There are two sentences from the Pen of Inspiration.
One of them we mentioned yesterday. God has created the human mind in
such a way that every faculty that we have in our mind, responds to
God’s mind, this is what God’s inspired counsel tells us in Christ’s
Object Lessons Chapter 25; when it considers the parable of the Ten
Talents. Then in 1897 Sister White said, "If we fail in understanding
the science of true education, we shall never enter into the Kingdom of
Heaven."
God’s education is through faith. I wasn’t educated
in faith. I was educated in this secular world and they taught me
scriptures with the secular method. Which is the secular method? Reason;
but not through faith.
How difficult it was for me to find something of
faith—very difficult. By God’s mercy, the way we must approach God is in
faith. He approaches us in faith. He comes to us in faith. He has
complete trust and believes that we can be born again, that we can
become children once again. He has that faith.
Faith does not condemn. Faith does not accuse. Faith
does not point at. Faith is not a yoke and faith is not a dominion.
Faith. Trust. Faith sees what cannot be seen.
Reason sees what can be seen. Reason sees sin and
reason sees wickedness. Reason sees what is the iniquity inside of the
other person. Each time I use my reason that way, what grows within me
is my pride and my self-sufficiency, because I learn through my reason.
But when I learn through faith I arrive to the conclusion that there is
nothing in me, and I become humble. Faith makes us humble, but reason
fills us up.
Jesus was taught through faith. Where did Mary learn?
Who taught Mary? Mary taught her child in faith. How did Mary learn? If
we compare Mary with us, we have PhDs in comparison. Because Mary; what
did Mary know? The only thing that she knew was—and she said; "Behold
Thy servant". Behold Thy servant. "May God’s will be done in me
according to His Word."
She permitted everything; she permitted everything
and she walked by faith, and she developed a child who never became an
adult—never became an adult. Behold the Child educated by the Lord so
that He wouldn’t become an adult. The more He grew; He was more
dependent, in greater communion, with greater ties, closer to His
Father.
But with us it is opposite. The more we grow, we
separate ourselves. We become more independent; we believe more in
ourselves and we trust more in ourselves and we trust less in Him. And
when we come to His Word, we reason it out, but we don’t trust in it.
But we know a lot. The scribes knew a lot. The
Pharisees knew a lot and the Sadducees knew a lot. The Hebrew people
knew a lot; they knew a lot of the letter of the Word. But they didn’t
have faith. What was it that they didn’t practice? What was it that they
didn’t practice? All that liturgy they had; all that system of the
sanctuary services. They were very careful with each specific color,
they had all the fringes, and they handled all the different robes—but
they didn’t know the real Lamb! And when Truth came, and when Truth
became incarnated, and when the Word became flesh, they did not
recognize it. Their religion was handled through reason, but not through
faith.
Mary educated her child by faith. Luke, in a Bible
verse that we know by memory and this verse should teach us a lot; in
Luke chapter 2, the scriptures say the following, and we should remember
what Paul said about Jesus: "but when the fullness of time came, God
sent His Son, subject unto the law." Subject unto the law—just as we
are.
Mary understood something of that without reasoning
too much, but with a lot of faith. And we should know the difference
there is between reason and faith. Because our reasons are born in our
head, but faith is born in Him.
Philosophers reason, theologians reason, all human
knowledge is a child of reason. And what does reasoning depend upon? Of
our senses. Who informs my senses? The external world that is around me;
and every perception I have of the outward world is educating me. But
God has made His knowledge in such a way that He reveals it, He reveals
everything, and His revelation is born in His mind. And His mind is not
sick with what makes my mind sick.
Almost everything that I perceive with my eyes, and
almost everything that I hear with my ears, and almost everything I
touch with my hands, is infected with sin and wickedness. It’s affected
by pride and selfishness. But all that God has made, and all that He has
revealed, is born from a pure mind, from a righteous mind, from a clean
mind.
What kind of a mind, what class of mind? In
Deuteronomy 32 it tells us what kind of God we have and what type of
God, what kind of God has revealed Himself in His word. Beginning in
verse 2: "My doctrine shall drop as the rain, my speech shall distil as
the dew, as the small rain upon the tender herb, and as the showers upon
the grass:"
Like what? Like the small rain. As showers upon the
grass, that is how revelation comes upon us, to everyone who is willing
to receive it by faith.
"Because I will publish the name of the LORD: ascribe
ye greatness unto our God. He is the Rock, his work is perfect: for all
his ways are judgment: a God of truth and without iniquity, just and
right is He. They have corrupted themselves."
Who is God? He is clean. He is pure. He is the only
One. That God was the One that Mary knew and she trusted herself into
the arms of that God.
Abraham’s experience was something similar. He didn’t
have a child. He asked God for a child. He needed an heir and God
promised him that He would give him a child that would be born of him.
Scriptures say he said; "Amen", the Hebrew expression for faith. He
trusted, but reason was telling him that it was impossible. Science was
telling him that it was impossible. His senses were telling him that
there was no possibility. But possibility is God. What is impossible for
us is possible for Him. And He is able to make us into children once
again, even though we are adults.
Our Lord Jesus never was an adult. He was always a
child. We read in Luke chapter 2 in verse 40, "And the child grew, and
waxed strong in spirit, filled with wisdom:"
Now we have a problem with the word ‘wisdom’, and in
this western culture we even have a coefficient of intelligence. We have
even placed on a numbered scale, wisdom; a hundred ten, a hundred
twenty, a hundred forty, a hundred sixty IQ. I don’t know how much you
would measure Jesus up to. But what is wisdom?
We know the letter; but Mary did not know too much of
the letter, but she had the experience. She lived in the presence of the
Lord. She didn’t do anything without the presence of the Lord and she
did everything according to His Word. She accepted everything according
to His will. Who is the Word? The fear of the Lord is the beginning of
wisdom. We understand the semantics of the word ‘fear’ in that context;
it’s the effect that results from being in the presence of God. That’s
an experience of faith.
Our ‘presence’ is of an idea of God—that is all our
‘presence’; an idea of Him, but not reality. For Mary, an experience of
faith—He was real for her. And in being real for her, He was a reality
for the child—God; because the child’s reality is the reality of what
the parents are. If in the parents that is not a reality, then the
children don’t know anything.
Sister White says that true education is an
influence. Have you read it? True education is not a curriculum of
algebra or math. True education is within; is implicit in he who knows
God. Mary knew the Lord; in her own sphere, she had the fear of the
Lord. Everything she did, and everything she thought, was in the
presence of Him. And the child was growing up and was strengthened and
His growth was simultaneous, and not only simultaneous it was also
encouraged, synchronized in mind, in heart and with His hands, He was
synchronized.
The Bible text says, "And the child grew, and waxed
strong in spirit, filled with wisdom: and the grace of God was upon
him." What is the grace of God?
Today children don’t receive from us grace. Do you
know what they receive from us? They receive disgrace. In the way we
treat them; in the very same way in which we conceived them; in the
relationship we have with them. They receive disgrace, instead of
receiving grace. And then we ask ourselves, why don’t they love me? Why
don’t they obey me?
And while we are wise in this secular world, we do
not know the science of true education, because to educate is to redeem.
Educating is not informing. Educating is redeeming; to redeem this
fallen human nature that I have given by the law of inheritance. I have
given to this child my heritage, my fallen condition I give unto them,
so I should know how to restore it.
If my relationship with Him—if God has restored me,
then an influence—an invisible influence—intangible influence—an
influence that you cannot measure with human instruments; the child will
receive it. God has made things in such a way that these children, as
the child Jesus needed two images—two images that had become just one
through faith. And that influence, the influence of Mary and the
influence of Joseph, the same influence in two personalities with the
same criteria; with the same will and with the same purpose. Without
controversy; without dichotomy; without being broken apart in their
relationship. They did the work, the work that we should have done and
that we still should do if we are born again and we become like children
in the kingdom of God.
Oh, but the problem of adults is that we know too
much. We know everything. We understand everything and no-one teaches
us. And I pretend to teach her, and she pretends to teach me, and while
we both teach each other—what we really do is contradict each other. And
the influence—the influence we are exerting on them, that influence
makes any child a schizophrenic.
Aw, but Jesus was born and He grew up in an
environment of grace. My loved ones, each contradiction amongst us is a
ton of disgrace upon our children and it is not grace. That’s a
principle in God’s education. It’s so simple, so elementary and so deep,
because it is truth! And what is so beautiful in this culture, is that
it is free. It doesn’t cost anything. How much did Mary have to pay to
educate her child in grace?
But today, education is a terrible business. It’s an
industry. Who has been more than Jesus? Who has been more than Jesus? No
one—and no one will be more than Jesus. How did He become the greatest?
By faith. And He was educated by the Word; in the Word. But today, we
cannot fathom that. We do not think it possible, because we are sons and
daughters of reason, and as we see how everyone is educated, that’s the
same way that we are educated. But Mary understood.
Luke chapter 2 verse 52: "And Jesus increased in
wisdom and stature, and in favour [grace] with God and man." Now notice
Jesus’ curriculum, a curriculum that is totally different. Aw, but
people are very concerned about the curriculum; math, chemistry,
physics, psychology, English and Spanish and grammar, phonetics—oh what
is it that we don’t teach? We have a huge curriculum and even expensive.
And then we have different grades, first, second,
third, fourth and fifth. And each time that he passes a grade we
graduate him and we put on him a hat and we even put a robe on him and
now those children even in elementary school they begin to puff
up—because they are graduated.
In the school of Mary, no one graduated. In the
school of Mary, in this divine education, each day we diminish, and we
diminish and we diminish more and we learn how to descend more. And
there is no graduation, because it will go on throughout eternity, we
will continue learning and we will be filling up in the knowledge of the
Lord, just as the waters fill the ocean.
But we don’t understand that, because we are children
of reason; because grace and kindness and faith don’t produce. We are
educated in what produces and our mentality is formed to produce money
and things.
But Jesus was educated to produce faith, to produce
grace, to produce redemption. He was educated to redeem. He was educated
to restore. He was educated to reconcile. He was educated to forgive and
He was educated to justify. And even on Calvary, dying, He forgot about
Himself, because He did not think on Himself, not even on Calvary. On
Calvary He was emptied of Himself. There was nothing in Him. He was
concerned for the thieves, justifying the thieves, seeking for the
repentance of the thieves and reconciling the thieves; the eternal
purpose of God.
Should it be ours also? Should it also be ours? Or we
are of this world of production. I know people who have told me, "When I
get so much money, then I will begin doing God’s work." They will never
do God’s work.
With what capital did Jesus do God’s work? What type
of capital did He have? What budget did Jesus have to do God’s work?
What is the budget that we need, so that the Holy Spirit might do His
work in us? And He might convert us into children? How much budget does
the Holy Spirit need for that?
Oh, but we have our mind geared into accounting and
we reason that way, because we are children of reason. But Jesus was a
child of faith. Not from bread alone shall man live. To live without
bread? To have lunch without bread? Have breakfast without bread? That’s
inconceivable. My reasoning is with bread; but Jesus’ reasoning was by
faith—God’s Word.
What a difficult thing to experience. For me it was
very difficult and for you it might be easy—for these children it is
easy—because they are born without—with a clean mind, with a blank mind,
so that we can write in them—faith. And if our influence is the
influence of God, then they will just receive grace. And in grace and in
love they learn to trust. But if they don’t have that influence, then
they receive another influence, because every human being, we are in the
divine influence or we are in the influence of sin, because there are
only two influences and these two cannot be mixed.
Jesus always received Mary’s influence. Can we
imagine Jesus, thirty years—thirty years—carrying water to His Mom?
Happily? In that time water did not come in like it comes in today. In
that time, you had to carry water. But we don’t carry water. The only
thing we carry is this little water bottle—that’s easy. To carry
water—that’s work—a heavy burden!
Perhaps you haven’t carried water here. We have had
to carry water. When we began in Venezuela there was no bathroom, there
was no water pipe system—we had to carry the water. And when we took a
shower—that’s something different. The child Jesus had to carry water,
until He was thirty years—willingly—with love. Without getting tired,
without murmuring—it was a pleasure for Him to take water to Mary.
He had learned the first lesson of faith. He had
learned to obey. He learned to obey. Oh, but today’s children—today’s
children—which is the child today that is obedient? How difficult it is
today to find an obedient child. And Ellen White says that obedience
should be instantaneous. Instantaneous obedience—can only be developed
in an environment of grace and treatment by faith, under the roof of two
persons that respire—that when they breathe, they breathe out
affection—divine affection; divine trust; and the only thing they
breathe and transpire is their knowledge of God.
When Mary breathed out, Jesus breathed that in; and
in that breath, what there was, was the breath of God’s image. And
Jesus—they didn’t need movies, or theatres, nor comedies—the real comedy
and the real theater was the relationship of Joseph and Mary. And
twenty-four hours a day, the child was absorbing and was being
transformed, beholding what was real, authentic in Mom and Dad. The
curriculum was implicit—was implicit in that. Oh, God’s education is
something that is implicit. He in us, the hope of glory.
The child Jesus, pay attention to the phenomenon and
we’re going to read it here, Jesus is performing His ministry—He is in
His full ministry—John 14:10 says: "Believest thou not that I am in the
Father, and the Father in me?" that is something that is very beautiful!
I don’t understand it, but we can experience it. While we would expect
that the husband would be in the wife and the wife in the husband—but
the father in the son, the mother in the child and the child in the
father—scriptures present that as a reality.
But for us this has stopped being a reality. At what
age does the child become independent? At what time do we separate
ourselves from the child? I know mothers that, fifteen days after the
child is born, they go to work and where does the child stay? But we
don’t want them to be independent and we don’t want them to stop
recognizing us. We don’t want them to have insecurity problems when they
are teenagers. But we create that disposition, because we do all that
was contrary, opposite to what Mary did.
When Mary separated herself from Jesus—she became
desperate and she sought out for Him–three days He was lost. And when
they found Him, Jesus told her: "I am in my Father’s business." At what
age? These children can have a business with the eternal Father. At what
age? Joseph and Mary unconsciously had prepared Him in their influence,
to be under the influence of the eternal Father.
Oh my beloved, in God’s Word—in His Spirit—in this
living Word, there is a mystery that is explicit. How a child matures;
how does a human being mature? If he has been exposed to a living
experience of God’s Word in us.
Pay attention to what it says here. Verse 10 of
chapter 14: the words that I speak unto you—the words that I speak unto
you—I speak not of myself: the words. Thirty years, Jesus; thirty one
years, Jesus; thirty two years; and at thirty years of age—thirty-three
years of age—His self did not speak. His will did not speak. He did not
speak of Himself. He was a child. He did not speak of Himself—because
truth is not born in us—what is truth is in Him. What is truth never
shall be ours; it will always be of Him.
Jesus never spoke of Himself by Himself. He was a
child. That was how He was educated. That was as He was born—in faith;
in dependence. And as He grew, He grew in grace. He grew in faith. He
grew in wisdom.
Oh my brothers, these children today—they grow and
they grow physically. They grow biologically. But they also grow in
selfishness and in pride and in self sufficiency; but they should grow
in grace and in the knowledge of God. But what human beings say is that
times have changed. Times have changed. So we blame time. Oh,
beloved—mine is the fault and you have an assignment—to learn, which is
the wickedness which is visited upon the children.
The Lord taught me education with the second
commandment. The Lord told me many years ago—these children were four
years old. 1970, 1971, and God told me, "Your children are going to be
lost." And I asked the Lord, "Lord, what should I do? What should I do
so they won’t be lost?" Second commandment; the second commandment is a
treatise of redemptive education.
Through reason it cannot enter—it has to be by faith.
Joseph and Mary understood that and at thirty-three years of age Jesus
did not speak of Himself. And the question is, when you speak, who
speaks? I or He in me? That is the difference.
And let me tell you something, human beings, we speak
a lot—a lot. We speak, we know how to use our tongues. We know how to
use our tongues. But our Lord Jesus, He learned to not speak of Himself.
It wasn’t His self that spoke and the Bible says even more about that in
John chapter 5 and in verse 30: "I can of mine own self do nothing:"
In today’s education, in the education we have today,
they teach you that you should be you. Be yourself! You can! That was
Satan’s education. "I Can! I can arise, I can go up and I will be up. I
will ascend and I will be on the throne and I will have dominion. My
mental faculties, my beauty, what I have received, that is mine and I’m
going up!" That is the foundation of education.
Have we been educated that way?
Jesus was educated in a contrary position to this. "I
can of mine own self do nothing: as I hear, I judge: and my judgment is
just; because I seek not mine own will, but the will of the Father which
hath sent me."
Oh my brethren, Jesus was thirty-three years old and
He said, "My Father, my Father." He depended on His Father; He did not
depend of Himself. He did not depend on His experience. He did not
depend on His education. He did not depend on His knowledge. He did not
depend on anything in Himself—completely dependant upon His Father.
And we are orphans in reality. Our heavenly Father is
an idea. Really our father is our own self. He is our father and we
depend on him—we depend on our self and of ourselves. We depend on our
strength and we depend on our reason.
But Jesus did not depend on anything that was in
Him—He was a child, and He never became an adult.
Verse 19 of chapter 5 of John: "Then answered Jesus
and said unto them, Verily, verily, I say unto you," and the expression
here translated as ‘verily’ is the same expression of faith by Abraham,
Amen, Amen. What is sure. What is certain. The only thing that is
trustworthy.
"Verily, verily, I say unto you, The Son can do
nothing of himself," Nothing!
Have we done a lot of things? Have we done a lot of
things? And the more we do, in whom do we trust? In what we have done.
Oh, we have created our own Babylon. We are small Nebuchadnezzars. But
in the same essence, Nebuchadnezzar said when he saw his house, and he
saw his palace, and he beheld his gardens, and his columns and pillars,
"Isn’t this the house that I have built for my own glory?"
Isn’t that our same experience? We find something in
the computer; we learn something in the computer—Oh, we did it! We make
a house, its better than our neighbors—Oh, I have a house! Even in our
ministry we can feel that way.
But our Lord Jesus; "The Son can do nothing of
himself"—Nothing!
Nothing? What is nothing?
"But what he seeth the Father do: for what things
soever he (the Father) doeth, these also doeth the Son likewise." What a
child—What a child! What a child was Jesus, He never became an adult. In
Him was power. In Him was strength, because He was a child—just born—who
needed the milk of the Father; the Spirit of the Father; the breath of
the Father; the knowledge of the Father; the will of the Father; the
righteousness of the Father; everything that was of His Father. And They
were One; the Father was in Him.
No wonder He said, "And this is life eternal, that
they might know Thee, the only true God. Knowing Him; and the Hebrew
word for knowing is a word that indicates an intimate communion—and
intimate communion. Not of things, not with things, because we have
intimate communion with our money; with our budget; with things,
physical—with our car; with our house; intimate communion. But Jesus’
communion was with His Father. That was His communion. Nothing in Him;
nothing in His head except His Father; that is how Jesus remained, and
He was a child and He shall be a child forever—depending from His
Father.
The most serious thing in this world is to be an
orphan—the hardest experience; the most difficult life—to be orphans.
And the majority of Christians, we are orphans of our heavenly Father.
We live by our own selves. We obtain our bread by our own selves. We
obtain our own house by our selves, and we find our wisdom by our own
selves. We are orphans and the life of an orphan is a very hard life.
And in the same way, these children, we teach them to
be orphans. That they can handle themselves independent, that they might
live by themselves—that they might depend upon their ego and their own
strength. And when they are fifteen years old, they want to have their
own apartment; they want to have their own car; and they want to have
their own woman. And they leave home at fifteen, sixteen years of age;
and at fifty years of age they have been orphans, no one receives them,
no one loves them—not even Mom or Dad—and where do they finish? In a
nursing home; the government will take care of them.
No one lives with anyone; the family values are
finished, have broken apart. I can’t live with anyone—only myself.
Only—and I put a sign on the door—‘don’t disturb me’. Private Property.
Oh beloved, Heaven—Heaven is plural! Heaven is
collective. It’s family. Heaven is relationship; community; an
experience without selfishness. Ones living for others, as Heaven has
become nothing, has surrendered itself; has given itself; and incarnated
itself to become Immanuel—God with us. May heaven permit us that
experience—to live with Him.