Crucified To The Religious World – T. Austin-Sparks
“But God forbid that I should glory, save in the cross of our Lord
Jesus Christ, by whom the world is crucified unto me, and I unto the world” (Galatians 6:14).
It is
interesting to notice the particular way in which the Apostle speaks of the
world here. That term is a very comprehensive term and includes a very great
deal. Here Paul gets right down to the spirit of the thing. You notice the
context; it is well for us to take account of it:
“For neither they themselves who are circumcised keep the law; but
desire to have you circumcised, that they may glory in your flesh” (Galatians 6:13).
What does
the Apostle mean? They want to say, “See how many proselytes we are making! See
how many followers and disciples we are getting! See how successful our
movement is! See what a power we are becoming in the world! See all the marks
of Divine blessing resting upon us!” The Apostle says that is worldliness in principle and spirit; that is the world. He sets over
against this his own clear spiritual position. Do I seek glory of men? Do I
seek to be well-pleasing to men? No! The world is crucified to me, and I to the
world.
All that
sort of thing does not weigh with me. What weighs with me is not whether my
movement is successful, whether I am getting a lot of followers, whether there
are all the manifestations outwardly of success; what weighs with me is the
measure of Christ in those with whom I have to do: “My little children, of whom
I travail in birth again until Christ be formed in you” (Galatians 4:19). Christ formed in you — that is
my concern, he says that is what weighs with me… not extensiveness, not
bigness, not popularity, not keeping in with the world, so that it is said that
this is a successful ministry and a successful movement. That is worldliness. I
am dead to all that; I am crucified with Christ to all that. The thing that
matters is Christ — the measure of Christ in you.
You see how
the world can creep in… and how worldly we can become almost imperceptibly by
taking account of things outwardly — of how men will think and talk, what they
will say, the attitude they will take; of the measure of our popularity, the
talk of our success. That is all the world, says the Apostle, the spirit of the
world; that is how the world talks. Those are the values in the eyes of the
world, but not in the eyes of the risen Christ. In the new creation, on the
resurrection side of the Cross, one thing alone determines value… and that is
the measure of Christ in everything. Nothing else is of value at all, however
big the thing may be, however popular it may be, however men talk favorably of
it; on the resurrection side that does not count a little bit. What counts is
how much of Christ there is.
You and I in
the Cross of the Lord Jesus must come to the place where we are crucified to
all those other elements. Ah, you may be unpopular, and the work be very small;
there may be no applause, and the world may despise; but in it all there may be
something which is of Christ, and that is the thing upon which our hearts must
be set. The Lord gives us grace for that crucifixion. There are few things more
difficult to bear than being despised; but He was despised and rejected of men.
What a thing is in God’s sight must be our standard. That is a resurrection
standard. Now that is the victory of the Cross: “But God forbid that I should
glory, save in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, by whom the world is
crucified unto me, and I unto the world
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