He who is joined to the Lord is one spirit with Him. (1 Corinthians 6:17)
The nature of this relationship is essentially spiritual; that is, it is a union
of spirit. "He that is joined to the Lord is one spirit." "They that worship
Him must worship Him in spirit..." because "God is Spirit." The union, then, is
the union of spirit. That goes deeper than any other kind of union. We cannot go
deeper than that. That defines the nature of man in the deepest, the most real
part of his being, that he is fundamentally in the sight of God, spirit.
The basis is Life. That is what John brings out
so clearly, by way of illustration in his Gospel, and by way of direct
statement in his epistle – "...God gave unto us eternal life, and this life is
in His Son." "He that hath the Son hath the life." That is a statement imposed
upon the basic declaration that our fellowship is with the Father and with the
Son. The fellowship is explained as being that of possessing His very Life. The
basis of union with God is that God's own Life is given to us in new birth, and
upon that God builds everything, on that He counts for everything. Where that is
not, God can do nothing so far as union is concerned.
In order to reach and realize all God's
thought, God must put Himself into man in the very essence of His being, His
very Life. God cannot realize spiritual, eternal, universal intentions on the
basis of natural life. The Scriptures make it very clear that man's own natural
life can never be the basis of the realization of any of God's purposes, that
God's own Life alone can be that. Thus for all His hopes God first of all
provides His own basis. God's hope is in His own Life, not in ours, and He puts
the basis of His hope within at new birth, and on that basis He proceeds to the
development of all His thought, and the realization of all His intention.