
Living
a life in fellowship with the Lord is a crucial matter. A life in fellowship is the base
of our pursuing life, our growing life, and our serving life.
We need to ask ourselves whether we are really touching the Lord
in our Christian life, or are we still merely living a good life?
Living a life in fellowship is a matter of exercise. The first exercise
for living such a life is related to two things: knowing and abiding.
When we do not know something, then it is not really ours. But even
when we know something it may still not be ours. We have to learn
how to abide in what we know. Living a life in fellowship is a matter
of both 'knowing' and 'abiding.' There are two things we need to know,
and one thing in which we must abide.
Firstly, we need to know the Spirit. When we think of God there
should be an instinctive reaction within us: God is Spirit (1)! But
if someone were to ask us to use one word to describe God, we would
not answer with "Spirit." We would probably think of a word
like "powerful," "mighty," "loving,"
or "kind." This is because we do not understand who our
God really is. Our God is Spirit. Yes, He has done a lot of things,
and He has a lot of bright attributes and virtues, but God is just
Spirit. We can say that God is love, God is light, and God is holiness,
but this does not say who He really is. To say that God is love is
to say that the Spirit is constituted and composed of love. If we
were to come to God and ask Him, "Who are You?" He would
say, "I am Spirit." It is important to realize that God
is Spirit, otherwise how could we ever touch Him?
After knowing that God is Spirit, we must also know that we ourselves
have a spirit. When God was creating the universe, He first made the
heavens and then laid the foundations of the earth. Then what did
He do? He formed the spirit of man within him (2). To God, the human
spirit is crucial.
Not only do we have a spirit, but our spirit is regenerated. That
which is born of the Spirit is spirit (3). Because we have a
regenerated spirit, we are able to worship God (1). We must realize
that we are joined to the Lord as one spirit (4). We are one spirit
with the Lord. When we really know that we have a spirit, then we
treasure it.
Secondly, we need to know the divine provisions for a life in fellowship.
What does the Lord provide for us to have a life of fellowship with
Him? The first provision is the blood of Jesus Christ, which cleanses
us from every sin (5). A true servant of the Lord treasures the operative
effectiveness of the blood of Jesus Christ. The blood is operative,
effective, and living. This blood takes care of us by cleansing us
from all our sins.
The second provision is closely related to the first one. After we
are cleansed with the Lord's blood, the Spirit witnesses with the
effectiveness of the blood (6). When we come to the Lord's presence,
first there is the blood, and then there is the Spirit. The Spirit
is the anointing element. When we take the blood, the anointing comes.
The third provision for a life in fellowship is that the Spirit washes
us, justifies us, sanctifies us, and calls us righteous (7). First
there is the blood, then there is the Spirit, and then there is the
Spirit's operation. The Spirit not only comes to witness with the
blood, but it also washes us, justifies us, and sanctifies us, calling
us righteous.
The fourth provision is the very word of God, the Bible that God has
given to us. This word is also the Spirit. The Bible says, "The
words which I have spoken to you are spirit and are life (8)."
This means that the Bible is a provision to us. The Bible is spirit
and life. When we have the Bible without spirit and life it becomes
merely a book of doctrine. Every time when we come to the Bible we
should practice this. We should open up our Bible with the realization
that we are opening up Spirit and life. When we come to the Bible,
we are coming to Spirit and life. When we take in the Bible, we are
taking in Spirit and life. The Lord has not only given us the Spirit,
but He has given us the Bible. The life-giving Word is Spirit and
life.
Thirdly, after knowing these things we must abide in a proper exercise.
To abide in something means to not get away from it. The first practice
is knowing how to call. We should know how to call upon the Lord's
name. The Bible tells us, "Whoever calls upon the name of the
Lord shall be saved (9)." When Saul of Tarsus was arresting the
saints in the book of Acts, he was arresting all those who called
upon the name of the Lord (10). In other words, at the beginning of
the church age, immediately after the Lord had done a marvelous work
in Jerusalem, all of the saints were callers. They knew how to call
upon the Lord. This should also be our practice. While we are driving,
or working, or just by ourselves, we should call on the name of the
Lord.
We should not only learn to recite and speak the word, but we should
learn to read-pray and pray-read the word. What is the difference
between pray-reading and read-praying? Pray-reading is a strong exercise,
while read-praying is related to sensing the anointing and turning
the word into prayer. For example, to pray-read the beginning of Genesis
is to exercise like this: "In the beginning! Amen! In the beginning,
God! Amen!" If you read-pray the verse, it may be like this:
"In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth."
After reading this there is no feeling, so you move on to the next
verse. "And the earth was waste and empty...." There is
still no feeling. But then when you come to "the Spirit of God,"
something touches you. "The Spirit of God moved." This touches
you again. Then you turn what touches you into prayer: "The Spirit
of God moves! Lord, thank You! Everything can be void, everything
can be hopeless, but You move as the Spirit. Lord, please move in
me. Please move over me." This is called read-praying. First
you read, and then you pray. This should be our healthy exercise.
The last exercise we need is the habit of prayer. Prayer should become
part of our person, even to the degree that we don't know when we
are praying because we are praying all the time. In the beginning
when we learn to pray we need to spend time and discipline ourselves.
But eventually prayer just becomes our person. We simply have a habit
of prayer. When we drive a car, we begin to pray. We might speak out
loud, or quietly within our heart. When something happens to us, we
just begin to pray. This means that prayer has become our person.
In what way should we have a habit of prayer? By speaking to the Lord,
regardless of who we are and what we have done.
Whatever we have done, we should just tell Him. Even when we
are in the midst of something that we know is wrong, we should just
pray right there at that moment. There is nothing to be afraid of.
At such a time we should remember the divine provisions. We have the
Lord's blood, the Spirit witnesses with the blood, and the Spirit
operates to cleanse us, justify us, and sanctify us. This will turn
us to the Lord's presence. When we speak to the Lord this way, it
will eventually become our habit of prayer.
(1) John 4:24 RcV. (2) Zechariah 12:1 RcV. (3) John 3:6
RcV. (4) 1 Corinthians 6:17 RcV. (5) 1 John 1:7, 9 RcV.
(6) 1 John 5:6 RcV. (7) 1 Corinthians 6:11 RcV. (8) John
6:63 RcV. (9) Rom. 10: 13 RcV. (10) Acts 9:14, 21 RcV.
Bible verses marked RcV are taken by permission from The New Testament,
Recovery Version, copyright 1985, 1991 Living Stream Ministry.
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