NATURAL AND SPIRITUAL FAMILY RELATIONSHIPS
John Strachan
I
think it is very interesting, dear brethren, that we have this occasion of a
marriage recorded for us in the Scriptures.
It is turned into a sign. I
think it would mean that it is intended to have a spiritual significance. It is a very encouraging thing that there
was this marriage where the Lord Jesus and His disciples were present. We are very happy to be here with our
brother and sister today to share with them in their joy, their natural
joy. It is right that it should be so
since marriage is a divine institution.
They have had to do with the Lord Jesus for themselves, each of them
separately. Our brother has had to do
with the Lord Jesus, and our sister has had to do with the Lord Jesus. Now, as set together, they have further
opportunities of having to do with Him.
The great benefit of marriage in the Lord is that it can be taken up in
relation to Him and in relation to His interests.
Now,
as things proceeded here, it began with the natural, and the natural link is
very important because it is a divine arrangement; and it is intended that it
should work out as a matter of love and joy in the relationship. However, it came to light that there was
something deficient; and things may not always be plain sailing. There may be a time when some deficiency
occurs, some lack, and it is a great matter when that happens to know where to
turn, to turn to the Lord Jesus. He had
the answer here. That is a very simple
thing to say, but it is a very real matter to be able to turn to Someone that
we know, Someone we can trust, Someone who has the answer to whatever the
problem may be. So He had the answer
here, and He used what was there at that time to provide the answer. There were these six stone water-vessels. Now, they were vessels for purification, and
that is like what believers are to be, available to work out this great matter
of moral purification. So the Lord
indicates what to do with these; “Fill the water-vessels with water”, He
says. I think for us it is really a
pointer to the application of the death of Christ being experienced morally in
believers in such a way that there is some transformation brought about. The vessels were filled to the brim; there
was no room for anything else. They are
like persons so affected by the death of Christ that the Lord can say, “Draw
out now”; draw out from these vessels.
Then what comes out is the word of the feast-master, “thou hast kept the
good wine till now”.
I
think it indicates something beyond just the enjoyment of the natural
relationship. We think of the natural
first, and then the spiritual; and I think it is leading on to the enjoyment of
spiritual family relationships. Now,
that is a very important thing. Along
with the marriage and the enjoyment of natural relationships, there should be
an entrance into the enjoyment of spiritual family relationships. I think the Lord is indicating that. It is not just enough to rely on the natural
relationships alone, but the Lord would have us come into the enjoyment of
spiritual family relationships. You
might say, 'Where is that?' Well, it is
in the family of God. It is in a wider
family than the natural: the divine family, composed of persons who have been
taken up through divine grace and have part in this wonderful family that is
being formed at the present time.
Well,
it says, “This beginning of signs did Jesus in Cana of Galilee, and manifested
his glory”. It is a wonderful thing to
have some manifestation of the glory of Christ, and I think where you can find
that taking place is in the divine family.
That is why it is so important that we should enjoy these family
relationships, and make way for some manifestation of the glory of Christ. We sang a verse in the house this morning -
There
Christ, the centre of the throng,
Shall
in His glory shine,
But not an eye those hosts among
But sees His glory Thine.
(Hymn 178)
That is very fine. Where would that be but in the divine family? It is a great matter to enjoy not only these natural relationships but also enjoy spiritual family relationships and to be conscious of something of the glory of Christ coming in. That is what will hold us, dear brethren, the glory of Christ. That will hold us eternally and it is enough to hold us for our time down here.
Now,
we are going to miss our sister, but we are happy that she is going to be with
brethren in another locality; they will have the blessing of having her
there. One of the things that has
impressed me about our sister is her attendance at the meetings, attendance,
you might say, in the divine family. I
would just seek to encourage all the young brothers and sisters to attend the
meetings and enjoy their spiritual links in the divine family. John has a special place in the Lord's mind
in this regard. The Lord says of him,
“If I will that he abide until I come ...”, John 21: 22. John has to do with our education for the
divine family and John's writings have a particular place in that regard.
Dear
brethren, I just commend the word to our brother and sister, and to us all for
our blessing, for the Lord's name's sake.
Dundee
17th July 2010