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OUR  ACCESS  INTO  THE  PRESENCE  OF  GOD
Hebrews 10: 19-22; 1 Corinthians 12: 13
2 Timothy 2: 19-22
Address at Singapore, June 4, 1959
Divine Provision in a Day of Small Things
Notes of Meetings, 11: 22-28


G. R. Cowell, 1898-1963

As we proceed I shall want to read more scriptures, but I have read these first because

We have access into the very presence of God. We have a nearer place to God than any other creature could have, nearer even than angels.

That is what the apostle means when he says,

The more we go into the presence of God and enjoy our place with Jesus, the more we shall desire to please Him here. We should walk down here as those who belong inside the veil.

If we want to please the Lord Jesus down here we have to remember we belong to the one universal – all over the world – church. The Bible only speaks of one church.

God has given us the Holy Spirit and thus we become members of the one body on earth, all over the earth.

Because we belong to this one universal – or all over the world – church, Christians should meet together as walking in the light of this in every place; so that,

In the beginning everyone knew there was only one church, for all were led by the same Spirit so that all were acting alike, so that

So we find in 2 Timothy that the Holy Spirit, through Paul, tells us what to do in a difficult day. Although difficult, God has made our path very clear.

2 Timothy 2: 20 and 21 show us that we not only have to withdraw from iniquity but from those who refuse to separate.

  1. Our first and most important good work is to worship Jesus and worship God. Jesus must be supreme in our hearts, then we shall worship the Father in spirit and in truth, and God in His greatness and majesty.

  2. The second is to serve the saints. As members of Christ’s body we shall always be seeking the good of the other members.

  3. Then the third good work is to do good to all men and to preach the gospel.

If we withdraw from iniquity and separate from everything dishonouring to the Lord, we shall be able to meet together as at the beginning.

The Lord would encourage us to be faithful to Him so that in every place we should be thinking and saying the same thing and worshipping in the same way.

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THE  FAMILY,  THE  BODY
AND  THE  TEMPLE
John 2: 13-22; 1 Thessalonians 1: 1; 2: 5-12
1 Corinthians 12: 27; 3: 16
Reading at Brooklyn, New York, November 5, 1957
The Truth, Notes of Meetings, Booklet 9: 30-52

G.R.C. In the brief time at our disposal we can only touch an outline of what is in mind, that is the relation between the family, the body and the temple.

In Corinthians he develops the truth of the assembly of God and shows that they were the body of Christ and temple of God.

In the first instance, we should see the importance of family affections because,

Ques. Would verse 13 be a dark religious background; the passover of the Jews, the sellers of oxen, and the money changers?

G.R.C. It is the current religious background.

Rem. John’s point of view is that we are all children of God.

G.R.C. Quite so, and Paul says, “ye are all God’s sons by faith in Christ Jesus”, Galatians 3: 26. The family is a basic matter.

Rem. Paul commences his constructive line by preaching Jesus, that He is the Son of God.

G.R.C. That is very good. He got two impressions at least, at his conversion.

  1. One was that Jesus is the Son of God, that is, he apprehended sonship and the family;

  2. and secondly that the church is the body of Christ.

  1. first his ministry of the gospel which brings in sonship,

  2. and secondly his ministry of the assembly.

Rem. This expression of the Lord “my Father’s house” would set out in a supreme way the feelings that are proper to the family.

G.R.C. Feelings in the family originate with the Father.

Rem. So that Paul’s word is “gentle”. He says, “gentle in the midst of you, as a nurse would cherish her own children”. That is very wonderful.

G.R.C. It is wonderful. He does not call himself an apostle in this epistle, he does not want anything official to intrude, for the time being, on family affections and feelings.

Rem. So the relation between the affections and the commandments is very noticeable in John’s ministry.

G.R.C. Quite so. Is not every commandment a necessity of divine love?

Rem. So that the Father’s love for the Son is what impresses you in the beginning and then the Father’s commandment, that is, His authority.

G.R.C. His commandment is life eternal and the conditions we are speaking of now – family conditions – are essential to life eternal, are they not?

Rem. The unofficial side, which we are speaking of, is what we should keep to. That is, we do not assume anything formally.

Ques. Is it not wonderful that in Mr. Darby himself we have not only authoritative ministry but the real fatherly spirit at the beginning of this revival!

G.R.C. He moved amongst the humblest of people, he went along with the lowly. No one could be afraid of such a man. He was amongst them as loving them and loving to serve.

Rem. The first mention of love in the Bible is the father’s love.

G.R.C. Exactly, and this is the source of love of this kind – the Father’s love for the Son.

Ques. Is it significant, therefore, that the top note, so to speak, of the Lord’s prayer in John 17 is,

G.R.C. Is it not a great service of the Spirit to bring us into the flow of the Father’s love for the Son, on the one hand,

Ques. In John 13, when Judas went out, the Lord calls them children. Do the feelings of the Father toward them as children find expression in the Lord Himself?

G.R.C. That is confirmed in chapter 14 where He says,

Rem. I see what you mean. You are speaking about the great thought of the Father, and so the mother is a kindred line.

G.R.C. It is the other side of the parental position.

Rem. Paul was mother to the Galatians. He could say,

G.R.C. Yes. He writes to the Corinthians as a father, but he writes to the Galatians as an outraged mother. Somebody was damaging the children, and his maternal feelings were thoroughly aroused.

Rem. In 1 Thessalonians 2: 7, Paul speaks of himself as

G.R.C. And it is interesting that the mother comes first. The first love that a child consciously experiences is a mother’s love, and so Paul puts that first.

Rem. In 2 Samuel 17: 8, ‘‘as a bear robbed of her whelps in the field; and thy father is a man of war”, is the testimony of Hushai to Absalom with reference to David.

G.R.C. And the mother feature is first again; ‘‘as a bear robbed of her whelps”.

Rem. The Lord’s reference in Luke 15 to the woman that diligently sweeps the house would possibly link with what you are saying as to both sides being seen in God.

G.R.C. Quite.

Rem. “Jerusalem, Jerusalem, the city that kills the prophets and stones those that are sent unto her, how often would I have gathered thy children as a hen gathers her chickens under her wings, and ye would not!” Matthew 23: 37.

G.R.C. It shews what motherly instinct will do. Jael was a mother in Israel. But in Luke the Lord says

Rem. Paul speaks about Timothy’s mother and his grandmother.

Ques. Is it not interesting, in that connection, that John Mark went out with Paul and Barnabas on an official basis – the word “attendant” there apparently refers to an official servant, Acts 13: 5 – whereas Timothy comes in on the line of the family.

G.R.C. That is very good. Timothy had a good maternal background. We need to be exercised about our own houses.

Ques. All the children, all which children, all our own children?

G.R.C. All the children in the meeting. Not long ago I met a sister who had no children of her own but she said that she regarded all the children in the meeting as hers.

Rem. Mr. Taylor said that in Australia, years ago.

Rem. In Proverbs 31 the children call her blessed and her husband praises her.

G.R.C. Very good. We shall get praise from the Lord if, as local companies we have true maternal affection. There is nothing like it to hold the young.

Ques. Was Sarah the true mother in Genesis 21 when she said

G.R.C. Sarah was a true mother at that time, her words being referred to as scripture in Galatians 4: 30. Is that so, Mr. T?

Rem. At that time, because she was not so until that time. Sisters are not spiritually mothers until a certain time, is that right?

G.R.C. It is right.

Rem. She was right at that time when it was said, “hearken to her voice”.

Ques. I want to ask about John 13:

G.R.C. True light and love must go together. It says,

Rem. Does it not bear on “body” exercises? We ought to hear about that. The truth of the body involves a different set of exercises from the family.

Rem. The Lord says, “He that has my commandments and keeps them, he it is that loves me”, and then lower down,

G.R.C. That is right. Keeping His commandments involves all that we are saying now.

Ques. Was the Lord adjusting Peter at the end of John’s gospel when he enquired about John?

G.R.C. “Follow thou Me”, He says to Peter, and thus turns him away from being occupied with John. The point was for Peter to carry out his commission.

Ques. How are you viewing Thessalonians; I am not quite clear.

G.R.C. That is the family setting. Paul had not introduced the truth of the body there, as far as we know.

Rem. “Our uncomely parts have more abundant comeliness; but our comely parts have not need. But God has tempered the body together, having given more abundant honour to the part that lacked; that there might be no division in the body, but that the members might have the same concern one for another”. 1 Corinthians 12: 24-25.

G.R.C. The first reference to the body is in Romans.

Ques. Why is it that God Himself has to do with the body, tempering it together, not the Father?

G.R.C. It is not exactly a family matter. The truth of the body leads on to the assembly, the great vessel in which God’s all-various wisdom is displayed at the present time.

Rem. It is a very instructive matter that all this teaching as to the assembly comes out in relation to saints who were not quite right, the Corinthians.

G.R.C. It is. What a mercy God brings good out of evil!

Rem. The Thessalonians, you might say, were more or less right. They were in family affection and evidently living apart from idolatry, whereas the Corinthians were mixed up in a great many things; and yet it is to those that the truth of the assembly is opened up.

Ques. You referred to the fact that the body is a vessel; would you open up what is in your mind as to what is characteristic of the body as a vessel?

G.R.C. It is a corporate whole where every member has a part to play.

What I am especially seeking to say is that the body brings out the idea of God’s sovereignty.

Rem. “And say to Archippus, Take heed to the ministry which thou hast received in the Lord, to the end that thou fulfill it”, Colossians 4: 17.

G.R.C. Quite so. Where the body is mentioned, it nearly always brings in the word “each”.

Rem. In Ezekiel 37, when the prophet prophesied, there was a rustling and the bones came together, bone to its bone. Is that how God has set us as members one of another?

G.R.C. Very good. That is what one would desire in a meeting like this, that we might be set together bodywise in a fuller way than ever before.

Ques. Is there some way in which the saints hold for me what I am in the body, if I am not filling it out? I was thinking of Thomas in John 20.

G.R.C. That is what we would do in love for each other. But then, if any of us contract out, we are throwing an additional strain on the other members.

Rem. The apostle says to the Romans:

G.R.C. So there are the special gifts that are referred to in 1 Corinthians 12 and Ephesians 4; apostles, prophets, teachers; but they all need the body.

Ques. As regards chapters 12 and 14 of 1 Corinthians, why does the 13th chapter close with faith, hope and love?

G.R.C. We cannot be in the body at all times without faith. We must have justifying faith to begin with;

Rem. It is interesting that he speaks in Romans 16 of certain ones who laboured in the Lord and others who laboured much in the Lord. It does not say what they did.

G.R.C. No. But they all knew their work.

Ques. It says in 1 Corinthians 12: 13,

G.R.C. That is what we come to in Corinthians.

Rem. As to being content in the body, it is said, we have all been given to drink of one Spirit. We have been told in the ministry that that is what we do ourselves, we drink into it. Would that bring about contentment in the body, where we have been placed sovereignly?

G.R.C. The Lord speaks in John 4 of what He would give, the living water; but then He speaks of the one who drinks of it; that is our side.

Rem. In those verses the oneness seems to be stressed. It is the one and the same Spirit, and even as the body is one, and all the members of the body, being many, are one body.

G.R.C. It is an essential thing that we should

Rem. So it is, “If the foot say”, in verse 15. That is the first one to say. The most unlikely part of the body is saying something.

G.R.C. Do you mean that if we are recognizing the Spirit, we must be prepared for something through any member, even the most unlikely?

Rem. I think the foot is out of order here. You have got a head.

G.R.C. You mean then, that the first thing is that someone speaks out of place.

Rem. Quite so. “If the foot say”.

G.R.C. That happens sometimes. Someone speaks out of place. What do you do then?

Rem. Put him in his place. I mean that is what should be done; but it should be somebody who can do it, of course.

G.R.C. It says, “Let two or three prophets speak, and let the others judge”.

Rem. I think that would be a very good way to get him right, instead of telling somebody else.

G.R.C. A lot may be said among the brethren and all may feel the same about it and yet the brother is never told.

Rem. So these ministry meetings really bring out what is external and you have those who judge. So let matters come out as to what the judgment is.

G.R.C. The extraordinary thing is that often a brother, who the saints generally feel has spoken out of place, will say when spoken to, I am sure the Lord gave me the word.

Rem. I think therefore we need to feel what the brethren think and yet we do not want to be unfair in what we are saying.

Rem. Even Paul says, Do ye judge what I say.

Ques. As to the meeting for ministry and the temple, are they together, one thought, or is there some distinction?

G.R.C. The ministry meeting does not cover the whole thought of the temple, but

Rem. So that when the saints are convened, it calls into play all that you have been speaking to us about.

G.R.C. Exactly. First of all there should be the warmth of perfect love which casts out fear. Otherwise fear of one another may quench the Spirit.

Ques. Would the three thoughts, the family, the body and the temple be included in Psalm 27: 4?

Ques. Would you say that the body is universal, the temple local?

G.R.C. Both are universal and local. The body is universal. It says, “we being many”, that is the universal “we”.

Ques. You spoke of judging what is said in the ministry meetings. Would you allow the possibility that the judgment of the saints may be wrong?

G.R.C. The state of the meeting would have to be very wrong for the saints as a whole to be wrong. The assembly is viewed as having priestly discernment.

Rem. Of course these are days of brokenness, so we cannot do much. The ministry meetings continue and we are thankful they do; but we always find, I suppose, someone we do not like in these meetings.

G.R.C. That would be letting in natural feelings which we have to avoid. When the Holy Spirit spoke in Acts 13 it says they were ministering to the Lord and fasting. Would not fasting include the disallowance of every natural like and dislike?

Rem. Quite so.

Ques. Does the truth of the body underlie the functioning of the assembly for divine praise, each member finding his place?

G.R.C. The praise of God will never be what it should be unless we have been through these exercises,

Rem. I am thankful you said that, what the assembly is to God. We have to keep in mind the assembly of God in Corinth. This book refers constantly to the assembly of God.

G.R.C. There was the assembly of God in Corinth. How much it means to Him to have His assembly in a city.

Ques. Is the Lord’s Supper in the family setting or the body setting or the temple setting?

G.R.C. It is in all three. These things run on concurrently.

Rem. The Lord coming in in the assembly is the great point, is it not, governing the whole position?

G.R.C. It is.

Rem. Simeon came into the temple in the early part of Luke; and the thought of the temple and true praise runs through that gospel. Christ is the theme, and fresh light came into Simeon’s soul at the time, did it not?

G.R.C. When he had the Child in his arms it looked as though light flooded his soul.

Rem. You arrive at the assembly as one who knows what to do. Having enjoyed family relations you fit into the composition of the body and you arrive at the assembly.

G.R.C. Exactly. You know what to do; you are available under the impulse of the Head.

Ques. Is there a sober note in the fact that while it is characteristic as to the temple –

G.R.C. That is a salutary remark. There it is, the whole thing –

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