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|  | '''Back to [['Christ in You']]''' |  | '''Back to [['Christ in You']]''' | 
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| − | Paul’s writings reveal thathe was not as one "beating theair." He was running toward a finish line; hewas pressing forward toward a specific "mark."<br>
 | + | ''And we know that all things work together for good to them that love God, to them who are the called according to his purpose. For whom he did foreknow, he also did predestinate to be changed into the image of his Son, that he might be the firstborn among many brethren. (Romans 8:28,29)''<br> | 
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| − | The concept thatthere truly is a mark, a point ofperfection,a place of maturity,an attainable standard, is very important to the pursuit of the victorious Christian discipleship. A believer who is not convinced that there actually is a place of maturity will not make the effort required to attain it.<br>
 | + | Here the Divine purpose is revealed. Here we see the goal that controls and gives significance to the events of world, church, and personal history.<br> | 
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| − | Jesus began ourredemption with thework of Calvary.Jesus will finish our redemption by bringing forth the perfected members of the Church,the Body ofChrist. <br>
 | + | God commenced our salvation on the cross of Calvary. God is guiding every creature, thing, circumstance, and event of His universe. God shall accomplish His stated purpose and goal.<br> | 
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| − | ''Looking unto Jesus theauthor and finisher ofour faith; . . .(Hebrews 12:2)''<br>
 | + | The day will come when each member of the Body of Christ has been changed into the image of God’s only begotten Son. We already have been called. We already have been justified. As far as God’s vision and purpose are concerned, we already have been glorified. The Kingdom, the power, and the glory belong to God.<br> | 
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| − | ''That he might present it to himself a glorious church, not having spot, or wrinkle, or any such thing; but that it should be holy and without blemish. (Ephesians 5:27)''<br>
 | + | It is God’s intention that the Church become His eternal Temple, the Divine Counterpart of His Son, an instrument for destroying lawlessness from the creation, and the Christ-filled Servant of the Lord who will bring justice to the nations of the earth. No aspect of this high destiny and inheritance is possible until the Word of God has been brought to maturity in us and we have been changed into the image of Christ and brought into complete union with God through Him.<br> | 
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| − | Four times in the Book of Revelation the Lord Jesus Christ refers to Himself as Alpha and Omega (the Beginning and the End). <br>
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| − | ''And he said unto me, It isdone. I am Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the end. I will give unto him thatis athirst of the fountain of the water of life freely. (Revelation 21:6)''<br>
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| − | If there were to be no ''Omega'' , no end, the Lord would have said so. If the God of Heaven has left it up to us to attempt to imitate Jesus, knowing that we always will fall short of the mark, understanding that we must be content with the knowledge that we tried to be a good person in the world, the Scriptures would be a book of proverbs.<br>
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| − | The Scriptures are a record of what God—not man—has done, is doing, and will yet accomplish. It is not a question of what we are able to do, it is a question of what God has chosen to do.<br>
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| − | If there is no "mark" toward which to press, if God has begun so gloriously on Calvary but has left it up to Christians to do the best we can, knowing we are full of sin, rebellion against God, and foolishness, Christ would be presented as the ''Alpha'' but never as the ''Omega'' .<br>
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| − | Alpha and Omega are the beginning and end of the Greek alphabet. The Lord Jesus Christ is the eternalWord of God having neither beginning nor end as we understand time. Therefore Alpha and Omega refer to the plan of redemption,particularly to thework and enlargement of Christ in the members of HisBody,not to the ''Logos'' Himself. <br>
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| − | ''Alpha'' is thespecific beginning of our redemption. ''Omega'' is the specific completion of our redemption. Is the Lord Jesus Christ the Omega as well as the Alpha? If so,we can expect the fullness of the Divine Glory to be exercised in bringing about the ''Omega'' of our redemption just as it was exercised in creating the ''Alpha''.<br>
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| − | We are looking toward andpressing toward all that God has spoken in His Word concerning theperfection of the saints and of the Body of Christ.<br>
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| − | When God stated "It is done" (Revelation 21:6) He was referring to the new Jerusalem that the Apostle John was beholding in vision. John was not witnessing the incredibly confused pile of dry bones, the ungainly, disjointed, self-seeking, crippled patchwork ofman’s striving that today terms itself theChristian churches.<br>
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| − | John was seeing the holy city, the unblemished Wife of the Lamb, the unified, mature new Jerusalem. The perfection of the new Jerusalem is the perfection of God Himself. It is the Substance, the Nature, the wisdom of God brought forth in visible form for the nations of the earthto behold.The Wife ofthe Lamb will judge, rule, heal, andbless thepeoples whom Godhas saved.<br>
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| − | Man has beenbuilding the church for the past two thousand years. We can study the results and understand what always is broughtinto being when the wisdom and efforts of human beings are added tothe creation of the Lord.<br>
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| − | In the last days a nation will be "born at once" (Isaiah 66:8). Man will have come to the end of himself. He will not be able to work because of the exceedingly great spiritual darkness. Then the Lord will work and the perfect, unblemished Church will come forth "at once."<br>
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| − | It is obvious that if there is one imperfect member of the Body of Christ, the Body is imperfect. If there is one Achan inthe camp, "Israel hath sinned." If there is one unclean believer in the Wife of the Lamb, the Wife is impure. If there is one sinner in the new Jerusalem, the city is defiled. God and Christ will not dwell in a defiled city.<br>
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| − | God and Christ will not dwell where there is unrighteousness and uncleanness. It is our misunderstanding of Divine grace that leads usto believe that God andChrist will abide permanently in a situation where the only righteousness is that which has beenimputed (ascribed) by God’s love. Imputed righteousness is a temporary state that is intended to lead thebeliever to the desired condition of actual righteousness and holiness of behavior.<br>
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| − | Imputed righteousness, the gift of God through the blood of the cross, serves until the Word of God comes to maturity in our personality. God is looking for mature fruit—the fruit of the moral image ofHis Son in us. If any person is dwelling in Christ andChrist in him, a new creation is coming intoview. The new creation cannot sin because it has been born of God.<br>
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| − | It is important to our destiny in Christ that we pursue throughthe Holy Spirit the life of victory in Christ until we arrive at the "mark," the "Omega" of redemption, the fullness of the righteousness and blessing of the new covenant. The Omega of redemption is the "measure of the stature of the fulness of Christ" created in our personality.<br>
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| − | Two scriptural representations of the fullness of the image of Christ are as follows: (1) the Ark of the Covenant of the Tabernacle of the Congregation; and (2) the four faces of the Cherubim of Glory.<br>
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| − | The Ark of the Covenant.<br>
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| − | The four faces of the Cherubim of Glory.<br>
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| − | </li></ul>
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| − | '''Back to [['Christ in You']]'''
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Here the Divine purpose is revealed. Here we see the goal that controls and gives significance to the events of world, church, and personal history.
God commenced our salvation on the cross of Calvary. God is guiding every creature, thing, circumstance, and event of His universe. God shall accomplish His stated purpose and goal.
The day will come when each member of the Body of Christ has been changed into the image of God’s only begotten Son. We already have been called. We already have been justified. As far as God’s vision and purpose are concerned, we already have been glorified. The Kingdom, the power, and the glory belong to God.
It is God’s intention that the Church become His eternal Temple, the Divine Counterpart of His Son, an instrument for destroying lawlessness from the creation, and the Christ-filled Servant of the Lord who will bring justice to the nations of the earth. No aspect of this high destiny and inheritance is possible until the Word of God has been brought to maturity in us and we have been changed into the image of Christ and brought into complete union with God through Him.