In His Letter to the Colossians
The Witness of the Church
It gives the answer positively - though not as positively as it might have done - but it does give the answer in this, that, after all (and what an "all" of these two thousand years!), the Church is still in existence. Think of that inrush of the forces of antagonism and hatred and murder upon the Church in its infancy, with the determination of the greatest empire that the world had ever known to wipe it out. After all, it is that empire that has gone; the Church continues. Think, too, of all that has set itself during the centuries since to bring the Church to an end, to destroy it, and still it set upon that. Oh, that men were not so blind that they misread history! If only those powers in the world today, great kingdoms, great empires, would rightly read history, they would see they are on an utterly vain mission, a fool's errand indeed, to try to destroy the testimony of Jesus on this earth. It is they who will be destroyed.
Yes, the very continuance and persistence of the Church is evidence that this is true - that Jesus Christ is the key to this universe, that He is the answer to all these questions. I say, the Church does not give the answer as clearly as it might. If only it had gone on as it began, what an answer it would be!
But it gives the answer negatively, as well as positively. It answers it negatively by the very fact that, whereas once it stood up to the world victoriously, weathered the storms triumphantly, it has now moved away from its center, the Lord Jesus Christ, and brought in substitutes for His absolute Headship and Lordship. It has made other things its governing interests. The result has been disintegration, division, and all the rest. Yes, the thing is answered in the negative, and it will always be like that.
Let us be quite clear: it is not that the truth has broken down. If these things ever become a question with you, it will not because they are open to question, but because something has gone wrong with you as it has gone wrong with the Church. It is not in the truth, but in that which is supposed to represent the truth, that the question lies. These substitutes for the Headship of Jesus Christ, whether they be men or institutions or religious interests or Christian activities, whatever they may be, if they get in the place of the Lord Jesus Himself, lead to nothing but disunity and division. To put that more positively, if only men, leaders and all the rest, would say, "Look here, all our institutions, our missions, our organizations, all our interests in Christianity, must be subservient to the absolute Lordship of Jesus Christ", you would find a unity coming about, a oneness. We should all flow together on that ground. It is the mighty tide of His Lordship that will cure it all.
Go down by the sea shore. The tide is right out, and all the breakwaters are naked, dividing up the whole coastline as it were into sections. But as the tide comes up, the breakwaters, the dividing things, begin to disappear. You come back at full flood-tide, and you see nothing whatever of those dividing breakwaters. The rising tide has buried them all. And when Christ is all, and in all, "in all things having the preeminence", all those things which belong to the low tide of spiritual life, the ebb-tide of spiritual life, will just disappear. The proof is in the Church.
We had a little taste of it during the recent visit to this country of Dr. Graham. There was one consuming passion to bring Christ into His place at the beginnings of life; all the different sections were found concerned with that. Where were the barriers, where were the breakwaters, where were the departmental things? They had gone, buried under this high tide of concern that Christ should have His place in lives. Why should that be for three months only? Why should it be experienced only in a convention lasting a few days once a year? No, this position is God's thought for always. The key to it is just this - CHRIST ALL IN ALL.
Perhaps we can see now why mention of the gospel in this letter is confined to one emphasis - "the hope of the gospel." Yes, the only occurrences of "gospel" or "good news" are in that connection - "the hope of the good news." The hope of the gospel is in Jesus Christ being all and in all. HOPE IS A PERSON, not an abstract nature in us - "being hopeful" - which does not amount to much more than periodical, variable optimism. HOPE HERE IS A PERSON. The hope of the good news is: He in all things having the preeminence. That is where the hope lies for you, for me, for the Church, for the world, for the universe. That is the hope of the gospel.
~T. Austin-Sparks~
(continued with # 22 - "In His Letter to the Thessalonians")
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