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God—His Nature

According to 2 Peter 1:4, 
we are partakers of the divine nature. 
To partake of God’s nature 
is to enjoy it 
and to participate in it. 
We can testify 
that day by day 
we not only possess the divine nature 
but also enjoy it. 
As believers, 
we certainly have the divine nature within us. 
Certain sufferings and hardships 
we cannot bear by ourselves; 
however, we are able to bear them 
by the divine nature.

We need to pay close attention 
to the matter of being partakers of the divine nature. 
2 Peter 1:4 says, 
“Through which He has granted to us 
precious and exceedingly great promises, 
that through these 
you might become partakers of the divine nature, 
having escaped the corruption 
which is in the world by lust.” 
Through the precious and exceedingly great promises given by God, 
we, the believers in Christ, 
who is our God and Savior, 
have become partakers of His divine nature 
in an organic union with Him. 
We have entered into this union through faith and baptism.
The virtue of this divine nature 
carries us into God’s glory, 
into the full expression of the Triune God.

Through the “precious and exceedingly great promises” 
we may become partakers of the divine nature. 
We receive the divine life simply by believing, 
and the divine nature is the substance of the divine life. 
Although we received the divine life at the time we believed, 
the divine nature must be continually enjoyed by us. 
This enjoyment requires the grace of God. 
The more we enjoy the divine nature, 
the more we have His virtue, 
and the more we are brought into His glory.

To partake of the divine nature 
is to enjoy what God is. 
In order that we may enjoy all that He is, 
God will do many things for us 
according to His precious and exceedingly great promises. 
This will enable us 
to enjoy His nature, what He is. 
One of His precious and exceedingly great promises 
is that His grace is sufficient for us (2 Cor. 12:9). 
God’s sufficient grace 
will work within us day by day 
so that we may enjoy His nature.

The divine nature 
refers to the riches of what God is. 
Whatever God is, is in His nature. 
Therefore, when we partake of the divine nature, 
we partake of the divine riches. 
Having received the divine life at the time of our regeneration, 
we must go on 
to enjoy what God is in His nature.

This enjoyment is both for the present and for eternity. 
For eternity we shall continue to partake of the divine nature. 
This is illustrated 
by the tree of life and the river of water of life in Revelation 22:1 and 2. 
Out from the throne of God and the Lamb 
the river of life flows. 
This signifies God 
flowing out to be the enjoyment of His redeemed. 
That flowing river 
will saturate the entire city of New Jerusalem, 
and the tree of life that grows in and along the river 
will supply the redeemed with God as their life supply. 
This is a picture of what it means 
to partake of the divine nature.

Just as we are constituted physically of the food we eat, 
so we, believers in Christ, 
should be constituted of the God 
of which we partake. 
This should be our experience day by day. 
If we enjoy God and partake of Him, 
we shall be constituted of Him. 
We shall be thoroughly constituted of God’s nature.

We all are constituted physically of the food we eat. 
For example, someone may eat so much fish 
and be constituted of fish to such an extent 
that he even smells of fish. 
In like manner, 
we may become so constituted of God 
that we express God in all 
that we are and do. 
We may even give off a divine “fragrance.” 
If we partake of God day by day, 
eventually we shall partake of Him unconsciously. 
When others contact us, 
they will see in us 
the expression of the Triune God. 
All the saints need to be saturated with the nature of God. 
The more we are saturated with God, 
the more we shall express Him.

To be a partaker of the divine nature 
is to be a partaker of the elements, the ingredients, of God’s being. 
When we partake of God, 
the aspects of what God is 
become our enjoyment. 
This is to enjoy 
the constituents of the divine nature.

To have eternal life 
is a matter once for all, 
but to partake of the divine nature 
is a continual matter. 
Although we have the divine life once for all, 
we cannot enjoy the divine nature once for all. 
During the course of our Christian life on earth, 
and even in eternity, 
we shall still be partaking of the divine nature.

The divine nature 
denotes what God is. 
We may again use eating food as an illustration 
of partaking of the divine nature. 
When we eat chicken, for example, 
we partake of the chicken nature. 
What the chicken is 
becomes our nourishment. 
When we eat chicken, 
we are actually eating the chicken nature, 
which includes various nourishing elements. 
These elements, or ingredients, 
are the constituents of the chicken nature. 
The principle is the same with the divine nature. 
Through God’s promises 
we are partaking of God’s nature 
with all the divine ingredients. 
Just as we do not eat food once for all, 
so we do not partake of the divine nature once for all. 
For eternity, as portrayed 
by the tree of life and the river of water of life in Revelation 22, 
we shall be partaking of the divine nature.

We have seen 
that the divine nature denotes what God is, 
that is, the constituents of God’s being. 
Because we are children of God born of Him, 
we possess God’s life 
and also His nature 
for our enjoyment.
A child born of American parents 
will certainly be American. 
Then what about those 
who have been born of God? 
Through our new birth, regeneration, 
we have been born of God, 
and we are God’s children. 
Because we have been born of God, 
in life and in nature 
we are the same as God. 
In this sense, 
those who are born of God 
are divine. 
But we definitely do not participate in the Godhead, 
and we certainly do not become an object of worship. 
We have God’s life and nature, 
but we do not become 
part of the Godhead.

Certain early church fathers taught 
concerning the deification of the believers. 
But they did not teach 
that the believers attained to the Godhead, 
or that they would ever be worshipped as God. 
Rather, they meant 
that Christians, those who have been regenerated of God, 
have God’s life and nature. 
We, the regenerated ones, 
are the same as God in life and nature, 
but we are not the same as God in position in the Godhead. 
Concerning this, 
we need to be very careful. 
It would be heretical 
to teach deification in the sense of claiming 
that believers attain to the Godhead. 
But it is according to the Scriptures 
to teach 
that because we have been born of God, 
we possess the divine life and the divine nature 
and that, in these aspects, 
we have become the same as God. 
We definitely cannot participate in the Godhead, 
or have the position to be worshipped by others as God. 
Nevertheless, through regeneration 
we have God’s life and nature.

We need to come back to the pure Word of God 
and to tell others 
that whoever believes in the Son of God 
is born of God 
and has the right, the authority, 
to become a child of God (John 1:12-13). 
As such, 
he has the right 
to partake of, to enjoy, the nature of God. 
Therefore, we have God’s life, 
we are enjoying God’s nature, 
and we have the position of God’s children. 
But we definitely do not have the position of the Godhead, 
the position to be worshipped by others as God. 
Praise the Lord 
that we have the position, the ability, and the provision 
to become partakers of the divine nature! 
Day by day we should partake of God’s nature 
and enjoy what He is, that is, enjoy the constituents of God’s rich being.

What is God’s nature? 
According to the New Testament 
God is Spirit (John 4:24), love (1 John 4:8, 16), and light (1 John 1:5). 
The expressions, “God is Spirit,” “God is love,” and “God is light,” 
are not used in a metaphoric sense, 
but in a predicative sense. 
These expressions denote and describe 
the nature of God.

In His nature 
God is Spirit, love, and light. 
Spirit denotes the nature of God’s person; 
love, the nature of God’s essence; 
and light, the nature of God’s expression. 
Both love and light 
are related to God as life, 
which life is of the Spirit (Rom. 8:2). 
God, Spirit, and life 
are actually one. 
God is Spirit, and Spirit is life. 
Within such a life 
are love and light. 
When this divine love appears to us, 
it becomes grace, 
and when this divine light shines upon us, 
it becomes truth.

The Gospel of John 
reveals that the Lord Jesus has brought grace and truth to us (John 1:14, 17) 
so that we may have the divine life (John 3:14-16), 
whereas the Epistle of 1 John 
unveils that the fellowship of the divine life brings us 
to the very sources of grace and truth, 
which are the divine love and the divine light. 
First John is the continuation of the Gospel of John. 
In the Gospel 
it was God in the Son 
coming to us as grace and truth 
so that we may become His children. 
In the Epistle of 1 John 
it is we, the children, in the fellowship of the Father’s life, 
coming to the Father 
in order to participate in His love and light. 
The former was God 
coming out to the outer court 
to meet our need at the altar 
with His grace and truth (Lev. 4:28-31); 
the latter is we 
entering into the Holy of Holies 
to contact Him at the ark 
in the divine love and light (Exo. 25:22). 
This is further and deeper 
in the experience of the divine life.

God is Spirit. 
This refers to His person. 
God is also love and light. 
Love refers to His essence, 
and light, to His expression. 
Both God’s love and light 
are related to His life. 
This life is actually God Himself. 
Life is also the Spirit.

When this life was manifested, 
it came with grace and truth. 
When we received the Lord Jesus, 
we received life, 
and now we enjoy grace and truth. 
This life brings us back to God 
to enjoy His love and light. 
First, God came to us 
so that we may receive grace and truth. 
Now we go back to the Father and contact Him 
as the source of grace and truth, 
and this source is love and light. 
Therefore, in the fellowship of the divine life 
we are being brought back to God 
to enjoy His love 
as the source of grace 
and His light 
as the source of truth.

This understanding of love and light 
is not derived from human reasoning; 
it comes from the divine revelation in the Word. 
In this revelation 
we have a number of items for our enjoyment, 
comparable to the many courses of a feast. 
We have God, the Spirit 
as the nature of God’s person, 
love 
as the nature of God’s essence, 
and light 
as the nature of God’s expression. 
When we have all these divine things, 
it means 
that we have been brought back to God the Father. 
When we are brought back to God the Father, 
we meet Him and enjoy Him 
as love, which is the source of grace, 
and light, which is the source of truth. 
How marvelous 
that in the fellowship of the divine life 
we enjoy the divine light and the divine love! 
Thus, in our experience 
we may enjoy God’s nature; 
that is, we may enjoy God 
as Spirit, love, and light.

According to His New Testament economy, 
God is now dispensing Himself into us. 
Surely what God dispenses into us 
is what He is in His nature. 
When God is dispensed into us, 
His nature is also dispensed into us. 
For God to dispense Himself into us 
means that He is dispensing Himself into us 
with what He is in His nature.

Every day my wife gives me vitamins with my food. 
Each vitamin has its own nature. 
When I take the vitamins into me, 
I also take in the nature of the vitamins. 
Taking vitamins 
is also an illustration of God’s feeding us with Himself. 
God is the best feeder. 
Daily He is feeding us with divine vitamins. 
God is feeding us 
with the “vitamins” of His nature.

We have seen 
that God’s nature includes 
Spirit as the nature of God’s person, 
love as the nature of God’s essence, 
and light as the nature of God’s expression. 
Since God is dispensing Himself in His nature into us, 
the more we are under God’s dispensing, 
the more we have of His Spirit, love, and light.

Apart from God’s dispensing, 
human beings have only the flesh, 
the soulish mind, emotion, and will, 
and a dormant spirit. 
As a result, 
they live only in a fleshly, psychological way. 
But if we are daily under God’s dispensing, 
we shall have more and more Spirit. 
Eventually, others will be able to sense the Spirit 
in what we do and say.

We need to experience God’s dispensing 
in our marriage life. 
Married brothers and sisters, 
how do you react 
when your husband or wife gives you a difficult time? 
If you react in a negative way, 
this indicates 
that you are not under God’s dispensing. 
If you are under His dispensing 
and are receiving the Spirit into you more and more, 
you will not react 
in your flesh or in your emotion. 
Instead, you will react 
with the Spirit.

Because God is love as well as Spirit, 
the more we are under His dispensing, 
the more love we have. 
Actually, the more God’s nature is dispensed into us, 
the more we become love. 
This means 
that we not only have love 
but that we are love. 
When the New Testament says 
that God is love, 
this does not mean 
that God merely has love 
but that He is love. 
Through God’s dispensing of Himself into us, 
we become love 
in the sense of being constituted of God as love. 
When love as the nature of God’s essence is dispensed into us, 
we shall react to others in love. 
Only one kind of love is genuine, 
and that is the love 
that comes out of God’s dispensing. 
When we are under God’s dispensing, 
we react 
with genuine love, 
which is God Himself.

When we are under God’s dispensing, 
our living will not only be with Spirit and love, 
but also with light. 
Our natural love is in darkness. 
Only one kind of love 
is full of light, 
and that is the love 
that comes from God’s dispensing.

If we are under God’s dispensing day by day, 
we shall behave 
with Spirit, with love, and with light. 
With how much Spirit, love, and light 
do you behave in your daily life? 
This is a test of 
whether or not you are under God’s dispensing.

In the foregoing messages 
we have seen 
that God’s person has many aspects, 
and in this message 
we have seen 
that He has a nature 
which is Spirit, love, and light. 
If we are under the dispensing of such a God, 
certainly He will infuse us with His nature, 
that is, with Himself 
as Spirit, the nature of His person, 
love, the nature of His essence inwardly, 
and light, the nature of His expression outwardly.

Suppose a certain brother is 
continually under God’s dispensing in a full way. 
When you contact him, 
you will sense 
that he lives and behaves with much Spirit. 
With him 
you will not see 
any sign of the flesh or the soul 
but of the Spirit. 
Furthermore, you will also sense love and light. 
When you are with him, 
you will have the sense 
that you are being enlightened. 
Such a brother 
is constituted of Spirit, love, and light 
because he is under the dispensing of the God 
who, in His nature, is Spirit, love, and light.

To live with Spirit, love, and light 
is very different 
from living only according to ethical, moral teachings. 
The New Testament 
reveals the dispensing of a God 
whose person is of many aspects 
and whose nature is Spirit, love, and light. 
If we are one with Him 
and if we are daily under His dispensing, 
we shall be those 
who spontaneously live a life 
that is full of Spirit, love, and light.

We need to consider 
all the aspects of what God is in His person. 
Although God’s person has many aspects, 
in nature He is very simple: 
He is Spirit, love, and light. 
If we are under His dispensing, 
our reactions will indicate to others 
that we have much Spirit, love, and light, 
even that we are constituted of Spirit, love, and light.

If we are under God’s dispensing, 
surely we shall participate in God’s nature 
as Spirit, love, and light. 
Then we shall become those 
who are living in Spirit, love, and light 
in the sense 
that we have been constituted of these elements of God’s nature. 
In our living 
there will be no need for us to perform, to act deliberately. 
Rather, we shall simply live a life 
according to the divine nature.

 

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