[soc.religion.christian] Being identified with Christ by being grafted into Him

ROBERT@kontu.utu.fi (Robert W. Johnson) (10/18/90)

			  IDENTIFIED WITH CHRIST
			 BY BEING GRAFTED INTO HIM

In Colossians 1:27, Paul speaks of Christ in us, and in the following
verse, of presenting every man full-grown in Christ. These verses indicate
that, on the one hand, Christ is in us and that, on the other hand, we are
in Christ. According to John 15:4 and 5, first we are in Christ, then
Christ is in us.

The two expressions, Christ in us and we in Christ, imply a divine, two-way
traffic, a traffic which is a universal mystery. What a mystery that we are
in the Triune God and that the Triune God is in us! We can bear strong
testimony to the fact that we have entered into the Triune God and that the
all-inclusive, life-giving, processed Triune God has come into us. 
				     
			     THE PROCESSED GOD

The Bible reveals that one day God became flesh. John 1:14 says that the
Word became flesh. Does this not point to a process? If there were no
process involved with the incarnation, how could the eternal, infinite God
have become a finite man? After thirty-three and a half years, this
processed One went to the cross and was crucified. Some may be amazed to
hear that it was God who was crucified. However, we need to remember that
the One who was crucified was God incarnate (Acts 20:28). After His
crucifixion, Christ was buried. Then He passed through death and came forth
in resurrection. Was that not also part of a process? Christ was buried
with a physical body like ours. But when He came out of the tomb in
resurrection, He had a spiritual body. His physical body had been
transfigured into a spiritual one. Certainly this indicates a process.
Therefore, we can say with assurance that our God has been processed. He
was processed through incarnation to become a man, and then He was
processed through resurrection to become the life-giving Spirit (1
Corinthians 15:45). 
				     
			  BAPTIZED INTO THE NAME
		      OF THE FATHER, SON, AND SPIRIT

Our God today is not merely the Creator revealed in Genesis 1:1. He is the
processed God, as revealed in Matthew 28:19. Matthew 28:19 is more
complicated than Genesis 1:1. Genesis 1:1 simply says that in the beginning
God created the heavens and the earth. But in Matthew 28:19 tells us to
baptize people "into the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy
Spirit." This verse speaks of the one name of the Father and of the Son and
of the Holy Spirit. The name of God here is Father-Son-Spirit. Due to the
poverty of our language, we may be forced to use the term "person" in
speaking of the Father, Son, and Spirit, referring to Them as the three
Persons of the Trinity. However, we should not press this term too far,
lest we unintentionally endorse the doctrine of tritheism, the belief that
the Father, Son, and Spirit are three Gods. We definitely do not believe in
tritheism; we believe in the one true God, whose name, according to Matthew
28:19, is Father-Son-Spirit. This is the processed God into whose name we
are to baptize people.

The English word "baptize" is an anglicized form of the Greek word baptizo,
which means to dip, or immerse, an object in water. In baptism we are
immersed in the name of the Father, Son, and Spirit. Because our
relationship with the Lord is mysterious and spiritual, the Bible used the
physical symbol of baptism to signify our union with the Triune God. Being
immersed in the water of baptism signifies that a believer is being put
into the name of the Father, Son, and Spirit.

The name in Matthew 28:19 denotes the sum total of the divine Being. Hence,
the name is equivalent to the person. To be put into the name is to be put
into the person. To baptize a believer into the name of the Triune God is
to immerse him into all that God is. To have the name is to have the
person. To baptize people into the name of the Father, Son, and Spirit is
to baptize them into a wonderful Person.

Matthew 28:19 does not tell us to disciple the nations and baptize them
into a certain kind of water. The Bible does not specify what kind of water
should be used. We are simply to baptize people in water which signifies
immersing them into the Triune God. What a difference it makes to realize
that in baptism people are put into the Triune God!
				     
			   BAPTIZED INTO CHRIST

In Galatians 3:27, Paul says, "For as many as were baptized into Christ
have put on Christ." The Christ in Galatians 3:27 is equal to the Father,
Son, and Spirit in Matthew 28:19. Therefore, to be baptized into Christ is
to be baptized into the name of Father, Son, and Spirit.
				     
		       BAPTIZED INTO CHRIST'S DEATH

In Romans 6:3, Paul asks, "Are you ignorant that as many as have been
baptized into Christ Jesus have been baptized into His death?" Have you
ever wondered why Paul says that those who are baptized into Christ Jesus
are baptized into a living Person. How then can we be baptized into His
death?

The resurrected Christ still bears in Himself the effectiveness of His
death. Otherwise we could not be baptized into Him. The fact that we are
baptized into Christ and into His death indicates that Christ and His death
are one. Drinking tea can be used as an illustration. When we drink tea, we
drink both tea and water. Because the water and the tea are one, the water
carries the element, the reality, of the the tea. In like manner, the
resurrection of Christ carries the element of His effective death. Thus,
when a person is baptized into Christ, he is spontaneously baptized into
the death of Christ.

There is a tremendous difference between death in Adam and the death of
Christ. I loathe death in Adam, but I appreciate the sweetness of Christ's
death. His death is dear and lovable, and I long to abide restfully in it.
How wonderful that a believer baptized into other all-inclusive Christ is
also placed into the death of Christ! In the words of a hymn written by
A.B. Simpson, "Oh! it is so sweet to die with Christ!" Rest and victory are
found in Christ's death.
				     
			     THE HEAVENLY AIR

We have seen that to be baptized is to be placed into the Triune God, into
Christ, and into the death of Christ. How is it possible for Christ to be
the spiritual water in which we are immersed? Christ can be such water
because in resurrection He was processed to become the "pneuma", the
life-giving Spirit. As the "pneuma", Christ is the heavenly air. To baptize
someone into such air is much easier than to baptize him into the water.
Everybody knows that water comes from rain and that rain comes from
moisture in the air. Christ today is the spiritual air full of moisture.
When we baptize people into Christ, we baptize them into Him as the
heavenly "pneuma", into the all-inclusive, life-giving, processed Triune
God.
				     
				 IN CHRIST

The way to get into Christ is to be baptized into Him. All believers should
have the assurance that they have been baptized into the Triune God. We can
boldly testify that because we have been baptized into Christ and into His
death, we are now in Christ.
				     
	       BURIED WITH CHRIST THROUGH BAPTISM INTO DEATH

In Romans 6:4 Paul says, "We have been buried therefore with Him through
baptism into death that as Christ was raised from among the dead through
the glory of the Father, even so we also should walk in newness of life."
Here Paul introduces the thought of burial; he says that with Christ we
have been buried through baptism into death. Which comes first, death, or
burial? In the natural realm, a person dies first and then is buried. But
Paul's word indicates that we are first buried and then enter into death.
According to the Bible, we, the believers, are buried into death. However,
we are not buried into death directly; this takes place with Christ and
through baptism.

Suppose a certain person repents and believes in the Lord Jesus. He should
then be baptized into Christ. To baptize this new believer into Christ is
to put him into the death of Christ. When he is baptized, he is actually
buried. This burial results in death. This is what it means to be buried
with Christ through baptism into death.
				     
		       A NEW PERSON IN RESURRECTION

This burial has a glorious consequence. As Christ was raised from among the
dead through the glory of the Father, we also may walk in newness of life.
This indicates that after baptism we become a new person in resurrection.
When we are immersed in the water, we enter into death. But when we come
out of the water, we enter into resurrection. We all need to have such a
wonderful realization and understanding of baptism.
				     
			  GROWING THROUGH BAPTISM

In Romans 6:5 Paul goes on to say, "For if we have grown together with Him
in the likeness of His death, we shall be also in the likeness of His
resurrection." We have grown together with Christ in the likeness of His
death, that is, in the baptism mentioned in verse 4. Now we see that we
shall also grow in the likeness of His resurrection, that is, in the
newness of life, also mentioned in verse 4. The important point is that to
be baptized is to grow. One who has been baptized has grown in the likeness
of Christ's death and now is growing in the likeness of His resurrection.
				     
			    GRAFTED INTO CHRIST

The growth in Romans 6:5 can be illustrated by the grafting of a branch
from one tree into another tree. Through grafting, two lives become one.
Hence, the process of grafting signifies our spiritual identification with
Christ. We are identified with Christ, made one with Him, by being grafted
into Him.

In Romans 11 Paul uses the example of branches from a wild olive tree
grafted into a cultivated olive tree (vv. 17, 24). In order for grafting to
take place, both trees must experience cutting. This cutting signifies the
experience of being put to death. Apart from this cutting, grafting, cannot
take place. In His crucifixion, Christ was cut, and He still bears the
marks of this cutting. This means that within the being of the resurrected
Christ, there is an opening into which we, the wild olive branches, can be
grafted. However, if we would be grafted into Him, we also must be cut.
Then we are joined to Him at the very place where both He and we have been
cut. In a sense, the two cuts embrace each other. Through such an embrace,
the grafting is accomplished, and the two trees become one.

Immediately after the process of grafting has been completed, the branch
from the wild olive tree begins to grow in oneness with the cultivated
olive tree. Furthermore, the cultivated olive tree grows with the branch
from the wild olive tree. Both trees grow together as one tree with one
life and one living. The life in this tree is a new life in which two
natures have been mingled together.

To be baptized is to be grafted into Christ. This baptism involves growth.
After a person repents and believes in the Lord Jesus, he grows with Christ
first in the likeness of His death and then in the likeness of His
resurrection. By the growth which takes place in baptism we get into
Christ.
				     
			     GROWING IN CHRIST

Now that we are in Christ, we are growing in Him. In Colossians 1:28 Paul
speaks of presenting every man full-grown in Christ. By warning others and
teaching them in all wisdom, Paul helped them to grow. We should do the
same thing in the church life today. After a person has been baptized, he
needs to be nourished in order to grow to maturity. 
				     
			       CHRIST IN US

Because we are in Christ, Christ is also in us. This fact is also
illustrated by grafting. After the branch from a wild olive tree is grafted
into a cultivated olive tree, it is a part of the cultivated olive tree,
and it grows in it. The life juice from the cultivated olive tree enters
into the branch from the wild olive tree. In this way, the cultivated olive
tree grows in the branch from the wild olive tree. In like manner, since we
have been grafted into Christ, He now dwells in us and is growing in us.
				     
			 A CYCLE BY WHICH WE GROW

In Colossians 1:27, Paul says that Christ is in us and in 1:28, that we are
in Christ. First we are put into Christ, then Christ is in us. The more we
get into Christ, the more He comes into us; and the more He comes into us,
the more we get into Him. This becomes a cycle by which we grow in life.
When we grow in this way, spontaneously our culture, including philosophy,
asceticism, and the elements of the world, falls away.

Baptism is the reality of circumcision in the Old Testament. According to
Colossians 2:11-12, baptism was our experience of circumcision, a
circumcision not made with hands "in the putting off of the body of the
flesh, in the circumcision of Christ." Through baptism, our whole being was
circumcised.  Since we have experienced such a circumcision, we have no
need for asceticism.  The more Christ grows in us and we grow in Him, the
more asceticism and all aspects of culture will fade away. Then instead of
living by our culture, we shall live by Christ.

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Compiled from the Life-study of Colossians by Witness Lee published by the
Living Stream Ministry, P.O. Box 2121, Anaheim, CA 92804


-----
Robert W. Johnson
Computer center, The University of Turku, Turku Finland
robert@kontu.utu.fi 	(InterNet)
robert@firien.bitnet    (BITNET)

The preceeding is my opinion and may not express the opinion of my employer
and furthermore has nothing to do with my employment.