ANOTHER COFFEE BREAK: GOING BEYOND, Part 4
November 28, 2014
Dealing with the formulaic approach to water baptism has been
the bane of the church world. It has caused sincere, committed believers in
Christ to lose sight of how critical this foundation is to their being able to
"go on beyond" into the realms that await. The formulaic approach has
blocked many believers from going on into the dimensions of the Spirit that
Jesus Christ has simply because they never availed themselves of the law of
liberty that comes with water baptism.
Let's
pick up where we left off last week (and I'm running a bit long again today in
order to finish this picture of water baptism):
In
writing to the Romans, Paul says, “Don’t you realize that
those of us who have been baptized — immersed — into the Anointed One and His
Anointing have been baptized into His death?” (Romans 6:3, RAC
Translation and Amplification)
Let
me pick up again with the amplified translation from Romans 6 that we used in
our last time of sharing on Baptism.
And
Paul continues: “Therefore, and as a consequence thereof, we are buried and put
into the grave through baptism so that our old man sees death. It follows,
therefore, that in the same way Christ was raised up from the dead by the
visible Glory of the Father, we also should walk and live renewed and refreshed
(with His breath) of life.” (Romans 6:4 RAC
Translation and Amplification)
Here’s
where Paul spells things out in specific detail.
“For if we have been planted together, germinating as seeds in
the likeness and form of His death, we shall also spring forth in (and with
His) resurrection: Knowing this, that our old man and corrupted DNA is
crucified with him, that the body (of law) of sin might be annulled and
destroyed in order to free us from having to serve and be under the Law of Sin
and Death.
“For he who has died is freed from sin (and the laws which
determine that which is sin). Now if we are truly dead with Christ, we
believe and know that we shall also live with Him:
“Knowing that Christ, being raised from the dead, will never die
again; death has no more authority, dominion, control or power over
Him. For when He died, He died killing off sin and death once and for all:
and by virtue of the fact that He lives, He lives in and for the destiny and
purposes of God.” (Romans
6:5-10, RAC Translation and Amplification)
I
have a question for you.
WHAT
in any of these statements Paul makes gives folks the idea that they need to go
back and continually repent for events that were not actually a part of their
lives? Let’s take something we’ve come to refer to as “generational
repentance.”
This
teaching and practice stems from a principle established under the Law of Moses
in which God made it clear that the sins of the father were passed on to the
children of the fourth generation — and in the case of children born outside of
wedlock, to the tenth generation.
First,
let’s take a look at the Law of Moses, and what God originally said concerning
the sins (or iniquities) of the fathers:
Exodus
20:5-6: “Thou shalt not bow down thyself to
them, nor serve them: for I the LORD thy God am a jealous God, visiting the
iniquity of the fathers upon the children unto the third and fourth generation
of them that hate me; And showing mercy unto thousands of them that love
me, and keep my commandments.”
Numbers
14:18: “The Lord is longsuffering and of great mercy, forgiving
iniquity and transgression, and by no means clearing the guilty, visiting the
iniquity of the fathers upon the children unto the third and fourth
generation.”
Deuteronomy
23:2-3: “A bastard shall not enter into the congregation of the Lord; even
to his tenth generation shall he not enter into the congregation of the Lord.
An Ammonite or Moabite shall not enter into the congregation of the Lord; even
to their tenth generation shall they not enter into the congregation of the
Lord.”
Now,
here’s the other side of this picture:
Deuteronomy
7:9: “Know therefore that the LORD thy God, he is God, the faithful
God, which keepeth covenant and mercy with them that
love him and keep his commandments to a thousand generations.”
I
Chronicles 16:15-17: “Be ye mindful always of his covenant; the word which he
commanded to a thousand generations; Even of the covenant which he made with
Abraham, and of his oath unto Isaac; And hath confirmed the same to Jacob for a
law, and to Israel for an everlasting covenant.”
The
phrase which occurs in Exodus 20:6:(showing mercy unto
thousands of them that love me) really misses it in our English translations. Even under
the Law of Moses, the generation of “them that love me” was free from the
generational curse of the sins of their fathers. We can better translate this
phrase out of Hebrew like this: “showing mercy unto
thousands of generations of them that love me.”
Put
in the same context as the first part of what God was saying to Israel,
It
may not be immediately clear at first glance, but what God was saying to Israel
was this: “Even though your father, and your father’s father may have
lived under the generational curse of your ancestor before them, because they
did not turn to me and continued in the ways of their fathers, you are free
from that curse and the iniquities which had been visited upon your fathers
because you love me and keep my commandments.” (RAC Translation
& Amplification)
If
that was true under the Law of Moses, how is it that we still find it necessary
today to drag up the sins of our fathers when we have a Covenant in Christ
Jesus which has freed us from the Law of Sin and Death?
Let’s
put this another way.
For
all those who are in Christ Jesus, we were with Him when He was hanging on the
Cross! All of our sins, along with the sins of our fathers, our grandfathers,
our great-grandfathers, and every generation before them came upon Jesus as He
hung there. When He died, He took those sins with Him to the grave.
During
the three days his body lay in the grave, He took our sins, our iniquities, our
sicknesses, our infirmities, our diseases and the curse of death that hung over
the human race and laid them all at Satan’s feet!
THAT,
folks, is exactly what happens with us in water baptism when we are buried with
Him! We are with Him. We are IN Him! EVERYTHING of our past — including the
sins of our fathers, and the iniquities visited upon us as a result — gets laid
at Satan’s feet. He gets back what He so treacherously dumped on us!
Now
comes the Resurrection! Listen to how the apostle Paul puts it as he writes to
the Philippians.
Philippians
3:8d-11: “That I may win Christ, And be found in him, not having mine own
righteousness, which is of the law, but that which is through the faith of
Christ, the righteousness which is of God by faith: That I may know him, and
the power of his resurrection, and the fellowship of his sufferings, being made
conformable unto his death; If by any means I might attain unto the
resurrection of the dead.”
Do
you see it? In water baptism we are in Him — NOT in our own (self)
righteousness which gets measured by the Law with its penalties and curse.
Rather, we are in Him by, through and because of His faith; and that faith
comes from Father God by means of the anointing that is in Jesus.
The
objective here is that — as Paul puts it — we have know and have the revelation
of Him, His onoma,
His character and makeup. But there’s much, much more! It isn’t simply that we
have a revelation of Jesus in water baptism: we also receive a revelation of
the miraculous power and might released in His resurrection.
And
still there is more!
We
get to be a partaker of the sufferings He endured — the beatings, the stripes, the
disfigurement that occurred when His beard was ripped out of his face, the
unutterable pain that occurred when the crown of thorns was shoved into His
skull.
How
are we a partaker of those sufferings, you ask? By receiving what He paid for
on our behalf when all that took place. Every single stripe of the cat-o-nine
tails that ripped the flesh on His body represents a disease or an infirmity
that He took for us.
The
disfigurement that took place when His beard was ripped out, leaving loose
flesh hanging from His face, His chin and His neck paid for the disfiguring
injuries that men and women suffer in today’s so-called “advanced” society as a
result of diseases or accidents of one kind or another.
The
pain and suffering that occurred with the planting of the crown of thorns into
His skull paid for all of the mental anguish, the torment of our minds, the
agonies we suffer with the thoughts of the past, the concerns of the present
and the future.
Are
you now beginning to grasp the significance of getting to “know the fellowship (Greek: koinonia: partnership and participation with) of His sufferings?” We partner with Him;
we partake of those sufferings by being IN Him when we are immersed in the
waters of baptism.
Let
me pause here for a minute to take you to Isaiah’s prophecy concerning Jesus:
Isaiah
53:3-5: “He is despised and rejected of men; a man of sorrows, and
acquainted with grief: and we hid as it were our faces from him; he was
despised, and we esteemed him not.
Surely he hath borne our griefs, and
carried our sorrows: yet we did esteem him stricken, smitten of God, and
afflicted. But he was wounded for our transgressions, he was bruised for
our iniquities: the chastisement of our peace was upon him; and with his
stripes we are healed.”
Isaiah
was able to see some 700 years or so into the future, and what he sees is
exactly what took place with Jesus’ suffering, the betrayal, all that He took
upon Himself, and all that He accomplished on our behalf.
But
Isaiah also saw far into the future to our present day. Here’s how the Hebrew
text describes the picture:
He is disdained and scorned, and considered as having ceased to
exist by men: a man of anguish and pain, and has known grief by seeing and
experiencing it; and we hid as it were our faces from Him; He was disdained and
scorned, and we maliciously fabricated, invented and treated His suffering and
death as void.
Surely He has suffered and accepted as His own our maladies, our
anxieties, our calamities, our disease and sicknesses, and carried our anguish,
pain and grief: yet we fabricated and maliciously invented His being stricken
violently, beaten, punished, wounded and slaughtered as if by God -- choosing
to believe that God browbeat, demeaned and looked down upon Him.
But He was broken and profaned for our rebellion, our revolt, our
apostasy and our [religious] quarrel against God; He was crushed, oppressed and
smitten, and (emotionally) broken into pieces for our perversity, our evil, our
mischief, sins and faults; the breaking and ridiculing of our peace, our
welfare, our prosperity, our health and our safety was upon Him; and with His
bloodied and blue wounds we are cured, mended, repaired and made thoroughly
whole. (Isaiah 53:3-5, RAC Translation &
Amplification)
You
see the difference in the picture, don’t you? Isaiah is actually seeing how the
world today treats Jesus, despite all that He did on our behalf! The world —
and a whole fistful of folks who call themselves Christians — still consider
that God demeaned and looked down on Him. So many folks today treat His death
as null and void when and where it applies to every aspect of their lives.
Jesus left NOTHING undone!
Listen
to how Paul finishes with his explanation of what takes place. He wraps all of
this up with this phrase: “being made conformable
to His death.”
There’s
a 64-dollar word for you! Conformable. It comes from the Greek word: summorphos. It translates literally to: being jointly formed; fashioned with and like.
Understand?
We are jointly formed with Jesus Christ INTO His death. He dies. We die with
Him. The old us is dead. What used to exist of us is now nothing more than a
corpse. Jesus has died and is buried in a tomb. We have been formed INTO Him so
that as He died, so did we.
In
the same way that Jesus’ death finished the past, the sin, the sufferings, the
diseases and everything that went with the curse that came upon the human race,
our having been jointly formed and fashioned like Him, means that our past —
and all the consequences of the sins, the iniquities of our fathers, the
diseases that have plagued us, the infirmities of our flesh, the poverty that
came with the curse — and death itself! — has been finished IN US!
But
that’s only the first part of baptism. That’s the dying and burial part. But we
don’t remain in the grave! The power of the Resurrection has been made
available to us. Here’s what Jesus said about it when He was talking to Martha:
John
11:25-26: “I am the resurrection, and the life: he that believeth in me,
though he were dead, yet shall he live: And whosoever liveth
and believeth in me shall never die. Believest thou
this?”
Paul
deals with this when he writes his letter to the Ekklesia
in Ephesus:
Ephesians
2:4-7: “But God, who is rich in mercy, for his great love wherewith he
loved us, Even when we were dead in sins, hath quickened us together with
Christ, (by grace ye are saved;)And hath raised us up together, and made us sit
together in heavenly places in Christ Jesus: That in the ages to come he
might show the exceeding riches of his grace in his kindness toward us through
Christ Jesus.”
It
couldn’t be any clearer! We were dead with our lives measured by the Law of Sin
and Death. But Jesus incorporated us with Him when He died. We were woven into
His being so that when He died, carrying our sins, we died at the same time.
We
didn’t exit Him, and He didn’t eject us when He was raised from the dead. Paul
uses an interesting word in the Greek text when he says that God “hath quickened us together with Christ.” The Greek word
in this instance is: suzoopoieo,
and it means: to reanimate, or to
make one alive together (at the same time). But our resurrection doesn’t stop
with our being raised from the dead (what which occurs when we are raised out
of the water). Father God continued the “raising up” together IN Christ, and
has made us to sit together — WITH Him, and IN Him — in Heavenly places, in the
anointing of the Anointed One, the Lord Jesus Christ!
THAT, my
friends is what takes place when we are baptized in water!
Again, if you are in need of healing -- especially if you have
some terminal disease or prognosis of a very short time to live from the
doctors -- please join our prayer conference calls on either Monday or
Wednesday of each week at 7:00 PM Eastern. Once again, the number to call is
(805) 399-1000. Then enter the access code: 124763#. To get into the queue for
prayer, when Randy opens the call up for everyone, hit *6-1 on your keypad. Let
us minister to your need for healing!
Blessings
on you!
Regner
A. Capener
CAPENER MINISTRIES
RIVER
WORSHIP CENTER
Sunnyside, Washington 98944
Email
Contact: Admin@RiverWorshipCenter.org
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