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The Ground of Peace
It is well that we should be clear as to the distinction between the ground of peace, and that which is the spring of growth and devotedness in our daily walk; in other words, that we should understand the distinction between the work of the Lord Jesus for us, and the work of the Holy Spirit in us*. The former is illustrated by the blood on the lintel outside; the latter, by the Israelites acting inside.
When anyone, through grace, receives the Savior, in the Divine efficacy of His accomplished work on the Cross, he is introduced into a position in which the Father can address him as to his conduct; he becomes the subject of loving parental care and child training. But then he must be careful not to confound the question of his walk with the ground of his perfect, his profound peace in the presence of his Father.
Many suffer in this way; they do not understand the fullness of the Lord Jesus for them, and their everlasting completeness in Him, together with the settled judgment of the Father about them. Now, while there is any dimness or uncertainty as to this there can neither be settled peace of conscience, nor any intelligent ground for true spiritual activity. Everything will be referred to the question of peace, rather than to the glory of the Lord Jesus, which should be our aim, and which will be our goal in proportion as we enter into the Divine reality of what we are in Him, through the infinite grace of our Father.
The more we realize the truth that everything has been accomplished on the Cross, for the perfect establishment of our peace in connection with the holiness of God, the more we shall see how futile every thought about ourselves is. A question as to the believer’s peace, is, in reality, a question as to the accomplished work of the Lord Jesus Christ. If you touch one, you touch the other; for “Christ is our peace.” Our Father’s estimate of Him and of us in Him is the same—“Ye are complete in Him, who is the head of all principality and power.” “As He is, so are we in this world.” “Wherein He hath made us accepted in the Beloved.”
Not that sin is not is us; for “if we say we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in us.” It would not give us any peace to be told that the Lord’s people have no sin in them; but that “He has not beheld” it (Num 23:21) gives peace to our heart. It is our Father’s grace that blots out sin, through the precious Blood of the Savior. He delights to do this; yea, it is His glory. “Thou hast cast all my sins behind Thy back” (Isa 38:17). This, Christian, should banish every fear from your heart. You Father in not looking at your sin, but at the Blood of the Lamb; and in that He sees the fruit of His own love and triumphs in it.
Now, if the Father is not looking at your sin, why should you be dwelling on it? The spring of your fellowship is you keeping your eye and heart fixed on the same object that your Father is looking at and loving. If He is looking at His Son, and you are looking at yourself and your sins, of necessity there can be no fellowship and worship (just a distant union – Exo 20:21—NC). How many are still anxiously occupied with the question of personal peace, which actually stands at the very threshold of the Christian course!
There is no reason why the believer should continue in a low or impoverished state of soul, unless he is deliberately trifling with conscience, and grieving the Holy Spirit of God. It is his privilege to have the Lord Jesus, in all His divine fullness, between his soul and everything, no matter what—sins, infirmities, circumstances; and when the eye is steadfastly fixed upon, and filled with the Lord Jesus, nothing can interfere with his peace.
- C H Mackintosh
Poster’s Opinion:
*”the work of the Lord Jesus for us, and the work of the Holy Spirit in us”: salvation received from Christ is a completely separate operation from our “walk in the Spirit,” in that expiation is complete and cannot vary due to its dependence upon the “once for all” (Heb 10:10) work of Christ, unlike the work of the Spirit of God within the saint which is ever-progressive. The Lord Jesus has done His part in obeying the Father, and now all the “conforming” is dependent upon the work of the Spirit using the “life” of Christ (Col 3:4).
Upon rebirth one lives in the Spirit, which union is invariable, but His teachings and enablements are continually variable. One born again lives in the Spirit and is continually taught more and more to “walk in the Spirit” (Gal 2:25).
When anyone, through grace, receives the Savior, in the Divine efficacy of His accomplished work on the Cross, he is introduced into a position in which the Father can address him as to his conduct; he becomes the subject of loving parental care and child training. But then he must be careful not to confound the question of his walk with the ground of his perfect, his profound peace in the presence of his Father.
Many suffer in this way; they do not understand the fullness of the Lord Jesus for them, and their everlasting completeness in Him, together with the settled judgment of the Father about them. Now, while there is any dimness or uncertainty as to this there can neither be settled peace of conscience, nor any intelligent ground for true spiritual activity. Everything will be referred to the question of peace, rather than to the glory of the Lord Jesus, which should be our aim, and which will be our goal in proportion as we enter into the Divine reality of what we are in Him, through the infinite grace of our Father.
The more we realize the truth that everything has been accomplished on the Cross, for the perfect establishment of our peace in connection with the holiness of God, the more we shall see how futile every thought about ourselves is. A question as to the believer’s peace, is, in reality, a question as to the accomplished work of the Lord Jesus Christ. If you touch one, you touch the other; for “Christ is our peace.” Our Father’s estimate of Him and of us in Him is the same—“Ye are complete in Him, who is the head of all principality and power.” “As He is, so are we in this world.” “Wherein He hath made us accepted in the Beloved.”
Not that sin is not is us; for “if we say we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in us.” It would not give us any peace to be told that the Lord’s people have no sin in them; but that “He has not beheld” it (Num 23:21) gives peace to our heart. It is our Father’s grace that blots out sin, through the precious Blood of the Savior. He delights to do this; yea, it is His glory. “Thou hast cast all my sins behind Thy back” (Isa 38:17). This, Christian, should banish every fear from your heart. You Father in not looking at your sin, but at the Blood of the Lamb; and in that He sees the fruit of His own love and triumphs in it.
Now, if the Father is not looking at your sin, why should you be dwelling on it? The spring of your fellowship is you keeping your eye and heart fixed on the same object that your Father is looking at and loving. If He is looking at His Son, and you are looking at yourself and your sins, of necessity there can be no fellowship and worship (just a distant union – Exo 20:21—NC). How many are still anxiously occupied with the question of personal peace, which actually stands at the very threshold of the Christian course!
There is no reason why the believer should continue in a low or impoverished state of soul, unless he is deliberately trifling with conscience, and grieving the Holy Spirit of God. It is his privilege to have the Lord Jesus, in all His divine fullness, between his soul and everything, no matter what—sins, infirmities, circumstances; and when the eye is steadfastly fixed upon, and filled with the Lord Jesus, nothing can interfere with his peace.
- C H Mackintosh
Poster’s Opinion:
*”the work of the Lord Jesus for us, and the work of the Holy Spirit in us”: salvation received from Christ is a completely separate operation from our “walk in the Spirit,” in that expiation is complete and cannot vary due to its dependence upon the “once for all” (Heb 10:10) work of Christ, unlike the work of the Spirit of God within the saint which is ever-progressive. The Lord Jesus has done His part in obeying the Father, and now all the “conforming” is dependent upon the work of the Spirit using the “life” of Christ (Col 3:4).
Upon rebirth one lives in the Spirit, which union is invariable, but His teachings and enablements are continually variable. One born again lives in the Spirit and is continually taught more and more to “walk in the Spirit” (Gal 2:25).
The Christian life is not our living a life like Christ, or our trying to be Christ-like, nor is it Christ giving us the power to live a life like His; but it is Christ Himself living His own life through us; 'no longer I, but Christ.'" -MJS
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