An
Exodus Accomplished
Reading: Luke 9:27-36; 2 Pet.
1:16-18; John 18:33-37; Col. 1:13.
"There are some of them
that stand here, who shall in no wise taste of death, till they
see the kingdom of God."
"My kingdom is not of this
world."
"...who delivered us out
of the authority of darkness and translated us into the kingdom
of the Son of his love."
"Behold, there talked with
him two men, who were Moses and Elijah; who appeared in glory,
and spake of his decease which he was about to accomplish at
Jerusalem."
It is not fresh knowledge to
you that that word translated 'decease' in the Revised Version,
elsewhere 'departure ' or' death', is really the word 'exodus' -
"spake of his exodus which he was about to accomplish at
Jerusalem". So the Cross is spoken of here as an exodus,
which is simply a way or a going out, and the word itself, of
course, immediately carries us back to a book which goes by that
name, and records the going out of the people of Israel from
Egypt. What the exodus was to Israel, the Cross was to the Lord
Jesus and is for us - a way and a going out, but a going out
through a definitely prescribed door, and that door the door of
death. That was the only way out for Israel - through the door of
death. It was the only way out for the Lord Jesus, and it is the
only way out for us.
But that can be put in another
way. The door of death was and is the way out! The
Apostle, in the passage in Col. 1:13 completes it and says it is
also the way in. "...who delivered us out of the authority
of darkness, and translated us into the kingdom of the
Son of his love". And in that connection, the presence of
Moses and Elijah on the Mount of Transfiguration is particularly
significant, for Moses and Elijah were two men in the Old
Testament who knew, one, the way out and the other, the way in;
the exodus and the translation, and they were there to speak with
Him about this; that His death was the way out, but it was also
the way in. It was an escape from one scene and condition, and a
translation into another.
But we must give due heed to
another word here - "the exodus that he was about to
accomplish at Jerusalem". Another word for that is
'achieve'. It was not just a going out, that the door was opened
and He went through; not at all. It was an achievement, an
accomplishment; and, if we want some little idea of what that
meant, look at the exodus of Israel again and see whether it was
an accomplishment. Did they just walk out through a door that was
opened? Not at all. There was an immense amount to be
accomplished achieved, to get them out through that door.
And the type is only a very
faint shadow of what the Cross of the Lord Jesus meant in the
matter of something to be accomplished, a way out to be
accomplished, achieved, a mighty work to be done. "Who delivered..."
- it is upon the meaning of that word that we are going to dwell,
I think, quite a lot. The deliverance of souls. "...who
delivered us out of the authority of darkness". That is the
one side. The other side - "and translated us into the
kingdom of the Son of his love", - but that will await some
further consideration.
Satan's
Rights Destroyed
"Who delivered". What
a tremendous amount there is in that word, what a history! We
shall see that eighty years of the life of Moses were taken up by
God with the formation of one who could deliver; deliverance is
such a tremendous thing. "Who delivered us out of the authority"
- the word 'power' is in our version, but it is that word which
means authority or right, and here it has a double meaning. It
refers to the person. You notice that it is translated in the
plural in Eph. 6:12 - "Our wrestling is... against the
principalities, against the powers..." - the same word,
'authorities'. These are personal things. They are entities in a
certain position. The authority of darkness is firstly a person,
of whom Pharaoh is but a faint type.
And then the authority is that
power which is wielded and exercised by one in a position to
exercise it, who has the right to exercise it in his own realm,
and whose very strength is in his right; from whom you cannot be
delivered just in the direct way of snatching from his grasp, but
you have to undo his right to hold, you have to take from him all
ground of jurisdiction, to bring him to judgment and judge him
clean out of court, so that he has not any more ground to stand
upon, he has no case left. 'Hath delivered us from the very case
that the devil has against us' - that is a tremendous thing, that
he has no more case against us. He will forever be seeking to
have a case against us, to find some ground on which he can bring
up a case against us. Hence he is called "the accuser of the
brethren" (Rev. 12:10), but he has had his case spoiled, his
ground destroyed, his rights nullified, and in this way we are
delivered out of the authority of darkness. The Cross of the Lord
Jesus is that kind of exodus, that escape, that way out, that
glorious achievement.
You see, this word 'authority'
carries with it the idea of rights, and that great battle in
Egypt, headed up to the Passover and consummated at the Red Sea,
was all a question of rights. In the Passover, the rights of
Pharaoh were wound up. If we understand the meaning of the virtue
of the blood of the lamb, the dying of that lamb, the
identification by faith of every believer with that lamb in
death, and the appropriation by faith of the blood of the lamb,
then we understand the meaning of Pharaoh's rights being wound
up. From that moment, he had no rights over them, and they began
their exodus. He sought to re-assert his rights and he met the
authority of superior rights and his hosts were destroyed in the
Red Sea. He had no ground to stand upon, morally, spiritually and
literally; his ground was gone.
All that is gathered
into the Cross of the Lord Jesus. The work of the Lord Jesus in
His Cross is all gathered into the Passover; and then, as He
leads His people out through the offering of Himself, the
shedding of His Blood, Satan's rights over them have been
destroyed and they have a position which means that while Satan
will be active afterward, he is only active against himself while
they maintain their position in faith; he is only bringing upon
himself his own destruction while we hold to the ground that the
Blood of the Lord Jesus has provided. That mighty Passover can
turn back upon Satan for his own undoing.
Deliverance
from the Authority of Darkness
You notice that the book which
goes by this name - Exodus - begins with the names of the sons of
Israel, the names of the elect race, and then out of Egypt God
calls His son collectively as one son, the sons in the son. He
leads them out - and what a rich fulness of meaning that gives to
a little statement with which we are so familiar in John's Gospel
- "He calleth his own sheep by name, and leadeth them
out" (John 10:3). The names all mentioned, the chosen ones;
He leadeth them out, He makes the exodus for His own sheep.
It says this, that those who
were in Judaism, as it was in the days when our Lord was here on
earth, were in something which had become bound up with the
kingdoms of this world from which they had to be delivered by the
death of the Lord Jesus - and it was a very religious thing. We
are getting very near to the heart of things. Our deliverance
from the authority of darkness may have to be wrought, not only
in our separation from this world as we think of it, it may have
to be wrought in a religious sense to get a people out into a
heavenly place, even from Christianity, as a religion of this
world, something which has become bound up with this world and
its kingdom. This deliverance of the Cross is an utter thing -
that is what we are getting at.
Complete
Separation from Satan's Kingdom
The Lord was very explicit
about Israel's exodus. He wrought and wrought for His rights, so
completely, that He would not compromise to the degree of a hoof.
"There shall not a hoof be left behind" (Ex. 10:26). He
was working for His rights over other rights, His authority,
and He would not allow a fragment to remain outside of His own
realm. That means that the Kingdom of the Son of His love is a
Kingdom which claims all, which represents all, which means the
most perfect separation from the kingdom, whatever its form and
nature, over which Satan has rights and therefore power. God is
not going to give His power, His glory, to any little fragment
which lies within the domain of the prince of this world. The
secret of spiritual power, of spiritual life, of spiritual
fulness, of spiritual effectiveness, the secret of reaching God's
full end, is found in the utterness of the dominion of the Lord
Jesus, in His having His rights in the life. Until, in type, that
was established in the case of Israel, they were a floundering
people. They, although out literally from Egypt, were not out
spiritually, and were weak, impersistent, unreliable,
ineffective, inwardly divided. They were not really out in an
inward way. God could not commit Himself to them until they were
established on the other side of Jordan. Then He could; He
commenced to commit Himself at Jericho, and went on.
Israel was chosen, in the
sovereignty of God, to be the instrument and vessel of blessing
to all nations of the earth. God intended to reach all through
Israel. In them, Abraham's seed, all nations of the earth were
intended to be blessed. There is a sense, of course, in which
that has been fulfilled, inasmuch as Jesus Christ of the seed of
Abraham has been the blessing to all nations, but Israel as a
nation was called to be a blessing and a channel of Divine
blessing to all peoples, and Israel failed. The Church has come
in according to the word of the Lord Jesus - "The kingdom of
God shall be taken away from you, and shall be given to a nation
bringing forth the fruits thereof" (Matt. 21:43). And Peter
says about the Church - "an elect race... a holy
nation" (1 Pet. 2:9), to take the place of Israel with the
same object - that the Church might be the channel of Divine
blessing to all peoples.
Now, why is it that there is so
much ineffectiveness, so much lack of power, so much defeat -
that is, absence of victory; so much that does not count for God
about us. Let us ask ourselves in all honesty whether it may not
be that, as yet, we do not know in a living way, the meaning of
the Cross as it is here set forth. The Cross represents that
accomplishment of an utter going out from a realm where Satan has
rights and therefore has power to spoil. In Egypt, Pharaoh had
rights. He was king of Egypt, that was his domain, he had a right
to do what he would. These people are in my domain, then they
come under my rule and I can do as I like, as I will! So he
oppressed, he weakened, he limited, he afflicted. And yet they
are the elect, called sons of God, called sons of God even when
they are there. We are sons of God by calling. But what a
terrible thing to think of sons of God in a state of defeat like
this, all because they are in a realm where there are rights by
which they are bound. While they stay in that realm, and, mark
you again, while there remains one hoof in that realm - they
might have all gone out, flocks and herds and everything of their
possessions might have gone out, and then just one hoof of one
bullock left in Egypt - the whole thing would have been under
arrest. The Lord's attitude was, I want that last hoof before I
move! That is a very literal interpretation, but that is the
Lord's attitude.
It means this, that our
vocation cannot be fulfilled, the calling with which we are
called, the power of God, cannot be realised while one fragment
remains in the territory where Satan has rights. We must get on
to the ground, into the realm, where all those rights are
destroyed and he has no authority at all; and God has secured
that realm, that position, by the Cross of the Lord Jesus, and if
you and I will only come into line with the meaning of the Cross
in its fullness, we have come into the way of power,
fruitfulness, effectiveness.
I was asking the question, why
it is that the Church is so ineffective? which is only saying,
why is it that so many Christians are so spiritually weak and
unfruitful and ineffective? Somewhere there is a link with the
world; outwardly or inwardly, there is a link with the world -
that is, the kingdom of darkness, the authority of darkness. I am
not talking about our being here on the earth and having to work
here in this world. You know the difference between being in it
and of it, between being here and having heart relationships,
voluntary relationships, choices, interests, desires, ambitions
and so on; to be a part of this world in its acceptance, its
recognition, and many other things. The way out and the way in is
the way of death and that death, while it is all-inclusive in His
own - for He has comprehended all that it means - He says for us
it is a crisis and then a daily thing. "Take up his cross
daily" (Luke 9:23), which means, I die daily to the
call of this world, to the call of that kingdom where Satan has
rights and authority, a call to my heart to be something here in
this world as in itself. Oh, how subtly Satan uses that with
many, seeking to argue that the realisation of an ambition would
give even greater opportunity for the Lord. That is very nice to
the flesh. The Cross has to be brought to all those subtle
arguments of the angel of light; and while I would not say to
anybody, Be careless, be slipshod, be second-rate in what you are
and what you are doing on this earth, never let your Christianity
make you less than the best amongst men and women and the most
efficient in your job: at the same time, examine your motive,
your object, your ambition. Examine your hearts in the light of
the Cross, and see whether it is self-gratification, self-glory,
or any form of self as the goal that is influencing the argument.
It is a deep heart matter, this matter of the Cross daily, dying
to much, perhaps, that the flesh would like, dying to the
cravings of this natural life, and oh, they are so strong! It is
so difficult to let this self go altogether and be nothing as
amongst men.
When we come to think of the
deliverer of souls, we shall find that Moses and Christ started
in this world with no place of acceptance. Moses came into the
world and found that the door was shut to him in this world and
he had to be hidden three months. His life was a prey from his
birth. And Christ came into this world on exactly the same
conditions. Herod's edict was at work and there was no place for
Him, and it is very difficult to take up a life which is like
that from the very inception. What you are as the Lord's, what
you represent, you as a child of God, as a Christian man or
woman, you are not wanted. If you will only just compromise a
bit, you will be accepted. If only you will hide it a bit,
nothing will be said, the way will be open for you. But if you
are going to stand on that ground of Christ, then the door is
shut to you, you are not wanted. This is what it means that the
Cross stands there right at the beginning of this life. You
remember Exodus 12 - "This month shall be unto you the
beginning of months... they shall take to them every man a
lamb". The beginning was with death, death to self, as to
this kingdom.
Well now, we know that this is
very practical in its application, and it does work out like
this, that, inasmuch as there is anything that belongs to that
realm in ourselves, inasmuch as it is here and we are actuated by
it, influenced by it, governed in any way by it, spiritual
weakness, spiritual defeat, spiritual paralysis, unfruitfulness
is the result. Somewhere there is a bridge, a link, a connection
with the realm the Lord cannot have, His rights are not ceded.
Out of the authority, not only the realm, but the right
of Satan, into the Kingdom of the Son of His love.
You notice the Mount of
Transfiguration. "There are some of them that stand here,
who shall in no wise taste of death, till they see the kingdom of
God" (Luke 9:27). Then eight days afterward - a, significant
number, resurrection, new ground, the old world gone, the Son of
Man glorified - eight days afterward He taketh Peter, John and
James up into the mountain, a heavenly position, and prayed.
There came a voice out of the cloud, "This is my beloved
Son; hear ye him". Peter, recounting it in his letter, says,
"He received from the Father honour and glory, when there
was borne such a voice to him by the Majestic Glory, This is my
beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased: and this voice we
ourselves heard borne out of heaven, when we were with him in the
holy mount" (2 Pet. 1:17-18). "Into the kingdom of the
son of his love". "In whom I am well pleased".
That very Kingdom of the Lord's pleasure, the Lord's delight,
lies on the other side of the exodus.
First published in "A Witness and A
Testimony" magazine, Jul-Aug 1945, Vol 23-4