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CHAPTER 1
UNRAVELING
THE MYSTERY OF INCOMPATIBLE TRUTH
Anyone who has earnestly sought to understand the ways of God has
been confronted by the perplexing mysteries of opposing truths. Placed
side by side, these truths appear contradictory, forcing us to choose
one while ignoring,
minimizing, or reinterpreting the
other to which we are less disposed. The problem is that God speaks
in "stereo," but we only hear in "mono."
Over time however, we develop "stereo" spiritual hearing, and our
perceptions change. We come to see the harmony between truths that first
seemed quite opposite. Christ Himself is the Truth and the great
Reconciler of truths. All things are brought together in Him (Eph. 1:10).
Focus on Him reconciles our understanding of conflicting truths, and in
turn the parts of the body of Christ distinguished by their adherence to a
particular truth. This
reconciliation applies not only to doctrinal truth, but also to experiential truth, ie, to truth that explains
the Holy Spirit's work in and upon the believer.
Over the last 200 years, but especially since 1900, the main
division over experiential truth has been between those who relate to the
Lord primarily through His
inward
sanctifying work and
those who relate through His more evident charismatic work. Failure to
discern and understand the complementary relationship of these works has
crippled the Church* perhaps more than the confusion over any
other pair of irreconcilable doctrines. This is because more than correct
understanding lies in the balance. At stake is our spiritual
experience. Our experience
determines the basis on which we end up actually relating to the Lord. It
determines whether or not we truly grow into Christ and where we finally
appear in His kingdom. At stake is not just a belief system, but our very
destiny in Christ.
The
Nature of "Incompatible Truth"
One of the key principles in unlocking the mystery between
apparently incompatible truths
is to understand that spiritual truths are rarely equal in force
and scope, yet all truth is interdependent. Sometimes we make the mistake
of talking about equally balanced spiritual truths. Truths, for example, about the
sovereignty of God and the will of man are sometimes considered
equal. This is not true. Yes,
they are interdependent, but no, they are not equal in nature, scope, or
effect.
More accurately, spiritual truth is either "foundational" or
"structural." It is either central or facilitating. In any pair of
contradictory spiritual truths, we tend to find that the one is necessary
to the existence of the other (foundational), but the other is essential
to affirmation of the first (facilitating or structural.) The difference of importance is traced to the difference
between Creator and creation.
Source
Truth and Reflective
Truth
Source truth refers to those propositions of spiritual truth which
rest in who God is or in relating man directly to God. These truths
are foundational. They are
able to stand alone. This is because God is Truth Personified. He is the
fountainhead of all reality. He was before anything else existed and
without Him nothing else can exist or has any
meaning.
The creation is truth reflected. Reflective truth refers to those
propositions which attest to something about creation or about man's
relating to God through creation.
These truths are structural and facilitating. They cannot stand alone but relate
back to foundational truth
for their support. Yet they are necessary to the displaying of source
truth. Without them, there is no expression for the glory of the
former.
The best Scriptural illustration of the relationship between source
truth and reflective truth is seen in Paul's description of the unequal
yet interdependent realities between man and woman:
For man did not come from woman, but woman from man; neither was man created for woman, but woman for man...
In the Lord however, woman is not independent of man, nor is man independent of woman. For as woman came from man, so also man is born of woman. But everything comes from God. I Cor. 11:8-9,11-12
Applying this illustration, man represents source
truth and woman represents reflective truth. Building on this picture, we
are shown in Ephesians 5 that man and woman are a type of Christ and His
People. Hence they picture the Lord of the universe in relationship to His
creation. Christ, the Truth, is totally self-sufficient and foundational.
Yet the truth which pertains to His people is necessary to Him because it
amplifies Him. His people are His "house" (Heb. 3:6). They are His "structure" through which He is
reflected. And all of it is
of God.
Source truth by itself is like electricity with no filament through
which to shine. Reflective truth by itself is like a light bulb with no
activating power. But
together they display the complete revelation of God. Though their natures
often appear contradictory, they are essential to one another in the plan
of God.
A Man
in a Garden
Our subjection to sin through the knowledge of good and evil is responsible for the division we
sense between these types of truth. Prior to the fall of man, Adam had a
perfect relationship with God. That relationship was carried out on two
levels. One was direct, the other indirect. Adam had immediate communion
with God. But he was also placed in a garden. Through his interaction with
creation's mysteries, Adam came to a fuller apprehension of who God was.
At first, Adam was able to carry out a perfected relationship
with God directly, and indirectly through His
creation. Then, his subjection to the knowledge of good and evil changed
all that. It created a
permanent division in the human heart forcing man to relate to the Lord through either the spiritual or
the natural, the eternal or the temporal, but not both. The goal of
redemption is to restore our ability to relate perfectly to the Lord both
directly and also indirectly through involvement with His creation. As we
come into full redemption and are delivered from our schismatic knowledge
of good and evil, these truths are reconciled in us.
This book is about the two great post-conversion works of the
Spirit's redemption in the Church today: the work of transformation, and the work of anointing. These two works
correspond to the two realms of truth we have outlined in this
introduction. The next four chapters
will detail the scope of each work and put them into their proper relationship within
God's overall plan for our complete salvation. Because of the interlocking
nature of the concepts to be presented, there will be an overlapping and
repetition of some points in the discussion as the same concepts are
appreciated from varying angles.
In the second half of the book, we will study the historical process of the Spirit's restoration of these great works over the last 250 years, and take a look at the deficiencies in the body of Christ today where we have partaken of only one or the other. Finally, we will discover how our ability to function in God's Kingdom of the coming age is dependent on our coming into the fullness of these two works in our lives.*
* For the remainder of this book, the capitalized word "Church" will refer to the general body of Christ, ie, the church-at-large. The word in small case will refer to a local assembly or other subsegment of the body of Christ.
[Chapter 2: TRANSFORMATION: THE WORK OF THE CROSS]
Chris Anderson
Merrimack, New Hampshire7/94
First Love Ministry
- a ministry of Anglemar Fellowship
http://www.firstloveministry.org
Webmaster littleflock@netzero.net
Page updated December 3, 2010