We were dead and buried with Him in baptism, so that just as He was raised from the dead by that splendid Revelation of the Father's power so we too might rise to life on a new plane altogether. If we have, as it were, shared His death, let us rise and live our new lives with Him!
(Romans 6:5 Phillips)
In our union with Christ in His
death, we cease and He begins, and from the beginning He becomes
the all. That is a progressive thing, as well as a basic thing.
It is a thing all-inclusive in its meaning, in its intent, but it
is also progressive. We have to accept the fullness of that thing in an act. We
have to take the position quite definitely and consciously that now, in
accepting our union with Christ in His death, this is to work out in our having
no more place at all, and that whenever we come into evidence we shall be
smitten, we shall be put aside, we shall not be allowed to go on. We have to
accept that once for all in a definite act of commitment, that from henceforth
everything that is of self is going to be smitten unsparingly with that Cross,
and whenever self comes in it will not be allowed to have a standing.
We had
better settle it once for all, and have a dealing with the Lord on that
inclusive, comprehensive, and utter ground, that He will make His own meaning in
that real; not our understanding of it, not our grasp or apprehension of it, not
what we think to be the "I" which is to be forbidden, but what He knows to be
the "I"; not the measure of our knowledge of ourselves, but His knowledge of us.
There will be revealed a very great deal more that is "I" than has ever entered
into our thought or imagination. Self, then, not as we know it, but as He knows
it through and through, is to be brought under the power of that Cross, and this
we accept in an act.