Possibly, one of the most complicated things is our
way of speaking. Our languages were born from a confusion. It was part
of God’s design in an effort to overcome sin to confuse the tongues. If
there is something complicated today it is grammar. But in God there is
nothing complicated.
All that is of God is simple in its nature. But we
live in a complicated world, and even more complicated because our
essence is pride and selfishness. So to understand truth, is a very
difficult issue today.
But for God, truth is very simple, and Scriptures
define truth in such a different manner, because Truth in Scriptures,
and in the universe, is a person. But for us, Truth is something of a
conceptual nature. Plato has really hurt us! He placed us in the world
of the ‘ideas’, but God works in the realm of realities, facts.
God works in the experience. He doesn’t work in a
conceptual manner. The Holy Writings are the acts of God and He explains
with acts, but we explain with abstract facts. The very same subject of
Truth is complicated in our grammar. We say that truth is an abstract
subject.
Something abstract is something you cannot grasp;
something that you cannot see; something that you cannot feel; something
that is of an ethereal nature—almost nothing. In the Scriptures, Truth
is what is of a most concrete nature, but our grammar says truth is an
abstract subject.
Love is an abstract verb, and righteousness is an
abstract noun. All what really IS, is abstract according to our
grammar—but not according to the Holy Scriptures. God’s Love is the most
concrete thing. It’s His Son, and that is why He says that God is Love.
There can’t be anything more concrete or real than this. There is no
abstract theme in Him; there is no ‘idea’ in Him. He is and He said, "I
am!" "I am the ‘I am’."
For us, that is still abstract, because our mind is
abstract, our mind is Greek. And the Old Testament was written with that
Hebrew mentality. In the Old Testament, we don’t find theologians. We
don’t find philosophers in the Old Testament. Philosophers came from
Greece.
From the Hebrew, we have the Prophets. The
philosophers and the theologians developed their knowledge with the
premise of the human mind, and all human minds are leprous minds,
because all human minds are sick. Every human mind is full of sin and of
pride.
But God’s Knowledge is not born in you and it’s not
born in me. The Knowledge of God is born in Him and maintains itself in
Him—lives in Him and He transmits that Knowledge through the prophets.
He has to use our complicated knowledge but with a great problem because
each human being has a conflict between what he thinks and what he
feels; between what he believes and what he really is.
But in God we don’t find this dichotomy—what He
thinks is what He is. What He believes is what He lives and what He
speaks is what He does. Between what He says and what He does, there is
no difference. That’s why the Hebrew word ‘dabar’, is the word chosen
for ‘word’. It means not an idea, not an abstraction, it means an
act—something that happens—news—Good News.
But our mind does not perceive that. We speak and
what we speak is in contrast with what we are and what we are is so
different from what is Truth. God in His mercy has purposed Himself to
make that a living reality in us; something whole—the Truth within us
and the way He does that is simply through His Word. Only through His
Word. "Say the Word", said the Roman Centurion, and he was not a
theologian and he did not know of the prophets but he had perceived in
Jesus that He was the Truth and he told Jesus, "Say the word and my
servant will be healed."
The Centurion had trust in truth—the Hebrews had lost
their trust in truth. They had the book, they had the concepts, they had
the Old Testament, they had tradition but they did not know the Truth
because the Truth is His Word and His Word is Him.
The Lord Jesus said, "What is Truth?" "I am." "I am."
And Pilate and the Jews were just scared. They didn’t understand. Pilate
asked Jesus, "What is truth?" and Jesus answered him but Pilate never
understood—because the Lord is Truth even if He does not speak it. But
we are truth when we speak it but Jesus is Truth without speaking.
We believe that the vehicle of truth is our tongue,
but the vehicle of truth in Christ was His being, His character, His
essence—His Truth. And He said it, "I am the Way; I am Life and I am
Truth, I am the Door, I am the Light—I Am."
Before Lazarus’ tomb, the Lord told Martha and Mary,
"I am the Resurrection," but they were already influenced by the common
Greek and for Mary and Martha resurrection was a doctrine. It was an
idea. For them it wasn’t Him. The Lord Jesus has said, "This is not a
matter of death." It was not an issue of death and not even the
disciples understood.
Four days had passed since he had died, but for Jesus
that was not death—for Jesus he was just sleeping. But we cannot
understand that because we have a complicated mind, an abstract mind.
The Lord Jesus said, "Lazarus come up, wake up, come out!" He is
resurrection; He is the Truth; He is Life; now—always! Have we received
Him?
What a difference it makes to really receive Him. He
came to His own, and His own did not receive Him. He came to His own and
they analyzed Him through concepts, and they rationalized Him, but they
did not experience Him. They applied His ideas and they applied His
theology in order to identify Him but their feelings, contrary to their
concepts, their selfishness and their pride, contrary to prophecy did
not permit them to perceive the simple Truth.
And that process that is a spiritualist process is
what Satan has developed with intellectualism and today it is even more
refined than ever. And possibly we, unconscious of that fact, live that
intellectual experience. But our Lord Jesus, Who is the same yesterday,
the same today, the same tomorrow and forever—the One Who never
changes—the immutable One, He will always be the same—the great ‘I Am’.
How different righteousness by faith from the lips of
Christ—very different from righteousness by faith from Paul’s pen,
because Paul was influenced by Plato and Aristotle—his culture was from
Aristotle—he lived in the Greek world. He was influenced by the
Hellenistic mind thought. Alexandria had an impact in his values and in
his culture.
But Jesus’ values are very simple values—easy to
follow—authentic values—the Truth. He said something that is so
beautiful, and is so simple, and at the same time is so deep. We discuss
so much who is going to be saved, and we study so much how to be saved.
Jesus said as soon as He sat down, when He gave the Sermon on the Mount,
He said, "Of whom is the Kingdom of Heaven?" He said it, "The kingdom of
God is of the poor in spirit."
"Of theirs is the Kingdom of Heaven—of the poor in
spirit".
Is it simple? Do we understand it? "Blessed are the
poor in spirit".
When we speak of poverty, it’s something horrible.
Who wants to be poor? No-one wants to be poor. All the cultures strive
to be rich. But Jesus said, "Happy are the poor. The poor!
"Because the poor in spirit—of them is the Kingdom of
Heaven."
The 144,000—poor in spirit. Really poor in spirit.
More than poor—pauperism in the spirit. So poor that there is nothing in
them, nothing worthy, nothing! Nothing in which to place their
knowledge; nothing from which to hang their wisdom; with no pretension.
So poor that they are empty, they are completely void and there is
nothing in them.
Isaiah came to this experience. "Woe to me! Woe to me! Because in me
there is only filthy rags!" when he saw the Lord. He saw the Lord; and
he saw Him in the same way that we can see Him. He did not perceive Him
in his sensorial capacity; he did not see Him with his eyes—he saw Him
through faith.
God always reveals Himself; He has always revealed
Himself; to us He has revealed Himself. He has revealed Himself to you
each time that the Holy Spirit moves in your conscience. He is revealing
Himself, He manifests Himself and His only purpose is to convict me of
sin. He knows that in order to convince me of sin, He has to be able to
make my life void that I might experience that I am poor. That in my
spirit, that in my flesh, that in my knowledge, and in my wisdom, and in
my theory and everything that is mine that I am poor. And I should be
made completely void but human beings complicate it. We reject that.
There are many ways in which we reject that. There
are many ways to reject Him. Sometimes in the way we deal with each
other at home we are rejecting that experience; but we don’t perceive
it. But He is present and He is telling me, "Be poor! Be poor of
spirit—with your wife—with your children—be poor. So that you might be
in the kingdom. So that you might experience the kingdom." But we
reject.
But we have the Truth here [in the head] and we
believe we have the Truth in the mind and we are exclusive with Truth.
The Jews were exclusive with their truth and they came to believe that
all the rest were out of the Remnant. But the Canaanite woman was more
willing and she experiences becoming void because of God. But the
disciples did not understand. The disciples told Jesus, "Send her away,
Send her away! She bothers us!"
The Lord Jesus, He was trying, He was educating, and
He was redeeming His disciples from all types of religious bigotry and
exclusiveness. But they were not poor. They were not poor. They thought
that they were rich; That Jesus was only for them; that truth was only
for them and how much did the Lord struggle to empty Peter of himself,
and make them all depositories of His Spirit—rich in the Spirit of God
but poor and totally emptied of themselves.
Do we understand it? It’s as simple as that. The most
simple One, the most sincere, was Jesus Christ. But we still believe
that Jesus is our example. Is that true? We still believe that Jesus is
our example.
The Protestant world believes that Jesus is only our
substitute, but in reality, He is not even our substitute. The
substitute for the Protestant world is the arrogance of their pride.
That’s their substitute. That’s the substitute of this world and whoever
has that substitute has already transgressed the First Commandment,
because the First Commandment implies the death to self.
How will they accept Jesus as their example? And in
reality, what has happened with us because we in our concepts, He can be
the example; in our ideas, He can be the example and in our theology, He
can be our example. But in our reality, my selfishness is my example; my
self is my example—that is the great dichotomy created by Satan. And
Brethren, Satan is the creator of making truth spiritualistic. Not only
the Body and the Soul but Truth itself. We accept it as a theory; we
accept it as an idea, as a theology. But in our reality, in our bodies,
it never is, and with our tongue we express it but with our spirit we
deny it. That is spiritualistic truth and Satan is an expert in
spiritualism.
Satan’s technique for sin is to separate, to
disintegrate, and to break apart; that is Satan’s technique. He began
using that technique in the Garden of Eden and he will not change it.
When God created us, the crown of creation, He created us whole. He
created us one, even as He is One. There is no separation between what
He feels and what He thinks. There is no separation. But for us these
are two different things. We feel one thing; we think another thing.
That is the work of Satan; that is not the work of God.
The work of redemption is that the very same thought
that is in the Lord, is the same thought that is within us. The same
feelings that are in God may be the same mind that is in us. That the
same love in Him may be in us, because He is One and He will never be
dual. He will always be One, the whole One, He who is complete, where
there is no shadow of variance.
We behold in Scriptures the same way that He treated
Nicodemus, the same dealing with Mary Magdalene, the same way He treated
the big people, the same way He dealt with the small insignificant
people—the same. The same hope for Nicodemus, the same hope He gave Mary
Magdalene, the same hope. He was the Door; He was Life for every human
being.
There’s no indifference in Him, that’s why He said,
"I am the Truth. I am the Life. I am the Way". But people still today
have not understood that. I hope that we might perceive it, in that very
simple language of Jesus.
The disciples had a problem; possibly the same
problem that we have today. The disciples had a problem, but very easy
to solve for Jesus. For Jesus, it was very easy to solve it. But for us
to solve a problem is something very complicated. For us to solve the
problem of our families, it’s a very complicated problem. And the
conclusion to which we arrive in order to solve the family problem is
divorce. That’s our solution.
But for Jesus, separation was not the solution.
Rupture was not the solution. And much less when I say, "I love
you"—less. Because we say, "I love you" and then we divorce, because we
do not know Him.
When Adam and Eve separated themselves from Him, when
Adam and Eve broke apart from God, He did not separate them. Notice how
He solved the problem—so simple the solution: "I will die for you, so
that you might not be separated from Me. So that you might not be apart
from Me. I will die for you. I will empty myself for you, because of
you, for your family, for this human race."
What a simple way of solving things—without lawyers;
without courtrooms; without a judgment. "I will come down, because I
love you and I forgive you and I place in the deep sea your sins. I am
your substitute so that I might come to be your example, so that you
might also learn to die to yourself, to deny yourself, to be poor in
spirit."
So simple a plan; if we experience it, there is the
essence of God’s simplicity. It can’t be explained but you can
experience it. Nicodemus, the wise man, he couldn’t understand it and he
was a wise man, he was a professor and he was an expert, more than any
of us, in Hebrew, in Hebrew thought, but he had not experienced it.
The Lord told something very interesting to
Nicodemus. The Lord told him, "If you want to see the Kingdom of
Heaven." See—not to posses—only to see—not to posses. To the poor in
spirit, the Lord told them, "Yours IS the Kingdom of Heaven. You are the
heirs", to the poor in spirit. But to Nicodemus, who was not yet poor in
spirit, He only told him that he had to be born again in order to see.
At what distance would he see it?
But the disciples, to the disciples He said something
even more concrete—much more concrete. Matthew 18:1, 2 & 3, and see the
way in which Jesus explained things. He would explain things with acts.
He explained the Kingdom of Heaven with the grain of wheat; with the man
who went to sow; with a very simple act; with something with which they
were very familiar. "The kingdom of God is like the sower who went out
to plant."
But here we find some rich disciples, full of
themselves, anxious for a high place, anxious to have a position. From
where had they come from? From where had they come from? They were
coming from a level where it was impossible to reach any position, but
in this human rupture and this spiritualistic disintegration in which we
participate, when they saw Jesus, they became great. They desired to
have power. They wished to have authority and to have a great position.
Amongst themselves they began to discuss who was the greatest. Rich!
They were rich! Rich in themselves. They did not know the nature of the
kingdom.
They had renounced, they had renounced—they renounced
things, but to leave things—to renounce things, is the easiest thing.
But to renounce our own self, that’s something different. Leave the
boat. Leave the employment. That’s easy. To leave our self—that is
redemption. That is to become poor in spirit—poor of ourselves, poor in
our essence, come to the conclusion that my moral essence is only
leprosy, filthy rags—that is very difficult to our complicated,
spiritualistic mind.
The enemy has given us a false value and we believe
in that false value. And the more we believe in ourselves the more
difficult it is to trust in Jesus’ word. "If anyone wants to follow Me,
let him deny himself, and take up his cross and follow Me."
How simple Christ’s formula for salvation. There is
no complicated word in that. There’s no technical term. We don’t need a
dictionary for that, because our Lord is very simple and Truth is very
simple.
Let us hear what it says here: Matthew chapter 18.
"At the same time came the disciples to Jesus saying, ‘who is the
greatest in the kingdom of heaven?’"
For the disciples it was already a familiar term,
‘the kingdom of heaven’. From the same moment that Jesus was baptized He
announced the kingdom of heaven. So up to this moment the kingdom of
heaven was a familiar term. So they asked Him, with their human values,
‘who will be the greatest in heaven?’
The greatness of this is the answer of Jesus, and the
simplicity of this, the truth in this, is Jesus’ answer to them. It was
not a philosophical answer. It was not a theological answer and it was
not an ideological answer. It was not an abstract answer, it was a very
concrete answer.
"And Jesus called a little child"; called a little
child. What a way to answer.
A tremendous problem—"Who is the greatest among us,
Jesus?" He could not hurt them. It wasn’t His plan to offend them. It
was not His plan to make them feel inferior. His plan was to redeem
them. His plan was to restore them. His plan was to show them the
kingdom. Let them participate the kingdom without offending them,
without hurting them, without breaking their values—just reaching them
in the most special manner so that they could perceive the kingdom. And
at the same time they could experience their shame and they could
experience their leprosy—experience their leprosy with a redemptive
motive, because we can show someone else their leprosy with the motive
of putting him down and not of redeeming him. With religion it is so
easy to show who is more.
"And Jesus called a little child and set him in the
midst of them."
A child; what did the disciples do with the children?
"They bother us! Get out!" They would reject the children.
Oh, But Jesus did not despise the children. Jesus was
not bothered by the children. They were an object of redemption and He
said of the children, "Of theirs is the kingdom of heaven." Jesus said
of us, the adults, the kingdom of heaven does not belong to us. It isn’t
ours because we are complicated, but children are simple. Oh the
children! But adults, we don’t trust; we are suspicious of each other;
we approach each other in a defensive manner; but children—they trust;
they give themselves; they are open—completely—they still are one,
notwithstanding the fact of sin and our fallen condition. What an agent
God has given to us that even in children you still can perceive that
innocence and purity.
And He put the child in the midst of them, and then
He spoke. Hear what He said: "Amen" that’s the word translated for
‘verily’. It’s the word for truth. It’s the word for assurance;
certainty; what is reality; what is authentic; what really is; without
any abstraction.
"Verily I say unto you except ye be converted." The
Hebrew word ‘chou’[sp] is to become—it is an act, it is a reality; if
you do not become. And the Lord, understanding by inspiration the
conflict in the language, the Lord added another verb in order to
compliment the first verb so that we might understand that the
experience of salvation is an act. It’s not a declaration; it is not a
forensic act; it’s not an idea; it’s an act. It’s an event; it’s an
experience—in us; in the disciples; and in anyone. And if that doesn’t
happen, we will never see the kingdom of heaven.
If you do not convert–and He adds, "and become" and
it’s from the verb ‘be’, ‘being’. Very interesting—first the action—then
the state of being. First the action—if you are not converted and then
‘be’ and that’s an inflection of the verb ‘to be’ and the verb ‘to be’
is God’s verb and fortunately in our human grammars, that is still that
way.
God in His mercy has permitted something with the
verb ‘to be’ because that verb does not indicate action. The verb ‘to
be’ implies nature, our constitution, a state of being; it’s a state of
being. Our Lord Jesus used the most simple language and He used the act
of a child because the child was a child and was in the condition of a
child. The child was a child. But we are adults and adults are
incredulous, they have unbelief and adults—we suspect, and we have a
defensive attitude because we are filled with ourselves.
"Verily I say unto you, Except ye be converted, and
become as little children, ye shall not enter into the kingdom of
heaven. Whosoever therefore…"
And this indefinite pronoun ‘Whosoever’, is a very
common pronoun in Jesus’ usage. Whoever! That pronoun has nothing
exclusive about it—anyone—with which condition? That empties himself.
Whoever descends—who descends his spirit—whoever descends. Whoever comes
down. In whatever circumstance—in whatever circumstance—in every
circumstance!
My loved ones, in the context of sin, God’s guidance
is for us to descend—is to come low. But in the realm of sin, the
direction of spiritualism is to exalt and lift up ourselves; is to go
up—is to be up. But in God’s direction is to go down.
Oh if Adam had humbled himself before Eve, he would
not have accused her. He would not have justified himself. He would not
have invented the religion of self-justification. But Adam was not
empty, he was already full of himself and instead of recognizing his
leprosy, he accused the leprosy in her. And that is our problem. He
became an adult. He stopped being a child.
Verse 4 "Whosoever therefore shall humble himself as
this little child, the same is greatest in the kingdom of heaven."
Do we want to be the greatest? Do we want to be the
greatest—you and I need to become children through God’s grace. Will we
permit this to the Lord? The kingdom is yours—is ours. We shall be of
the 144,000 if we permit this.
May God Bless you!