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George H. Warnock: "Journey
of the Bride" |
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Chapter 2
The Burden of Abraham's Servant
“And Abraham said unto his eldest servant of his house, that ruled over all
that he had, Put, I pray thee, thy hand under my thigh: and I will make thee
swear by the LORD, the God of heaven, and the God of the earth, that thou shalt
not take a wife unto my son of the daughters of the Canaanites, among whom I
dwell: but thou shalt go unto my country, and to my kindred, and take a wife
unto my son Isaac” (Gen. 24:24). The eldest servant was Abraham’s steward; he
had all of Abraham’s possessions in his care. Now God’s stewards are simply
those to whom the Lord has entrusted the treasures of His wisdom and knowledge
for the instruction and the maturing of the people of God, so as to enable them
to walk in His ways. God’s true steward-servants are those who bring forth from
their treasures “things new and old.” Things that God has given them, and
revealed to them by His Spirit. They are not sent of Him to unravel the
philosophies of Plato and Socrates, or the hidden mysteries of the occult realm.
They are appointed to relate to God’s people the secrets of God, which no one
can relate and no one can receive except as they are illuminated by the Holy
Spirit. Abraham’s servant had nothing of his own; but he had all of Abraham’s
possessions under his watchful care. Jesus said, “Henceforth I call you not
servants; for the servant knoweth not what his lord doeth: but I have called you
friends; for all things that I have heard of My Father I have made known unto
you” (Jn. l5:15). God’s true servants are not “slaves” by calling, as the word
“doulos” implies. They are the friends of God. Nevertheless they are “friends”
who walk in such a love-relationship with Him that they become, in their own
eyes and in their own estimation, the “bondslaves” of love and truth. Not until
they come to this kind of commitment do they know anything about real freedom,
and much less about taking charge of God’s House or of His treasures. True
authority in the House of God does not spring from the authority of the ministry
one has. It springs rather from a true and loving bondslave relationship with
the Father. If this relationship is not there, the authority will be
“authoritarian” by nature, rather than a ministration of love and truth which
brings the discipline and the order of the Law of the Spirit into loving and
meaningful expression in the House of God. Now I think it is evident that in the
higher sense the servant of Abraham represents the Holy Spirit, whose mission it
is to prepare a Bride for Christ. But what we so often forget is the fact that
the Holy Spirit dwells in God’s servants in the earth, making them to be true
and faithful servants of God, that He might live in them, speak through them,
and work through them. God’s servants, therefore, become the visible instruments
in the earth who are responsible and held accountable before God to faithfully
speak His words in the earth, that will procure this holy Bride for Christ.
Without this faithful ministration of His servants in the earth this holy Bride
cannot be prepared; and so Paul could say to the Corinthian church: “For I am
jealous over you with godly jealousy; for I have espoused you to one Husband,
that I may present you as a chaste virgin to Christ” (2 Cor. 11:2). Notice what
he said: “My jealousy over you is God’s very own jealousy... I have espoused you
to one Husband… I want to present you as a chaste virgin to Christ.” Some who
are strong on the idea of rulership over the people have coined the phrase, “the
husband ministry,” relative to the apostles and prophets and teachers in the
Church. This is totally wrong. True ministry will never meddle with one’s
individual, intimate relationship with the Lord; but with God’s zeal and
jealousy will so minister Christ that the believer’s love-relationship with Him
will become more and more pronounced. As this relationship continues to grow and
to be strengthened, so will the cords which once seemed to bind the immature
child of God to some outstanding minister begin to snap. God never intended that
these cords of ministry should be anything more than cords of respect and love
because of the help they receive; and these cords must be replaced, in the
fullness of God’s working in our lives, with the all-encompassing cords of true
love that bind our hearts to Him that loved us, and to all of God’s people who
are loved of Him. The weaned child must eventually become a son or daughter in
Father’s House, and grow unto maturity under the guidance of spiritual fathers
and mothers, until one day they themselves may be able to feed and nourish
others. True fathers in God’s House will anticipate the day when the children
shall have grown unto maturity, and become equal with them in their apprehension
of Truth, and in their personal relationship with the Father above. The true
servant does not, because of the office he may hold, command the submission and
respect of the people of God in virtue of that office. That respect and
submission ought to be there if the immature ones are truly desirous of growing
in the ways of the Lord. But that servant of the Lord who feeds them and seeks
to nurture them in the ways of the Lord will be happy and blessed when the one
he feeds with Truth rises up in the stature of the Lord and begins to feed
others. Even that elder pastor or that elder teacher or that elder prophet, or
apostle, will find himself sitting at the feet of one whom he has instructed in
the ways of the Lord, to receive instruction from him, and rejoicing in the
maturity that he sees beginning to develop in one much younger than himself.
When God ordained the casting of lots for the ministry of song in the House
of the Lord, He made no distinction between “the small and the great,” or
between “the teacher and the scholar.” So does God harmonize the expression of
the living Christ in the House of God. He, the Master musician, knows how to
strike-the chords of many hearts as they assemble together to behold the beauty
of the Lord. And with the striking of the chords in hearts that are in tune with
Him... whether they be “great or small,” whether they be “teacher or scholar”...
ONE SOUND is heard in the congregation of the Lord, as it was in the early days
of the ministry of song in Solomon’s Temple. (See 2 Chron. 5:13.) The harmonious
strains of the Lord will find a response in the hearts of God’s people no matter
what instrument may be used; and many voices will blend together as they are
orchestrated by the Holy Spirit to magnify and to glorify the Lord Jesus in our
midst. Our modern musicians in the Church are masters at this, as far as their
musical talent is concerned. But we are not talking about that. For the musical
instruments in the Temple were themselves but types of the people of God, who
are fine tuned by the Holy Spirit, and who become very sensitive to the fingers
of God as He plays upon the strings of their heart, and causes them to show
forth in the congregation of the Lord some aspect of the glory of Christ for
which the Spirit has tuned them true to His own heart, and set them in the Body
as “members in particular.” Would God that His people would have the same
diligence to be tuned into God and His truth, as they are to have their musical
instruments tuned to the sensitive ears of the musicians. Then we would have a
vital expression of the Body of Christ in the earth, showing forth the praises
of the Lord. Without that expression of Christ in our midst, our musical
renditions become mere entertainment, and serve only to soothe the hearts of
God’s people, rather than to pierce them with the Sword of the Spirit. Without
that expression of Christ in our midst, the beautiful music must sound like
“clanging cymbals” or like “sounding brass” in the ears of the Lord. And the
heart that is soothed by the beautiful music of the minstrel will soon be lulled
to sleep, rather than awakened to hear the clear, pure Word of the Lord. I fear
it is happening in our churches, as happened in the days of the prophet: “And
lo, thou art unto them as a very lovely song of one that bath a pleasant voice,
and can play well on an instrument: for they hear thy words, but they do them
not” (Ezek. 33:32). We are talking about the burden that Abraham laid upon his
servant. Abraham knew what he wanted, and he knew what God wanted; and we can be
sure it was God who put it into his heart to set in motion the plan that would
bring into being the desire of His own heart. Abraham would not have to
personally take that long and arduous journey to Mesopotamia. His trusted
servant could do the job as well as he; for this servant had been with Abraham
these many years, and he had come to know the heart of Abraham, as well as the
heart of Abraham’s God. This was a matter of vital importance. Through Abraham
and through Isaac “all nations were to be blessed” . . and Isaac’s bride must be
“elect according to the foreknowledge of God.” Throughout the whole story the
servant remains the unnamed servant. Some assume it was Eliezer; but this we do
not know. By the time we come to Genesis 24, it is at least 54 years from the
time Eliezer was last mentioned. And so we are simply going to call him “the
servant” or “the man” as the Bible does. His name is not to be held in
reverence, nor are the names of God’s servants today. His mission is to honor
the name of Abraham and of Isaac, and to procure a worthy bride for his master.
He was not to get any glory out of this, except the glory one has when, by the
ministry of the Spirit, he is enabled to impart the glory of God to others, and
through this to glorify and exalt the Name of the Lord Jesus. Paul was able to
say of the Thessalonians, “For ye are our glory and joy” (1 Thess. 2:20). Why?
Because in ministering Christ to them it was Christ that was honored and Christ
that was glorified, and that was the total purpose of his ministry. “Who then is
Paul, and who is Apollos, but ministers by whom ye believed, even as the Lord
gave to every man?” (1 Cor. 3:5). Yet even as he would “downgrade” himself as it
were, he had no hesitation in saying that he was a “steward” in the House of
God.
Stewards Of The Mysteries
“Let a man so account of us, as of the ministers of Christ, and stewards of
the mysteries of God” (1 Cor. 4:1). The mysteries of God are the secrets of God,
and Paul was entrusted with many of these. As a Pharisee he knew the Scriptures
very well, but he had not learned God’s secrets. He certainly honored the
Scriptures as the Word of God; but he made it clear that he did not come to an
understanding of God’s “secrets” through an intellectual research of the truth,
but by the “revelation” of the Spirit. (See 1 Cor. 2:12-14; Gal. 1:12.) It was
all there in the Old Testament, at least in seed-form; but he could not see it
until God revealed to him His secrets. What he received was not foreign to the
Scriptures, but it was so hidden away in the letter of the Word that no man
could see it unless God unveiled it. For instance, who would consider this to be
a valid interpretation of Scripture: that the “seed of Abraham” was really the
Christ Himself? Only the Holy Spirit could reveal something like that; and even
our most fundamental Christian teachers are slow to accept it: THAT THE PROMISES
TO ABRAHAM WERE TO THE SEED, WHICH IS CHRIST, AND NOT TO UNREGENERATE
ISRAELITES. (See Gal. 3:16.) And again, it is said by the Holy Spirit that Levi
paid tithes to Melchizedek... because Abraham, Levi’s great-grandfather had done
so. What kind of logic is that? it is the logic of the Spirit of God. (See Heb.
7:9, 10.) He alone can reveal secrets like this that are hidden away in the
letter of the Word. He alone is able to break open the shell, and bring forth
the kernel. He alone can clothe the Word with life, that it becomes living bread
to the hungry heart. The living Word is there... hidden away in the shell... but
only the Holy Spirit can make it to be bread for the hungry, and refreshing
water to him that is thirsty and dry. Now if we profess to be partakers of the
“secrets of God,” let us be assured that we can only minister those secrets by
the Holy Spirit; and if He does not break open the shell and show them to us...
they will not minister life to our own hearts, or to the hearts of the people
with whom we seek to share them. For this reason a great deal of discipline is
required in the lives of those who are “stewards of the mysteries of God.” God
does not place us under oath, as Abraham did with his servant... and we can be
thankful for that; for He knows only too well that we would at one time or
another become guilty of perjury. But let us be sure of this: If God reveals His
eternal secrets to us, our obligation to faithfully relate the words of God to
His people is just as exacting, and perhaps more so, than if we were called upon
to swear by God or His throne that we would do what He said. In this writing we
are putting a lot of emphasis upon the servant-ministry, because it is very
evident that they are largely to blame for the lack of true spiritual life in
the people of God. I believe that God is in this hour seeking out for Himself a
trusted and tried servant-ministry that will faithfully minister the truth to
His people; for God is very jealous for His own Name’s sake that He have a Bride
truly like Himself truly worthy of Him, truly compatible with Him. Let the
awesomeness of the oath of God that Abraham laid upon his servant, strike all of
our hearts with the sense of our responsibility before God and His people in
this awesome hour. There is a holy Bride out there that God is grooming for His
Son. And there is a fresh Word going forth from the heart of God that will
prepare and procure this holy Bride for Christ. Long has the Church realized
that the Holy Spirit will be faithful to present this chaste virgin to Christ.
But how little have we recognized that He sends forth this cleansing, purifying
Word through the lips of trusted, tried, cleansed, and purged vessels in the
House of God. I believe God is bringing forth a new ministry in the Church to
bring forth this fresh, cleansing stream from the House of God. I am not
referring to a new kind of clergy. I am referring to a true corporate ministry
that is arising in the Body of Christ that will be one with the people of God...
and together, one with the Holy Spirit. God never intended the special
ministries of apostles, prophets, evangelists, pastors and teachers, to be on an
elevated plane, above the people. The clergy-laity system in the Church must
disappear. God never gave these ministries to the Church to create a
class-system in the Church. As truly as the five loaves and the two fishes were
taken into the hands of the Master, and broken together in His hands... and then
distributed to the disciples and from there to the famishing crowds... so the
ministry and the people must be broken together in the hands of Christ if there
is to be broken bread for a Church and a world in need. In all of the teaching
that abounds in the Church today concerning the Body of Christ we see very
little beyond a class system... a clergy type of ministration to a people who
are content to just sit and listen. Oftentimes the people will exalt and idolize
the one who stands before them, with very little thought that they are supposed
to be a part of the ministration of the Spirit... that they must so partake of
Christ for themselves, that they might become a living expression of the Christ
in His corporate Body. Now it is clearly stated in the Word what the special
ministries are for... if we may use that word “special.” “For the perfecting of
the saints, for the work of the ministry, for the edifying of the body of
Christ” (Eph. 4:12). Read it slowly: It is to perfect and equip the people of
God that they may effectually minister to, and build up the Body of Christ. The
“five-fold ministry” then is intended of the Lord to so bring forth this living
Word that every member, as a “member in particular,” may become a vital
expression of Christ in our midst. It is not just to prepare a few elders and
deacons to minister under the authority of a pastor, but to so impart Christ to
the Body that each member will have his own vital ministration of the Spirit to
share with the rest of the Body. But notice this: it is the lack of this kind of
expression in the Body that is responsible for the schisms that exist, and that
are becoming more and more frequent in the Church: “But God hath tempered the
body together, having given more abundant honour to that part which lacked: that
there should be no schism in the body; but that the members should have the same
care one for another” (1 Cor. 13:24, 25). Did you hear what God says is causing
the schisms in the Body? That unruly member? That ambitious elder? These
problems may exist; but God says it is because there are members that sit there
in the congregation, lacking that abundant honor that God would lay upon them...
so that they might be enabled to minister Christ, as a “member in particular.”
We are not talking about ministering in the ecclesiastical sense; but a people
so honored of the Lord with the “honor” that He places upon them, that out from
their lives there comes forth a reflection of the living Christ in the midst of
His people. It causes them to exercise a “care” for the flock of God... a care
that removes the schisms, and that brings a healing to the Body of Christ. It
could manifest itself in many, many ways: in prayers and intercessions, in
exhortations, in ministrations of mercy, in physical and spiritual healings, in
helps of one kind and another. God says it is this “abundant honor” from Christ
that will remove the schisms, and heal the Body. Until this happens, it matters
not how many wonderful prophets and apostles and teachers might be in the Church
establishing church “order,” and setting up “New Testament churches.” If there
is not that ministration of the Spirit that nurtures the saints of God and makes
them to be a vital “Member in particular,” we are not going to see this kind of
healing in the Body of Christ that God intends. Of course we cannot manufacture
this kind of ministration in the members of the Body of Christ. God must do it
by His Spirit. But the true servants of the Lord will cherish this vision, and
will earnestly seek the Lord that the “honor” He alone can bestow may come upon
the whole congregation, that “there be no schism in the Body... that the members
should have the same care one for another.”
The Nature Of The Oath
As we know, an “oath” is intended to attach great significance and importance
to a covenant, lest it be taken lightly. This matter of ministering the Truth is
no light thing in the sight of God. God does not ask His servants to take an
oath in ministry, for it would only bring greater condemnation upon us in times
of failure. He nevertheless bears witness to all that we say and do, and He is
not at all pleased with this professional type of minis try in the Church that
functions not too differently from our political parties in the world... in
setting up one, and putting down another, according to the popular will of the
people. This democratic system of government has no place in the House of God.
God has always been faithful to give leadership according to His own will, if
the people are really minded to go His way. But when the time comes that God’s
will is no longer considered to be of utmost importance, He simply withdraws
from it all and allows man to run it his way. Oh, He may continue to bless His
people, as He did under Saul; but it is not His way, and in due course it must
all come crashing down. His blessing in the midst of a politically oriented
church structure is in no sense a token of His pleasure in what they are doing.
It is rather another example of His grace and mercy to a disobedient people.
Forty long years God blessed His people in the wilderness... but when it was all
over, God Himself testified that He was “grieved” with that generation who
“erred in their heart” and who did not come to know His ways (Ps. 95:10).
Abraham’s servant took the oath, but not without some misgivings. What if the
one he found for Isaac was not willing to take the journey? Would he then be
permitted to take Isaac back to that land, to receive his bride? The answer was
“No”... he was not to do that. But with that answer Abraham, with confidence in
God, was able to assure the servant that if he was faithful to follow the
instructions he was giving him, then God would be faithful to find a bride that
would be willing to take the journey. The commitment of a faithful servant to
minister Truth explicitly according to the will of God, is the servant’s
assurance that God will be faithful to watch over that Word, and bring it to
pass. God help us all in this matter of commitment. It is no light thing to say,
“Lord, I will follow you... I will go your way... I will do your will.” For as
surely as we are apprehended of God with a desire to do His will, the assurance
that we are walking in His will becomes more and more pronounced in all that we
do. Is there first of all a genuine, fervent desire to do as He says? Or is
there that lingering mixture of selfish desire? “I will follow you, Lord, but
FIRST I want to do this... or that...” (See Luke 9:59-61.) How many conditions
do we attach to our commitments, knowingly or unknowingly? As long as these
conditions are there we are not going to discover the positive assurance that we
must have in our walk with Him as we seek to walk beneath the unclouded skies of
His favor and presence. But as our commitment is purged from all conditions, and
our desires purified from all selfish pursuits, more and more will we discover
His faithfulness in causing us to make the right judgments, and to walk in the
perfect ways of the Lord. Jesus was able to say, “I can of Mine own self do
nothing: as I hear, I judge: and My judgment is just; because I seek not Mine
own will, but the will of the Father which hath sent me” (Jn. 5:30). His
commitment to the will of God so apprehended His inner-most being that He had
positive assurance that what He said was right... what He judged was right. He
would pray, and He knew the Father would hear Him always. He would speak, and He
knew it was the Father speaking. He would work, and He knew the Father would be
there to perform what the Father had in mind. Notice this: He did not claim to
be right, and to judge aright, because He was an apostle or a prophet, or
because He was the Messiah, BUT BECAUSE HE EARNESTLY DESIRED TO DO THE FATHER’S
WILL, RATHER THAN HIS OWN. “Because I seek not mine own will, but the will of
the Father which hath sent Me.” So it was that Abraham’s servant went forth on a
long journey under oath to do what Abraham had said... nothing more, and nothing
less. He had the assurance from his master, “You do what I am adjuring you to
do, and God will show you favor, and do what you cannot do. He will lead you in
the right way; He will guide you to the right place; and you will be assured
that the one that God has chosen for Isaac will be the right one... a bride
compatible and worthy of my son, and willing to follow you on the journey home.”
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