical senses. We cannot touch God, smell God, taste God, see God, or hear God. It is useless for us to try to contact God with our five senses. As I have said repeatedly, there is another organ within us—our spirit. Within every one of us there is a spirit. We must contact God and receive Him with this spirit.

Some people exercise their mind rather than their spirit when they pray. When a sentence comes to their mind, they utter it, and they also utter the next sentence that comes to their mind. They pray according to the thoughts in their mind. When their minds are distracted by other things, they even spontaneously pray concerning these distracting matters. Once a pastor in a denomination asked an elder to pray after his sermon. Because the elder had been preoccupied with his business while the sermon was being given, he found himself muttering something concerning his business a few sentences into his prayer. The whole congregation burst into laughter. This may sound like a joke, but we also have prayed in this way. We have prayed prayers that were not prayers. Mental prayers from the mind are frustrations. They frustrate us from eating and drinking God, and we are held back from receiving God. No matter how many mental prayers we utter, they will never touch God.

God is Spirit. Hence, receiving God and assimilating Him are altogether a matter in the spirit. We need to restrain our mind when we pray. We must exercise to pray with our spirit. Instead of spending the time to consider what to pray, we should take care of our inward feeling. As we kneel before the Lord, we may not have any words to utter. However, because of a heavy burden, a pressure within our spirit, we can still groan and sigh before the Lord. This is a very genuine prayer. Have we had this kind of experience? We generally utter groaning prayers when we are in a difficult situation, because the situation exhausts our mental capacity. When the suffering is intense, our mind is unable to control the situation, and the spirit is released through groaning before the Lord. This is the best kind of prayer. It is the most precious kind of breathing.

We must learn to stop our thoughts and contact God in spirit not only when we pray but while we are walking on the street, sitting in a bus, or working. The more we are in the spirit, the more we will touch God, and the more we will absorb Him, eat Him, and drink of Him. It is not a matter of what we pray. We will assimilate God as long as we turn to our spirit.

How to Enjoy God and How to Practice the Enjoyment of God, Ch. 9, Sec. 1 of 3

CHAPTER NINE

ENJOYING GOD
THROUGH TAKING IN THE SPIRIT

Scripture Reading: Psa. 27:1; John 6:63; 7:37-39; 14:6; 15:4-5; 1 John 2:27-28; 3:24; 4:13; 5:20

BEING DRUNK WITH THE HOLY SPIRIT

I would like to emphasize the word eats in John 6:57 and drink in 7:37. After speaking concerning eating Him in 6:57, the Lord said that anyone who thirsts should come to Him to drink in 7:37. We should never consider that the thought of eating and drinking the Lord is something we invented. Our speaking is based entirely on the Lord Jesus’ words.

Drinking the living water refers to drinking the Spirit. At the time the Lord Jesus spoke this word, the Spirit was not yet, because Jesus had not yet been glorified. Hence, on the evening of the Lord’s resurrection He came and stood in the midst of the disciples and breathed into them, saying, “Receive the Holy Spirit” (20:22). From that day on the disciples drank of the Spirit. On the day of Pentecost the Holy Spirit descended and filled the disciples. This was a greater drinking of the Spirit. Once they were filled with the Spirit, they began to speak in different tongues. They were like drunken people speaking. Those who heard them could not comprehend them. They could not understand what was happening, and they remarked that the disciples were filled with new wine. They definitely were filled, not with new wine but with the Spirit. They were drunk with the Spirit, not drunk with wine. The Spirit is the realization of God. They were drunk with God, not with wine. They were “crazy” because of God, not “crazy” because of wine. I believe that the Lord would allow me to say this. When a man is drunk, he becomes crazy and speaks deliriously. He speaks whatever he wants to speak; there is no fear or reservation in him. On the day of Pentecost the disciples were indeed drunk. They were drunk with God. They were filled with God. Therefore, they were “crazy” in their behavior.

We should not be surprised when we hear the word crazy. Strictly speaking, if we have never been crazy in our experience as a Christian, our faith in Him is not very strong. In 2 Corinthians 5:13 Paul says, “For whether we were beside ourselves, it was to God.” Being beside oneself is being crazy. God can make a person beside himself. As Christians, have we ever been beside ourselves? The verse goes on to say, “Or whether we are sober-minded, it is for you.” This means that the apostle was sober toward men but was crazy toward God. Some Christians are sober before men and sober before God; they have never been crazy, because they have never been drunk with God.

Another place in the Bible, Acts 26:24-25, also speaks of being beside oneself. These verses say, “As he was saying these things in his defense, Festus said with a loud voice, You are insane, Paul. Much learning is driving you insane. But Paul said, I am not insane, most excellent Festus, but I am uttering words of truth and soberness.” In Paul’s mind he was uttering words of truth and soberness, but to his interrogators he was insane. He was speaking in an insane way while he was defending himself, not in an ordinary way. Paul was “insane” because he was inwardly filled and drunk with God. He was filled with the Holy Spirit.

Many of us can testify that when we breathe in God through our prayer, we are filled with the Holy Spirit. The Spirit can be compared to new wine; the more we drink Him, the more we are inwardly filled with Him. When we are full of the Spirit, we cannot help but be beside ourselves, because it seems as if we have been swept off our feet. Our praise is no longer common praise, and our singing is no longer common singing. We are as those who are “insane” before God; we are drunk with God.

We not only need to eat God and drink God, but we also need to be drunk with God. This is an intense drinking, not a small sipping. We need to drink to the extent that our whole being is filled with God. Then our preaching of the gospel will be powerful, and our witnessing for the Lord will be bold. The fact that some brothers and sisters are afraid of testifying for the Lord proves that they do not have enough God, not enough of the Spirit, within them. Everyone who is drunk with the Spirit is bold. Whatever God entrusts them with or commissions them to say is carried out without any fear. They are like Peter who declared before the rulers, “Whether it is right in the sight of God to listen to you rather than to God, you judge” (4:19). The apostles were indeed in a drunken and crazy state. They testified that the Jesus whom the Jews had crucified on the cross was raised up by the God of their fathers, for it was not possible for Him to be bound by death. They seemed to be saying, “We stand here today to testify of His resurrection. If He has not resurrected, we would not have such boldness. He is living, and He is living within us. As the Spirit, He has entered into us, has filled us, and has intoxicated us. Therefore, we are not afraid of anything.”

We must see that God is not only edible and drinkable but also intoxicating. Not only can we eat God and drink God; we can be intoxicated by Him and be drunk with Him.