Ephesians 1:5 says,
“Having predestinated us unto sonship
through Jesus Christ to Himself,
according to the good pleasure of His will.”
Ephesians 1:9 goes on to say,
“Having made known to us
the mystery of His will,
according to His good pleasure
which He purposed in Himself.”
God has a will
in which is His good pleasure.
This good pleasure
is the desire of His heart.
God’s good pleasure
is the delight of His heart.
God’s good pleasure, God’s heart’s desire,
is to have many sons.
God has predestinated us, marked us out beforehand,
that is, before the foundation of the world (Eph. 1:4), unto a certain destiny.
The destiny of God’s marking us out beforehand
is sonship.
The goal of God’s predestination
is to have many sons.
This is God’s heart’s desire
and is emphatically revealed in the book of Romans.
The central thought of the book of Romans
is that God’s salvation makes sinners
His sons with His life and nature to express Him
so that they may become constituents
of the Body of Christ for His expression.
Romans 8:14 says,
“For as many as are led by the Spirit of God,
these are sons of God.”
The Spirit’s leading in our daily life
is a sign
that we are the sons of God.
As sons of God,
we have God’s life and nature.
The Spirit’s leading
always corresponds with God’s life and nature
to prove that we are sons of God.
Romans 8:15 says,
“You have not received a spirit of slavery to fear again,
but you have received a spirit of sonship
in which we cry, Abba, Father.”
As sons of God, we cry, “Abba, Father.”
Through the dispensing of the Triune God,
we have truly become God’s sons in life;
hence, we can call Him, “Abba, Father.”
As sons of God,
we have within us
the life of God, the nature of God, and the Spirit of the Son of God.
Romans 8:29 goes on to say,
“Whom He foreknew,
He also predestinated
to be conformed to the image of His Son,
that He should be the Firstborn among many brothers.”
In the initial stage
we are children of God (Rom. 8:16).
In the advanced stage
we are sons of God (Rom. 8:14).
Romans 8:29 does not say
that we shall be conformed to the image of the children of God;
it says that we shall be conformed to the image of the Son of God.
Through the process of conformation,
the firstborn Son of God, Jesus Christ,
will have many brothers.
As the Son of God,
Christ was the unique, only begotten Son.
Now through His incarnation, crucifixion, and resurrection,
He has become the firstborn Son of God,
and the many sons of God, who are His brothers,
are being conformed to His image.
In Romans 1:4
the Firstborn of God is designated,
but in 8:29
the many sons of God are conformed.
The designation of the Firstborn of God
is the work on the prototype;
the conformation of the many sons of God
is the work of mass production.
Having gained the prototype,
God is now seeking
to have the mass production
in order to produce many sons
in the image of the Firstborn.
God’s goal according to His good pleasure, the desire of His heart,
is to produce many sons.
This goal of producing many sons of God
requires redemption, the imparting of life, and the living by this life
so that they may be regenerated, transformed,
and conformed to the image of the Firstborn of God.
God uses His firstborn Son as a prototype, a model, a pattern,
to produce many sons.
Thus, God’s only begotten Son
has become the Firstborn among many brothers.
This is the issue
of the dispensing of the Triune God into us.
Hebrews 2:10 says
that God is “leading many sons into glory.”
The many sons here
are the many brothers in Romans 8:29.
The last step of God’s great salvation
is to bring His many sons into glory.
Romans 8 tells us
that God’s work of grace upon us
began with His foreknowing
through His predestination, calling, and justification
and will end with His glorification (vv. 29-30).
Romans 8 also says
that the whole creation eagerly expects
the revelation, the glorification, of the sons of God,
hoping that the creation itself
will enter into the freedom of the glory of the children of God (vv. 19-21).
This will take place at the Lord’s coming back,
at which time we shall appear with Him in glory (Col. 3:4).
This glorification of the sons of God,
as the goal of God’s salvation,
will last through the millennial kingdom
and will be manifested in full in the New Jerusalem for eternity (Rev. 21:11, 23).
The Triune God is still working today
to bring His many sons into glory.
We are sons of God,
but we are not yet in glory.
One day we shall all be in glory.
That will be the redemption of our body (Rom. 8:23).
Our body has not yet been redeemed,
but one day it will be transfigured
into a glorious body (Phil. 3:21).
This redemption of our body
is our full sonship.
Revelation 21:7 says,
“He who overcomes
shall inherit these things,
and I will be God to him,
and he shall be a son to Me.”
This speaks of the sons of God in eternity in the New Jerusalem.
Here “overcomes”
means to overcome by believing,
as in 1 John 5:4 and 5.
This overcoming qualifies all believers
to participate in the New Jerusalem
with all its enjoyment
as a common portion of God’s eternal salvation for His sons.
Actually, the sons of God in the New Jerusalem
will be the constituents of the New Jerusalem.
The New Jerusalem
will be a composition of all the regenerated sons of God
to fulfill the desire of God’s heart.
It is God’s good pleasure, the desire of His heart,
to have many sons
for the expression of His Son.
As we have seen,
Romans 8:29 says
that God predestinated us
to be conformed to the image of His Son.
To have us conformed to the image of His Son
is for the expression of His Son.
Second Corinthians 3:18 says,
“We all with unveiled face,
beholding and reflecting as a mirror
the glory of the Lord,
are being transformed
into the same image
from glory to glory.”
This corresponds with Romans 8:29
that we, the sons of God, should be transformed
and conformed to the image of the Son of God
to express Him.
In Philippians 1:20,
the Apostle Paul, one of God’s many sons, says
that Christ shall be magnified in his body,
whether through life or through death.
This is to express the Son of God.
In Philippians 1:21
Paul continues to say,
“To me to live is Christ.”
Paul’s life was one
that expressed Christ the Son of God.
First John 3:2 says,
“If He is manifested,
we shall be like Him.”
To be like the Lord
is also to express the Son of God.
According to God’s desire and His plan,
we, as the sons of God, should express His Son today,
and we are destined
to express His Son
at the coming of His Son.
Concerning the expression of the Son of God,
Ephesians 1:23 indicates
that His Body
is the fullness of the One
who fills all in all.
This fullness
is the expression of Christ the Son of God.
Christ, who is the embodiment of the infinite God without any limitation,
is so great
that He fills all things in all things.
Such a great Christ
needs the Body,
constituted of the many sons of God,
for His complete expression.
As the expression of the unsearchably rich Christ,
the church is the unlimited expression
of the unlimited Christ.
The church is the fullness of Christ,
who is Himself the embodiment of the fullness of God (Col. 2:9).
It is God’s desire
that the church today
be such an expression of Christ, His Son.
Eventually in Revelation 21
the New Jerusalem,
which is the composition of all the sons of God (Rev. 21:7)
and the consummation of the church,
will be a corporate expression of Christ the Son of God,
who will be the temple
within the holy city
and the lamp
to shine out through the city (vv. 22-23).
God desires to have many sons
for the expression of His Son
so that He may be expressed in the Son through the Spirit.
Through the incarnation, crucifixion, and resurrection of Christ, the firstborn Son of God,
God has produced millions of sons.
These sons are for the expression of His Son.
God’s desire
is to have many sons
to express His Son,
who is now the Firstborn among many brothers.
When this Son is expressed,
God is expressed in the Son through the Spirit.
Paul refers to the expression of God in Ephesians 3:19
when he speaks of our being “filled unto all the fullness of God.”
The fullness of God here
is the corporate expression of God by the church.
To be filled unto all the fullness of God
is to be filled with the result
that we, as the church, become the corporate expression of God.
In Ephesians 3
Paul prayed
that the Father would strengthen us
with power
through His Spirit
into our inner man
so that Christ might make His home in our hearts
and that we might know Christ’s dimensions
—the breadth, the length, the height, and the depth—
that we might be filled unto, resulting in, the fullness of God,
which is His corporate expression, the church.
In Ephesians 3:19
we have the expression of God,
and in Ephesians 3:16
we have a word concerning the Spirit.
God’s many sons
are the expression of His Son
so that God Himself may be expressed in the Son through the Spirit.
This is God’s good pleasure, His heart’s desire.
For God to be expressed in the Son through the Spirit
needs God’s dispensing of Himself into His chosen people
to produce a corporate expression.
In Ephesians 3
the Father answers and fulfills the apostle’s prayer through the Spirit
that Christ the Son may make His home in our hearts.
As a result,
we are filled unto the fullness of God.
This is the dispensing of the Triune God into our being
for His corporate expression.
This expression is in the church today,
and it will consummate in the New Jerusalem,
the eternal corporate expression of the Triune God.
God desires to dispense Himself into His chosen people
for the producing of the church
so that He may be expressed in a corporate way.
We have seen
the many aspects of God’s person
and the items of His attributes.
All the aspects of God’s person
and all the items of His attributes
are the ingredients of God as our food
to be dispensed into our being.
According to Genesis 1,
God created man in His image
with the intention of dispensing Himself into man.
The way this dispensing is carried out
is portrayed in chapter two of Genesis.
God’s way to dispense Himself into man
is through man’s eating of Him as the tree of life.
The eating of the tree of life
implies two things:
first, that life is the means for God to dispense Himself into us;
second, that eating is the way
God is dispensed into us.
If we would have God’s dispensing,
we need
both life as the means and eating as the way.
The matter of eating
is found throughout the Bible,
from the beginning in Genesis
to the end in Revelation.
We have the tree of life in Genesis 2,
and we have the tree of life again in Revelation 22.
Between Genesis 2 and Revelation 22
there is a line related to eating.
At the time of the Passover
the children of Israel
ate the meat of the lamb
in order to receive the life supply (Exo. 12:3-5, 8-9).
Then in the wilderness
they were sustained by manna (Exo. 16:14-15).
Manna was their food,
and by eating manna
they received the supply of life.
Eventually, the children of Israel
entered into the good land,
and there they enjoyed the rich produce of the land (Josh. 5:12).
Three times a year
the people came together
to eat the produce of the good land
before God and with God.
In their feasts
they were eating,
and God was eating as well.
In the New Testament,
the Lord Jesus in John 6
says that He is the bread of life
and that we need to eat Him.
If we eat Him as the bread of life,
we shall live by Him.
Paul speaks also
about eating the spiritual food in his Epistles.
In 1 Corinthians 10:3
he says,
“All ate the same spiritual food.”
In Revelation 2:7 and 22:14
the Lord speaks about eating the tree of life.
The record regarding the spiritual eating in the Bible
is a strong indication and implication
that God intends to dispense Himself into our being
by means of life and by the way of eating.
God is life to us,
and the way we take Him as life
is to eat Him.
God is our food,
and we eat Him.
God is not only our food
—He is our feast.
This is revealed in the Scriptures.
God is not mainly teaching us
but dispensing Himself into us.
God’s dispensing is a divine feeding.
God is constantly feeding us.
He feeds us with Himself as food.
During the past centuries
there have been those
who received God’s dispensing,
the saints
who contacted God all the time.
Even though they may not have known the word “dispensing”
or had the adequate knowledge about eating God,
they took God into them as their food.
For the most part,
they ate God
by eating the Word.
The Word conveys God as its content.
Apart from God as the content of the Word,
the Word is empty.
Hence, to eat the words of the Bible
is actually to eat God
conveyed in the Word.
In the past,
the godly ones
who spent much time contacting God spontaneously and even unconsciously
were under God’s dispensing.
The aspects of God’s person
and the items of His attributes
are infused into us
as the ingredients of God as our food
by His dispensing.
We may not be able to remember all the aspects of God’s person
or all the items of His attributes,
but as long as we are under His dispensing,
these ingredients are infused into us.
Simply eat God,
and all that He is and has
will be dispensed into you.
Eating is the way
to experience God’s dispensing
for His expression.
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