The Normal Christian Life (9 page)

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Authors: Watchman Nee

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BOOK: The Normal Christian Life
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This brings us to the subject of baptism. “Are ye ignorant that all we who were baptized into Christ Jesus were baptized into his death? We were buried therefore with him through baptism into death” (Rom. 6:3–4). We must now ask ourselves what is the significance of these words.

Baptism in Scripture is associated with salvation. “He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved” (Mark 16:16). We cannot speak scripturally of “baptismal regeneration,” but we may speak of “baptismal salvation.” What is salvation? It relates not to our sins, nor to the power of sin, but to the cosmos or world system. We are involved in Satan’s world system. To be saved is to make our exit from his world system into God’s.

In the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, says Paul, “the world hath been crucified unto me, and I unto the world” (Gal. 6:14). This is the figure developed by Peter when he writes of the eight souls who were “saved through water” (1 Pet. 3:20). Entering into the ark, Noah and those with him stepped by faith out of that old corrupt world into a new one. It was not so much that they were personally not drowned, but that they were out of that corrupt system. That is salvation.

Then Peter goes on: “Which also after a true likeness [mg., “in the antitype”] doth now save you, even baptism” (3:21). In other words, by that aspect of the cross which is figured in baptism, you are delivered from this present evil world; and by your baptism in water, you confirm this. It is baptism “into his
death,” ending one creation; but it is also baptism “into Christ Jesus,” having in view a new one (Rom. 6:3). You go down into the water and your world, in figure, goes down with you. You come up in Christ, but your world is drowned.

“Believe on the Lord Jesus, and thou shalt be saved,” said Paul at Philippi, and “spake the word of the Lord” to the jailer and his household. And he “was baptized, he and all his, immediately” (Acts 16:31–34). In doing so, he and those with him testified before God, His people and the spiritual powers that they were indeed saved from a world under judgment. As a result, we read, they rejoiced greatly, “having believed in God.”

Thus, it is clear that baptism is no mere question of a cup of water, nor even of a baptistry of water. It is something far greater, relating as it does to both the death and the resurrection of our Lord, and having in view two worlds. Anyone who has seen men turn to Christ in a pagan country knows what tremendous issues are raised by baptism.

Burial Means an End

Peter goes on now to describe baptism in the passage just quoted as “the answer of a good conscience toward God” (1 Pet. 3:21,
KJV
). Now we cannot answer without being spoken to. If God had said nothing, we should have no need to answer. But He has spoken; He has spoken to us by the cross. By it he has told of his judgment of us, of the world, of the old creation and of the old kingdom. The cross is not only Christ’s personally—an “individual” cross. It is an all-inclusive cross, a “corporate” cross, a cross that includes you and me. God has put us all into His Son, and crucified us in
Him. In the last Adam He has wiped out all that was of the first Adam.

What then is my answer to God’s verdict on the old creation? I answer by asking for baptism. Why? In Romans 6:4 Paul explains that baptism means burial: “We were buried therefore with him through baptism.” Baptism is, of course, connected with both death and resurrection, though in itself it is neither death nor resurrection: it is burial. But who qualify for burial? Only the dead! So if I ask for baptism, I proclaim myself dead and fit only for the grave.

Alas, some have been taught to look on burial as a means to death; they try to die by getting themselves buried! Let me say emphatically that, unless our eyes have been opened by God to see that we have died in Christ and been buried with Him, we have no right to be baptized. The reason we step down into the water is that we have recognized that in God’s sight we have already died. It is to that that we testify. God’s question is clear and simple: “Christ has died, and I have included you there. Now, what are you going to say to that?” What is my answer? “Lord, I believe you have done the crucifying. I say yes to the death and to the burial to which You have committed me.” He has consigned me to death and the grave; by my request for baptism, I give public assent to that fact.

In China a woman lost her husband, but becoming deranged by her loss, she flatly refused to have him buried. Day after day for a fortnight he lay in the house. “No,” she said, “he is not dead; I talk with him every night.” She was unwilling to have him buried because, poor woman, she did not believe him to be dead. When are we willing to bury our dear ones? Only when we are absolutely sure that they have
passed away. While there is the tiniest hope that they are alive, we will never bury them.

So when will I ask for baptism? When I see that God’s way is perfect and that I deserved to die, and when I truly believe that God has already crucified me. Once I am fully persuaded that, before God, I am quite dead, then I apply for baptism. I say, “Praise God, I am dead! Lord, You have slain me; now get me buried!”

In China we have two emergency services, a “Red Cross” and a “Blue Cross.” The first deals with those who are wounded in battle but are still alive, to bring them succor and healing; the second deals with those who are already dead in famine, flood or war, to give them burial. God’s dealings with us in the cross of Christ are more drastic than those of the “Red Cross.” He does not set out to patch up the old creation. By Him even the still living are condemned to death and to burial, that they may be raised again to new life. God has done the work of crucifixion so that now we are counted among the dead; but we must accept this and submit to the work of the “Blue Cross” by sealing that death with “burial.”

There is an old world and a new world, and between the two there is a tomb. God has already crucified me, but I must consent to be consigned to the tomb. My baptism confirms God’s sentence, passed upon me in the cross of His Son. It affirms that I am cut off from the old world and belong now to the new. So baptism is no small thing. It means for me a definite conscious break with the old way of life. This is the meaning of Romans 6:2: “We who died to sin, how shall we any longer live therein?” Paul asks, in effect, “If you would continue in the old world, why be baptized? You
should never have been baptized if you meant to live on in the old realm.” When once we see the force of this, we are ready enough to clear the ground for the new creation by our assent to the burial of the old.

In Romans 6:5, still writing to those who “were baptized” (6:3), Paul speaks of our being “united with him in the likeness of his death.” For by baptism we acknowledge in a figure that God has wrought an intimate union between ourselves and Christ in this matter of death and resurrection.

One day I was seeking to emphasize to a Christian brother the intimacy of this union. We happened to be drinking tea together, so I took a lump of sugar and stirred it into my tea. A couple of minutes later I asked, “Can you tell me where the sugar is now, and where the tea?”

“No,” he said, “you have put them together and the one has become lost in the other; they cannot now be separated.” It was a simple illustration, but it helped him to see the intimacy and the finality of our union with Christ in death. It is God that has put us there, and God’s acts cannot be reversed.

What, in fact, does this union imply? The real meaning behind baptism is that in the cross we were “baptized” into the historic death of Christ, so that His death became ours. Our death and His became then so closely identified that it is impossible to divide between them. It is to this historic “baptism”—this God-wrought union with Him—that we assent when we go down into the water. Our public testimony in baptism today is our admission that the death of Christ two thousand years ago was a mighty all-inclusive death, mighty enough and all-inclusive enough to carry away in it and bring to an end everything in us that is not of God.

Resurrection Unto Newness of Life

“If we have become united with him in the likeness of his death, we shall be also in the likeness of his resurrection” (Rom. 6:5).

Now with resurrection the figure is different because something new is introduced. I am “baptized into his death,” but I do not enter in quite the same way into His resurrection, for—Praise the Lord!—His resurrection enters into me, imparting to me a new life. In the death of the Lord, the emphasis is solely upon “I in Christ.” With the resurrection, while the same thing is true, there is now a new emphasis upon “Christ in me.”

How is it possible for Christ to communicate His resurrection life to me? How do I receive this new life? Paul suggests, I think, a very good illustration with these very same words: “united with him.” For the word “united” (
KJV
, “planted together”) may carry in the Greek the sense of “grafted,”
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and it gives us a very beautiful picture of the life of Christ which is imparted to us through resurrection.

In Fukien I once visited a man who owned an orchard of
longien
trees.
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He had three or four acres of land and about three hundred fruit trees. I inquired if his trees had been grafted or if they were of the original native stock. “Do you think,” he replied, “that I would waste my land growing ungrafted trees? What value could I ever expect from the old stock?”

So I asked him to explain the process of grafting, which he gladly did. “When a tree has grown to a certain height,” he said, “I lop off the top and graft on to it.” Pointing to a special tree he asked, “Do you see that tree? I call it the father tree, because all the grafts for the other trees are taken from
that one. If the other trees were just left to follow the course of nature, their fruit would be only about the size of a raspberry, and would consist mainly of thick skin and seeds. This tree, from which the grafts for all the others are taken, bears a luscious fruit the size of a plum, with very thin skin and a tiny seed; and of course all the grafted trees bear fruit like it.”

“How does it happen?” I asked.

“I simply take a little of the nature of the one tree and transfer it to the other,” he explained. “I make a cleavage in the poor tree and insert a slip from the good one. Then I bind it up and leave it to grow.”

“But how can it grow?” I asked.

“I don’t know,” he said, “but it does grow.”

Then he showed me a tree bearing miserably poor fruit from the old stock below the graft, and rich juicy fruit from the new stock above the graft. “I have left the old shoots with their useless fruit on them to show the difference,” he said. “From it you can understand the value of grafting. You can appreciate, can you not, why I grow only grafted trees?”

How can one tree bear the fruit of another? How can a poor tree bear good fruit? Only by grafting. Only by our implanting into it the life of a good tree. But if a man can graft a branch of one tree into another, cannot God take of the life of His Son and, so to speak, graft it into us?

A Chinese woman burned her arm badly and was taken to hospital. In order to prevent serious contracture due to scarring, it was found necessary to graft some new skin over the injured area. But the doctor attempted in vain to graft a piece of the woman’s own skin on to the arm. Owing to her age and ill-nourishment, the skin-graft was too poor and would not “take.” Then a foreign nurse offered a piece
of skin, and the operation was carried out successfully. The new skin knit with the old, and the woman left the hospital with her arm perfectly healed; but there remained a patch of white foreign skin on her yellow arm to tell the tale of the past. You ask how the skin of another grew on that woman’s arm? I do not know how it grew, but I know that it did grow.

If an earthly surgeon can take a piece of skin from one human body and graft it on another,
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cannot the divine Surgeon implant the life of His Son into me? I do not know how it is done. “The wind bloweth where it will, and thou hearest the voice thereof, but knowest not whence it cometh, and whither it goeth: so is every one that is born of the Spirit” (John 3:8). We cannot tell how God has done His work in us, but it is done. We can do nothing and need do nothing to bring it about, for by the resurrection God has already done it.

God has done everything. There is only one fruitful life in the world and that has been grafted into millions of other lives. We call this the “new birth.” New birth is the reception of a life which I did not possess before. It is not that my natural life has been changed at all; it is that another life, a life altogether new, altogether divine, has become my life.

God has cut off the old creation by the cross of His Son in order to bring in a new creation in Christ by resurrection. He has shut the door to that old kingdom of darkness and translated me into the kingdom of his dear Son. My glorying is in the fact that it has been done—that, through the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, that old world has “been crucified unto me, and I unto the world” (Gal. 6:14). My baptism is my public testimony to the fact. By it, as by my oral witness, my “confession is made unto salvation” (Rom. 10:10).

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The Path of Progress: Presenting Ourselves to God

O
UR STUDY has now brought us to the point where we are able to consider the true nature of consecration. We have before us the second half of Romans 6 from verse 12 to the end. In Romans 6:12–13 we read: “Let not sin therefore reign in your mortal body, that ye should obey the lusts thereof: neither present your members unto sin as instruments of unrighteousness; but present yourselves unto God, as alive from the dead, and your members as instruments of righteousness unto God.” The operative word here is “present,” and this occurs five times in the chapter, in verses 13, 16 and 19.
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Many have taken this word “present” to imply consecration without looking carefully into its content. Of course that is what it does mean, but not in the sense in which we so often understand it. It is not the consecration of our “old man” with his instincts and resources, his natural wisdom,
strength and other gifts, to the Lord for Him to use.

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