Being
"In" Christ
It may be helpful to consider our duties on the basis
of some of the Lord's teaching in which he presented
a very profound thought in the simplest of words. He
said to the disciples, "You in me, and I in you"
(John 14:20). In the next chapter the same thought is
repeated under the figure of the true vine: "Abide
in me, and I in you. As the branch cannot bear fruit
of itself, except it abide in the vine, no more can
ye, except ye abide in me" (John 15:4). Then in
the prayer uttered just before the supreme trial, there
is a plea for unity, "that they may be one, as
we are one"; and then at the end of the supplication
we have the words, "that the love wherewith thou
hast loved me may be in them, and I in them" (John
17:21, 26).
There
is not much difficulty in understanding what is meant
by our being in Christ. The phrase is used repeatedly
in connections which are self-explanatory. "I knew
a man in Christ", says the apostle in drawing a
lesson from past experience (2 Corinthians 12:2). He
also speaks of some "who were in Christ before
me" (Romans 16:7). He says that a maiden or a widow
is at liberty to be married to whom she will, "only
in the Lord" (1 Corinthians 7:39). He wrote explicitly
that "as many as have been baptized into Christ
have put on Christ" (Galatians 3:27). And again,
"Know ye not that so many of us as were baptized
into Christ were baptized into his death?" (Romans
6:3). He also wrote of the "washing of regeneration",
by which disciples can be saved (Titus 3:5). Clearly
it is this regeneration,
this
new birth out of water, this putting on of Christ, which
brings us under the constitution of righteousness and
makes us "in Christ" (John 3:3-6).
To
be a true Christian, however, involves something more
than this. We may have believed the good news of the
Kingdom of God and of the redemption offered through
Christ. We may have been baptized into him, and we may
still abide in him; but the searching question arises
from his simple words, is he in us? The apostle Paul
evidently felt that the believers in Galatia had not
attained to this necessary "newness of life".
He wrote: "My little children, of whom I travail
in birth again until Christ be formed in you . . ."
(Galatians 4:19). They had believed the Gospel, and
had turned to the living God; they had been baptized,
and so, having "put on" the sin-covering name,
they were in Christ; but as yet Christ had not been
formed in them.
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