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Christ is All, and … In All

 Arthur Licursi

“And have put on (“put on” in Greek is “enduo”, “to sink into, as sinking into a garment”) the new man, which is renewed in knowledge (knowledge, Gk. epignosis, full experiential knowledge) after the image of him that created him: 11Where there is neither Greek nor Jew, circumcision nor uncircumcision, Barbarian, Scythian, bond nor free: but Christ is all, and in all (“all”, Gk. pas, meaning “in all things, all places, by all means, at all times”). Col. 3:10-11

 

At one time, several years ago, I honestly confessed to a friend that I had no problem with trusting Christ regarding my salvation from perdition, but frankly I, at that time, could not yet somehow see Him, to trust Him, in my practical daily secular life – and the load was heavy. I’ve since come to see that there’s no difference between my spiritual and secular life, as a born-again child of God.

 

My Old Way of Living

In past years I’ve always been a worker and control person, to make things happen, in business and all spheres of my life, including my spiritual life. After all, didn’t religion tell us we had to – have enough faith, pray, give, go to as many church meetings as possible, support the church program, etc.?

 

That kind of “doing”, for me, was rooted in self-dependence, which I now see as rooted in self-love out of self-concern because I did NOT trust God. I wanted to control everything around me not so I could measure my achievements and feel good, but rather so I could feel secure about myself in every situation. It never worked, because the result was that I was always anxious and never at rest. This is the state of many, many Christians who live under the “works based religious concept” and approach to Christian living. They do not realize that when they attempt to be good Christians and work for God by their self-directed self-effort, they at the same time they make void the grace of God. Grace must be 100% or its not grace.

“And if by grace, then is it no more of works: otherwise grace is no more grace. But if it be of works, then is it no more grace: otherwise work is no more work.” Romans 11:6

Thus, helping out God is not the answer; we see that in the experience of Abraham, whose effort to fulfill God’s promise, only served to bring forth Ishmael.

 

In retrospect, this was due to the fact that I knew that I was incapable of keeping everything in life under control. I always felt uneasy because I knew deep inside that I was incapable of controlling everything. Lest I had not yet been convinced of my inability to control everything, the Father permitted insurmountable sufferings into my life and the lives of those near to me (heart surgery for myself and 5 grandchildren, law suits, people and situations in my life that were contrary to me and beyond my control.) All these insurmountable things were to make me realize I am not up to the task; I’m not the god of my own life. This kind of revelation must come to all of us.

 

A New Way of Living

In recent years I’ve come to learn a new way of living which takes the sting out of the hurts of life. Though I’ve not yet arrived, life has become so much easier – just as Jesus promised, “Take my yoke upon you, and learn of me; for I am meek and lowly in heart: and ye shall find rest unto your souls.” (Matthew 11:29). "I have told you these things, so that in me you may have peace. In this world you will have trouble. But take heart! I have overcome the world." (John 16:33) My good friend Bill Landon and I have come to define successful or overcoming Christian living as Jesus does in Jn 16:33. Successful Christian living is a life that is lived with inner rest and peace, that peace is ours only as He, who is peace, becomes ALL to us.

 

Jesus of Nazareth did nothing of Himself, but only as the Father led Him to do, speak, and evaluate things. He did not live by self-will, but by the Father’s will for Him. This way of complete and utter dependence upon the Father is the way of rest and peace.

 

So now I endure the very same problems in life; life threatening illnesses, disappointments, concerns, relationships that hurt, inconveniences and interruptions to what “I” want to do, … but now I know that it is really not happening to “me” alone, but Him as “me”, Him who is my rest in the midst of all the trying things of life on earth in this world. The miracle is that Christ lives in me as my true and only genuine life (spirit life, at my core, 1Cor 6:17, Col 3:4). “I” am in Him who is my ALL in my living.

 

Living in trust and reliance upon Him not only has made life restful, but also more and enjoyable in the midst of it ALL.

 

The Remedy for Unrest

Some time ago my wife, Linda, and I were recounting how it is that He seems to be effectively working in our lives. We realized that there are some key and basic understandings He has brought us to, which permit Him to be seen as all to us. Since Christ is THE only PEACE, then all who live apart from trusting in Him from moment to moment have chronic lack of peace, unrest. We now recognize that the remedy for this unrest is rooted in the following 8 points.

1.)    God first is Our Father, who happens also to be Almighty God, the “I Am”

 

2.)    We are The Father’s literal birthed offspring by virtue of a spiritual conception by His Seed (Christ) in our spirit. (Gal 3:16, 1Peter 1:23, John 3:5-6; John 3:8; John 8:41; 1 John 2:29; John 20:17, 1 John 3:9; 1 John 4:7; 1 John 5:1; 1 John 5:4; 1 John 5:18) Thus we have the literal life (Col 1:27) and nature (2Pet 1:4) of God our Father, by the indwelling of His Seeded Son (1Peter 1:23, Gal 3:16), as the Spirit of life (Rom 8:2), indwelling our spirit (1John 4:13) as our new life (Gal 2:20).

 

3.)    He loves us unconditionally (Rom 5:6), with the Father’s love, a love that goes beyond benign unconditionality; He actively loves us by involvement in ALL the things that touch our lives (Rom 8:28).

 

4.)      Christ is always and irrevocably living and abiding in us (1Jn 4:13, Col 1:27), as our life (Col. 3:4a,), with all the power of His resurrected life (Eph 3:20). Christ in my spirit is my life, and also Christ is my faith, so it’s not my faith that must be pumped up to make life work in rest and peace. It’s my trusting in Christ’s life in me that makes it work. He is the victorious Christian in me.

 

A key for my seeing “all things are of God” is to know and believe that I am both dead and alive by Him in me, in place of the old me (Rom. 6:2-5). So now I only have one life to live and live by - His.

 

I’m saved by, and also live by, Christ and His faith in the Father. I am crucified with Christ: nevertheless I live; yet not I, but Christ liveth in me: and the life which I now live in the flesh I live by the faith of (“faith of”, in Greek is. “Christo pistis“, "The living, divinely implanted faith of Christ) the Son of God, who loved me, and gave himself for me.” (Galatians 2:20)

 

5.)    We must have a revelatory knowledge that we are incapable of making life work to the extent of living with an abiding peace and rest, on our own or by our own effort. This is a key that only God may supply – revelation, thus Paul prayed. “The eyes of your understanding being enlightened; that ye may know what is the hope of his calling, and what the riches of the glory of his inheritance in the saints, 19And what is the exceeding greatness of his power to us-ward who believe, according to the working of his mighty power,” (Ephes. 1:18-19)

 

6.)    Suffering was needed and must be embraced as blessing in our life. He in His time has blessed us and brought us through much suffering to a place where we now are learning to trust Him, to know He is in ALL.

 

By this understanding, I know that nothing can touch my life unless it is from His hand and that He is in ALL and ALL is for my good (Rom. 8:28, 2Cor 5:18). I now know that the Devil is God’s Devil, who cannot touch me in my true rebirthed and eternal person (1John. 5:18) or in body and soul, except as He permits (see Job). Paul recognized that Nero’s prison was God’s prison for Paul “I Paul, a prisoner of the Lord” (Eph. 4:1a), (Eph. 4:1a) and the cup of suffering our Lord drank was the “cup of my Father” (John 18:11). We know that Joseph’s dilemma was of God who meant “it for good”. It is plain to see that everything is from His hand – whether pleasant or not. The unpleasant seems to present the greatest opportunity for us to see our illusionary “self-love” in its all of its vileness; as the expression of our foster father (Satan), who usurped the container (me) who was intended to contain and bear the very seed (Christ) and life of Father God.

 

7.)    He is in ALL. He is in ALL the people situations and circumstances (large and small), at ALL times and by ALL means in our lives, working thereby for our eternal good. For the Christian “All things are of God” 2Cor 5:18 (“of” Greek, “ek”, meaning “out from and with the sender”). All things in my life (the good and bad) have Christ in them for me, if I have eyes to see through them, to Him in it. If Christ is ALL and in ALL (omnipresent) – this includes Him being in every aspect of my living experience.

 

8.)    My work is reduced to one thing only – to simply to trust the Christ who lives in me, trusting Him to live through me spontaneously as He wills (Philip 2:13), as the apple tree spontaneously produces apples via the branch, in due season. This is a sort of a “passive work”. Trust in Him is a work of not working, or not relying upon our self, but rather relying upon Him.

 

We can see this by an example most of us can relate to. This “Trust in Him is a work of not working” may be likened floating on water - the only work for us to float on water is to let go, to trust the water to hold us.

 

When Paul says we need to “put on the new man” Paul is commending us to not working. How can I say this? Let’s look at the words “put on”. “Put on” is the one Greek word (“enduo”, meaning,  to sink into, as sinking into a garment”, Strong’s Exhaustive Concordance.)

 

The new man is “renewed in knowledge (full recognition, as a new consciousness) after the image of him that created him:” As we grow in the knowledge of the “indwelling Christ” we will more and more give up to trust Him. We will trust only as we let go of self-reliance. Thankfully God is working ALL things in that direction for each of us.

 

I was taught from a child, and so thought that my choices are what governed my life. Now I see that, as a child of the Father, He governs my life and makes the choices for me by His “seed, which is Christ” (Gal 3:16) in me, if I’ll be led (Rom. 8:14), if I will yield (Romans 6:13; Romans 6:16; Romans 6:19).

 

This indwelling Seed makes us complete (Col. 2:10). His indwelling life includes the very mind of the resurrected Christ, appropriated by a spontaneous intuitive knowing. I’ve learned that if I wait long enough, ignoring my self-desires, His will is automatically known to me as a “normal inner knowing”.

 

We males usually consider a situation “logically”, but most often end up “doing” just what we want; and then sometimes making the logic fit what we “desire”. So desire is the root issue, not our choices. Formerly I lived according to the desire of a life contrary to me which is living in my flesh body – the Sinful Spirit – Satan. It was his lusts (strong desire) we served (John 8:44).

 

That Sin spirit within my flesh even now lies to me, saying “You can handle and fix things”, I can operate independent of Christ in me. As Christian we will face this temptation so long as we have these fallen, sin infected, bodies. It is a lie and an illusion – that I could govern my life. Deep down I know I do not, in myself, have what it takes, hence, anxiety. As stated before, I never was at ease, most often living with fear and anxiety. Now I live by trusting Him as my ALL (my very life), in the situations that He has designed or permitted in order for me to experience His ALLness, to learn how reliable He is. I’m learning that if I will wait on Him and permit Him to lead me, the direction of my life automatically and spontaneously becomes what He has chosen. I come to know that by a sense of Him, by an inner knowing. Formerly, I would rush in where angels fear to tread, to take charge without waiting on Him, for fear that somehow He would not show up.

 

Religion told me God was generally everywhere but never told me that Christ’s Spirit of Life (Rom 8:2) specifically is literally and irrevocably dwelling in me as the new me. I knew Him as “The Almighty”, but I did not really know He was my literal Father and loved me as such, and that He has ordered my every situation for my good.

 

Yes, I made that one irrevocable free will choice the day I received Him. I now see that even that choice was not of entirely of myself, since the faith by which I believed was not of myself. “For by grace are ye saved through faith; and that not of yourselves: it is the gift of God: Not of works, lest any man should boast. (Ephes. 2:8-9).

 

There is not much room for self to glory in this kind of relationship with and in Him. I would guess that this activity of our loving Father God on our behalf must be why the religious, works based, Christian cannot stand seeing others enjoy the liberty of 100% grace in Christ – there is no room for them to “do something” in which their self may have some glory. Grace is a 100% thing (Rom 1:6). It’s all grace, or nothing of Christ is effective in our lives. Christ is made of “no effect” by our good self-efforts, laboring under law, precepts or otherwise. Christ is become of no effect unto you, whosoever of you are justified by the law; ye are fallen from grace.” (Galatians 5:4) If we make “Christ indwelling life of no effect”, then our Christian life cannot work, as measured by rest and peace.

 

Peter Ultimately Learned to Let Go

Peter is the one who was once full of self-zeal, but failed in denying the Lord three times. That failure, I’m sure, only served to ultimately turn him to the reliable life of Another, abiding within him as his only life. Jesus told Peter he too would ultimately come to a place of being borne by Him and not asserting his own self, as he had been accustomed to doing.

“Verily, verily, I say unto thee, When thou wast young, thou girdedst thyself, and walkedst whither thou wouldest: but when thou shalt be old, thou shalt stretch forth thy hands, and another shall gird thee, and carry thee whither thou wouldest not.” (John 21:18).

 

Peter no doubt ultimately learned to be girded and led in Christ – even to a cross where Peter also died. Peter then rested in Christ, he “put on Christ” by letting go, by sinking into Christ (see Col. 3:10 above) as his life and governor (Isa. 9:6). <END>