We were burdened beyond measure, above strength, so that we despaired even of life. Yes, we had the sentence of death in ourselves, that we should not trust in ourselves but in God who raises the dead. (2 Corinthians 1:8,9)
It is a part of the nature of things that we never learn in a vital way by
information. We really only come into the good of things by being "pressed out
of measure." So the Lord has to take much time to make spiritual history. When
at length our eyes are open, we cry, "Oh, why did I not see it before!" But
everything else had to prove insufficient before we could really be shown, and
that takes time. Thus it was that we were turned in that dark hour to Romans
chapter six, and, almost as though He spoke in audible language, the Lord said:
"When I died, you died. When I went to the Cross I not only took your sins, but
I took you. When I took you, I
not only took you as the sinner that you might regard yourself to be, but I took
you as being all that you are by nature; your good (?) as your bad; your
abilities as well as your disabilities; yes, every resource of yours. I took you
as a 'worker,' a 'preacher,' an organizer! My Cross means that not
even for Me can you be or do anything out from yourself, but if there is to
be anything at all it must be out from Me, and that means a life of absolute
dependence and faith."
At this point, therefore, we awoke to the fundamental principle of our Lord's
own life while here, and it became the law of everything for us from that time.
That principle was: "nothing of (out from) Himself", but "all things of (out
from) God." "The Son can do nothing of (out from) Himself, but what He seeth
the Father doing: for what things soever He doeth, then the Son also doeth in
like manner" (John 5:19). Such
a revelation, if it is to be a staggering and breaking thing, so that there is
no strength left in us, requires a background of much vain effort. But then, it
carries with it a great implication. While an end is written large in the Cross,
and while that end is to be accepted as our end
indeed, so that there can be
no more of anything so
far as we are
concerned, Jesus lives! And that means boundless possibilities.