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"A  MAN  IN  CHRIST"
2 Corinthians 12
Collected Writings of J. N. Darby, 7: 238-255
From "The Girdle of Truth", 1858
William Kelly wrote, "Mr. Darby was deliberate and prayerful in weighing a Scripture; but he wrote rapidly, as thoughts arose in his spirit, and often with scarcely a word changed.
"He delighted in a concatenated sentence, sometimes with parenthesis within parenthesis, to express the truth fully, and with guards against misconception.
"An early riser and indefatigable worker, he yet had not time to express his mind as briefly and clearly as he could wish.
" 'You write to be read and understood', he once said playfully to me; 'I only think on paper'. This made his writings, to the uninitiated, anything but pleasant reading, and to a hasty glance almost unintelligible; so that many, even among highly educated believers, turned away, because of their inability to penetrate sentences so involved".


The folowing valuable article is a classic example of WK's description of JND's writings. It is not for the faint hearted or those used to being spoon fed, but it will amply repay those who devote the time and patience to explore it.  GAR

J. N. Darby, 1800-82

There are some chapters in scripture which contain so full and blessed a statement of some great truth of God that they acquire and retain a peculiar hold on the believer's mind.

The way in which, in this one chapter, we find the highest state to which a Christian can be elevated, an exceptional one, no doubt, as an experience, and the lowest condition to which he can fall, and all the practical principles on which the divine work is carried on between these two extremes, is very striking.

Paul uses a remarkable expression as to himself when speaking of his elevation to the third heaven:

But when a state of soul is prescribed – why is that? Because it is needed. It becomes necessary because of the state of the person to whom the command is addressed. He is otherwise inclined, in danger from other dispositions of doing otherwise.

Further, it shews no good to him as an object before his soul. I repeat, to make the distinction clear – it requires good in him, loving God and his neighbour for example; but it presents no good to him. There is no revealed object to produce good nor be man's good in him in living power. It works therefore wrath.

But this we must a little explain and open out. It is often very vague in many a Christian's heart.

Man's history was morally closed. "Now", says the Lord, when Greeks came up, "is the judgment of this world".

Faith anticipates the judgment, as regards the old man, the flesh, with all its ways.

Our place, our standing before God, is no longer in flesh. It is in Christ.

Amazing and total change from the whole condition and standing of the first Adam, responsible for his own sins, into that of Christ, who, having borne the whole consequence of that responsibility in his place, has given him – in the power of that, to us, new life, in which He rose from the dead – a place in and with Himself, as He now is as man before God!

The reader will forgive me, if I have dwelt so long upon the first expression of our chapter. I have done so because of its vast importance. It is the very heart of all Paul's doctrine, the true and holy way of full divine liberty, and the power of holiness.

A regenerate man may be in the flesh, as to the condition and standing of his own soul, though he be not so in God's sight;

Of the full and wondrous fruit of this, Paul, for God's wise and blessed purposes, was made to enjoy in an extraordinary and special manner.

The reader will remark, too, how carefully the apostle distinguishes between the man in Christ and himself as he had the practical experience of himself down here, having indeed the life of Christ and the Spirit which united him to the Head, but having also the flesh in him, though he was not in the flesh.

The being, as men speak, in the third heaven, is not always our place and portion. It is a mistake to think it would puff us up. A creature is never puffed up in the presence of God and with Him before the mind.

But, wonderful as that is into which we are brought, the question of good and evil, the knowledge of which we have by the fall, and cannot get rid of, nor is it desirable or meant we should, must be thoroughly and experimentally gone through by us.

Note this difference. It is not necessary, when we are in Christ, that flesh should act in order that we should learn to judge it in ourselves. Alas! it is often in that way that we do learn it, but it is not necessary that it should act even in thought.

In what has preceded we have found three important points brought before us in this chapter.

  1. First, the man in Christ;

  2. secondly, the gross evil of the flesh if our members be not mortified;

  3. thirdly, that this same flesh is not at all corrected in its tendencies even by a man's being in the third heaven, nor by anything else. Paul needed a messenger of Satan to buffet him, lest he should be puffed up.

First, we may remark that no extent of knowledge, even where given of God, is in itself spiritual power in our souls.

Here we find first the privilege of having a title to hold ourselves dead. We are not debtors to the flesh. It has no kind of title over us. We are not in the flesh. We may reckon ourselves dead and alive unto God, and sin shall not have dominion over us. It is all-important to hold this fast.

But if the flesh be not changed, how is this realized in practice? It is this which is taught us here.

Such is our path. Admitted into the very presence of God, into the holiest, by the blood of Christ, we judge in its roots, in communion with Him according to His infinite grace, everything that is not of Christ in us, and the grace we meet and are made partakers of in this communion carries us along our road in lowliness and grace. Our fleshly tendencies are thus only the occasion of receiving the grace which keeps us safe from their power.

We find in Philippians this confidence in the flesh – not lusts of corruption – judged by the apostle.

What can the flesh do with this then? Well, it would be spared what seemed a hindrance. To whom? Why, to Paul. Just right. Paul had to be kept down – terrible truth for us!

That self should feel self nothing, or a hindrance, is a most divine work – though it be a shame to a man who has been in the third heaven to think himself something in respect of it: but flesh is incorrigible – but as to the instrumentality used, a mean and miserable process, such as becomes making nothing of flesh.

As to what self would lean on, it must find itself a hindering flesh where it would pretend to be a helping one. It is really nothing in the work and path of God; but when it would be positively something, it must be made to feel itself a positive hindrance. This is not the end, but it is the way.

But the fact that the flesh is thus practically mortified is not in itself power: we must be positively dependent on another – glad to be so, if our heart is in Christ's service, and that we find His help only can make us to serve Him.

In the path of service, the energy of Christ's love impels us, Christ's power sustains and enables us: flesh, only a hindrance to that, must be put down, and practically annulled, that Christ may work freely in us according to the blessing of that love.

But we become now sensibly dependent, and Christ our power, I do not say sensibly power; for though there may be a consciousness of His strength, the service and work is done indeed, but done without any conscious strength.

The path of strength, then, is the being made sensible of our own weakness, so that divine strength, which will never be a supplement to flesh's strength, may come in.

One or two remarks more, and I will close my imperfect suggestions on this chapter.

Further, remark, that dealing with self, our own spiritual condition, is the secret of power, not the quantity of divine revelations we have to communicate, valuable as this may be in its place.

I would add to these, one collateral observation. The Lord can unite discipline with positive suffering for Christ, though the two things are quite distinct.

In fine, before God we have the "man in Christ" – blessed position – and which is perfection where we want it; and as to our place before men, besides Christ in us as life, the power of Christ, where we practically want it – in weakness and imperfection down here – resting on the man for walk and service before men.

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"OBSCURITY  AND  DEVOTEDNESS"
CORRESPONDENCE ON RECENT MATTERS - 3
Collected Writings 31: 371-74
From Letters 2: 339-341 – New York, April 8, 1875
Attention was drawn to this article by my longtime friend, Noel Brien. GAR

I think that Brethren are entering into a new phase of existence, which increases danger to them, and brings greater, or at any rate more manifest, responsibility.

But if attention is drawn – and it is – to the truth they possess through grace, their responsibility is greatly increased.

As regards all the activity outside them, it is one of the signs of the time, and they should rejoice in it.

Union is sought now by indifference to truth, in this country (America) avowedly so, as exchanging pulpits with infidels, and indeed openly everywhere: I say avowedly.

I thought of writing to you, dear brother, not having heard for a long while, and my thoughts flowed on, for out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaketh.

… If Brethren fall in with the current Christianity inside the camp, they would be just another sect with certain truths.

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