SPIRITUAL QUALITY (1)
SPIRITUAL QUALITY (1)
SMcC I was thinking of the book of the Acts having specially in mind the thought of spiritual quality appearing in those who are the subjects of divine workmanship in the book, and I thought it might be good to commence with the first chapter. It is hoped that in the pursuit of our enquiry together in a subject and dependent way we shall see the greatness of the Spirit’s place in this book, and also the great place the assembly has, but it is particularly in mind to centre our thoughts on the thought of spiritual quality appearing in persons who come before us uniquely in this book, and who are serving in the testimony in relation to the promulgation of the thoughts of God. It is important, I am sure we would all agree, that in the closing days we should see the necessity for quality. I suppose at no time has there been such insistence on quality in the minds of men in the world as at the present time; quality has a unique place, and great efforts are made in order that the materials and the like might be of dependable quality, and how much more so should it be in the testimony, and in relation to the assembly in the finishing of the dispensation, and we are to be concerned about the matter of quality, quality in persons, for this book brings persons before us. Christianity is not something in the air. Christianity is a living system of things centring in Christ glorified and the Spirit here, and then worked out, not just in books, nor in ritual or ceremony, but in persons who coming under the hand of divine Persons have been wrought upon by Them, and give evidence and testimony to that work. It is in mind as we pursue to take account of Peter, and Stephen, Philip, and Paul, and others, and especially to see the place that women have, because it is of all moment that the sisters should understand the place they have in the present economy, the place they have to fill out in usefulness, whether old or young, because this book shows us quality in persons both old and young.
I thought we might begin with the first chapter which has primarily in mind those who were the fruit of the Lord’s own personal service in the days of His flesh here, and they are brought before us in relation to the upper room in Jerusalem. We should dwell for a moment on the remarkable way in which Luke opens the book by drawing attention to Christ, presenting Himself to His own, as it says, “I composed the first discourse, O Theophilus, concerning all things which Jesus began both to do and to teach, until that day in which, having by the Holy Spirit charged the apostles whom He had chosen, He was taken up; to whom also He presented Himself living, after He had suffered, with many proofs; being seen by them during forty days, and speaking of the things which concern the kingdom of God.” Now, we are to note the way the Lord continues to use the Spirit although He had been into death. When He came into manhood and entered into public service He referred to the Spirit according to Luke, being upon Him as He stood up in the synagogue in Nazareth, and the Spirit was used by Him all through His pathway. Chapter 1 of Acts views the fact that He has died, was buried, and had risen again, and we are to note the stress on the Holy Spirit, because by way of model and example the Lord Jesus is setting out what is to be the true source, spring and power of all service in persons, whomsoever they may be that are used in the testimony in the book of the Acts.
JR Is this quality to be seen in the saints as the result of the work of the Holy Spirit?
SMcC I thought so, because none of us are to rely on anything we may be naturally. There is nothing so uncertain in the things of God as anything we may have naturally, be it a keen mind, or keen perception naturally, be it a humble disposition naturally, or an obstreperous disposition naturally; none of those things can be relied upon. We have to make room for the Holy Spirit. He is the great power by which things are to be done in this book, so that the book might be rightly termed “The Acts of the Holy Spirit.”
JR It was at Antioch that the disciples were first called Christians. They were like Christ.
SMcC Yes, at Antioch, showing I suppose that the name came out through what would be expressed in them. It was not a name given from heaven, but a name which seemed to be given in relation to what was expressed among them.
OEF So Paul says in Philippians, “We are the circumcision who worship by the Spirit of God, and boast in Christ Jesus, and do not trust in flesh,” Philippians 3: 3.
SMcC Very good, showing what a complete deliverance there had been with Paul from Judaism which claimed to be the circumcision. Paul understood the whole setting of Christianity that the Spirit was the great power and means by which things are done.
FW Do you have something in your mind as to the Lord using the Holy Spirit Himself in this first chapter? “Having by the Holy Spirit charged the apostles whom he had chosen.”
SMcC The way the Lord Jesus moves in these forty days has specially in mind, by way of precept and example, to inculcate into the minds of His disciples the way things were to be done, that is by the Spirit, not by natural resources or human strength, but by the. Spirit. The Lord Jesus could say in resurrection, according to Matthew 28: 18, “All power has been given me in heaven and upon earth.” But here it is remarkable that the Person who says that is presented to us as by the Spirit charging His apostles whom He had chosen - delightful reference “whom he had chosen” - and he charged them by the Holy Spirit.
LC Would this expression “whom he had chosen” bring to our minds His choosing in regard to the pearl of great value? Quality had been in His mind in making that choice.
SMcC Exactly. I am sure there is something in that. Before choosing these men He had spent a night in prayer to God. What ground must have been covered in that all night season of prayer! What He must have gone through in communion with God about the matter, and then they were chosen. It would bring in the great idea of spiritual quality. Of course, we have to bear in mind that among them appears Judas of whom the Lord says, “Have not I chosen you the twelve? and of you one is a devil,” John 6: 70. In the great public profession we have to bear in mind that there may be what is unreal, and Judas represents that side. He is in the place of outward relations with Christ as many in the profession are, but this chapter soberly unfolds to us that he is an apostate, a very humbling thing which should search every one of our hearts, because every one of us may be so near to divine Persons, the Lord Jesus, and the Holy Spirit, even perhaps be useable in any service, and yet there is always the possibility of a Judas coming to light. We have to watch that element. Only the work of God will go through.
FH The Lord’s word to the woman in John 4 was “The Father seeks such as his worshippers.” She had been the subject of the work of God and there was quality and reality with her.
SMcC I am sure it has in mind the thought of quality, and I think the Lord would impress our minds with that this afternoon, that it is not a question of anything and everything, but a question of divine selection, divine choosing, and what can any of us say about the matter? If in the sovereignty of God, and the exercise of His mercy we have come into the line of the testimony. What can we say in the presence of it all? The Lord has in mind quality to carry on the testimony, and these persons come before us as persons of quality as under His hand.
MD “The Spirit said to Philip, Approach and join this chariot” in Acts 8: 29. Was there spiritual quality with Philip?
SMcC Yes, we shall see that. He was a man with the quality of an evangelist. He was a remarkable man, and he had remarkable daughters, showing that there was not only quality in the man himself, but in his house. He had four daughters who prophesied; where and how is something we need to look into, but the Spirit of God says that they prophesied and we may be sure that they did.
GSR In John 15: 16 the Lord says “Ye have not chosen me, but I have chosen you.”
SMcC John’s gospel has in mind very specially what is trustworthy, that the Lord could commit things into their hands, and we know that naturally we are not trustworthy. In the beginning of John we have “Jesus himself did not trust himself to them, because he knew all men, and that he had not need that any should testify of man, for himself knew what was in man,” John 2: 24, 25. But as divinely wrought upon we become trustworthy vessels, and John’s ministry has that particularly in mind.
JR In verse 15 of Acts 1 it speaks of “the crowd of names.” Would that suggest what is distinctive?
SMcC That is what I thought, and the allusion to the women among them is interesting. We are to note how women enter into this setting in the upper room and are marked by spiritual quality, but before going on to that the matter of the Lord’s sufferings is alluded to in verse 3, “to whom also he presented himself living after he had suffered with many proofs being seen by them during forty days, and speaking the things which concern the kingdom of God.” We are not to forget the impress the writer would put upon our minds and spirits as to the sufferings of Christ. How much we owe to them! Indeed, we owe all to the sufferings of Christ, and we shall see as we proceed with this book what spiritual quality shines testimonially in sufferings; however great the sufferings might be we shall find features of spiritual quality shine in the persons in suffering, and we are not to forget the suffering, whether in Christ, or by extension in the saints of the assembly. Suffering is our privileged portion, and we ought to thank God for it all the time.
ECL Would suffering enter into the making? The Lord says to Simon and Andrew, “Come after me, and I will make you fishers of men,” Matthew 4: 19.
SMcC I think there is something in that. Think of the Lord taking them in hand, and take all the personnel that are here today; each one has a certain individuality, and think of the Lord making disciples of us! Think of what He has had to take in hand in oneself, and in the rest of us. We are all different in temperament and make-up. We know, some of us in the field of engineering, how hard it is, and what a trial it is to work on difficult material. Well, think of the Lord working on material such as we, and we can thank God for the results, not that there is any praise to any of us, but to Him under whose hand we have come.
JB Would you say the woman of Samaria in John 4 was marked by spiritual quality after she came in contact with the Saviour?
SMcC I think so, and we would like to see a lot of sisters like that. She did what the twelve did not. They were occupied with material things, but she was thinking about attracting the men of the city to Christ, and so wonderful was her testimony (she must have been remarkably affected because of the power there was in her testimony) that the men of the city followed her.
JW Would Rebecca in Genesis 24 be marked by spiritual quality in her readiness to follow Abraham’s servant?
SMcC I think so. Scripture abounds with suggestions in persons as to quality, right from the beginning to the end, and Rebecca is one of them. Of course, we have not time to go into all the examples that may come up. In our enquiry this afternoon we are centring on the beginning of the Acts to see what is making way for the great vessel which is about to come into view, the assembly, as formed by the incoming of the Spirit, a vessel that is to take the place of Israel in the ways of God, and in which the testimony of grace is to be set out. Acts 1 brings certain persons concretely before us. The Lord is preparing the way in His service for the descent of the Spirit, and they are to become accustomed in their minds and thoughts to what is spiritual, because the Lord is stressing the spiritual side. “Having by the Holy Spirit charged the apostles whom he had chosen,” verse 2, and in verse 5, “Ye shall be baptised with the Holy Spirit after now not many days.” Think of what the baptism with the Holy Spirit would mean; what a powerful touch that would be in their lives. Think of the first touch when Christ called them, when He said, “Come after Me,” and then think of what this touch, yea, more than a touch would be. The baptism of the Spirit involves that they would be merged together in that great vessel of grace in the dispensation, the assembly, the body of Christ.
OEF I was thinking of the personnel as making room for the Spirit. Holy men of God were used by the Spirit of God in writing the Scriptures.
SMcC It is a very great matter that the personnel should be kept before us. Men make a lot of personnel these days; their records are voluminous that deal with personnel, but think of the personnel that form the assembly, and while the assembly is a glorious entity, the body of Christ, we are not to lose sight of the fact that that entity is composed of individuals such as we are, and they constitute the personnel under the hand of divine Persons in relation to the promoting of divine ends in the economy of grace, so that in the baptism of the Spirit what a testimony there would be in persons coming under the influence of the Spirit. If you met a person under the influence of the Holy Spirit you could not help feeling there is something different about that brother or that sister, and I am sure we all need to be concerned more and more as to what the Lord has in mind here in His education of His disciples that they are to come under the hand of the Spirit, and we are to get that into our minds that we are to come under the hand of the Spirit.
GSR In connection with that does the word in verse 3 bear on it, “to whom he presented himself living after he had suffered with many proofs.” Is there a suggestion in that to the Spirit’s quickening service? The last impression the apostle had was of a living person who would give character to the system.
SMcC I am sure that is right, for in the presentation of Himself living there was something in that in the way of testimony that was to affect them and is to give character to the whole system of Christianity,
because Christianity is a living system, and life is to be seen by extension in persons who are made to live in the life of a risen and ascended Man, because we are quickened in that life.
LC Is it a matter that the Lord Jesus accumulated certain material during His time here, and now is entrusting that material to the Holy Spirit and now it would be a question of what the Holy Spirit would make of these persons.
SMcC Yes, I think that is what chapter 2 would bring us on to. But here the Spirit has not yet come, and the Lord is with them during the forty days prior to the Spirit’s coming, and the Lord is serving to help the disciples educationally in view of the coming of the Spirit and the fact that the Spirit was to take them on, and they were to form part of the vessel the assembly, that the Spirit would indwell and were to be used by the Spirit in relation to that vessel.
SWR What is the difference between the baptism of John and the baptism with the Holy Spirit?
SMcC You notice that twice in the chapter reference is made to John’s baptism, in verses 5 and 22. Now, there is a moral element in the matter of John’s baptism that we are not to forget. The Lord is not pushing John’s baptism aside. Notice the word ‘indeed.’ “John indeed baptised with water.” That was the baptism of what we might call separation through which the remnant were separated from what then existed, but the baptism of the Spirit is a merging baptism, which involves not so much that we are separated from something, but merged by the act into the glorious vessel that constitutes the assembly, but with John’s baptism there is a moral element that we are not to lose sight of, because you will notice when the matter of selecting one in the place of Judas comes up, it says “it is necessary therefore, that of the men who have assembled with us all the time in which the Lord Jesus came in and went out among us, beginning from the baptism of John until the day in which he was taken up from us, one of these should be a witness with us of his resurrection,” verse 21, 22.
SWR And that was maintained right on till the Ephesian disciples were found.
SMcC Well, it would look like that, but there was something amiss there, and they had suffered from it in that they had not received the Spirit. It seems as if the baptism of John forms a kind of background for what the Lord proceeds with in relation to His service. He Himself said about it “thus it becometh us to fulfil all righteousness,” Matthew 3: 15.
JG Is the baptism with the Spirit done once and for all in relation to the assembly?
SMcC Well, the Spirit does not come twice, He came once. I know that in certain Hymnals and others too, there is the thought of the renewing of the coming of the Spirit, but that does not fit in with the teaching of the Scriptures. The Spirit came once, He does not come again. 1 Corinthians 12: 13 says “we have all been baptised into one body.” The reception of the Spirit involves that we have part in this glorious entity that is formed of everyone who has the Spirit. In that way the baptism with the Spirit covers the dispensation.
JR Is it a fact that we have been baptised into one body when we receive the Spirit?
SMcC We come vitally into the assembly as receiving the Spirit, because we could hardly refer to a person who does not have the Spirit as forming part of the body of Christ. Of course, what God will do at the rapture is another matter. Many persons who have just a little link with Christ, who may have the forgiveness of sins but not the Spirit, God will do wonderful things at the rapture,
because I do not think there will be any person in heaven who belongs to this dispensation and has the forgiveness of sins who will not have the Spirit. We have the Spirit, of course, in this dispensation in a way that no other family has.
JR Is that where spiritual quality commences?
SMcC That is what I think. The reception of the Spirit involves the beginning of the formative side of the work of God, because what we take in by faith in the way of light, and the receiving of the forgiveness of sins and justification, hardly alludes to the formative side of the work of God. It is a question of what we appropriate of the work by faith. Numbers 21 involves the life line. The reception of the Spirit and His service in us has in view the work of God subjectively bringing about spiritual quality.
There are a few interesting words to be noted in this chapter, and we should note the word in verse 4 ‘assembled,’ and then we have it in verse 21, “the men who have assembled with us.” Notice the disciples are taking on the use of this word. In the first section it stands related to Christ assembling with His disciples, and now Peter takes on the word in this section. “It is necessary therefore, that of the men who have assembled with us.” There is dignity about that word ‘assembled.’ It links on with the idea of the assembly, but we do not have the assembly in chapter l of the Acts, and it is well to keep that in mind. We have to come to chapter 2 before we get the assembly.
FW You mean the personnel were there, but the Spirit had not been given yet?
SMcC Exactly. The assembly is formed by the Spirit; you have the assembly when the Spirit comes. Of course, the Lord says in Matthew 16: 18, “on this rock I will build my assembly,” and in Matthew 18, “tell it to the assembly” which is anticipative, and in John 20 “He breathed into them, and says to them, Receive the Holy Spirit,” that was pattern and, anticipative; we have to wait till Acts 2 before the assembly is actually formed by the coming of the Spirit.
AEMcC Is there a suggestion of quality in the Lord saying to them that they were not to leave Jerusalem until they had received the Spirit? He does not say how long they would have to wait, but He would leave them with that word.
SMcC That is very good, because the element of trustworthiness enters into that. The Spirit had not yet come, and I think these men and women are a wonderful tribute to the work of Christ. The Lord in John 17 speaks to the Father of “the men whom thou gavest me.” Think of what each of them was to the Lord Jesus, and how, in the days of His flesh He had served them and carried them through. “He said to them, When I sent you without purse and scrip and sandals, did ye lack anything? And they said, Nothing,” Luke 22: 35. They had lacked nothing; but think of how He had cared for them, even in a paternal way, for He had been a father to them. Think of what they were, each of these persons with a known history who had been under the hand of Christ, because we must remember that the nucleus of the assembly in these persons is the fruit of the service of Christ.
ST So you would say that these men and women would learn from this blessed unique Person all these features exemplified in Him, so that with the incoming of the Holy Spirit they would be witnesses here for the Lord Jesus; they had witnessed the way He did things and taught.
SMcC That is right. Jerusalem would have in mind the very place outside the gates of which He had been crucified. It is a wonderful testimony of grace, and we want to think of the grace that enters into it that in the very presence of the most terrible wickedness expressed in the Jewish leaders, and in those of the nations, that in that very place grace was to be expressed in the testimony of the word of God in the glad tidings. The Lord said to them they were to tarry there. They might have said “they will do the same to us as they have done to You,” but there is nothing of that. In the very scene where Jerusalem had lifted its head against the vessel of grace, Jesus, they were to abide there until they received the Spirit from on high.
It is a great thing that we should see this matter of quality, because quality involves ourselves, as Peter and John said, “Look on us.” It is a wonderful thing when you can not only point a soul to what may help him in the Scriptures, but when you can point him to persons in whom the truth is working. That is a great matter, and is what is in mind here; each of these men and women had a history with God, and with the Lord Jesus.
ECL The Lord in Luke went through city by city, and certain women went with Him. That would be a testimony.
SMcC It would, a wonderful testimony to the attractiveness of Christ in that way. Then it says in verse 12, “Then they returned to Jerusalem from the mount called the mount of Olives, which is near Jerusalem, a sabbath day’s journey off. And when they were come into the city, they went up to the upper chamber, where were staying both Peter, and John and James, and Andrew, Philip, and Thomas, Bartholomew and Matthew. James son of Alphaeus, and Simon the zealot, and Jude the brother of James. These gave themselves all with one accord to continual prayer, with several women and Mary the mother of Jesus, and with his brethren.” Now we can see how the stress on quality is getting greater and greater. The upper chamber would allude to what is over against Judaism which was vanishing away as Hebrews tells us. Wonderful things had been linked with Jerusalem, the temple and the glory, but now it is a transitional time, and persons are linked with the upper chamber, “where were staying both Peter, and John; and James, and Andrew, Philip and Thomas, Bartholomew and Matthew, James son of Alphaeus and Simon the zealot, and Jude the brother of James.” How do we get on with one another? All this enters into this matter of quality. Persons in whom God had wrought should be able to get on with one another. They recognised the grace that belonged to each; each is essential if the truth of the assembly is to be arrived at rightly and effectively.
SWR Was it a normal thing for them to enquire in regard of the kingdom?
SMcC Well, it is interesting the enquiry that comes up. “They therefore being come together, asked him saying, Lord is it at this time that thou restorest the kingdom to Israel?” verse 6. Notice all these words, “being come together,” “being assembled with them.” The word ‘meeting’ does not appear in this chapter, it is assembling, a very dignified thought. “They therefore being come together asked him saying, Lord, is it at this time that thou restorest the kingdom to Israel? And he said to them, It is not yours to know times or seasons, which the Father has placed in his own authority, but ye will receive power, the Holy Spirit having come upon you, and ye shall be my witnesses both in Jerusalem, and in all Judaea and Samaria, and to the end of the earth,” verse 6 - 8. He is reminding them now that there are certain things that are beyond their ken. The Lord is drawing their attention to the supremacy of the Father in the economy of grace, and that is a thought that should touch our hearts. In the economy of grace the Father remains in the place of supremacy, the Lord Jesus and the blessed Spirit taking a subordinate position. In abstract Deity the Father, the Son and the Spirit are equal, but in the economy of grace the Father occupies the peculiar place of supremacy, and He has the times and seasons in His hand.
FH As this light of the dispensation is conveyed to them, does it settle the matter for them?
SMcC I thought so. There is no other question raised. They are content to leave it. It is another tribute to the quality that was there, and what they were as coming under the hand of Christ, and they just leave the matter. “And having said these things he was taken up, they beholding him, and a cloud received him out of their sight,” verse 9. Now the sight period is over, and we enter upon the dispensation of faith.
We cannot pass on to this remarkable section at the close without referring to this matter of the women. “These gave themselves all with one accord to continual prayer, with several women, and Mary the mother of Jesus and with his brethren,” verse 14. We have often thought of this matter - why should Mary the mother of Jesus be singled out and not left among the “several women”? But after all, in Christianity divine Persons have a right to put forward whom They will. In the body of Christ we are all merged, and are all members of the body in that sense, we are all one in that sense; but what we are referring to now is the personnel of the testimony, and the Lord has the right to point to any one in whom a particular phase or feature of things may be presented to us. Like in Luke 7 the Lord says to Simon the Pharisee, “Seest thou this woman?” verse 44. Notice that. The Lord loves to single out persons in whom certain spiritual qualities may be present, and we want to be on the look out in our localities and make the most of any sister or any brother who has got something. The point we are arriving at is the hidden wealth there is in Christianity, and that is why the sisters are being brought forward, and we want to get at what is in the women, and get at the wealth that is circulating there.
SW There should be liberty amongst us to set forward those who have quality as we see in the record Peter and John are first. They were men of quality and were set forward.
SMcC Very good. That brings us to the thought of gift as we shall see as the book proceeds. It is remarkable that in 1 Corinthians 12, a chapter which largely deals with the thought of the body, and the Spirit’s place in the body, it says, “God has set certain in the assembly.” It would never do to think of the gifts as set in the body, although part of the body, and a great means of wealth in the body, but the gifts are set in the assembly, so that there should be no overshadowing in the body. It is a poor thing if any ability a brother has becomes an overshadowing feature in any locality, and hinders the development of what is latent in the saints. You will always find where there is true gift, and true moral weight and worth under the hand of Christ, there will always be room for what there is latent in the saints. The Lord is laying stress on the hidden side of the body. Take all the sisters here, what a source of wealth they constitute! After all, what may come out in any given meeting depends largely on what is among the brethren. Gift is not like a water pump, you pump the handle and something comes out! Gift is in a setting of light and wealth, and there is ability to set in relief what may be there. F.E.R. said that gift was like a precious stone in the temple, it radiates the light. The light is there and gift radiates it.
ECL “In those days Peter, standing up in the midst of the brethren.”
SMcC Not standing up above the brethren, but in the midst, and in those days, It is interesting study in the book of the Acts in the first ten chapters to look into this matter of “in those days.” You will find it a few times referred to, and you find it here, “In those days Peter, standing up in the midst of the brethren.” It is a matter of leadership in regard to a given matter on hand, and nobody seems to appoint Peter. He sees what is needed, and we should concentrate now on this section and see what appears in Peter. He had a knowledge of the Scriptures, and what he says is from the Scriptures, showing that he was a man who read the Scriptures, and I think that is a word we need to take to heart as to whether we read the Scriptures, and as to whether we know the Scriptures, because that enters into our subject of spiritual quality.
ECL The Lord in Luke 4 reads from the Scriptures, and He says, “today this scripture is fulfilled in your ears,” verse 21.
SMcC No doubt Peter must have been affected by the Lord’s use of the Scriptures. The remarkable way the Lord used the Scriptures in His service at Nazareth, and the way He used them before He entered into His public service, and the way He used them in the wilderness in regard to Satan; there is nothing more effective than the word of God. Peter says it is necessary that the Scripture should have been fulfilled. Now notice this - it shows in Peter one feature of quality - “which the Holy Spirit spoke before, by the mouth of David, concerning Judas, who became guide to those who took Jesus.” The Lord is charging the apostles by the Holy Spirit in the beginning of the first chapter, and Peter has got the gain of this. It is a great thing to be alert, and to apprehend things, and to be taught, for teaching is a great matter, especially in regard to the truth, and the Lord had been inculcating into their minds this great matter as to the Spirit, and so Peter immediately takes it on and says “that the scripture should have been fulfilled which the Holy Spirit spoke before, by the mouth of David.” I think that is a beautiful touch as to Peter as benefiting from the education. The Lord had just recently left them and gone up, and immediately there appears in the midst of the brethren the results of the education connected with the days the Lord was with them. That should come home to us. Are we quick learners?
HF It is very solemn what is said in regard of Judas, “that the scripture should have been fulfilled, which the Holy Spirit spoke before, by the mouth of David, concerning Judas, who became guide to those who took Jesus.”
SMcC Well, that is a very humbling matter how the Scriptures long before give us light as to Judas. I suppose in the Psalms Ahithophel would be in mind, the betrayer of David. What must it be to the heart of Christ to take account in Christendom now, in the public profession, of the feature of betrayal. The matter is fully covered here. It says, “who became guide to those who took Jesus.” That is a very interesting reference over against the Holy Spirit. When the Lord Jesus was going away He had to deal with Judas in the choice realm where love was operating in John 13. You remember how His spirit was troubled in relation to Judas, and then in chapters 14, 15 and 16 He draws attention to the Spirit and specially alludes to the Spirit as “the Spirit of truth... he shall guide you into all the truth.” Here Judas is guiding those who took Jesus. What a contrast to the blessed Spirit who has come to guide us into all the truth. It says “he was numbered amongst us, and had received a part in this service.” A very humbling thing that. Hebrews 6 gives us a remarkable outline in relation to apostasy and as to those who may have tasted the good word of God, and the works of power of the age to come,
and have fallen away, crucifying for themselves (as they do) the Son of God, and making a show of him,” Hebrews 6: 5, 6. For such there is no hope.
HD Does not Peter display great accuracy in quoting the Scriptures? He presents it with authority and with accuracy.
SMcC That is a great matter. There is nothing more important than that we should know the Scriptures, and know them accurately. The word of God is important, and especially important in the assembly in matters and issues that may come up, and I think what you point out is interesting and helpful. The way they go through with this matter, and the matter of the resurrection, not the ascension, is stressed. Resurrection is the greatest testimony to the power of God. We do well to keep that in mind. Ascension links more with the inward, private, heavenly, spiritual side, but resurrection stands related to the moral question and the public testimony and is the outstanding witness in the dispensation to the greatness of God’s power.
JR Would that have a place in the preaching?
SMcC That is what one has in mind. Quality in persons would stress this side of the truth in the preaching of the word of God. It is a matter of a Man out of death, divine power operating miraculously in breaking the power of death. In Numbers 17 Aaron’s staff budded, and brought forth buds and bloomed blossoms and ripened almonds. It is life established on the basis of a miracle, a witness to resurrection, which means we belong to another world. We are not going on with this world, and its passing show, and fashions, but we are going on with that world and the resurrection from the dead.
LC Does Peter take on another matter in that the Lord Jesus had said in verse 8, “the Holy Spirit having come upon you, and ye shall be my witnesses both in Jerusalem, and in Judaea and Samaria, and to the end of the earth.” So Peter states here that the person who is to be a witness must qualify for being My witness, as having seen the Lord.
SMcC It shows what a quick learner Peter was, and how he must have paid attention, and I think that is a great matter that we should pay attention, and not sit casually in the meetings. When we read the ministry or are in the meetings we are not to be casual, but to pay attention because that is how spiritual quality develops.
HD In chapter 2: 32 Peter says “This Jesus has God raised up, whereof all we are witnesses.” The “we” is emphatic.
SMcC Very good. Showing heaven was honouring their selection. We might finish with a reference to verse 24, “And they prayed and said, Thou Lord, knower of the hearts of all, shew which one of these two thou hast chosen, to receive the lot of this service and apostleship, from which Judas transgressing fell to go to his own place. And they gave lots on them, and the lot fell on Matthias, and he was numbered with the eleven apostles.” The Lord had delegated to them apostolic authority, but their humility of mind is interesting here. “Thou Lord, knower of the hearts of all.” Notice, hearts, not minds, of all. “They gave lots on them, and the lot fell on Matthias, and he was numbered with the eleven apostles.” That is a wonderful tribute to quality, while they are exercising apostolic authority in selecting one to fill the place of Judas, they are doing it in such a dependent way, bringing God into the matter.
Kingston, Jamaica.