The Pathway to Spiritual Maturity & 
			the Coming Glory 
There are many Christians who take great 
			comfort in Bible prophecy and are indeed looking for the rapture of 
			the Church to take place in these, the “last days.”  They are aware 
			of the seven-year tribulation period that will then transpire on 
			earth and upon its inhabitance.  And they are even knowledgeable 
			regarding the 1,000-year reign of Christ (the Messianic Era, 
			Christ’s millennial kingdom) that will be established when Christ 
			comes back to earth (His second advent) after the tribulation 
			period.  Yet these same Christians, by and large, have no concept of 
			the distinct and most certain connection between their present life 
			and their position relative to the upcoming kingdom.  Some are even 
			aware that they will face Jesus Christ post-rapture at His judgment 
			seat; but, they primarily focus on a positive outcome, completely 
			unable to either understand or face the negative outcome that most 
			likely will take place at this judicial setting.
			
This study, if considered, will in fact correct 
			the ignorance regarding these issues.  This study, if considered, 
			will indeed change the reader’s Christian life in a most definite 
			and positive fashion, which the reader will deeply be grateful for 
			now and in the kingdom to come. This document will focus on the one 
			and only path upon which a Christian can travel in order to achieve 
			spiritual maturity, with its revealed goal being to rule and reign 
			with Christ in His glory as King of kings and Lord of lords in the 
			upcoming Messianic Era.  
			
			Fundamentals
			
To fully understand both the reality and 
			importance of the pathway to spiritual maturity and the coming 
			glory, it is necessary to review and understand the following 
			fundamental doctrines of the Word:  (1) Composition of Man, (2) 
			God’s Redemption Plan, and (3) The Christian’s Coming Judgment; all 
			which follow:
			
Composition of Man
			
Man is a tripartite being, composed of a 
			spirit, soul, and body.  Scripture is careful to make this 
			distinction, never confusing the three (1 
			Thessalonians 5:23; 
			Hebrews 4:12). 
			
			1.      
			Man’s spirit (Greek: pneuma) is the spiritual part of 
			man that links him directly to God who is spirit.  Every person born 
			into the world is born with a dead spirit (Ephesians 2:1), as a result of Adam’s sin (1 
			Corinthians 15:22; cf. 
			Genesis 2:17; Romans 5:14), which can only be 
			activated (made alive) by means of the birth from above (John 
			3:3-7).
			
			2.      
			Man’s soul (Greek: psuche) is the sentient part of man 
			that links him to self-awareness (self-consciousness) and all 
			non-spiritual aspects of life.  The soul is composed of intellect, 
			emotions, and will; and it is through the soul that man relates to 
			the natural world.  Its animating (life-giving) principle is found 
			in the blood (Leviticus 17:11; 
			cf. Genesis 9:4).  Individuals in the Bible are 
			occasionally referred to as “souls,” a word used to represent the 
			entire person.  A person without a soul is a dead person, because 
			the “soul” is the “life” in the person.  The Hebrew word for “soul,”
			nephesh, is often translated “life” in the Old Testament; 
			just as the Greek word, psuche, is used accordingly in the 
			New Testament.
			
			3.      
			Man’s body (Greek: soma) is the corporal part of man 
			that links him to all that is material.  The body does this through 
			the five senses (sight, hearing, taste, smell, and touch), allowing 
			him both assimilation and expression relative to the material 
			world.  The body is the material part of man through which both the 
			soul and spirit of man may express themselves externally.  It is 
			intimately united with the “soul,” because it is the psuche 
			(soul/life) that keeps the physical body alive.
			
Genesis 1:26 
			reveals that God created man in His “image” 
			and “likeness.”  The 
			word for God here in the Hebrew text is Elohim, a plural 
			noun, which, in complete keeping with related Scripture, would 
			include all three members of the Godhead — God the Father, God the 
			Son, and God the Holy Spirit (e.g., 
			cf. John 1:1-3).  And since Elohim is a 
			trinity, for man to be created in the “image” 
			and “likeness” of God, 
			he too must be a trinity.
			
Jesus is Elohim manifested in the flesh; 
			and having been made in the “likeness” 
			of man (but apart from man’s fallen nature), He, as man, must also 
			be a trinity (John 1:14;
			Philippians 2:7).  This tripartite nature of Christ, 
			in whom “dwells all the fullness 
			of the Godhead bodily” (Colossians 
			2:9), was clearly revealed at the time of His death.  At 
			that time Jesus yielded up His spirit, which went back into 
			the presence of His Father in heaven (Luke 
			23:46; cf.
			Ecclesiastes 12:7; Acts 7:59); His soul 
			went into Hades, the place of the dead, housed inside the earth at 
			the time (Acts 2:27); 
			and His body was removed from the cross and placed in Joseph 
			of Arimathea’s tomb (Matthew 
			27:57-61).  This threefold separation persisted until the 
			soul and spirit re-entered the body at the time Christ was raised 
			from the dead.
			
Thus, God (Elohim) is a trinity; 
			Jesus (Elohim), manifested in the flesh, is likewise a 
			trinity; and man, created in the “image” 
			and “likeness” of 
			Elohim, can only be a trinity as well.  Accordingly, a 
			complete redemption provided by the triune God must, of 
			necessity, pertain to man as a complete being.  Man’s 
			complete redemption must encompass spirit, soul, and 
			body.
			
Yet, it is unfortunate that most Christians 
			fail to understand God’s comprehensive plan of redemption, which is 
			distinctive as it relates individually to the spirit, the 
			soul, and the body.  It is misunderstood because of the way most 
			Christians view the topic of salvation, particularly as to how it 
			relates to soul-salvation.
			
Contrary to common belief, soul-salvation has 
			nothing to do with eternal destiny.  Biblically, eternal 
			salvation always relates to the spiritual part of man, never to the 
			soulical, and it is centered in one realm alone — Christ’s 
			finished work on Calvary.
			
The message pertaining to spirit-salvation, 
			having to do with Christ’s finished work on Calvary and one’s 
			eternal destiny, is both clear and straightforward:
			
			Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, and 
			you will be saved [made 
			possible through that which Christ has done on man’s behalf] . . . . 
			(Acts 16:31)
			
			For God so loved the world that He 
			gave His only begotten Son that whoever believes in Him will not 
			perish but have everlasting life. 
			. . . He who believes in Him is not condemned; but he who 
			does not believe is condemned . . . . (John 3:16, 18a)
			
			For by grace you have been saved 
			through faith, and that 
			[salvation] is not of yourselves; it is the gift of God,
			not of works, lest anyone should boast. (Ephesians 
			2:8, 9)
			
But the salvation of the soul is dealt with 
			after an entirely different fashion in Scripture.  Rather than 
			Christ’s past work at Calvary, His present work as High 
			Priest is in view; and rather than the unsaved, Christians alone are 
			in view.  Christ is presently performing His High Priestly ministry 
			(Hebrews 4:14-16), on 
			the basis of His shed blood on the mercy seat, to effect a cleansing 
			from sin (1 John 1:9; 
			2:1, 2) for the kingdom of priests (1 
			Peter 2:9) that He is about to bring forth (Hebrews 
			2:10) — all solely relating to Christians and their 
			soul-salvation.
			
Soul-salvation is dealt with in Scripture in 
			relation to the present faithfulness of Christians, and this 
			salvation will be realized only at the end of one’s faith 
			(1 Peter 1:9).  It is a 
			salvation associated with rewards, Christ’s Second 
			Advent, and His kingdom (cf. 
			Matthew 16:24-17:5; 
			Hebrews 10:35-39).
			
			Therefore lay aside all filthiness 
			and overflow [abundance]
			of wickedness, and receive with meekness the implanted 
			Word, which is able to save your souls [the souls of 
			Christians, those who have “passed from death to life” (1 
			John 3:14), the only ones in a position to receive “the 
			implanted Word”]. (James 1:21)
			
God’s Redemption Plan
			
Probably no one has better expressed the 
			comprehensive redemption plan of God regarding man than Arlen L. 
			Chitwood in chapter one of his book, Salvation of the Soul, 
			The Lamp Broadcast, Inc., 2003, as follows:
			
			For by grace you have been saved 
			through faith, and that 
			not of yourselves; it is the gift of God, not of works, 
			lest anyone should boast. (Ephesians 2:8, 9)
			
			For the message of the cross is 
			foolishness to those who are perishing, 
			but to us who are being saved it is the power of God. (1 
			Corinthians 1:18)
			
			Are they 
			[angels] not all ministering spirits sent forth to minister for 
			those who will inherit [lit. “for the sake of the ones 
			about to inherit”] salvation? (Hebrews 1:14)
			
Salvation in the 
			Word of God is spoken of in three tenses — past, present,
			and future:  (1) Christians have been saved, 
			(2) Christians are being saved, and (3) Christians are 
			about to be saved.  The previously quoted verses provide 
			examples of how Scripture deals with each of these three tenses or 
			aspects of salvation.
			
In Ephesians 
			2:8, 9, salvation is a past, completed act; 
			in 1 Corinthians 1:18, salvation is a present, 
			continuous work; and in Hebrews 1:14, salvation is a 
			future, inherited possession.  Since the Word of God 
			presents salvation in a framework of this nature, it is vitally 
			important in Scriptural interpretation to first ascertain to 
			which of these three aspects of salvation any given passage 
			pertains.
			
In the first 
			aspect of salvation, dealt with in Ephesians 2:8, the words, 
			“you have been saved,” which is a correct translation, are a 
			translation of two Greek words that form, what is called in the 
			Greek, a “periphrastic perfect.”  The “perfect” tense refers to 
			action completed in past time, with the results of this 
			action extending into the present and existing in a finished 
			state.  The “periphrastic” construction places additional 
			emphasis on the present, finished state and refers to the 
			persistent results during present time of the past, 
			completed work.
			
Salvation in 
			this verse is wrought by grace through faith, accomplished 
			completely in past time, and is the present possession of 
			every believer.  This present possession, in turn, 
			constitutes an active, continuing, ever-abiding salvation.  The 
			eternal security of the believer cannot be expressed in stronger 
			terms than the periphrastic construction of the perfect tense in 
			Ephesians 2:8, for the present results of the past action, in 
			this case, can only continue unchanged forever.
			
However, in 1 
			Corinthians 1:18, dealing with the second aspect of salvation, 
			things are presented in an entirely different light than seen in 
			Ephesians 2:8.  Rather than the tense in the Greek text 
			referring to a past, completed act, the tense refers 
			to a present, continuous work.  The former has already 
			been completed, but the latter has yet to be completed.
			
Then, in 
			Hebrews 1:14, dealing with the third aspect of salvation, 
			matters are presented yet in a completely different light.  The 
			wording in the Greek text of this verse refers to something that is 
			about to occur.  Nothing is past or present; the reception of this 
			salvation, in its entirety, is placed in the future.
			
Further, the 
			salvation referred to in Hebrews 1:14 is not only to be 
			realized in the future, but it is also an inherited salvation.  
			And the thought of inheritance further distinguishes the 
			salvation in this verse from the salvation previously seen in 
			Ephesians 2:8, for the salvation that Christians presently 
			possess is not an inherited salvation.
			
Rather, our 
			present salvation was obtained as a free gift during the time 
			we were alienated from God.  And, as aliens (outside the family of 
			God), we were in no position to inherit salvation, for inheritance 
			in Scripture is always a family matter.
			
In the Old 
			Testament, “sons” were first in line to receive the inheritance, 
			with “daughters” next.  If there were no sons or daughters in the 
			immediate family, the inheritance was passed on to the nearest 
			family member or members, designated by the law of inheritance (Numbers 
			27:8-11).
			
Consequently, an 
			individual must first be a family member before he can be 
			considered for the inheritance, which, during the present 
			dispensation, is restricted to “children” or “sons” of the Owner.  
			That’s why the statement is made in Romans 8:17, “If 
			children, then heirs . . . .”  And that’s also why, in 
			Hebrews 1:14, that an inherited salvation pertains to those who 
			have already been saved, those who are no longer alienated from God 
			but are presently family members.
			
In this respect, 
			the complete scope of salvation — past, present, 
			and future — has a beginning point, with an end in view.  It 
			involves the Spirit of God breathing life into the one having no 
			life and thereby effecting the birth from above.  And this has been 
			done with a purpose, with an end in view.  This has been done so 
			that the Spirit can take the one who now has spiritual life and 
			perform a work in the life of that individual, with a view to an 
			inheritance that will be realized at a future time.
			
Thus, one should 
			immediately be able to see the importance of proper distinctions 
			being drawn and observed in the realm of these three aspects of 
			salvation.  And depending on how one approaches and deals with the 
			different salvation passages in Scripture, either difficulties
			can be avoided on the one hand or insurmountable problems 
			can result on the other. . . .
			
1. Past, 
			Present, Future . . . Spirit, Soul, Body
			
When man sinned 
			in the garden in Eden, the complete being of man — spirit, soul, and 
			body — became in a fallen state.  God had commanded Adam concerning 
			the fruit of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, “you 
			shall not eat, for in the day that you eat of it you shall 
			surely die” (Genesis 2:17).  After Satan had deceived Eve 
			into eating of the fruit of this tree, she then “gave to her 
			husband with her; and he ate.”  Immediately following 
			this, “the eyes of both of them were opened, and they knew 
			that they were naked; and they sewed fig leaves together and 
			made themselves coverings” (Genesis 3:1-7).
			
At the time of 
			the fall, Adam and Eve lost something; and it is clearly stated in 
			Scripture that both immediately recognized this fact.  That which 
			they lost could only have been a covering of pristine glory that had 
			previously clothed their bodies; for they, following the fall, found 
			that they were in a twofold condition:  (1) naked and 
			(2) separated from God.
			
God is arrayed 
			in a covering of “light,” connected with “honor and 
			majesty.”  And man, created in the “image” and “likeness” 
			of God, could only have been arrayed in a similar manner prior to 
			the fall.
			
			Bless the LORD, 
			O my soul! O LORD my God, You are very great: 
			You are clothed with [You have put on] honor and majesty,
			
			who cover Yourself with light as with 
			a garment, who stretch 
			out the heavens like a curtain.” (Psalm 104:1, 2)
			
Recognizing the 
			loss of this covering, realizing that they were naked, explains why 
			Adam and Eve immediately sought to clothe themselves following the 
			fall.  They tried to replace the covering that had been lost with a 
			work of their own hands, with fig leaf aprons.  And then, apparently 
			realizing the utter inadequacy of this covering, they, in their 
			fallen state, sought to hide from God.
			
God, finding 
			Adam and Eve in this condition, completely rejected the works of 
			their hands.  God completely rejected their feeble efforts to atone 
			for their own sin by seeking to replace the covering of pristine 
			glory with fig leaves.  Then, to bring His fallen creature back into 
			a right relationship (although not in complete keeping with their 
			previously unfallen state — something still future even today), God 
			provided a covering consisting of animal skins (Genesis 3:21).  
			This necessitated death and the shedding of blood; and 
			herein lays basic, unchangeable truths concerning the state of 
			fallen man and the means that are necessary to effect his 
			redemption.  
			
Unredeemed man 
			is a fallen creature, alienated from God; and two things are 
			necessary to effect his redemption: (1) divine intervention,
			and (2) death and shed blood.  These truths have 
			forever been set forth in the opening chapters of Genesis and 
			can never change.
			
			(Two different words are used for “naked” 
			in the Hebrew text of Genesis 2:25 [before the fall] and 
			Genesis 3:7 [after the fall].  In the latter [3:7], the 
			word has to do with absolute nakedness, but not so in 
			the former [2:25].
			
			Remaining within the way a person 
			dressed in the East at the time Moses wrote Genesis, and at 
			later times as well, the word used relative to nakedness 
			pertaining to Adam and Eve preceding the fall [2:25] could be 
			used to describe a person clothed in a tunic [inner garment] but 
			lacking the mantle or cloak [outer garment].  In the preceding 
			respect, prior to the fall, Adam and Eve were clothed in the Glory 
			of God but had yet to possess the regal outer garments worn by kings 
			[fulfilling the reason for man’s creation — to rule the earth (Genesis 
			1:26-28)].
			
			Then, following the fall, no longer 
			clothed in the Glory of God, Adam and Eve were no longer in a 
			position to be further clothed in regal garments, realizing the 
			purpose for their creation.  They, apart from the inner garment [the 
			Glory] could not wear the outer garments [royal apparel].  Adam, 
			prior to the fall, never wore regal garments or held the scepter.  
			In this respect, he never moved beyond the description given in 
			Genesis 2:25 — a “naked” condition, “naked” in 
			relation to the reason for his creation [lacking the outer 
			regal garments].
			
			Thus, if man, now separated from the 
			Glory, is to ever fulfill the purpose for his creation, God must 
			act.  Redemption has to occur; and this, of necessity, has to 
			include the complete man — spirit, soul, and body 
			— with a view to not only a restoration of the Glory but to 
			regality beyond this restoration.)
			
a) Spirit
			
Man’s sin in the 
			garden in Eden produced death.  Man died the day he 
			ate of the forbidden fruit.  Since his body continued to 
			live, revealing that his soul — the life-giving principle in 
			the blood (Leviticus 17:11; cf. Genesis 9:4) — 
			remained unchanged with respect to life (natural life), it is 
			evident that it was his spirit that died.
			
The spiritual 
			nature is that part of man that links him directly with God.  “God 
			is spirit,” and man’s worship of God must be “in spirit and 
			truth” (John 4:24).  The death of Adam’s spirit separated 
			him from God (establishing the primary meaning of “death” in 
			Scripture — separation from God), and this death (this 
			separation from God) “passed upon all men” (Romans 5:12).
			
Scripture speaks 
			of an unsaved person as being “dead in trespasses and sins” (Ephesians 
			2:1).  With an unredeemed, inanimate spirit (spiritually dead), 
			he is alienated from God, separated from God (Ephesians 
			2:12).
			
But once the 
			person has been born from above, he is then spoken of as having 
			passed “from death to life,” as having been “quickened” 
			(John 5:24; Ephesians 2:5).  Possessing an animate 
			spirit, possessing spiritual life (having been made alive 
			spiritually), he is no longer separated from the One who 
			Himself is “Spirit” (John 4:24).
			
This aspect of 
			salvation is brought to pass through the Spirit of God breathing 
			life into the one having no life, based on Christ’s finished work at 
			Calvary; and once this has been accomplished, everything surrounding 
			the work effecting this aspect of salvation has been completed, with 
			this work existing in a finished state (as previously seen through 
			the use of the perfect tense in Ephesians 2:8).  Thus, the 
			salvation experience that man enters into at the time of the birth 
			from above is a work of the Spirit, based on a previous work of the 
			Son.  It is a spiritual birth and has to do with man’s 
			spirit alone:  “. . . that which is born of the Spirit is 
			spirit” (John 3:6b).
			
b) Soul
			
The salvation 
			of the soul, on the 
			other hand, should never be associated with the past aspect 
			of salvation.  Scripture carefully distinguishes between the soul
			and the spirit, never using the words interchangeably in 
			this respect (cf. 1 Thessalonians 5:23; Hebrews 
			4:12).  And Scripture also carefully distinguishes between 
			salvation in relation to the spirit and salvation in relation 
			to the soul.  Salvation in relation to the spirit is 
			always dealt with in a past sense, but not so with the 
			salvation of the soul.  Rather, the salvation of 
			the soul is always dealt with in a future sense:
			
			Receiving the end of your faith — the 
			salvation of your souls. (1 
			Peter 1:9)
			
			Therefore lay aside all filthiness 
			and overflow of wickedness, 
			and receive with meekness the implanted Word, which is able 
			to save your souls. (James 1:21)
			
			But we are not of those who draw back 
			to perdition, but of 
			those who believe [are faithful] to the saving of the soul. 
			(Hebrews 10:39)
			
The statements 
			and exhortations in these verses pertain to Christians alone 
			— those whose spirits have already been saved and whose 
			souls are in the process of being saved, with the salvation of 
			the soul being realized only at a future time.
			
c) Body
			
The salvation of
			the body presents very few problems for the majority of 
			Christians.  Very few Christians contend, contrary to Scripture, 
			that the body has either already been redeemed or is in the process 
			of being redeemed.  Scripture places the redemption of man’s body 
			entirely in the future (Romans 8:23).  
			
The Christian’s 
			body is presently in a continuous state of deterioration.  The body 
			grows old and weakens with time; and the body is subject to 
			sickness, disease, and eventually death.  This must ever remain the 
			case as long as the body remains unredeemed.  The “wages of sin 
			is death” (Romans 6:23), and the unredeemed body must pay 
			the price that sin requires.
			
Within this 
			unredeemed body are two opposing entities, each seeking dominion —
			a redeemed spirit, and an unredeemed soul.
			 The unredeemed soul is housed in an unredeemed body, and the 
			two are mutually compatible.  But the redeemed spirit housed 
			alongside an unredeemed soul in an unredeemed body experiences no 
			compatibility with either of the other two at all.  Compatibility is 
			not possible, for “what fellowship has righteousness with 
			lawlessness, and what communion has light with darkness?” 
			(2 Corinthians 6:14).  This heterogeneous union is what 
			produced the cry of the Apostle Paul in Romans 7:24:
			
			O wretched man that I am!
			 Who will  deliver me from this body of death?
			
2. Soulical, 
			Spiritual, Carnal
			
According to the 
			Word of God, every man can be categorized as being soulical, 
			spiritual, or carnal.  The word “soulical” 
			pertains to all non-Christians, and the words “spiritual” and 
			“carnal” pertain to two classes of Christians.
			
a) Soulical
			
But the 
			natural man [the “soulical” man] does not receive the things of the Spirit of 
			God, for they are foolishness to him; nor can he know 
			them, because they are [can only be] spiritually 
			discerned.” (1 Corinthians 2:14)
			
The Greek word 
			translated “soul” throughout the New Testament is psuche. 
			This word has to do with “the natural life” of the individual.  
			The soul is the seat of a person’s emotions, feelings, and desires 
			pertaining to his man-conscious existence.
			
The Greek word 
			translated “natural” in 1 Corinthians 2:14 is psuchikos,
			a form of the word psuche.  Psuchikos is the 
			“natural” or “soulical” life (self-life) that man has in common with 
			the animal kingdom.  The soulical man is dominated or ruled by his 
			soul, which includes all the experiences, desires, emotions, 
			sensations, likes, and dislikes within the personal life of the 
			individual.  Such likes, dislikes, etc. will vary from individual to 
			individual, but all emanate from the soul-life of man.  The soulical 
			man is alienated from God and thus possesses no way to grasp 
			spiritual truth.  A man must be born from above — made alive 
			spiritually — before he can possess spiritual discernment.
			
b) Spiritual
			
			And I, 
			brethren, could not speak to you as to spiritual . . . . 
			(1 Corinthians 3:1a)
			
The Greek word 
			translated “spirit” throughout the New Testament is pneuma. 
			This word is used in the New Testament referring to the Holy 
			Spirit, man’s spirit, angels (both fallen and unfallen), a state of 
			mind or disposition, wind, and breath.  Examples in Scripture of the 
			last four are Luke 8:55; John 3:8; 1 Corinthians 
			4:21; 2 Timothy 1:7; Hebrews 1:7; 1 Peter 3:19.
			
Man’s spirit is 
			the seat of the higher divine life pertaining to his God-conscious 
			existence.  The Greek word translated “spiritual” in 1 
			Corinthians 3:1a is pneumatikos, a form of the 
			word pneuma.  The spiritual man is one who is 
			controlled by the Spirit of God acting through his own spirit 
			(through a spirit made alive by the birth from above).
			
The spiritual 
			man, unlike the soulical man, controls his emotions, feelings, and 
			desires pertaining to his still-present, man-conscious existence.  
			He brings his unredeemed body under subjection and exerts control 
			over the soulical man.  This, of course, is not performed within his 
			own power, but within the power of the indwelling Holy Spirit.  This 
			is an experience open to redeemed man alone, to an individual who 
			has been made alive spiritually.
			
Unredeemed man, 
			on the other hand, although a tripartite being, fails to rise above 
			the dichotomous animal kingdom in his natural or soulical 
			existence.  He lacks a redeemed spirit with the accompanying, 
			indwelling Holy Spirit.  He, with an inanimate spirit, is 
			spiritually dead.  And, consequently, he remains alienated from 
			God.  Thus, for unredeemed man, an existence outside the soulical 
			(natural) state is not possible.
			
c) Carnal
			
			. . . but as to carnal, 
			even as to babes in Christ. (1 Corinthians 3:1b)
			
The Greek word 
			translated “carnal” is sarkikos.  This is a form of 
			the word sarx, which means “flesh.”  Sarkikos 
			(fleshly) is the opposite of pneumatikos (spiritual).  The 
			carnal Christian is “fleshly” as opposed to “spiritual.”  He is one 
			who allows himself to be controlled by his soul rather than by the 
			indwelling Holy Spirit.  He, as the soulical man (the unsaved man), 
			follows his personal emotions, feelings, and desires.
			
He, however, 
			unlike the soulical man, has been born from above and is capable of 
			grasping spiritual truth.  But, unlike the spiritual man, this truth 
			is not being received.  Thus, the carnal Christian, without an 
			impartation of spiritual truth flowing into his saved human spirit, 
			remains immature and fleshly, following the fleshly impulses of the 
			soul.
			
			(The use of “flesh” or “fleshly” in 
			the preceding respect would be a direct allusion back to that which 
			occurred in Eden at the time of the fall.  Man, following his fall, 
			possessed a body that was no longer enswathed in a covering of 
			Glory, with the exposed flesh openly demonstrating this fact.  This 
			is what is meant by Christ coming “in the likeness of sinful 
			flesh” [Romans 8:3].  Christ came to earth in a body not 
			enswathed in the Glory of God.
			
			This was the crux of the ignominy 
			and shame surrounding the events of Calvary.  Not only was 
			Christ’s body of flesh [apart from the covering of Glory] arrayed in 
			a mock regal manner [with a robe and a crown of thorns], but He hung 
			on the cross without even His Own garments to cover His body, for 
			all to behold that which had been wrought by sin 4,000 years earlier 
			— nakedness, and death [Matthew 27:27-36].
			
			There is nothing wrong with “flesh”
			per se.  Man was created in a body of flesh, Christ presently 
			has a body of flesh, and both God’s Son and man will live in bodies 
			of flesh forever.
			
			But, though there is nothing wrong 
			with a body of “flesh,” there is something wrong with a body of 
			flesh that is not enswathed in the Glory of God.)
			
Within the scope 
			of that which God reveals about the impartation of spiritual truth
			to redeemed man alone lies the great lesson concerning 
			unredeemed man’s relationship to the Word of God.  It is utterly 
			futile for unredeemed man to either himself attempt to understand 
			the Word of God or for redeemed man to attempt to teach him the Word 
			of God.  Scripture is “spiritually discerned,” and a man 
			must be born from above — be made alive spiritually, which 
			places him in a position where he can exercise spiritual discernment 
			— before he can understand the things of the Spirit of God.  The 
			soulical (unredeemed) man, completely alienated from God — 
			spiritually dead and in no position to exercise spiritual 
			discernment — cannot understand spiritual things, and they appear to 
			him as no more than “foolishness” (1 Corinthians 2:14).
			
Herein also lies 
			the reason why the things of the Spirit have been hidden from the “wise 
			and prudent,” but revealed to “babes” (cf. 
			Matthew 11:25).  Certain Christian intelligentsia of the present 
			dispensation, even though saved and in a position to understand the 
			Word of God, too often seek spiritual discernment in the light of 
			worldly wisdom rather than through comparing “scripture with 
			scripture” and looking to the indwelling Spirit to lead them 
			“into all truth” (John 16:13; 1 Corinthians 2:9-13).
			
And, although 
			those Christians who seek spiritual discernment in this manner may 
			often be looked upon as great spiritual leaders, theologians, 
			expositors, etc., they, in the final analysis, cannot understand 
			these things.  Such individuals can only be sadly lacking in the 
			very realm where they are held in high esteem.
			
While at the 
			same time, “babes” (Greek: nepios, those who 
			are still on the milk of the Word and have not grown enough to even 
			partake of solid food), through the leadership of the Spirit of God 
			— as they compare “scripture with scripture” and look to the 
			Spirit to lead them “into all truth” — can invariably 
			be brought into an understanding of these things.  
			
They, through 
			turning to the Word and looking to the Spirit for discernment and 
			leadership, can understand more about these same spiritual truths 
			than the “wise and prudent” who turn to places other than the 
			Word and either ignore or reject the Spirit’s discernment and 
			leadership.
			
			Redeemed Man
			
Redeemed man, 
			through a past and finished work of the Spirit, based on a past and 
			finished work of Christ, has been brought from a dead to a living 
			state spiritually.  He has passed “from death to life.”  And 
			in this living state, he is now in a position to realize the 
			purpose for his salvation — the salvation of his soul.
			
One aspect of 
			salvation is past.  The individual presently possesses eternal life, 
			and nothing can ever change or nullify this fact.  But the 
			individual has been saved for a purpose, which will be 
			brought to pass only within the framework of his realizing present 
			and future aspects of salvation.
			
And this 
			complete panorama of the salvation message, with a purpose in view,
			must be recognized.  Redeemed man must recognize that 
			there is not only a past aspect to salvation but present and future 
			aspects as well.  
			
And the present 
			and future aspects of salvation are inseparably connected with man 
			one day being brought into a realization of the purpose for which 
			he was created in the beginning — “. . . let them have 
			dominion” (Genesis 1:26-28).  
			
Present and 
			future aspects of salvation have to do with man occupying regal 
			positions following the time when he, in that coming day, is 
			brought into a realization of the salvation of his soul.
			
1.  The 
			Complete Salvation Issue
			
In order to 
			effect man’s eternal redemption, the Spirit of God deals with 
			unsaved man on one basis alone.  The Spirit deals with 
			unsaved man solely on the basis of Christ’s finished work at 
			Calvary.
			
But once an 
			individual has believed on the Lord Jesus Christ and has been dealt 
			with on the basis of Christ’s finished work, realizing the birth 
			from above — the salvation of his spirit — the salvation issue then 
			shifts from the salvation of his spirit to the 
			salvation of his soul.  The salvation of the spirit becomes a past, 
			completed work and is never dealt with as an issue beyond 
			this point.  The Spirit of God, from this point forward, deals with 
			the individual solely on the basis of present and future aspects 
			of salvation.  The individual, from this point forward, 
			is dealt with in relation to the salvation of his soul.
			
Thus, all 
			scriptures dealing with carnality or unfaithfulness of Christians, 
			resulting in forfeiture or loss, must pertain to issues 
			surrounding the salvation of the soul and NEVER to issues 
			surrounding the salvation of the spirit.
			
Once the 
			salvation of the spirit has been effected, making it possible for 
			the indwelling Spirit of God to impart spiritual truth into and to 
			control an individual’s life through his own spirit, then man’s 
			unredeemed soul occupies the center of attention.  The salvation of 
			the soul, unlike the salvation of the spirit, is conditional. 
			The salvation of the soul is dependent on the life one lives 
			after his spirit has been saved.  It is dependent on the individual 
			allowing the Spirit of God to impart spiritual truth into and to 
			control his life through his own spirit.
			
An individual 
			allowing the Spirit of God to impart spiritual truth into and to 
			control his life through his own spirit progressively grows from 
			immaturity to maturity.  He progressively grows into a spiritually 
			mature Christian.  Growing in this manner, he exerts control over 
			his emotions, feelings, and desires pertaining to his man-conscious 
			(soulical) existence.  And, through this means, he will ultimately 
			come into a realization of the salvation of his soul (life).
			
On the other 
			hand, an individual who refuses to allow the Spirit of God to impart 
			spiritual truth into and to control his life in the preceding manner 
			can only remain as a carnally immature Christian.  Apart from the 
			assimilation of spiritual truth, resulting in spiritual growth, he 
			cannot help but be controlled by his emotions, feelings, and desires 
			pertaining to his man-conscious (soulical) existence.  And, 
			accordingly, such a person will ultimately suffer the loss of his 
			soul (life), which can have no bearing whatsoever 
			on his eternal salvation (for that is a past, finished matter that 
			has already been dealt with).
			
2. The 
			Complete Salvation Message
			
The shift of the 
			salvation issue from the spirit to the soul at the 
			time of the birth from above necessitates a corresponding shift 
			from the salvation message that is to be proclaimed to the 
			unsaved (which concerns the salvation of the spirit) to the 
			salvation message that is to be proclaimed to the saved (which 
			concerns the salvation of the soul).  This must ever be the case, 
			for that which is past ceases to be the issue, and that which 
			is present and future becomes the issue.
			
The only message 
			to be carried to the unsaved is the gospel of grace.  This is 
			the good news that “Christ died for our sins according to the 
			Scriptures.”  This message alone forms the basis upon 
			which the Spirit can breathe life into the one having no life (1 
			Corinthians 15:3; cf. 1 Corinthians 2:1, 2).
			
But once the 
			unsaved individual has believed on the Lord Jesus Christ, 
			experiencing the birth from above, the message must then 
			change, for the goal of the message will have been realized.  The 
			Spirit must then deal with the individual on an entirely 
			different plane, with the issue at the forefront no longer being the 
			salvation of the spirit, but the salvation of the soul.
			
Thus, a minister 
			with a congregation placed under his care has been charged with a 
			tremendous responsibility.  His central ministry is among 
			the saved, among those capable of grasping spiritual truth; and he 
			is to disseminate spiritual truth to these individuals as it relates 
			to things surrounding present and future aspects of salvation, not 
			to things surrounding the past aspect of salvation.  He, in this 
			manner, is to “feed the flock of God,” looking ahead to 
			Christ’s appearance in all His glory (1 Peter 5:2-4).
			
This individual 
			is responsible, under the leadership of the Spirit of God, to 
			provide proper spiritual nourishment to and for those Christians 
			placed under his care.  And the only thing that God has provided for 
			him to use as he feeds the flock of God is the Word of God.
			
As a minister in 
			charge of a flock, he is to expound this Word under the leadership 
			of the Holy Spirit.  And Christians placed under his care are to 
			receive this proclaimed Word into their saved human spirits.  Then 
			the Spirit of God can take this “implanted Word” and 
			effect spiritual growth to maturity, with the end result being the 
			salvation of their souls (James 1:21).
			
The tragedy in 
			Christian circles today is the light regard that pastors of churches 
			have for fulfilling the very purpose of their ministry.  And, the 
			end result of pastors failing to properly “feed the flock” entrusted 
			to their care will be the entrance of innumerable carnal, immature 
			Christians into the Lord’s presence at the end of the present 
			dispensation with redeemed spirits, changed bodies, but wasted and 
			thus unredeemed souls — forfeited lives.  Their eternal salvation 
			will remain unaffected; but, with the forfeiture or loss of their 
			souls, they will be unable to realize the inheritance presently “reserved 
			in heaven” for the faithful (1 Peter 1:4).  Consequently, 
			they will occupy no position among the “many sons” who will 
			be brought to glory (Hebrews 2:10).
			
Concluding 
			Thoughts:
			
Failure to 
			understand and distinguish between the salvation that we presently 
			possess and the salvation, to be revealed when our Lord returns, has 
			caused untold confusion in Christian circles.
			
Many Christians 
			take scriptures dealing with the salvation to be revealed and seek 
			to apply them to the salvation that we presently possess.  And 
			misapplying scriptures in this manner, these individuals arrive at 
			the erroneous conclusion that it is possible for a saved person to 
			be lost, which not only casts reproach upon the sufficiency of the 
			finished work of Christ at Calvary, but also does violence to 
			numerous portions of the Word of God.
			
Then, on the 
			other hand, there are those Christians who recognize that the loss 
			of one’s eternal salvation is not possible, but still fail to 
			understand distinctions between the salvation of the spirit and the 
			salvation of the soul.  Most from this group take many of these same 
			verses and seek to either apply them to the nation of Israel or to 
			unregenerate individuals, whether Jew or Gentile.  And applications 
			of this nature not only remove the Spirit’s exhortations and 
			warnings to redeemed individuals, but erroneous interpretations in 
			one area of Scripture will often, for the sake of consistency, lead 
			to erroneous interpretations in other areas.
			
Thus, the 
			importance of understanding distinctions between the salvation of 
			the spirit and the salvation of the soul becomes self-evident.
			
Let it be 
			forever stated:  Redeemed man has come into a position from which he 
			can never be removed.  But this same redeemed man, in this 
			position, is directly responsible to his Creator; and, at a future 
			date, he will either inherit as a joint-heir with his Lord or 
			suffer loss in the presence of his Lord.  The former will be 
			realized through the salvation of his soul, or the latter will, 
			instead, be realized through the loss of his soul.
			
			(Salvation of the Soul, Arlen 
			L. Chitwood)
			
Today in even the most evangelical-conservative 
			local churches, ignorance of the “meat” of God’s Word prevails.  
			Even though most Christians will admit that the Word teaches they 
			are to live holy lives, they fail to understand the very real 
			consequences for not doing so.  They have little concept of the 
			coming judgment they most assuredly will face at Christ’s judgment 
			seat and how the decisions and determinations at this judicial 
			setting will affect their lives during the millennial kingdom — for 
			one thousand years!  
			
Their view of what is to come appears to be 
			focused on only the mere fact of gaining or losing of rewards with 
			little regard to any suffering due to the loss.  There is 
			little wonder that the fact of a sure and coming judgment, a most 
			unpopular topic, is glossed over or completely disregarded by most 
			pastors as they ignore their God-assigned position as 
			pastor-teacher (literal rendering of 
			Ephesians 4:11; 
			cf. 2 Timothy 4:1-5) and attempt to seek popular 
			support with sermons that emanate out of the “milk” of God’s Word (1 
			Corinthians 3:1-3; 
			Hebrews 5:12-14).
			
The Christians’ Coming Judgment
			
This is another basic doctrine, which one must 
			understand before one will be able to truly appreciate and apprehend 
			the subject of the pathway to spiritual maturity and the 
			coming glory.  Again, probably no one represents this issue 
			better than Chitwood in chapter one of his book, The Judgment 
			Seat of Christ, The Lamp Broadcast, Inc., 2001, a portion of 
			which follows:
			
			Basis for Judgment
			
			For no other foundation can anyone 
			lay than that which is laid, 
			which is Jesus Christ.
			
			 Now if anyone builds on this 
			foundation with gold, 
			silver, precious stones, wood, hay, straw, 
			
			
			each one’s 
			work will become clear; for the Day will declare it, 
			because it will be revealed by fire; and the fire will test 
			each one’s work, of what sort it is.  
			
			
			If anyone’s 
			work which he has built on it endures, he will receive a 
			reward.  
			
			If anyone’s 
			work is burned, he will suffer loss; but he himself 
			will be saved, yet so as through fire. (1 
			Corinthians 3:11-15)
			
Something little 
			understood today is the fact that the “basis” for God’s judgments is 
			always works.  God judged sin at Calvary, based on Christ’s 
			completed work; and when God views redeemed man today, He views this 
			past completed work of His Son and past judgment upon sin.  Redeemed 
			man, through the Spirit having breathed into him, possesses 
			spiritual life; and Christ's righteous, justifying act — His 
			finished work at Calvary — has been reckoned as merit to him (Romans 
			5:l6-l8; Philemon 18).  However, redeemed man in this 
			standing before God is directly responsible to his Creator; and he, 
			in his justified state, will himself be judged on the basis of 
			works — his own works performed following salvation (Matthew 
			l6:27; 1 Corinthians 3:12-15). 
			
And works 
			are the basis for all God’s subsequent judgments upon man — Israel, 
			the living Gentiles coming out of the Great Tribulation, and those 
			appearing before the Great White Throne.  Man’s appearance or 
			nonappearance at a particular judgment, or place in this judgment 
			(e.g., man’s appearance at the judgment seat of Christ, or at the 
			great white throne judgment 1,000 years later), is dependent on his
			acceptance or rejection of the past work of Another; 
			but judgment of the individual will be on the basis of his own 
			works, which will be performed either as a redeemed or as an 
			unredeemed individual (Ezekiel 20:34-38; 2 Corinthians 
			5:9-11; Revelation 20:11-15).
			
Before the 
			judgment seat of Christ, “Every man’s work shall be made 
			manifest . . . it shall be revealed by [in] fire.”  There 
			will be works comparable to “gold, silver, precious 
			stones”; and there will be works comparable to “wood, 
			hay, straw.”  One set of material reveals works of 
			intrinsic value, which will endure the fire; but the other set of 
			material reveals valueless works, which will be burned in the fire.
			
Works performed 
			by Christians during the present time can vary a great deal in 
			worth.  Such works can be performed under the leadership of the Holy 
			Spirit and redound to the praise, honor, and glory of the Lord; or 
			such works can be performed under the leadership of man and redound 
			to the praise, honor, and glory of man.  At the judgment seat, all 
			will be revealed; for “the fire shall test each one’s 
			work, of what sort it is.”
			
1) Works . . 
			. Revealed by Fire 
			
Works emanate 
			out of faithfulness to one’s calling and bring faith to its proper 
			goal, which will result in the salvation of one's soul (cf. James 
			2:l4-26; 1 Peter 1:5-11).  At the judgment seat, the 
			worth of every man’s work in this realm will be revealed; and 
			decisions and determinations emanating out of this judgment will 
			determine every man's position in the coming kingdom (cf. Matthew 
			l6:24-27; 24:45-51; 25:l4-30; Luke 19:12-27).
			
			
“Judgment” on 
			the basis of works is alien to the thinking of many 
			Christians, for they have been exposed time and again to a 
			proclamation of salvation by grace through faith apart from works,
			unbalanced by the proclamation of the coming judgment of 
			Christians on the basis of works.  The emphasis has been placed 
			almost entirely upon the finished work of Christ at Calvary, with 
			little regard given to Christian living, the coming judgment seat, 
			and the coming kingdom. 
			
Teachings of 
			this nature have centered almost solely on the salvation that we 
			presently possess; and things having to do with the inheritance 
			awaiting Christians, the salvation of the soul, etc., have been 
			removed from their respective contexts and applied to our present 
			salvation.  Ministries centering on this type teaching in the 
			churches have produced both confusion and complacency in 
			Christendom.
			
Then, there is 
			another type widespread teaching in the churches that recognizes 
			works but has every Christian performing good works.  The reasoning 
			of those who so teach centers on the thought that if a person is 
			really saved he will produce good works; if, on the other hand he 
			doesn’t produce good works, this simply goes to show that he was 
			never really saved in the first place.  Aside from having no 
			scriptural basis whatsoever, such a teaching produces both an 
			erroneous view of salvation by grace through faith and an erroneous 
			view of issues surrounding the judgment seat of Christ. 
			
If every 
			Christian produces good works to show that he has been saved, then 
			works enter into an area where works cannot exist. 
			
			And if by grace,
			then it is no longer of works; otherwise grace is no 
			longer grace. But if it is of works, it is no longer 
			grace; otherwise work is no longer work. (Romans 11:6)
			
The presence or 
			absence of works on the part of Christians can have no connection 
			whatsoever with their prior reception of the finished work of 
			Christ.  Christ’s finished work allows an individual to be 
			placed in the position where he can produce good works.  
			There is nothing in Scripture which teaches that he, of necessity,
			will produce good works.  Such would be completely contrary 
			to the teaching of salvation by grace through faith apart from 
			works.
			
If it be 
			maintained that every Christian must produce good works to 
			show that he has been saved, then it must follow that every 
			Christian would appear at the judgment seat of Christ with works 
			that “abide” the fire.  Possessing works of this nature, every 
			Christian would “receive a reward.” 
			
But this thought 
			is at once seen to be erroneous by reference to the text in 1 
			Corinthians chapter three.  There will be Christians 
			appearing at the judgment seat who will “suffer loss” and “be 
			saved; yet so as by [through] fire” (v. 15).  ALL 
			of their works will be burned, but they themselves will “be saved,” 
			i.e., they themselves will be delivered.  And this 
			deliverance will occur “through fire.” 
			
This 
			deliverance at the judgment seat can have nothing to do with 
			eternal salvation, for all issues surrounding one’s eternal 
			salvation, whether during the present time or at the future judgment 
			seat, are past issues (e.g., Christ’s finished work at 
			Calvary, the Spirit’s finished work of breathing life into the one 
			having no life, allowing him to pass “from death to life”).  
			God judged sin in the person of His Son at Calvary, and God is 
			satisfied; and the Spirit breathes life into the one having no life, 
			on the basis of the finished work of God's Son.  And this work of 
			the triune Godhead is a past, finished deliverance 
			which could never be referred to in the future sense seen in
			1 Corinthians 3:15.
			
The 
			deliverance seen in 1 Corinthians 3:15 is, contextually,
			a deliverance out of the fire at the judgment seat.  Though 
			all of the person’s works will be burned and he will appear naked in 
			Christ’s presence (Revelation 3:17, 18), he himself 
			will not be burned.  Rather, he will be delivered — delivered 
			from being burned with his works.
			
But, though he 
			himself will be delivered in this respect, “so as by 
			[through] fire,” he will be unable to escape the dire 
			consequences which will result from his works being consumed by the 
			fire and his consequent naked appearance.  And there can be no 
			deliverance from these consequences, for there will have to be a “just 
			recompense” — exact payment for services rendered in the house 
			during the time of the Lord’s absence.  If not, God would not be 
			perfectly just and righteous in His dealings with His household 
			servants.
			
One-sided views 
			of the judgment seat that maintain that every Christian will appear 
			with good works are little different than the teaching which ignores 
			works.  Confusion and complacency, once again, can only be the 
			ultimate result.
			
Much of the 
			preceding, erroneous teaching is fostered by a misunderstanding of
			1 Corinthians 4:5. This verse in the King James Version 
			reads, 
			
			Therefore judge nothing before the 
			time, until the Lord 
			come, who will bring to light the hidden things of darkness, 
			and will make manifest the counsels of the hearts: and then 
			shall every man have praise of God. (1 Corinthians 4:5, 
			KJV)
			
The problem 
			emanates from both a mistranslation in the text and a non-contextual 
			understanding of the words, “then shall every man have praise of 
			God.”  The words “every man” could be better translated “each 
			man”; and the reference is back to the faithful stewards 
			in verse two.  Faithful stewards will, individually, receive praise 
			from God; but there is nothing in Scripture which teaches that “every 
			man,” apart from the context would also include unfaithful 
			stewards, will receive such praise.  To the contrary, Scripture 
			quite clearly reveals that both faithful and unfaithful stewards 
			will appear at the judgment seat, that the judgment seat will be 
			operable in two realms, and that faithful stewards alone 
			will receive praise of God.
			
2) If 
			Anyone’s Work . . . Endures 
			
“Rewards” are 
			being reserved for the faithful alone.  This is one side of 
			the judgment seat.  Christians have been “created in Christ Jesus 
			to good works, which God hath before ordained that we should 
			walk in them” (Ephesians 2:l0).  
			
Works of this 
			nature, performed by a Christian exhibiting faithfulness to his 
			calling, will “endure” at the judgment seat.  They will be 
			manifested as works comparable to “gold, silver, 
			precious stones” and will endure the fire.  Such works will 
			result in the Christian receiving a reward and a position with 
			Christ in the kingdom.
			
Works that 
			endure the fire will be the type of works necessary to bring faith 
			to its proper goal, resulting in the salvation of the Christian’s 
			soul.  Following the testing of such works, the Christian will 
			receive praise from his Lord.  He will hear his Lord say, “Well 
			done, good and faithful servant; thou hast been 
			faithful over a few things, I will make you ruler over many 
			things: enter into the joy of your Lord”; and he will 
			subsequently be positioned according to rank among those destined to 
			rule as joint-heirs with Christ (Matthew 24:45-47; 
			25:l9-23; Luke l9:l5-19; Romans 8:17). 
			
3) If Anyone’s 
			Work is Burned
			
“Suffering loss” 
			is in store for the unfaithful.  This is the other side of the 
			judgment seat.  It is possible for a Christian to appear before the 
			judgment seat of Christ without one single good work to his credit.  
			He may have works, but not works done under the direction of the 
			Holy Spirit, for the praise, honor, and glory of the Lord. Such 
			works, comparable to “wood, hay, straw” will be 
			burned.  They will not endure the fire.  But the Christian himself “will 
			be saved [delivered]; yet so as by [through] fire.”
			
			
The presence of 
			works, the absence of works, or the type of works can have no 
			bearing on his eternal salvation, wrought completely apart from his 
			own works.  He will come out of this judgment, as Lot from Sodom, 
			with nothing to show but escape from the condemnation befalling the 
			unregenerate.  
			
Works consumed 
			by fire will be the type of works unable to bring faith to its 
			proper goal, resulting in the loss of the Christian's soul.  
			Following the testing of such works, the Christian will be 
			rebuked by his Lord.  He will hear his Lord say, “Thou wicked 
			and slothful servant . . . .” 
			
Then, that which 
			had been entrusted to him during the time of his Lord’s absence will 
			be taken from him.  He will be denied a position with Christ in the 
			kingdom, a position which could have been his had he previously 
			exercised faithfulness in his calling; and he will be appointed “his 
			portion with the hypocrites.” (Matthew 24:48-51; 25:l9, 
			24-30; Luke 19:l5, 20-26). 
			
He will then 
			find himself cast “without,” into the place that Scripture 
			calls, “the outer darkness” (ASV).  In this place there will 
			be “the weeping and the gnashing of teeth [an Eastern 
			expression showing deep grief]” (ASV) on the part of Christians who 
			realize too late that they could have occupied one of the proffered 
			positions with Christ in His kingdom.  Their rights as firstborn 
			sons — the rights of primogeniture — will have been forfeited; and 
			they, as Esau, will lift up their voices and weep. 
			
			
Concluding 
			Thoughts: 
			
Receiving 
			rewards or suffering loss at the judgment seat of Christ are grave 
			issues about which most Christians seem to know very little, or, for 
			that matter, appear to even be concerned.  But such will have no 
			bearing upon the fact that there is a day coming in the not 
			too-distant future when every Christian MUST render an account to 
			his Lord for the “things done in his body” (2 Corinthians 
			5:10). 
			
Events of 
			that day will come to pass at the end of the present dispensation, immediately 
			preceding the Messianic Era; issues of that day will surround 
			a review of the works performed by Christians in view of their 
			receiving rewards or suffering loss; the purpose of that day, 
			aside from providing a “just recompense,” will be to make 
			decisions and determinations concerning Christians occupying 
			positions with Christ in His 1,000-year rule from the heavens over 
			the earth. 
			
Everything is 
			moving toward that l,000-year Messianic Era when God’s Son will 
			reign supreme.  Man’s Day, in conjunction with his rule over 
			the earth, is about to end; and the Lord’s Day, in conjunction with
			His rule over the earth, is about to commence.  A kingdom, 
			such as the coming kingdom of Christ, requires a King with 
			numerous vice-regents.  Christians are today being tested, 
			tried, and refined with a view to that coming day.
			
Events of the 
			entire present dispensation revolve around the thought that God is 
			today calling out the vice-regents who will reign with His Son 
			during the coming dispensation; and the presence of the Church upon 
			the earth will extend, in one sense of the word, to that point in 
			time when God will have acquired the necessary rulers to occupy the 
			proffered positions in the kingdom under Christ.  It will extend to 
			that point in time when the Spirit successfully completes His search 
			for a bride for God’s Son. 
			
The removal of 
			the Church and the appearance of Christians before the judgment seat 
			will involve the issues of two dispensations:  This basis for 
			this judgment will have to do with works, emanating out of 
			faithfulness or unfaithfulness of the Lord’s servants during a past 
			dispensation (the activity of Christians during the present 
			dispensation, which will be past in that coming day), and the
			purpose for this judgment will have to do with Christians 
			participating in the coming reign of God’s Son (co-heirs 
			ascending the throne with God's Son in the kingdom of Christ.
			
Preparation 
			occurs today; placement, based upon preparation, will emanate 
			out of issues and determinations made at the judgment seat and will 
			be made known after the Father delivers the kingdom to His Son (cf.
			Daniel 4:17, 25, 32; 7:13, 14; 
			Matthew 20:20-23); and positions in the kingdom will be 
			realized in the reign of Christ that follows (cf. Matthew 25:19ff;
			Luke 19:15ff; Revelation 2:26, 27).
			
			(Judgment Seat of Christ, 
			Arlen L. Chitwood)
			
The Christian, with a proper understanding of 
			the composition of man, of God’s comprehensive redemption plan, and 
			of the coming judgment for Christians, is then in a position to 
			follow God’s pathway to spiritual maturity and the coming glory. 
			
			
And there is only one path to this dual 
			end.  It is not by embracing a legalistic structure of rituals, 
			traditions, and requirements proffered by any religion. 
			
The 
			Pathway
			
The pathway is the study and 
			apprehension of the “meat” doctrines within God’s holy, revealed, 
			and living Word.  And this is a process that can only be achieved 
			when a Christian allows the Spirit to lead “into 
			all truth” (John 16:13), 
			which will then without fail produce within him a metamorphosis (a 
			true spiritual change) and a resulting outward change during his 
			pilgrim’s journey.   Unfortunately, almost all Christians avoid this 
			pathway.  The depth of Holy Writ is totally ignored by most 
			Christians, contrary to the boasting that churches offer instruction 
			in the Word.
			
Very few Christians ever take it upon 
			themselves to personally, seriously, and thoroughly study the Word; 
			seeking rather to sooth their conscience with church traditions, 
			church attendance, and the mimicking of various and often spurious 
			“spiritual” activities.   In addition to this, there is very little 
			contextual exegesis (critical analysis) of Scripture within Sunday 
			schools and from pulpits.  There appears to be no end of replacement 
			activity within local churches for this deficiency; such as 
			milk-based and psychologically oriented (pep-talk/feel good) sermons 
			from pulpits, an emphasis upon emotionally based public expression, 
			and various and sundry social programs.  
			
This, coupled with church-sponsored Bible 
			classes that are encumbered with “other activities,” leaving usually 
			thirty minutes or less for actual study of Scripture; and the 
			church’s general assembly (“worship service”) much of which is given 
			over to activities other than the study of the Word (i.e., 
			solicitation of money, announcements, various vocal performances, 
			and other administrative activities), along with a brief sermon on 
			elementary and/or under-developed biblical principles, often given 
			in such a manner to rivet the parishioners’ attention on the 
			messenger instead of the message; provides little to no spiritual 
			substance or sustenance for Christians.  Consequently, the result is 
			little to no spiritual growth to maturity for those under the 
			church’s leadership.
			
And the sad fact is that this is perfectly 
			acceptable to Christians today.  This is how they understand the 
			local church and they, as Christians, should function.  They have no 
			concept of the manner and conduct of early New Testament Christians 
			or of the formation and function of early local New Testament 
			churches.  But then, the progressive deterioration of the Christian 
			“model” was prophesied by the Lord Himself in the various “mysteries 
			of the kingdom of the heavens” parables in the book of 
			Matthew chapter 
			thirteen.
			
Jesus Christ, just prior to going to the cross, 
			probably delineated most succinctly the pathway while praying 
			to the Father in behalf of His disciples.  In His prayer and upon 
			stating that He had indeed given to them the Word of God (John 
			17:8, 14), 
			He made the following supplication:
			
			Sanctify 
			[set apart to holiness, i.e., spiritual maturity] them by Your 
			truth. Your word is truth. (John 17:17; cf. 
			Ephesians 5:26)
			
By this prayer, Christ established the fact 
			that sanctification (the process of being set apart to holiness 
			[spiritual maturity]) is directly proportional to one’s consumption 
			(understanding) of the Word of God.  
			
Moses, to whom God “made 
			known His ways” (Psalm 
			103:7), voiced this truth in his instruction to the 
			children of Israel:
			
			Set your hearts on all the words 
			which I testify among you today,
			which you shall command your children to be careful to observe 
			all the words of this law.  For it is not a futile thing for 
			you, because it is your life, and by this Word you 
			shall prolong your days in the land which you cross over the Jordan 
			to possess. (Deuteronomy 32:46, 47)
			
This admonition, which referred to the power 
			of the Word’s ability to bring about a change in one’s 
			spiritual life, climaxed Moses’ expression of concern for the 
			present and future spiritual welfare of the people of Israel.  
			Absorption of and obedience to the Word would produce an inward 
			change to spiritual maturity, resulting in being built up in and a 
			walk by faith.  And this pertained not only to the Israelites’ 
			present spiritual life but to a future prolongation of that life in 
			the land to which they had been called as well.
			
The Word — the 66 books of the Holy Bible — is 
			the only spiritual food with which the Holy Spirit enables 
			spiritual growth!  The only way a Christian can know the mind of 
			Christ (1 Corinthians 2:16), 
			is by knowing the “meat” of the living Word (Hebrews 
			4:12), which then will inevitably alter his inward 
			thought processes (Romans 12:2;
			cf. 2 Corinthians 3:18; Colossians 3:10) 
			toward a more mature spiritual walk (Proverbs 
			23:7a) and truly enable him to “discern 
			both good and evil” (Hebrews 
			5:14).  One does not come without the other.
			
The apostle Paul made this fact clear to the 
			elders of the church in Ephesus, when he said, “So now, brethren, I 
			commend you to God and to the Word of His grace, which is 
			able to build you up and give you an inheritance among all those who 
			are sanctified” (Acts 
			20:32).  He confirmed that it was the Word that 
			could bring them to spiritual maturity and thereby insure their 
			inheritance in the coming kingdom. He also insisted to the believers 
			in the Roman church that it was only through “the 
			patience and comfort of the Scriptures” that they could 
			have “hope” toward the 
			future (Romans15:4) and 
			be “established . . . for 
			obedience to the faith” (Romans 
			16:25, 26).
			
Paul further affirmed that spiritual maturity 
			comes only through the Word, when he revealed that it was the 
			primary responsibility of pastor-teachers, “for 
			the equipping of the saints for the work of ministry, 
			for the edifying of the body of Christ, till we all come to 
			the unity of the faith and of the knowledge of the Son of God, 
			to a perfect [spiritual mature] man, to the measure of 
			the stature of the fullness of Christ; that we should no 
			longer be children, tossed to and fro and carried about with 
			every wind of doctrine, by the trickery of men, in the 
			cunning craftiness of deceitful plotting” (Ephesians 
			4:11-14).  In essence, he affirmed that it is only by 
			being grounded in the meat of the Word that will insulate a 
			Christian from false doctrine. 
			
And to Timothy he reinforces this point by 
			urging him to “give attention to 
			reading, to exhortation,
			to doctrine . . . Meditate on these things; give 
			yourself entirely to them, that your progress [spiritual 
			maturity] may be evident to all.  Take heed to yourself 
			and to the doctrine. Continue in them, for in doing 
			this you will save [a reference to soul-salvation] both 
			yourself and those who hear you” (1 Timothy 4:1-16).  
			And also to Timothy he said, “Be 
			diligent to present yourself approved to God,
			a worker who does not need to be ashamed, rightly dividing 
			the Word of truth” (2 
			Timothy 2:15).  In fact, he assured Timothy that it was
			the Word alone that would make him “complete
			[mature], thoroughly 
			equipped for every good work” (2 
			Timothy 3:16, 17).
			
Peter’s buttress to Paul’s position on the 
			Word may be found in his words:
			
			Grace and peace be multiplied to you 
			in the knowledge of God and of Jesus our Lord,
			as His divine power has given to us all things that pertain to 
			life and godliness, through the knowledge of Him who called 
			us by glory and virtue, by which have been given to us 
			exceedingly great and precious promises, that through these 
			you may be partakers of the divine nature, having escaped the 
			corruption that is in the world through lust.” 
			
			(2 Peter 1:2-4)
			
But again, probably no one reveals more clearly 
			the necessity of personal consumption of the Word of God as the 
			only pathway to spiritual maturity and eventual glory with 
			Christ during the coming Messianic Era than Chitwood in chapters 3 
			and 4 in his book Salvation of the Soul, which follow:
			
			The Implanted Word
			
			Of His own will He brought us forth 
			by the Word of truth, 
			that we might be a kind of firstfruits of His creatures.
			
			Therefore lay aside all filthiness 
			and overflow of wickedness, 
			and receive with meekness the implanted Word, which is able 
			to save your souls. (James 1:18, 21)
			
“Redemption” is 
			the central issue throughout all Scripture, but redemption includes 
			far more than the salvation that we presently possess.  Redemption 
			begins with unredeemed man who, because of sin, is both alienated 
			from God and dwelling on an earth that is under a curse; and 
			redemption terminates with redeemed man dwelling as a joint-heir 
			with his Messiah, ruling over an earth removed from the curse.
			
In this respect, 
			God’s revealed purpose for man’s redemption is to ultimately place 
			him in the position for which he was originally created:  “Let 
			them have dominion . . . .”  And when this has been 
			accomplished, restored man will occupy a regal position over a 
			restored earth, removed from the curse (cf. Genesis 
			1:26, 28; Acts 3:21; Colossians 1:20).  
			Anything short of this revealed goal is short of God’s 
			purpose for His redemptive work surrounding man.
			
The Hebrew word 
			translated “dominion” in Genesis 1:26, 28 is 
			radhah, which means “to rule.”  This is the same word 
			translated “rule” in Psalm 110:2, referring to Christ ruling 
			the earth in the coming age as the great King-Priest “after the 
			order of Melchizedek.”  Christ, however, is not to rule alone.  
			He will have many “companions” (Hebrews 1:9; 3:14) 
			ruling as joint-heirs with Him, and God’s purpose for His 
			past and present redemptive work surrounding man is to ultimately 
			bring him into this regal position — a culmination of God’s 
			redemptive work, to be realized at a future date.
			
The text in 
			James 1:18, 21 encompasses the complete scope of 
			redemption — past, present, and future.  The word translated “brought 
			us forth” [“begat us” in other translations] in verse 
			eighteen is a medical term in the Greek text that refers to the 
			actual birth itself.  The individuals in this passage (the writer 
			included himself) had been begotten from above, realizing the 
			salvation of their spirits.  And through the birth from above, these 
			individuals had been placed in a position (possessing spiritual 
			life) where they could ultimately be brought into a realization of
			the salvation of their souls through following that which is 
			outlined in verse twenty-one.
			
In the preceding 
			respect, the issue surrounding redemption in relation to 
			alienated, unredeemed man has to do with the salvation of his 
			spirit; and the issue surrounding redemption in 
			relation to redeemed man, who possesses a right relationship with 
			God, has to do with the salvation of his soul.  Thus, 
			relative to the salvation of both the spirit and the soul,
			man has been saved (salvation of the spirit) in order to bring 
			him into a position where he can be saved (salvation of the soul).
			
The former has 
			to do with eternal verities and the latter with millennial 
			verities.  Through the salvation of man’s spirit, 
			he comes into possession of eternal life; but only through the 
			salvation of his soul does he come into possession of the 
			inheritance awaiting the faithful, to be realized during the 
			Messianic Era.
			
			Therefore lay aside . . . receive . . 
			. 
			
In James 1:21, 
			there is really only one command in the wording of the Greek text.  
			The verse should literally read,
			
			Therefore,
			putting away all filthiness and all prevailing wickedness, 
			in meekness receive the implanted Word, which is able to save 
			your souls. (James 1:21)
			
Following the 
			salvation of one’s spirit, an individual (Christian) is commanded to 
			“receive the implanted Word,” for this Word alone is able 
			to effect the salvation of his soul.
			
However, a 
			Christian is to receive this Word only after he has set aside the 
			things which would hinder the reception of this Word.  The words 
			“filthiness” and “wickedness,” though appearing to refer basically 
			to the same thing in the English text, set forth two entirely 
			different thoughts in the Greek text.
			
The word 
			translated “filthiness” comes from a root word that, relative 
			to the human ear — the channel through which “the implanted Word” 
			is received — could have to do with earwax.  In a 
			metaphorical manner of viewing the matter, the thought set forth 
			through the use of this word has to do with the possibility that 
			these Christians’ ears, so to speak, were filthy.  There were 
			possibly obstructions — having to do with a dulled spiritual 
			perception — that prevented the Word of God from flowing through the 
			auditory canals in a proper manner; and, if so, they were to remove 
			these obstructions.
			
Then, after 
			these Christians had removed any obstructions that could prevent 
			them from hearing the Word of God properly, they were to put away 
			all “wickedness” in their lives.  This is simply a general term that 
			carries the thought of “anything opposed to purity.”   These 
			Christians were to put away any impurity in their lives that could 
			hinder the reception of the Word of God.  And receiving the 
			implanted Word in this fashion would then allow them to “grow 
			thereby unto salvation” (1 Peter 2:2, ASV), i.e., through 
			spiritual growth they would ultimately realize the salvation of 
			their souls.
			
The word 
			“implanted” has to do simply with that which is placed on the 
			inside.  This Word is to be firmly fixed within a person’s 
			mind, within his thinking process.  The channel, as we 
			have seen, is the ear.  According to Romans 10:17, “. . . 
			faith comes by [‘out of’] hearing, and hearing by 
			[‘through’] the Word of God.”  The Word is to flow through 
			unobstructed auditory canals into a saved human spirit, for a 
			revealed purpose.
			
Once the Word 
			has been received in this manner, the indwelling Holy Spirit can 
			then perform a work in the individual.  As all hindrances 
			(all impurities) are set aside and the spiritual man is allowed to 
			exert full control, the Holy Spirit, using “the implanted Word,”
			can then effect spiritual growth.  And, as this 
			process continues over time, spiritual growth of this nature will 
			lead from immaturity to maturity.
			
The teaching in
			James 1:21, or for that matter the book of James as a 
			whole, must be understood in the light of the subject matter at hand 
			— the salvation of the soul.  In order to properly 
			understand the Word of God at this point, one must not only 
			have an understanding of the salvation that he presently possesses, 
			but he must also have an equally good understanding and 
			comprehension of the salvation that he is about to possess.
			
Teachings 
			surrounding the salvation of the soul are, in reality, the central 
			subject matter in all of the epistles — both the Pauline and general 
			epistles, from Romans through Jude.  Each epistle is 
			different, containing its own peculiarities; and each has been 
			written to provide a different facet of revealed truth, with all of 
			the epistles together forming a complete body of revealed 
			information and instructions for Christians relative to present and 
			future aspects of salvation.
			
In this respect, 
			apart from an understanding of the salvation of the soul, it is not 
			possible to properly understand the central message of the 
			epistles.  An understanding of the salvation of the soul, which is 
			introduced in the Old Testament and continued in the gospels and the 
			book of Acts, is the key that will open the epistles to 
			one’s understanding.
			
Thus, the 
			importance of understanding that which Scripture reveals about the 
			salvation of the soul cannot be overemphasized.  And 
			this importance can be shown by the goal, which the writer of
			Hebrews dealt with near the beginning of his epistle, 
			referring to this salvation as “so great salvation” (Hebrews 
			2:3; cf. Hebrews 1:14; 2:5; 6:13-19; 
			10:35-39; 1 Peter 1:9).  It is the greatest thing 
			God could ever design for redeemed man, for it includes joint-heirship 
			with His Son over all things during the coming age.
			
			Growing unto Salvation
			
			Putting away 
			therefore all wickedness, and all guile, and 
			hypocrisy, and envies, and all evil speaking,
			
			As newborn babes, long for the spiritual milk that is without guile, that you may 
			grow thereby unto salvation. (1 Peter 2:1, 2, 
			ASV)
			
The American 
			Standard Version (ASV) of the Bible has been quoted rather than the 
			King James Version (KJV) because it includes the translation of two 
			important and explanatory Greek words in verse two (ref. also 
			NASB, NIV, Weymouth).  These two words, eis soterian, 
			appear at the end of the verse and actually sum up and conclude the 
			thought of the entire verse, for within these two words lie the 
			revealed reason for growth towards maturity.
			
Eis soterian
			should be properly 
			translated either “unto salvation” or “with respect to salvation” 
			(ref. NASB).  Then the question naturally arises, “What aspect of 
			salvation is in view?”  It can only be the salvation of the soul,
			for not only is this the subject matter dealt with in 1 Peter 
			(cf. 1:9, 10) but Christians do not grow “unto” 
			or “with respect to” the salvation that they presently possess.
			
The salvation of 
			the spirit was effected in past time completely apart from any 
			accomplishment, effort, etc., of man.  Nothing can ever be added to 
			or taken from this salvation, for it is based entirely on the 
			finished work of Christ at Calvary.  And this finished work can 
			never be changed or altered in any fashion.
			
All Christians 
			remain on an equal plain within the scope of this salvation.  A 
			newborn babe in Christ, a carnally immature Christian, and a 
			spiritually mature Christian all occupy identical positions 
			insofar as the salvation of the spirit is concerned.  Christian 
			growth is brought to pass on the basis of the salvation of 
			the spirit, but there is no such thing as growing “unto” or “with 
			respect to” this salvation.
			
The command in
			1 Peter 2:2, although applicable only to newborn babes, 
			parallels and has to do with the same central thought as the command 
			in James 1:21:  “. . . long for the spiritual milk that is 
			without guile, that you may grow thereby unto salvation,” 
			and “. . . receive with meekness the implanted Word, which 
			is able to save your souls.”  Both begin at the same point (a 
			reception of the Word of God into man’s saved human spirit), 
			progress in the same manner (spiritual growth), and end at the same 
			point (salvation).
			
The commands to 
			receive the Word of God in both James 1:21 and 1 Peter 2:2 
			are preceded by parallel statements:
			
			Therefore lay aside 
			[lit. Therefore laying aside] all filthiness and overflow of 
			wickedness . . . . (James 1:21a)
			
			Putting away 
			therefore all wickedness, and all guile, and 
			hypocrisy, and envies, and all evil speaking. (1 
			Peter 2:1)
			
Nothing must be 
			allowed to interfere with the reception of the Word of God as 
			Christians mature day by day.  This is the reason Christians are 
			exhorted over and over in the New Testament to separate themselves 
			from the things of the world, the flesh, and the devil.  Sin in 
			one’s life will impede the reception of the Word of God; and sin 
			harbored in one’s life will impede the reception of this Word to the 
			extent that the individual may fail to grow “unto salvation.”
			
The problem of 
			sin in the Christian’s life today, in view of the coming salvation 
			of the soul, is the reason Christ is presently exercising a high 
			priestly ministry in the heavenly sanctuary.  Christians reside in a 
			body of death with the ever-present sin nature; and, in this 
			condition, they reside in a world under the control and dominion of 
			Satan and his angels.  Residing in the present world system after 
			this fashion, Christians come under constant attack from the 
			archenemy of their souls; and failure in the pilgrim walk, producing 
			defilement in their lives, can and does occur.
			
Because of 
			present conditions and circumstances, Christ, as High Priest, is 
			performing a work in the heavenly sanctuary.  He is performing a 
			present, continuous cleansing for Christians, 
			accomplished solely on the basis of His shed blood on the mercy seat 
			(Hebrews 9:11, 12).  And forgiveness and 
			cleansing from “all unrighteousness” occur as Christians “confess” 
			their sins (1 John 1:5, 6, 9; 2:1, 2).
			
The reason for 
			Christ’s present ministry has to do with the salvation of the 
			soul, as the reason for His past ministry had to do with
			the salvation of the spirit.  God’s complete purpose 
			for man cannot be realized apart from the salvation of both, i.e., 
			the salvation of man as a complete being (which, in that coming day, 
			will include his body as well).
			
			Milk . . . Meat . . . Strong Meat
			
In the 
			terminology of Scripture itself, milk is for babies, and 
			meat is for those who have experienced sufficient growth to 
			leave the milk and partake of solid food.  Both milk and meat (solid 
			food) are indispensable elements as one progressively grows from an 
			immature infant into a mature adult, and nourishment to produce 
			proper growth in both the physical and spiritual realms must come 
			from the correct source.
			
1.  In the 
			Physical Realm
			
The analogy 
			concerning a newborn Christian’s spiritual needs for the “milk 
			which is without guile” is drawn from the physical needs 
			and desires of a newborn baby.  Almost immediately following birth 
			the baby instinctively begins seeking nourishment from his mother.  
			His needs are very basic:  food, warmth, and security.
			
These are all 
			satisfied at his mother’s breasts, as he longs for his mother’s 
			milk.  This milk is pure, easily digested, and contains all the 
			necessary components for the early growth of the entire body, 
			especially the brain and nervous system.  The mother’s milk is a 
			living organism that cannot be duplicated.  Man’s best efforts 
			to reproduce this milk are described by the terms “most like,” or 
			“near to.”
			
A child in his 
			early physical growth does not continue on milk indefinitely.  The 
			child’s growth always moves toward a day when he is able to leave 
			the milk and continue on solid food.  The solid food that the child 
			first begins taking is a type that is more easily masticated and 
			digested.  But as the child grows, the teeth become more firmly 
			entrenched, the digestive system matures, and the day arrives when 
			the child becomes physically mature enough to handle any type of 
			solid food.
			
2.  In the 
			Spiritual Realm
			
God revealed 
			Himself to Abraham as “El Shaddai [‘Almighty God’]” (Genesis 
			17:1).  El is the singular form of the plural Hebrew word 
			for “God” (Elohim), and Shaddai is a derivative of the 
			word shad, which means “breast.”  In this respect, God 
			literally revealed Himself to Abraham as the “All-Powerful, Breasted 
			God,” i.e., the All-Powerful God who nourishes, gives 
			strength, and satisfies.  This appears to be the primary thought 
			behind the words El Shaddai when used with God’s own people 
			in view.
			
God’s revealed 
			Word to man, derived from the “All-Powerful, Breasted One,” is the 
			means through which God nourishes, strengthens, and satisfies His 
			people throughout their pilgrim walk.  The newborn Christian, 
			because of his new nature, is to instinctively long for the “spiritual 
			milk which is without guile”; and the more mature a Christian 
			becomes, the more he, in like manner, is to instinctively move on 
			into the “meat” and “strong meat” of the Word.
			
This Word is “quick 
			[‘alive’], and powerful” (Hebrews 4:12) and contains 
			everything necessary for Christian growth unto maturity.  The 
			weaning process in Christian growth pertains only to the “milk,” not 
			the source.  It is not possible for any Christian to receive 
			nourishment apart from the “All-Powerful, Breasted God.”
			
Proper Christian 
			growth begins with “milk,” progresses to “meat,” 
			and then moves on to “strong meat.”  In Hebrews 
			chapter five, the writer of this book severely rebuked 
			certain Christians for their inability to handle anything but 
			“milk.”  They had been saved for a sufficient length of time that 
			they should not only have progressed from milk to meat, and then to 
			strong meat, but they should also have progressed to the point where 
			they could teach the Word to other Christians.
			
However, because 
			of a lazy, careless manner of conducting their spiritual lives over 
			time, these Christians had not experienced proper growth in their 
			understanding of the Word.  They were still on the milk of the Word 
			and had not progressed in their Christian growth beyond the point of 
			themselves needing to be taught.
			
The subject 
			matter at hand in relation to “strong meat” in Hebrews 
			chapter five is the Melchizedek priesthood.  The writer of 
			this book had “many things” he would like to have said concerning 
			this priesthood; but these things had to do with a realm of biblical 
			doctrine beyond that which these Christians, because of their 
			immaturity, were able to comprehend.
			
The things 
			associated with the Melchizedek priesthood had to do with strong 
			meat, and these Christians were still on milk.  They were 
			unable to partake of meat, much less strong meat drawn from 
			teachings surrounding the Melchizedek priesthood.
			
			(Note that both “milk” and “meat” 
			have an association with that which is living in both the 
			physical and spiritual realms.  Man may attempt to duplicate both; 
			but, in reality, he can duplicate neither.  Life of this 
			nature — physical or spiritual — comes only through breath, 
			which comes from God.
			
			This whole overall thought will 
			explain what is meant in John chapter six by partaking 
			of Christ as the Bread of life, or eating His flesh and drinking His 
			blood [vv. 33-35, 48-58].  There is the living Word, 
			and there is the written Word [which is living as 
			well].  The two are inseparably related; and an individual partakes 
			of the former through an intake, assimilation, and digestion of the 
			latter.
			
			Everything is alive.  It is a partaking of the living Word through a 
			partaking of the written Word [which, again, is living 
			as well].  It is a progression from living milk, to living 
			meat, to living strong meat.  Only through this 
			means can spiritual growth for the man now possessing 
			spiritual life occur.)
			
The Christians 
			in Hebrews chapter five were said to be “dull of 
			hearing” (v. 11).  The thought from the wording of the 
			text is that they didn’t necessarily begin this way as newborn 
			babes.  This is something that had resulted from the careless manner 
			in which they had governed their spiritual lives.  
			
Before they had 
			grown to the point where they could leave the milk of the Word, they
			had become sluggish in hearing the Word of God.  They, as 
			brought out in James 1:21, had possibly allowed wax to 
			build up in their ears.  Their spiritual perception had been dulled, 
			preventing them from hearing properly.
			
The Word of God 
			was not being allowed to travel in a proper and natural manner 
			through the auditory canal into their saved human spirits.  There 
			was no proper exercise of faith because there was no proper exercise 
			of hearing the Word of God (cf. Romans 10:17; Hebrews 11:6).  
			And, apart from the reception of this Word, there could, 
			consequently, be no growth toward maturity.
			
The only way to 
			rectify an existing situation of this nature is clearly outlined in
			James 1:21 and 1 Peter 2:1, 2.  It requires 
			removing any obstructions from the auditory canals, laying aside 
			everything opposed to purity, and receiving “with meekness 
			[in a favorable manner] the implanted Word . . . .”
			
The word 
			translated “dull” in Hebrews 5:11 is from the same word in 
			the Greek text translated “become sluggish” in Hebrews 6:12:
			
			That you do not become sluggish, 
			but imitate those who through faith and patience inherit the 
			promises.
			
The Christians 
			referred to in chapter six where exhorted to not be like the 
			ones previously referred to in chapter five; and the given 
			purpose had to do with faith, patient endurance,
			and a future inheritance (vv. 13ff).
			
The word 
			“patience” is the translation of a Greek word that has to do with 
			patiently enduring over a long period of time.  In this case, 
			the entire Christian life is in view.  These Christians were to 
			receive the Word of God in a continuing manner throughout their 
			entire pilgrim walk.  
			
The reception of 
			this Word would, in turn, produce a walk by faith and progressively 
			result in Christian maturity. And, while patiently enduring trials 
			and tests during the pilgrim walk after this fashion, they were to 
			look ahead to the inheritance that would be realized at the 
			end of their faith, in connection with and at the time of the 
			salvation of their souls (cf. Hebrews 6:14-19; 
			1 Peter 1:4-9).
			
			The Neshamah
			
			And the Lord God formed man of the 
			dust of the ground, and 
			breathed into his nostrils the breath [the “neshamah”] 
			of life; and man became a living soul. (Genesis 2:7)
			
The roots of all 
			biblical doctrine have been established in the book of Genesis.  
			This is the book of beginnings; and all Scripture 
			beyond this point must, after some fashion, reach back and draw from 
			this book.
			
In the account 
			of the creation of man, insight is given into certain truths 
			concerning “life” derived from God.  These truths will, in turn, 
			provide light on the subject matter at hand — the reception of the 
			Word of God (which is alive, and powerful [Hebrews 4:12]) in 
			relation to the salvation of the soul/life.
			
The creation of 
			Adam from the dust of the ground, and the removal of a rib from 
			Adam’s side, occurred on the sixth day of the restoration account in
			Genesis chapter one.  But the methods that God used to 
			bring about both Adam’s creation and the formation of Eve from a 
			portion of Adam’s body were not revealed in the recorded account 
			until following the seventh day in chapter two.
			
Most of the 
			second chapter is taken up with certain specifics concerning that 
			which had previously occurred on the sixth day in the preceding 
			chapter, and this account is rich beyond degree in biblical study.  
			The second chapter of Genesis (just as in the first chapter) 
			is the point where the origin of numerous biblical doctrines 
			can be traced, and these doctrines cannot be properly understood 
			apart from this chapter.
			
The means that 
			God used in both man’s creation and the subsequent impartation of 
			life into His new creation are given in Genesis 2:7.  There 
			first existed a lifeless form that had previously been fashioned 
			from the dust of the ground.  Creation itself did not produce life 
			in this form.  Rather, God imparted life to man following his 
			creation.  This life was produced by means of the breath of God,
			and it is here that “life” in relation to man is first 
			mentioned in Scripture.
			
The Hebrew word 
			translated “breath” in Genesis 2:7 is Neshamah. 
			The neshamah of God produced “life.”  The word “God” 
			in this verse is a translation of the plural noun, Elohim,
			indicating that not only the Father, but also the Son and the 
			Holy Spirit were instrumental in producing this life.
			
Thus, man’s life 
			in the beginning was derived from the triune God through what is 
			called the neshamah.  And Genesis 2:7 provides 
			insights into things far beyond the simple fact that God created man 
			and then imparted life into man.  This verse provides insights into 
			things surrounding man’s salvation today — both the salvation of the 
			spirit and the salvation of the soul.
			
First,
			the impartation of life to unredeemed man, who is “dead in 
			trespasses and sins” (Ephesians 2:1, 5), must follow 
			the pattern (type) established in Genesis. 
			 He, as Adam prior to the neshamah of God, is lifeless; and 
			his life must be derived through the same means as Adam’s life.
			
Second,
			once this life has been imparted, it must be continued and 
			sustained; and, as will become evident, Scripture teaches that 
			life is not only imparted through the neshamah of God, but 
			life is also continued and sustained through the neshamah of 
			God as well.
			
A first-mention 
			principle has been established in Genesis 2:7, and life
			that man derives from God must always be in complete keeping 
			with that set forth in this verse.  God alone initially 
			“imparts” and subsequently “continues” and “sustains” life; 
			and this entire sequence, having to do with God’s revealed work as 
			it pertains to life, is always accomplished, in its entirety, 
			through the neshamah of God.
			
1. 
			Impartation of Life to the Unsaved (Salvation of the Spirit)
			
Unregenerate man 
			today comes into a right relationship with God solely through the 
			regenerating power of the Holy Spirit on the basis of Christ’s 
			finished work at Calvary.  The Spirit breathes life into the one 
			having no life, and through this work of the Spirit man passes “from 
			death to life” (John 5:24).
			
			(The word “Spirit” in the Greek text 
			is pneuma, a word that also means “breath.”  It is 
			used in the latter sense in the New Testament to show life being 
			produced through a “breathing in,” or death being wrought through a 
			“breathing out.”  In Luke 8:55, life was restored to a young 
			girl by her “spirit [breath]” returning; and in Luke 23:46, 
			Christ terminated His life on the Cross by giving “up the spirit 
			[lit. from the wording of the Greek text, He ‘breathed 
			out’].”)
			
Thus, the Holy 
			Spirit is the One who generates life in lifeless man (on the basis 
			of Christ’s finished work at Calvary), and the expression used in 
			both the Hebrew and Greek texts relative to the Spirit generating 
			life in this manner is a “breathing in.”  God, through the 
			instrumentality of the Holy Spirit, “breathes life into” 
			unregenerate man, which results in man passing “from death to 
			life.”
			
Or, in James 
			2:26, the same principle is seen relative to the physical body, 
			as previously seen in Genesis 2:7:  “. . . the body 
			without the spirit [‘breath’] is dead.”
			
Since type and 
			antitype must agree in exact detail, the impartation of life to Adam 
			in Genesis chapter two must, of necessity, have 
			occurred in the same fashion that the impartation of life to 
			unredeemed man occurs today.  Lifeless man during the present time 
			derives life from God through the work of the Holy Spirit, and 
			lifeless Adam in the Genesis account could only have derived 
			life from God in this same manner.
			
Teachings drawn 
			from the original type in relation to man’s redemption necessitate 
			this same conclusion.  The original type is found in the first 
			chapter of Genesis (vv. 2b-5), with Genesis 2:7 
			being a subsequent type, providing additional details.  And the 
			latter verse, providing the first mention of “life” in relation to 
			man, must be in complete agreement with and understood in the light 
			of revelation in the former verses, in the original type.
			
The portion of 
			the original type under consideration at this point is Genesis 
			1:2b, 3:
			
			. . . darkness was upon the face 
			of the deep.  And the Spirit of God moved on the face of the waters.  
			And God said, Let there be light:  and there was light.
			
These verses 
			outline the beginning of the restoration of a creation that was 
			brought into a ruined state through an act of Satan (the earth,
			the province over which Satan ruled [and still rules today], 
			becoming a chaos because of his aspirations to be “like 
			the most High” [Isaiah 14:12-14]).
			
Then these 
			verses, in turn, set forth in type the beginning of the restoration 
			of a creation that was brought into a subsequent state of ruin 
			through another act of Satan (causing man to fall [becoming
			a ruin, a chaos] through deceiving the woman into believing 
			that she could be “as God” [Genesis 3:5, 22]).
			
The established 
			pattern (type) relative to the restoration of a ruined creation is 
			set in the first chapter of Genesis.  Once God establishes a 
			pattern of this nature, no change can ever occur.  The 
			restoration of any subsequent ruined creation must occur in exact 
			accord with the established pattern.  Thus, God’s work in the 
			restoration of fallen man today — a subsequent ruined creation — 
			must follow the established pattern, in exact detail.
			
The Spirit of 
			God moved in the first chapter of Genesis, effecting a 
			beginning of the earth’s restoration.  And the first thing recorded 
			immediately following the Spirit’s movement was the placement of 
			light alongside the previously existing darkness, with a division 
			established between the light and the darkness.
			
The Spirit of 
			God, in like manner, moves today, effecting a beginning of man’s 
			restoration (the salvation of his spirit).  And the first thing that 
			God does for man is to place light alongside the previously existing 
			darkness — place a new nature alongside the old nature, a new man 
			alongside the old man — with a division established between the two 
			(cf. Hebrews 4:12).
			
But in the 
			Genesis account, complete restoration was not accomplished 
			through God’s work on the first day.  Rather, the earth, through 
			this divine work accomplished on the first day, was brought into a 
			state where a continued work could be accomplished.  And, over time, 
			this continued work would complete the earth’s restoration.
			
And restoration 
			for ruined man occurs exactly the same way.  Complete restoration is 
			not accomplished through the birth from above.  Rather, the person, 
			through the birth from above, is brought into a state where a 
			continued work can be accomplished.  And, over time, this continued 
			work will complete man’s restoration.
			
Note the words 
			of the apostle Paul in 2 Corinthians 4:6; 5:17 in this 
			respect:
			
			For God, who commanded the light to 
			shine out of darkness, 
			has shined in our hearts, to give the light of the knowledge 
			of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ . . . 
			
			
			Therefore if any man be in Christ, he 
			is a new creature [‘new 
			creation’] . . . .”
			
These verses in
			2 Corinthians chapters four and five can only 
			be a direct allusion to the account of the restoration of the ruined 
			creation in Genesis chapter one — light shining out of 
			darkness, associated with a new creation being brought into 
			existence in both instances, with the former foreshadowing the 
			latter.  And Genesis 2:7, a subsequent type concerning 
			unregenerate man (life produced in that which is lifeless), is an 
			account portraying exactly the same truth from a different 
			perspective, providing additional details.  The Spirit of God 
			wrought order out of chaos in Genesis chapter one; the 
			Spirit of God — the neshamah — produced life in Genesis 
			chapter two; and the Spirit of God brings order out of chaos, 
			produces life in unregenerate man today, exactly the same way.
			
The Spirit of 
			God today moves upon the ruined creation, upon ruined man (chapter 
			1).  That is, He breathes life into the one having no 
			life (chapter 2).  Only then does “light” shine out of what 
			was only darkness before that time (allowing for a continued divine 
			work), with everything being done in complete accordance with the 
			revealed Word of God — “And God said . . .” (cf. Genesis 
			1:2b ff; 2 Corinthians 4:6).
			
Then, to 
			complete the type, note the septenary structure of this opening 
			section of Genesis, establishing, at the very beginning, a 
			septenary structure upon which the whole of subsequent Scripture 
			rests.  The six days of work used to restore the earth in Genesis
			point to the six days (6,000 years [cf. 2 Peter 
			1:15-18; 3:1-8]) of work that God is presently using to 
			restore man; and the Sabbath rest following the six days in the 
			Genesis account points to the Sabbath rest, the 1,000-year 
			Messianic Era, which will follow the present six days, the present 
			6,000 years of work (cf. Exodus 31:12-17; Hebrews 
			4:1-9).
			
2. 
			Impartation of Life to the Saved (Salvation of the Soul)
			
			All Scripture is God-breathed and is 
			useful for teaching, 
			rebuking, correcting and training in righteousness, so 
			that the man of God may be thoroughly equipped for every good work. 
			(2 Timothy 3:16, 17, NIV)
			
Once life has 
			been generated, life must then be continued and sustained.  Life is
			generated through “breathing in” (initial work of the 
			Spirit), retained through “the breath remaining” (a 
			subsequent work of the Spirit), and sustained through a 
			“continued breathing in.”  Sustenance for life, “a continued 
			breathing in,” is what is involved in 2 Timothy 3:16.  
			
			
This verse, 
			studied in the light of Genesis 2:7, is the key that will 1) 
			unlock the door concerning the neshamah of God in relation to 
			saved man (past or present), 2) demonstrate the power of the Word of 
			God, and 3) reveal the reason Christians are commanded to “receive 
			the implanted Word.”
			
The word “God-breathed” 
			in 2 Timothy 3:16 is a translation of the compound Greek word
			theopneustos, which is simply the word for “God” (theos)
			and the word for “breath,” or “Spirit” (pneuma) 
			added.  Thus, the translation “God-breathed” is not only a very 
			literal translation, but, in the light of Genesis 2:7, it can 
			only be the best of all possible translations.
			
The “Word of 
			God,” through comparing Genesis 2:7 and 2 Timothy 3:16, 
			is identified with the neshamah of God — the breath of God.  
			The Word of God was given through the instrumentality of the Holy 
			Spirit (2 Peter 1:21), and is the element — the living 
			organism — that the indwelling Holy Spirit uses to sustain 
			the life that He Himself originally imparted and presently 
			continues.
			
Thus, in a full 
			Scriptural respect, the neshamah of God can only refer to 
			both the Spirit and the Word.  “Life” emanates 
			from both (2 Corinthians 3:6; Hebrews 4:12; James 
			2:26), and they are inseparably linked through one common 
			denominator — Breath.
			
The Word of God, 
			because of its very origin and nature, is the only thing that 
			the Holy Spirit, who gave the Word, can use to effect man’s 
			spiritual growth toward maturity.  The neshamah of God (the 
			Holy Spirit) who imparted life uses the neshamah of God (the 
			implanted Word) to feed, nourish, and properly develop this life.
			
The Word of 
			God alone is able to make 
			one “wise unto salvation” (2 Timothy 3:15).  That is 
			to say, the Word of God alone can be used by the Holy Spirit 
			to bring about the Christian’s walk by faith (cf. Romans 10:17), 
			ultimately resulting in the salvation of his soul.
			
			The Breath of God
			
			And the Lord God formed man of the 
			dust of the ground and breathed into his nostrils the breath [neshamah] of life; and man became a living being. 
			(Genesis 2:7)
			
			All Scripture is God-breathed 
			[theopneustos] and is useful for teaching, rebuking, 
			correcting and training in righteousness, so that the man of 
			God may be thoroughly equipped for every good work. (2 
			Timothy 3:16, NIV)
			
Man’s “life” 
			following his creation in the beginning was produced by “the 
			breath [neshamah] of God” (Genesis 2:7).  
			This establishes a first-mention principle in Scripture concerning 
			“life” in relation to man, and this principle remains unchanged
			throughout all subsequent Scripture.  Man’s life throughout time
			and eternity, as in the Genesis account, must 
			emanate from God; and this life cannot be generated, 
			continued, or sustained apart from the neshamah of God.
			
In scriptural 
			terminology, the neshamah is identified with both the “Holy 
			Spirit” of God and the “Word” of God.  Life, which 
			comes from God alone, is always produced through “breathing in.”  
			Remaining within basic teachings drawn from the types in Genesis 
			1:2-5; 2:7, God, through the instrumentality of the Holy 
			Spirit, “breathes life into” unredeemed, lifeless man today.  Once 
			imparted, with the man possessing spiritual life (having been 
			redeemed), this life is then continued and sustained through 
			the same principle — the breath of God remaining with man 
			(past dispensation) or remaining in man (present 
			dispensation), and the breath of God continuing to be breathed 
			into man.
			
Through the 
			abiding presence of the breath of God 
			(which, during this present dispensation, is through the Spirit 
			indwelling the one in whom He had previously breathed life), the 
			believer remains secure in his positional standing before God; and
			through a continued impartation of the breath of God (the 
			Word of God flowing into man’s saved human spirit, with the 
			indwelling Holy Spirit leading the individual “into all truth”), 
			the believer receives living nourishment for spiritual growth 
			unto maturity.
			
“Scripture,” 
			unlike any other writings, is alive:
			
			For the Word of God is living
			and powerful, and sharper than any two-edged sword . . 
			. . (Hebrews 4:12a).
			
“Life” can be 
			attributed to Scripture only on the basis of the fact that 
			the “oracles of God” emanated from the Giver and Sustainer of 
			life.  Scripture is “God-breathed.”  It is the 
			neshamah, the “breath” of God.
			
This is what 
			sets Scripture apart from all other writings.  That which God has to 
			say in His Word is alive, not subject to error, and 
			will endure forever.  But that which man has to say is, 
			on the other hand, lifeless, subject to error, and 
			will endure only for time.
			
Thus, the Holy 
			Spirit today initially imparts life to man who is “dead in 
			trespasses and sins,” continues this life through His 
			abiding presence, and sustains this life via the living Word 
			of God flowing into man’s saved human spirit.  The indwelling Holy 
			Spirit takes the Word of God received into man’s saved human spirit, 
			and, through man’s spiritual perception, changes the water to
			wine (cf. John 2:1-11).  A continued process of 
			this nature — revealing the things of the Spirit to the man of 
			spirit through man’s spiritual perception — progressively results in 
			growth unto maturity.
			
The great 
			difference between redeemed man and unredeemed man is possession or 
			non-possession of spiritual life derived from the “breath” of 
			God. 
			
Unregenerate 
			man, who is spiritually dead, is alienated from everything 
			associated with the “breath” of God in this respect, for that which 
			has no life is completely incompatible with that which has life.  
			Thus, the living Word of God is not for him; it is alien to his 
			fallen nature, the only nature that he possesses.
			
Regenerate 
			man, on the other 
			hand, possesses spiritual life that was “breathed in.”  He possesses 
			a new, non-alienated nature; and, on this basis, there can now be a 
			continuance of life “breathed in.”  Thus, the living Word of God, 
			because it is the very life-giving “breath” of God, is for 
			redeemed man alone.
			
Redeemed 
			individuals are divided into two classes in Scripture — “spiritual,” 
			and “carnal” (1 Corinthians 3:1, 2).  Both 
			possess spiritual life that was “breathed in,” both are 
			capable of spiritual discernment, and both are in a 
			position to allow God to continue “breathing in” life.
			
The carnal 
			Christian though rejects the leadership of the Spirit.  He follows the fleshly 
			man rather than the spiritual man; and, although his eternal 
			salvation remains secure through the “breath” of God remaining in 
			him (based on Christ’s finished work at Calvary), he experiences no 
			growth.  He does not allow God to continue “breathing in” life.
			
But the 
			spiritual Christian governs his life in an entirely different 
			manner.  He follows the leadership of the Spirit; He allows God to 
			continue “breathing in” life; and, through his spiritual 
			discernment, as led by the Holy Spirit, he is able to begin grasping
			the great spiritual truths of the Word of God, progressively 
			growing from immaturity to maturity.
			
A continued 
			inflow of the breath of God into man’s saved human spirit in this 
			manner, following his salvation, will result in what Scripture calls 
			“the filling of the Spirit” and “be transformed” (“the 
			metamorphosis”).  These are actually two different experiences in 
			the lives of Christians that occur in a progressive, concurrent 
			manner.  These experiences, however, are so closely related that one 
			cannot occur without the other, and neither can occur apart from the 
			Word of God and the Spirit’s work in the life of a believer in 
			relation to this Word.
			
The remainder of 
			this chapter will be taken up with “the breath” of God producing 
			a Spirit-filled Christian and, at the same time, working the 
			metamorphosis in his life.
			
			Filled with the Spirit
			
Being filled 
			with the Holy Spirit is an experience that occurs after one has been 
			born from above.  At the time of the new birth, an individual is 
			immersed (baptized) in the Holy Spirit, 
			and, through this immersion, becomes part of the “one body,” 
			the “one new man,” in Christ (cf. Matthew 3:11;
			Acts 1:5; 1 Corinthians 12:13 [“with” and “by” should 
			be translated “in”]; Ephesians 2:15).  The Holy Spirit, from 
			this point forward, indwells the believer, forming a “temple of 
			God” — an earthly tabernacle in which deity dwells (1 
			Corinthians 3:16, 17; 6:19, 20).
			
But the Spirit 
			filling the tabernacle is an experience in the life of a Christian 
			that occurs subsequent to the Spirit indwelling the tabernacle.  
			Christians, ones in whom the Spirit dwells, are commanded to be 
			filled with the Spirit (Ephesians 5:18); and the biblical 
			manner in which this is accomplished is clearly revealed to be in 
			connection with life continuing to be “breathed into” man 
			following the initial “inbreathing” that generated life at the 
			beginning.
			
Scripture 
			reveals an inseparable relationship between being filled with the 
			Spirit (the neshamah) and dwelling deeply in the Word of God 
			(the neshamah).  This is clearly taught by comparing “scripture 
			with scripture” in Ephesians and Colossians — 
			companion epistles, which parallel one another in a number of 
			places.
			
One such 
			parallel can be seen in the section in Ephesians where 
			Christians are commanded to be filled with the Spirit and in the 
			section in Colossians where Christians are commanded to let 
			the Word of Christ dwell in them richly in all wisdom.
			
In Ephesians, 
			Christians are told:
			
			And do not be drunk with wine, 
			in which is dissipation; but be filled with the Spirit,
			
			speaking to one another in psalms and 
			hymns and spiritual songs,
			singing and making melody in your heart to the Lord; 
			giving thanks always for all things to God the Father in the name of 
			our Lord Jesus Christ. (Ephesians 5:18-20)
			
In Colossians, 
			Christians are told:
			
			Let the Word of Christ dwell in you 
			richly in all wisdom, 
			teaching and admonishing one another in psalms and hymns and 
			spiritual songs, singing with grace in your hearts to the 
			Lord.  And whatever you do in word or deed, do all in 
			the name of the Lord Jesus, giving thanks to God the Father 
			through Him. (Colossians 3:16, 17)
			
Note the 
			contextual parallel between the commands, “Be filled with the 
			Spirit” in Ephesians and “Let the Word of Christ dwell 
			in you richly in all wisdom” in Colossians.  Both have to 
			do with the same thing.  One is substituted for the other in its 
			respective, parallel counterpart.  And the clear inference from this 
			parallel, in conjunction with related scripture, leads to only one 
			conclusion:  A Christian who is filled with the Spirit is one who 
			has allowed the Word of Christ to dwell in him richly in all wisdom.
			
The 
			indwelling of the Spirit is consummated at the time God 
			initially “breathes life into” an individual, and the filling of 
			the Spirit is progressively accomplished through God 
			subsequently continuing to “breathe life into” that individual.  
			The “God-breathed” scriptures flowing into man’s saved human spirit 
			— a continued impartation of life into man — progressively produces, 
			through the work of the indwelling Holy Spirit (John 16:13), 
			a Spirit-filled Christian.
			
Relative to the 
			filling of the Spirit, note further the relationship to one another 
			of husbands and wives, children and parents, and servants and 
			masters in the verses immediately following these two sections in 
			Ephesians and Colossians.
			
Wives 
			show that they are filled with 
			the Spirit through their submission to their husbands, “as to the 
			Lord” (cf. Ephesians 5:22-24; Colossians 3:18).
			
Husbands
			show that they are filled 
			with the Spirit through their love for their wives, “even as 
			Christ also loved the Church, and gave Himself for it” 
			(cf. Ephesians 5:25-33; Colossians 3:19).
			
Children
			show that they are filled 
			with the Spirit through their obedience to their parents, “in the 
			Lord” (cf. Ephesians 6:1, 2; Colossians 
			3:20).
			
Fathers
			show that they are filled 
			with the Spirit through not provoking their children to anger, but 
			bringing “them up in the nurture and admonition of the Lord” 
			(cf. Ephesians 6:4; Colossians 3:21).
			
Servants
			show that they are filled 
			with the Spirit through being obedient to their masters according to 
			the flesh, “with fear and trembling, in singleness of your 
			heart, as to Christ” (cf. Ephesians 6:5-8;
			Colossians 3:22-25).
			
And masters
			show that they are filled with the Spirit through treating their 
			servants just and equal, “knowing that your Master also is in 
			heaven; neither is there respect of persons with Him” 
			(cf. Ephesians 6:9; Colossians 4:1).
			
God desires that 
			all Christians be filled with the Spirit, and the manner God uses to 
			bring this to pass is clearly revealed in His Word.  There must be a 
			continued “breathing in” of life into the one who has 
			initially been given life through the “breath” of God, and 
			this cannot be accomplished apart from the “God-breathed” Oracles.
			
In view of this, 
			it is no wonder that the living Word of God — the neshamah
			— remains under constant attack by Satan, his emissaries, and 
			those who do his bidding.
			
The Word of God 
			is either what it claims to be or there can be no continued 
			“inbreathing” of life into redeemed man.  And, apart from 
			this continued “inbreathing” of life, redeemed man can not 
			grow spiritually, for only that compatible with spiritual life can 
			provide nourishment for this life, resulting in growth.  Apart from 
			the God-breathed Word, every Christian, throughout his entire 
			pilgrim walk, would remain in a carnally immature state rather than 
			grow in a spiritual manner to maturity.  Such a Christian would be 
			indwelt by the Spirit, but, apart from the living Word, he 
			could not be filled with the Spirit.  He would remain carnal, 
			immature, and powerless.  Nor could he ultimately realize the 
			salvation of his soul, for there would be no continued inbreathing 
			of life to bring this to pass.
			
Consequently, 
			apart from this continued “inbreathing” of life, God could not 
			ultimately bring “many sons” unto glory to occupy the numerous 
			positions of power and authority as joint-heirs with Christ in the 
			coming kingdom.  The “many sons” whom God will bring “to 
			glory” are those who will be adopted — placed as firstborn 
			sons — at the end of the present age.  And occupying positions 
			of this nature as sons — occupying positions as firstborn sons, 
			with “sonship” implying rulership — will be entered 
			into only by those Christians who realize the salvation of their 
			souls.
			
			The Metamorphosis — Present
			
			And do not be conformed to this world 
			[‘age’], but be transformed by the renewing of your mind, 
			that you may prove what is that good and acceptable and perfect will 
			of God. (Romans 12:2)
			
In this verse 
			there is a negative command followed by a positive command:  “Do 
			not be conformed . . . but be transformed . . . .”
			
1.  Be Not 
			Conformed
			
The Greek word 
			translated “conformed” is sunschematizo.  This 
			is a compound word with the preposition sun (“with”) prefixed 
			to the verb form of the word schema (“outline,” “diagram”).  
			The English word “scheme” is an Anglicized form of the Greek word 
			schema.  The word has to do with a schematic outline, and 
			the thought inherent in this compound Greek word along with its 
			negative command is to not outline or diagram your life in 
			accordance with the present age.
			
During the 
			present age there is a world kingdom in which the Gentile nations 
			rule the earth under the control and dominion of Satan, the “god 
			of this age” (2 Corinthians 4:4).  Fallen man is ruling 
			the earth, which is under a curse, directly under the one who has 
			disqualified himself to rule (Satan, along with his angels — ruling 
			from a heavenly sphere over the earth through the Gentile nations 
			[cf. Ezekiel 28:14; Daniel 10:13-20; Luke 4:5, 
			6; Ephesians 6:11, 12]).
			
Everywhere one 
			looks there’s something wrong with the structure of the present 
			kingdom:  The Gentile nations are out of place, Israel is out of 
			place, Satan and his angels are out of place, and Christ and His 
			co-heirs (those destined to occupy regal positions with Him in the 
			kingdom) are out of place.  These conditions have continued 
			unchanged, in part, for the past 6,000 years (since the fall of 
			Adam, which resulted in the entire creation coming under the curse 
			produced by sin); and they have continued unchanged in their 
			entirety for the past 2,600 years (since the beginning of the “times 
			of the Gentiles” [Luke 21:24], with Israel being 
			scattered among the nations).  And no change will occur until Christ 
			returns and takes the kingdom.
			
The rightful 
			place for Satan and his angels is in the abyss and ultimately in the 
			lake of fire; the rightful place for Christ and His co-heirs is 
			ruling (from the heavens over the earth) in the stead of Satan and 
			his angels; the rightful place for Israel is dwelling in the land 
			covenanted to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, within a theocracy, at the 
			head of the nations; and the rightful place for the Gentile nations 
			is dwelling in their respective lands, out from under the dominion 
			and rule of Satan, in a position subservient to and blessed through 
			Israel.
			
When Christ 
			returns and takes the kingdom, He and His glorified followers, 
			rather than Satan and his angels, will rule from the heavens over 
			the earth.  Satan and his angels (cast out of the heavens slightly 
			over three and one-half years prior to this time) will be chained 
			and imprisoned in the abyss (awaiting consignment to the lake of 
			fire 1,000 years later), the curse will be lifted, and Israel will 
			be placed in her own land at the head of the nations.  And all the 
			Gentile nations entering the kingdom will then occupy subservient 
			positions to Israel and be under the dominion of Christ and those 
			who rule as joint-heirs with Him.
			
Presently, “the 
			whole world lies in wickedness [lit. ‘in the evil one’]” 
			(1 John 5:19b).  The positional standing of the believer is “in 
			Christ,” and the position occupied by the world is “in the evil 
			one.”  These positions are diametrically opposed, one to the other.  
			Scripture clearly commands the believer, “Love not the world, 
			neither the things that are in the world . . . .” (1 John 
			2:15a).  Why?  Because the world lies “in the evil one.” 
			
			
The entire 
			present system is under Satan’s control and sway; and, whether the 
			world realizes it or not, the programs, aims, ambitions, and 
			aspirations of the incumbent ruler are being carried out within the 
			present system.  All of this will one day reach an apex under the 
			reign of the “man of sin,” during the coming Tribulation.  And, from 
			that apex, it will come to a sudden and climactic end.  Then, in 
			conjunction with this end, Satan and his angels will, by force, be 
			removed from their present position — that of ruling the earth 
			through the Gentile nations.
			
Thus, it does 
			not become Christians to involve themselves in the affairs of this 
			present world system, during the present age.  By so doing, they 
			are, in effect, defiling their high calling “in Christ” 
			through stepping down into an arena occupied by those “in the evil 
			one.”
			
Christ, rejected 
			by the world, is in a place removed from the world.  And Christians 
			are to share this rejection by and separation from the world with 
			Christ.  It is not possible for Christians to involve 
			themselves in the affairs of this present world system, during the 
			present age, and, at the same time, share Christ’s rejection by and 
			separation from the world.
			
			(The preceding is dealt with at 
			length in the books of 1 & 2 Samuel, in the typology 
			surrounding Saul and David.  Refer to the author’s book, Judgment 
			Seat of Christ [revised edition], chapter 12, “Crowned Rulers,” 
			for a discussion of this type in the light of the antitype.)
			
2.  Be 
			Transformed
			
Following the 
			command in Romans 12:2, “Do not be conformed to this age,” 
			the Christian is commanded to be “transformed by the renewing of 
			your mind.”  The Greek word translated “transformed” is 
			metamorphoo.  This is the word from which the English 
			word “metamorphosis” is derived.  This word refers to an inward 
			change brought about completely apart from the power of the 
			individual himself.  The individual Christian is powerless to bring 
			about this metamorphosis.
			
In 2 
			Corinthians 11:13-15, Satan is said to be “transformed into 
			an angel of light” and his ministers “transformed as the 
			ministers of righteousness.”  In the Greek text the word 
			“transformed” is not the same in 2 Corinthians 11:13-15 as it 
			is in Romans 12:2.  The word used in 2 Corinthians 
			11:13-15 is metaschematizo, referring to an 
			outward change; and, textually (v. 13), this change is 
			brought about through an individual’s own power.
			
Satan, thus, 
			seeks to counterfeit the work of the Spirit by substituting
			an outward change in place of the inward change.  And the 
			nature and source of this pseudo change often go unrecognized.
			
Christians who 
			seek to bring about the change of Romans 12:2 themselves will 
			always effect a metaschema (outward change) rather than a 
			metamorphosis (inward change).  At the time of the birth from 
			above the Spirit of God began a work in the Christian that He 
			will continue “until the day of Jesus Christ” (Philippians 
			1:6).  No effort on the part of Christians can help the Spirit 
			of God effect this change.
			
Man’s way finds 
			man actively involved, seeking spirituality through either quitting 
			certain things or doing certain things, subsequently producing a 
			metaschema.  But God’s way finds man passive, and God 
			performs a work in the individual, ultimately producing the 
			metamorphosis.
			
The endless list 
			of “do’s” and “do not’s,” taboos formed by Christian groups; 
			invariably have to do with a metaschema, not a 
			metamorphosis.  Any effort on the part of Christians to 
			help the Spirit of God bring about the transformation of Romans 
			12:2 will always result in pseudo-spirituality.  God’s way is 
			an inward change accomplished through the power of the Spirit, 
			not an outward change accomplished through the power of the 
			individual.
			
3.  The 
			Renewing of Your Mind
			
Note according 
			to the text how this inward change, the metamorphosis, takes 
			place:  “. . . be transformed by the renewing of your mind.”  
			The word “renewing” is a translation of the Greek word 
			anakainosis; and the action of the preceding verb 
			(“transformed”) directs attention to a continuous renewing process, 
			one which is to keep on taking place.  In 2 Corinthians 4:16 
			we are told that “the inward man is renewed [lit. ‘is 
			being renewed’] day by day.”  This renewing process is to 
			keep on taking place day in and day out for the entire duration of 
			the pilgrim walk here on earth.
			
Then, 
			Colossians 3:10 reveals how the renewing of the mind is 
			accomplished:
			
			And have put on the new man, 
			which is renewed [lit. is being renewed] in knowledge 
			after the image of Him that created Him.
			
Note the word “knowledge” 
			in this verse.  The regular Greek word for “knowledge” is gnosis,
			but the word used in Colossians 3:10 is epignosis. 
			This is the word gnosis (knowledge) with the prefix 
			epi (upon).  Epignosis, thus, means “knowledge 
			upon knowledge,” i.e., “a mature knowledge.”  The word 
			translated “renewed” is a past participle of anakainoo (the 
			same word used in Romans 12:2 and 2 Corinthians 4:16) 
			and could be better translated, “being renewed.”  The only way a 
			Christian can acquire this mature knowledge, which allows the Spirit 
			of God to work the metamorphosis in his life, is through 
			receiving the living Word of God into his saved human spirit.
			
Christians 
			must allow God to continue “breathing in” life.  The 
			living, God-breathed Word must be allowed to flow into man’s 
			saved human spirit or there can be no metamorphosis.  
			The renewing of the inward man “day by day,” through receiving “the 
			implanted Word,” producing the metamorphosis in one’s 
			life, is the manner in which the salvation of the soul is presently 
			being effected.
			
As previously 
			seen, receiving “the implanted Word” in James 1:21 and
			1 Peter 2:2 is preceded by “laying aside” everything 
			opposed to purity (ref. chapter 3).  It is the same with the 
			metamorphosis in Romans 12:2.  The words, “do not be 
			conformed to this age [lit. ‘stop being conformed to this 
			age’],” appear prior to the words, “be transformed by the 
			renewing of your mind.”  Those “in Christ” are commanded 
			to remove themselves from that which lies “in the evil one” prior to 
			receiving “the implanted Word,” which will effect the 
			metamorphosis in their lives.
			
Thus, Romans 
			12:2; James 1:21; and 1 Peter 2:2 all teach the 
			same thing relative to laying aside everything opposed to purity 
			prior to receiving “the implanted Word, which is able to 
			save your souls.”
			
			The Metamorphosis — Future
			
			Assuredly, 
			I say to you, there are some standing here who shall not 
			taste death till they see the Son of Man coming in His kingdom.
			
			Now after six days Jesus took Peter, 
			James, and John his brother, led them up on a high 
			mountain by themselves;
			
			and He was transfigured before them.  
			His face shone like the sun, and His clothes became as white 
			as the light.
			
			And behold, 
			Moses and Elijah appeared to them, talking with Him.
			
			Then Peter answered and said to Jesus, 
			“Lord, it is good for us to be here; if You wish, 
			let us make here three tabernacles: one for You, one 
			for Moses, and one for Elijah.”
			
			While he was still speaking, 
			behold, a bright cloud overshadowed them; and suddenly 
			a voice came out of the cloud, saying, “This is My 
			beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased. Hear Him!” 
			(Matthew 16:28-17:5)
			
The change 
			presently taking place in the lives of Christians is inward. 
			But within the culmination of the work of the Spirit in that 
			future day of Jesus Christ, the change will include the outward
			also.  The metamorphosis actually cannot be completed 
			apart from this culmination, outward change.  The Spirit of God “who 
			has begun a good work in you will perform it until the day of Jesus 
			Christ” (Philippians 1:6).
			
The day will 
			come when we will put off “the body of this death” (Romans 
			7:24).  That will be the day when He will “fashion anew the 
			body of our humiliation, that it may be conformed to the body 
			of His glory” (Philippians 3:21a, ASV).  The work of the 
			Spirit in this part of the metamorphosis is set forth in 
			Matthew chapter seventeen.
			
That which 
			occurred on the Mount, when Jesus was transfigured, is a fore-view 
			of things that are yet to occur.  The same Greek word translated “transformed” 
			in Romans 12:2 (metamorphoo) is translated “transfigured” 
			in Matthew 17:2.  As Peter, James, and John appeared with 
			Jesus on the Mount, Jesus was transfigured before them; and Moses 
			and Elijah appeared and stood in His presence.
			
In Matthew 
			16:28, Christ had revealed that certain disciples would not die 
			until they had seen “the Son of man coming in His kingdom.”  
			Then, in Matthew 17:1-5, after six days, on the seventh day, 
			certain disciples (Peter, James, and John) saw “the Son of man 
			coming in His kingdom.”
			
Peter, as he 
			wrote years later concerning this experience, said:
			
			. . . we did not follow cunningly 
			devised fables when we made known to you the power and coming of our 
			Lord Jesus Christ, but were eyewitnesses of His majesty 
			[His greatest regal magnificence — a superlative in the Greek text]. 
			(2 Peter 1:16) 
			
Peter then went 
			on to state that the time this eyewitness account occurred was “when 
			we were with Him on the holy mountain” (v. 18).  Biblical 
			revelation leaves no room to question or wonder exactly what is 
			being foreshadowed by the events on the Mount, recorded in 
			Matthew 17:1-5.
			
The “six days” (Matthew 
			17:1) foreshadow the entire time comprising Man’s Day.  “Six” is
			man’s number.  These six days extend from the 
			creation of Adam to the beginning of the Messianic Kingdom.  Each 
			one of these days is 1,000 years in length (2 Peter 3:1-8).  
			This 6,000-year period comprises Man’s Day, and at the end of Man’s 
			Day the Lord’s Day will begin.
			
The seventh 
			1,000-year period dating from the creation of Adam comprises the 
			Lord’s Day.  “Seven” is God’s number.  It will be 
			“after six days” — after 6,000 years, at the end of Man’s Day — that 
			the Son of man will be seen “coming in His kingdom,” 
			beginning the Lord’s Day on the earth.
			
The “high 
			mountain” (Matthew 17:1) foreshadows the coming 
			kingdom.  A “mountain” in Scripture, when used in this sense, 
			refers to a kingdom (cf. Psalm 2:6; Ezekiel 
			28:14; Daniel 2:35).  And, in this section of Scripture, 
			the coming kingdom of our Lord is not referred to by just any 
			mountain, but by a “high mountain.”
			
Jesus appeared 
			in a transfigured body.  Moses and Elijah appeared with Jesus, also 
			in transfigured bodies.  Moses had died, and had been raised from 
			the dead.  Elijah had never died, but had been removed from the 
			earth alive.  Peter, James, and John, out from the nation of Israel, 
			appeared in natural bodies and were elevated above all those at the 
			foot of the mount.  And “a bright cloud,” the Glory of God
			(cf. Luke 9:31, 32), overshadowed them all.
			
In the coming 
			kingdom, Jesus will appear in this same transfigured body.  Just as 
			Moses (who was raised from the dead) and Elijah (who was removed 
			from the earth without dying) appeared with Christ in transfigured 
			bodies, so will Christians in that future day appear with Christ in 
			transfigured bodies like unto the body of Christ.
			
When the Lord 
			Himself descends from heaven to take His Church out of the world, “. 
			. . the dead in Christ shall rise first:  then we that are 
			alive and remain shall be caught up together with them in clouds, 
			to meet the Lord in the air . . . .” (1 Thessalonians 4:16b,
			17a).
			
Christians 
			associated with Christ in the kingdom will possess bodies like unto 
			the body of Christ (a spiritual body — a body of flesh and 
			bone, with the life-giving, animating principle being the Spirit of 
			God).  These Christians will be comprised of resurrected believers 
			(typified by Moses) and believers who have never died (typified by 
			Elijah).  And these Christians will rule from the heavens over the 
			earth as co-heirs with Christ.
			
Then, the nation 
			of Israel (typified by Peter, James, and John) will be here on 
			earth.  And the individuals comprising this nation will be present 
			in natural bodies (soulical bodies — bodies of flesh, blood, 
			and bone, with the life-giving, animating principle being the blood 
			[cf. Leviticus 17:11]).  As Peter, James, and John 
			were elevated above all those at the foot of the mount, the nation 
			of Israel will be elevated above all other nations.  And the 
			Glory of God, the “bright cloud” that overshadowed 
			those on the mount (cf. Matthew 17:5; Luke 9:32), 
			will be restored to Israel (cf. Isaiah 2:1-4; 6:1-10; 
			Joel 2:27-32).
			
One day when the 
			Lord returns for His Church, the Holy Spirit will complete the 
			metamorphosis.  Christians will be delivered from “the 
			body of this death” and will receive bodies that will possess an 
			entirely different life-giving, animating principle than the bodies 
			that Christians possess today.  The neshamah of God — the 
			Holy Spirit Himself — will provide this life in the completion of 
			the metamorphosis (1 Corinthians 15:40-45).
			
All Christians 
			will be changed in the outward manifestation of the metamorphosis,
			for the resurrection and rapture, with the accompanying change 
			of the body, are not contingent upon the inward change during the 
			present time.  The outward change is conditioned upon one’s 
			positional standing (“in Christ”) alone.
			
But Christians 
			experiencing the outward change apart from the prior inward change 
			will realize the loss of their souls/lives.  They will enter into 
			the presence of the Lord with redeemed spirits, changed bodies, but 
			forfeited lives.  Consequently, they will occupy no position among 
			the many sons who will be brought unto glory.
			
			(At the end of the present 
			dispensation, Christians will be resurrected, or removed from the 
			earth without dying, in the same type body in which Christ was 
			raised from the dead.  Christ was raised in a spiritual body, not a 
			natural [soulical] body [cf. 1 Corinthians 15:42-44].  He was 
			raised in a body of flesh and bones, with the life-giving, animating 
			principle of the body being the Spirit of God rather than the blood 
			[which He had previously “poured out” (Isaiah 53:12)].
			
			Christ though was not raised in a 
			glorified body.  He was raised in a type of body that possessed 
			capabilities outside the scope possessed by a natural [soulical] 
			body [e.g., He could appear at a certain place and disappear from 
			that place, moving to another place, at will (Luke 24:31, 
			36)].  But there was no Glory connected with His resurrection 
			body until “a cloud” received Him out of the disciples’ sight 
			at the end of His forty-day post-resurrection ministry, when He was 
			“received up into glory” [Acts 1:9; 1 Timothy 3:16].
			
			This can be easily seen, for example, 
			through noting the differences in two of Christ’s post-resurrection 
			appearances.  He appeared to the two disciples on the Emmaus road 
			later on the same day that He was raised from the dead [appearing 
			apart from His Glory (Luke 24:13-31)], and He appeared a few 
			years later to Paul on the Damascus road [in connection with His 
			Glory (Acts 9:1-5; 26:12-15)].  
			
			At Christ’s former appearance, it is 
			apparent that there was nothing visibly different about His overall 
			appearance that distinguished Him from any other man.  However, at 
			His latter appearance, there was a major difference in this 
			respect.  There was a brightness surrounding His appearance that was 
			above that of the noon-day sun [Acts 26:13; cf. Revelation 
			1:16].
			
			When Christians are removed from the 
			earth at the end of the present dispensation, they will receive 
			bodies like unto Christ’s body at the time of His resurrection — a 
			spiritual body of flesh and bones, apart from the Glory.  The “redemption” 
			of the body will then occur at a later time, in connection with 
			“the adoption” [Romans 8:23], not in connection with 
			the removal of Christians from the earth at the end of the present 
			dispensation.
			
			The adoption of Christians can occur 
			only following events surrounding the judgment seat of Christ, for 
			the adoption has to do with the placement of sons in a firstborn 
			status — something that cannot be done preceding a separation of 
			Christians [the overcomers from the non-overcomers], based on 
			decisions and determinations rendered at the judgment seat.  
			Christians having been shown faithful at the judgment seat, 
			realizing the salvation of their souls/lives, will be adopted as 
			firstborn sons.  But such will not be, for it cannot be, the case 
			for unfaithful Christians, those having forfeited their souls/lives.
			
			According to Romans 8:18-23, 
			adoption as firstborn sons is in connection with rulership 
			[in the human realm, only firstborn sons can rule in this manner 
			within the theocracy].  And the unfaithful, though possessing 
			spiritual bodies of flesh and bones, will be in no position to rule 
			and cannot be adopted into a firstborn status.  They can only appear 
			as the ones seen in Hebrews 12:8 — as individuals who had 
			previously rejected God’s child-training [vv. 5-7] and cannot 
			now be His sons [the sons seen in Romans 8:19, adopted into a 
			firstborn status in v. 23].
			
			[The word “chastisement” (KJV) or 
			“chastening” (NKJV) in Hebrews 12:5-8 is from the noun and 
			verb forms (paideia, paideuo) of a Greek word that 
			means “child-training.”  Then, the word translated “bastard” (KJV) 
			or “illegitimate” (NKJV) in v. 8 is nothos in the 
			Greek text.  The word, contextually refers to those who reject 
			God’s child-training and cannot be His sons.  “Sonship,” 
			with a view to rulership, is in view.  And only those capable 
			of spiritual perception, only those “born from above,” would be in a 
			position to reject God’s child-training.  Thus, the unsaved cannot 
			be in view; nor is eternal salvation even the subject at hand.]
			
			Only following the adoption can the 
			Glory be connected with the body, with man brought back into a full 
			realization of that which Adam forfeited at the time of the fall [at 
			the end of six days, at the end of 6,000 years].  Man, following the 
			adoption and the corresponding restoration of the Glory will once 
			again be enswathed in a covering of Glory and in a position to be 
			further clothed in regal garments [refer to the text in parenthesis 
			on page six in chapter one of this book for additional information 
			in this realm].
			
			Thus, the redemption of the body in
			Romans 8:23 can have nothing to do with the change in the 
			body that will occur when Christians are removed from the earth at 
			the end of the dispensation.  As shown by the context, the 
			redemption of the body in this verse can only be a reference to that 
			future time when “the glory . . . shall be revealed in us,”
			in Christians; it can only be a reference to that future time 
			when “the sons of God,” a new order of Sons — Christ with His 
			co-heirs [overcoming Christians, adopted and properly arrayed] — 
			will be manifested for all to behold [vv. 18, 19].)
			
			(Salvation of the Soul by 
			Arlen L. Chitwood)
			
			Rules of the Road (Pathway)
			
Contained within God’s Word are a number of 
			rules a serious student of the Word must follow in order to insure 
			he is “rightly dividing the Word 
			of truth” (2 Timothy 
			2:15).  Some are quite explicit, while others are known 
			through experiential analysis.  All the rules are important and the 
			following inventory of them is not meant to establish any listing of 
			priorities; except, it may be argued, for the first one.  
			
Furthermore, there may in fact be other rules 
			than on the following list, which the reader may find worthy of 
			note.  If such should be the case, the reader is earnestly invited 
			to share them with
			
			www.bibleone.net. 
			
Study the Word under the guidance of (with 
			faith in) its assigned Author/Instructor
			
The Word of God is in fact just that, divinely 
			inspired living (God-breathed) expressions given through men to man 
			and is therefore not subject to any “private interpretation” by man himself (Hebrews 
			4:12; 2 Peter 1:20,
			21; c.f. 2 Samuel 23:2; Luke 1:70; Acts 1:16;
			3:18; 1 Peter 1:11).  Jesus Christ stated 
			specifically that the One who authored the Scriptures is the One who 
			must teach them.  
			
And the Teacher is the Holy Spirit.  The 
			cornerstone of correct interpretation of the Word is utter 
			dependence on the Spirit of God for enlightenment.
			
			But the Helper,
			the Holy Spirit, whom the Father will send in My name,
			He will teach you all things, and bring to your 
			remembrance all things that I said to you. (John 14:26)
			
			However,
			when He, the Spirit of truth, has come, He 
			will guide you into all truth; for He will not speak on His 
			own authority, but whatever He hears He will speak; and He 
			will tell you things to come. (John 16:13)
			
			But you have an anointing from the 
			Holy One, and you know 
			all things. . . . But the anointing which you have received from Him 
			abides in you, and you do not need that anyone teach you;
			but as the same anointing teaches you concerning all things,
			and is true, and is not a lie, and just as it has 
			taught you, you will abide in Him. (1 John 2:20,
			27; cf. 1 Corinthians 3:16; 6:19)
			
In deed, the Word of God is “living [Greek: 
			zao] . . . . (Hebrews 4:12a), 
			which is to say it is the material representation of “The 
			Word,” who was “in the 
			beginning” and who was “with 
			God, and . . . was God” 
			and who “became flesh and dwelt 
			among us, and we beheld 
			His glory, the glory as of the only begotten of the Father, 
			full of grace and truth” (John 
			1:1, 14). 
			
			
When one correctly understands Scripture, one 
			understands the “mind of Christ” 
			(Philippians 2:5;
			1 Corinthians 2:16), for indeed, one cannot be 
			separated from the other.  And it is the “living Word,” which alone 
			can be used by the Holy Spirit as nourishment for one who once was “dead 
			in trespasses and sins” but now has been made alive “in 
			Christ,” a “new creation,” by means of the “new 
			birth” (Ephesians 2:1;
			1 Corinthians 15:22; 2 Corinthians 5:17; John 3:3-7).
			
Study the Word with deference to its unity
			
Both the Old Testament and the book of 
			John open with the 
			statement, “In the beginning,” 
			going back to the same point in time — the beginning of God’s 
			creative activity relative to the heavens and the earth.  In fact, 
			the first five verses of Genesis 
			can be paralleled with the first five verses of John’s gospel, with
			John, starting at verse
			six, moving millennia 
			ahead and continuing with events during John’s present day, though 
			still referencing events of prior days.
			
In fact the opening of the New Testament, the 
			gospel of Matthew, 
			immediately references the Old Testament with the statement, “The 
			book of the generation of Jesus Christ, 
			the son of David, the son of Abraham” (1:1).  
			And in the gospel of Luke, 
			the lineage of Christ is carried all the way back to Adam (3:23-38).
			
As Chitwood so aptly states, “The Old Testament 
			leads into the New after an inseparable fashion.  The latter 
			forms a continuation and completion of that which was began in the 
			former; and both together constitute one continuous, 
			complete revelation that God gave to man over a period of about 
			1,500 years through some forty different Jewish writers, revealing 
			His plans and purposes in relation to man, the earth, and the 
			universe at large.”  Chuck Missler of
			
			www.khouse.org put it this way:  “The New Testament is concealed 
			in the Old Testament and the Old Testament is revealed in the New.”
			
Consequently, to properly understand Scripture, 
			each Testament must be understood in light of the other, apart from 
			precedence given to either.  It is no more or no less valid to 
			interpret the Old Testament in light of the New as it is to 
			interpret the New Testament in light of the Old.  Any passage of 
			Scripture must be interpreted contextually, within its present 
			setting, within the setting surrounding its immediate setting, and 
			within the setting of the entire Bible as a whole.
			
This rule is best expressed by the apostle Paul 
			in his first epistle to the Corinthian church:
			
			These things we also speak,
			not in words which man’s wisdom teaches but which the Holy 
			Spirit teaches, comparing spiritual things with spiritual. 
			(1 Corinthians 2:13)
			
This rule is demonstrated throughout the New 
			Testament, as it presents truths in light of historical accounts 
			contained within the Old Testament.  For example, in referencing the 
			passage of the children of Israel out from the Egypt through the 
			wilderness toward the Promised Land of Canaan, the apostle Paul made 
			these statements:
			
			Now these things became our examples,
			to the intent that we should not lust after evil things as they 
			also lusted. . . . Now all these things happened to them as 
			examples, and they were written for our admonition, 
			upon whom the ends of the ages have come. 
			
			(1 Corinthians 10:6, 11)
			
The book of 
			Hebrews references the Old Testament frequently in order 
			to convey its richly laden truths pertaining to the Christian life (1: 5-14; 2:6-8, 12,
			13; 3:2, 3, 5, 7-11, 15-19;
			4; and throughout all its remaining chapters).  And 
			Christ Jesus specifically used the Old Testament to enlighten two 
			disciples on the road to Emmaus:
			
			Then He 
			[Christ] said to them, “O 
			foolish ones, and slow of heart to believe in all that the 
			prophets have spoken!  Ought not the Christ to have suffered 
			these things and to enter into His glory?”  And beginning at 
			Moses and all the Prophets, He expounded to them in all the 
			Scriptures the things concerning Himself. (Luke24:25-27)
			
In fact, one would be hard pressed to find any 
			book within the New Testament that does not draw from the Old.  The
			foundations have been established in the Old Testament, and 
			both Testaments together comprise one continuous, complete 
			revelation of all the various facets of the person and work of 
			Christ.  And the only way one can grasp the complete picture 
			is to look at the whole of Scripture after this fashion.
			
Study the Word in light of its type-antitype 
			structure
			
This rule compliments the previous rule of 
			studying Scripture with deference to its unity.  The manner in which 
			Scripture is related in both Testaments is often through a 
			type-antitype arrangement, i.e. God has structured His revelation to 
			man after a fashion in which not only true, correct history is 
			presented but this is presented in such a manner that it is 
			highly typical in nature.  God draws not so much from history 
			per se as He does from the spiritual content set forth in 
			the historic accounts — the great spiritual lessons, taught 
			mainly from types pointing to corresponding antitypes.
			
Anyone can understand facts within revealed 
			biblical history (saved or unsaved alike).  This would pertain more 
			to the letter of the matter.  But only saved man can go 
			beyond the letter to the spirit of the matter (2 
			Corinthians 3:6-16).  Only the saved can understand the
			spiritual lessons drawn from history.  Only the saved can 
			look within biblical history and see spiritual content (1 Corinthians 2:12-16).
			
A person can read Old Testament history from 
			one end to the other and never see the person and work of Christ 
			within that history.  In this respect, the person would be reading
			the letter of Scripture, failing to see anything beyond.  In 
			order to truly see the Christ of the Old Testament, a person must 
			see beyond the letter to the spirit.
			
Christ is seen mainly within the inherent 
			types set forth by the historic accounts rather than in the 
			actual historic accounts themselves.  All Old Testament history is, 
			after some fashion about the person and work of Christ; but this 
			same history must be “spiritually 
			discerned,” “comparing 
			spiritual things with spiritual” (1 
			Corinthians 2:13, 14).
			
There are literally hundreds upon hundreds of 
			types in the Old Testament, which, when considered in light of the 
			antitypes in the New Testament, result in great enlightenment of 
			truth.  This also goes for the highly typical nature of the New 
			Testament, which, when understood and applied, reveals truth.
			
In the book of 
			Romans, the apostle Paul 
			makes this statement:
			
			Nevertheless death reigned from Adam 
			to Moses, even over 
			those who had not sinned according to the likeness of the 
			transgression of Adam, who is a type of Him who was to come. 
			(Romans 5:14; cf. 1 Corinthians 15:45)
			
Viewing Scripture after the type-antitype 
			structure in which it is given, a complete word picture is presented 
			of the central Person of Scripture — the Lord Jesus Christ.  This 
			word picture begins in the opening chapter of 
			Genesis and continues 
			uninterrupted until the Living Word Himself appears on the scene, 
			4,000 years later.  In this respect, the Old Testament forms a 
			complete introduction to and revelation of the One who would appear 
			on earth, intervening in the affairs of man, 4,000 and 6,000 year 
			beyond the creation of man in the opening chapter of 
			Genesis.
			
This is really the underlying thought behind 
			Christ’s rebuke of the two disciples on the Emmaus road, following 
			His resurrection.  They didn’t know the spiritual content of 
			their own Old Testament Scriptures, though they undoubtedly would 
			have been familiar with the letter of the matter, the historical 
			facts.  Had they known the spiritual content of the historical 
			facts, they would, in turn, not only have known the exact identity 
			of the Person standing in their midst but they would also have known 
			exactly what had occurred, was occurring, and would yet occur.
			
The truth is that the entire Old Testament is 
			typical of the life and work of Christ.  A person can read Old 
			Testament history from one end to the other and never see the person 
			and work of Christ within that history.  In this respect, the person 
			would be reading the letter of the Scripture, failing to see 
			anything beyond.  In order to truly see the Christ of the Old 
			Testament, a person must see beyond the letter to 
			the spirit.
			
And it is within this complete, overall thought 
			that one finds the whole of biblical history fraught with types and 
			meanings.  This is the manner in which God has structured His Word. 
			 It has been given to man after this fashion, and if man would 
			properly understand that which God has revealed in His Word, he 
			must study it after the fashion in which is was given.
			
Study the Word in light of the septenary 
			arrangement of Scripture
			
This rule, in this writer’s opinion, can only 
			be adequately understood by reading the complete chapter two of 
			Chitwood’s book, The Study of Scripture (which may be 
			obtained verbatim from
			
			www.bibleone.net).  But to give the reader a taste, the 
			following several initial and two last paragraphs of his book 
			follow:
			
			There remains therefore a rest 
			[‘Sabbath rest’] for the people of God (Hebrews 4:9).
			
Hebrews 
			4:1-11 deals with a 
			rest that will be realized by “the people of God” during 
			the seventh millennium dating from the restoration of the earth and 
			the creation of man in the first chapter of Genesis. 
			
			
Teachings 
			surrounding this rest, textually and contextually, viewed from the 
			standpoint of the way matters are outlined in the book of Hebrews, 
			are based on three portions of Old Testament Scripture: 
			- The experiences of the Israelites under Moses, and later Joshua (Hebrews 3:2-19).
- God’s work and subsequent rest during the seven days of Genesis chapters one and two (Hebrews 4:4).
- The Sabbath given to Israel that the nation was to keep week after week following six days of work (Hebrews 4:9).
The experiences 
			of the Israelites under Moses, and later Joshua, during a past 
			dispensation form the type; and the experiences of Christians 
			under Christ during the present dispensation, leading into the 
			coming dispensation, form the antitype.  Then 
			teachings surrounding a rest lying before both the Israelites 
			in the type and Christians in the antitype are drawn from the rest 
			that God entered into following six days of work in Genesis 
			chapters one and two.  And the Sabbath was given to 
			Israel to keep, ever before them, the whole overall thought 
			of that that occurred in the opening two chapters of Genesis 
			(cf. Exodus 20:8-11; 31:13-17).
			
Teachings drawn from the opening two chapters of Genesis form the key to the entire matter, and a correct understanding and interpretation of these opening chapters is not something that should be taken lightly. Scripture is actually built upon a structure that is laid down in these two chapters, and an individual's understanding and interpretation of numerous things throughout the remainder of Scripture will be governed by his or her understanding and interpretation of this opening section of Scripture.
			
If one understands these opening verses correctly, he will understand how God has structured His revelation to man, allowing him to grasp numerous things that he could not otherwise understand. However, if one fails to understand these opening verses correctly, the opposite will be true. He will have gone wrong at the beginning, and he will remain wrong the remainder of the way.
			
The preceding, for example, is the reason many individuals fail to see the proper relationship of the Sabbath rest in Hebrews 4:9 to God’s rest following six days of work in Genesis 2:2, 3 (cf. Hebrews 4:4). They attempt to relate this rest to something that Christians enter into during the present day and time, which is a time prior to the seventh day, a time not even in view. Or this is the reason many individuals attempt to understand 2 Peter 3:8 in the light of Psalm 90:4, when, contextually, 2 Peter 3:8 must be understood in the light of the opening two chapters of Genesis (cf. 2 Peter 1:16-18; 3:5-7).
			
With these things in mind, the remainder of this chapter deals with the structure of the Hebrew text, especially in parts of the first chapter of Genesis, particularly verse two, and the testimony of the remainder of Scripture insofar as the opening two chapters of Genesis are concerned. One MUST understand what is revealed at the beginning first. This is the key. Only then can an individual be in a position to move forward and properly understand the remainder.
			Teachings drawn from the opening two chapters of Genesis form the key to the entire matter, and a correct understanding and interpretation of these opening chapters is not something that should be taken lightly. Scripture is actually built upon a structure that is laid down in these two chapters, and an individual's understanding and interpretation of numerous things throughout the remainder of Scripture will be governed by his or her understanding and interpretation of this opening section of Scripture.
If one understands these opening verses correctly, he will understand how God has structured His revelation to man, allowing him to grasp numerous things that he could not otherwise understand. However, if one fails to understand these opening verses correctly, the opposite will be true. He will have gone wrong at the beginning, and he will remain wrong the remainder of the way.
The preceding, for example, is the reason many individuals fail to see the proper relationship of the Sabbath rest in Hebrews 4:9 to God’s rest following six days of work in Genesis 2:2, 3 (cf. Hebrews 4:4). They attempt to relate this rest to something that Christians enter into during the present day and time, which is a time prior to the seventh day, a time not even in view. Or this is the reason many individuals attempt to understand 2 Peter 3:8 in the light of Psalm 90:4, when, contextually, 2 Peter 3:8 must be understood in the light of the opening two chapters of Genesis (cf. 2 Peter 1:16-18; 3:5-7).
With these things in mind, the remainder of this chapter deals with the structure of the Hebrew text, especially in parts of the first chapter of Genesis, particularly verse two, and the testimony of the remainder of Scripture insofar as the opening two chapters of Genesis are concerned. One MUST understand what is revealed at the beginning first. This is the key. Only then can an individual be in a position to move forward and properly understand the remainder.
(and)
			
 
			
By viewing the whole of Scripture, the correct 
			interpretation of the opening verses of Genesis can be 
			clearly and unquestionably presented through:
			
			1)      
			The manner in which the Hebrew words from Genesis 1:2a, 
			tohu wavohu, are used elsewhere in Scripture (interpreting 
			Scripture in the light of Scripture [Isaiah 34:11; 45:18; 
			Jeremiah 4:23]).
			
			2)      
			And through the typical nature of Old Testament history (1 
			Corinthians 10:6, 11), which has been set forth in a very 
			evident divinely established septenary arrangement.
			
And these opening verses, providing the 
			divinely established basis for that which follows, must be 
			understood accordingly.
			
The Bible is a book of redemption; and only a correct view of the opening verses of Genesis can reflect positively, at the very outset, on God’s redemptive message as a whole — the restoration of a ruined creation, performed in its entirety through divine intervention, for a revealed purpose.
An incorrect view, on the other hand, can only have negative ramifications. Creation alone, apart from a ruin and restoration of the creation, fails to convey the complete message at the outset of the Word; and Restoration alone (viewing the opening verse as other than an absolute beginning), apart from a record of the preceding creation and ruin, likewise fails to convey the complete message at this opening point in Scripture.
It is as F. W. Grant stated years ago relative to the existing parallel between the creation and ruin of the earth and the subsequent creation and ruin of man:
			The Bible is a book of redemption; and only a correct view of the opening verses of Genesis can reflect positively, at the very outset, on God’s redemptive message as a whole — the restoration of a ruined creation, performed in its entirety through divine intervention, for a revealed purpose.
An incorrect view, on the other hand, can only have negative ramifications. Creation alone, apart from a ruin and restoration of the creation, fails to convey the complete message at the outset of the Word; and Restoration alone (viewing the opening verse as other than an absolute beginning), apart from a record of the preceding creation and ruin, likewise fails to convey the complete message at this opening point in Scripture.
It is as F. W. Grant stated years ago relative to the existing parallel between the creation and ruin of the earth and the subsequent creation and ruin of man:
“The thought of a 
			ruined condition of the earth succeeding its original creation . . . 
			is . . . required by the typical view [that is, the earth’s 
			creation, ruin, and subsequent restoration forms a type of 
			(foreshadows) man’s creation, ruin, and subsequent restoration].”
			
Accordingly, the opening verses of Genesis 
			cannot deal strictly with Creation; nor can these 
			verses deal strictly with Restoration. Either view would be 
			out of line with the whole of Scripture, beginning with the central 
			theme of Scripture, the message of redemption.
			
The only interpretative view that will fit — at all points — within the divinely established septenary arrangement of Scripture (which has it basis in these opening verses) is:
			The only interpretative view that will fit — at all points — within the divinely established septenary arrangement of Scripture (which has it basis in these opening verses) is:
Creation (an 
			absolute beginning, and a perfect creation [v. 1]).
			
A Ruin of the Creation (v. 2a).
A Restoration of the Ruined Creation (vv. 2b-25).
Rest (in the type — six twenty-four-hour days of restorative work, followed by a twenty-four-hour day of rest; in the antitype — six 1,000-year days of restorative work, followed by a 1,000-year day of rest [1:2b-2:3]).
			A Ruin of the Creation (v. 2a).
A Restoration of the Ruined Creation (vv. 2b-25).
Rest (in the type — six twenty-four-hour days of restorative work, followed by a twenty-four-hour day of rest; in the antitype — six 1,000-year days of restorative work, followed by a 1,000-year day of rest [1:2b-2:3]).
			(The Study of Scripture, 
			Arlen L. Chitwood)
			
Study the Word beginning where God began and 
			build upon the foundation
			
This rule, in this writer’s opinion, can only 
			be adequately understood by reading completely chapters three and 
			four of Chitwood’s book, The Study of Scripture (which may be 
			obtained verbatim from
			
			www.bibleone.net).  But to give the reader a taste, the 
			following paragraphs from these chapters follow:
			
Genesis 
			is the book of beginnings, and the opening verses (1:1-2:3) 
			contain the skeletal framework for the whole of Scripture that 
			follows.  These verses cover the whole panorama of Scripture, from 
			beginning to end; and if one understands the foundational framework
			first, he will then be in a position to place all that 
			follows within a proper perspective in relation to the foundational 
			structure.
			
That would be to say, if one views the bones that form the skeletal framework after the correct fashion first, then he will be in a position to clothe this framework with all the sinews, flesh, and skin that follow, placing them in their proper positions upon the bones.
			
However, if one doesn't see and understand the skeletal framework first, then he will be in no position to properly handle that which follows. He will not have utilized the God-provided beginning point of reference, which can only negatively affecting his knowledge and understanding of how all subsequent Scripture fits together. He will likely see numerous disconnected verses or disconnected sections of Scripture, for he will not have begun with and understood that which would have allowed him to properly relate these verses or sections to the whole of Scripture.
			
Thus, two things could be said about the beginning point in Scripture:
			That would be to say, if one views the bones that form the skeletal framework after the correct fashion first, then he will be in a position to clothe this framework with all the sinews, flesh, and skin that follow, placing them in their proper positions upon the bones.
However, if one doesn't see and understand the skeletal framework first, then he will be in no position to properly handle that which follows. He will not have utilized the God-provided beginning point of reference, which can only negatively affecting his knowledge and understanding of how all subsequent Scripture fits together. He will likely see numerous disconnected verses or disconnected sections of Scripture, for he will not have begun with and understood that which would have allowed him to properly relate these verses or sections to the whole of Scripture.
Thus, two things could be said about the beginning point in Scripture:
			a)     
			A person must begin where God began.
			
			b)     
			And a person must, aside from beginning where God 
			began, understand aright that which God has revealed in these 
			opening verses. 
			From a biblical standpoint, NOTHING is more important than these two prerequisites in studying Scripture.
Genesis 
			1:1-2:3 begins with a 
			simple statement concerning God’s creation of the heavens and the 
			earth (1:1).  Then disorder entered where only perfect order 
			had previously existed (1:2a).  The reason for this disorder 
			is revealed elsewhere in Scripture.  Satan, God’s appointed ruler 
			over the earth, sought to exalt his throne and be “like the most 
			High” (Isaiah 14:12-17).  And, as a result, his kingdom — 
			the province over which he ruled, i.e., the earth (Ezekiel 
			28:14-16) — was reduced to a ruined state.  In the words of 
			Scripture,
			
			The earth was 
			[lit., But the earth became] without form, and void; and darkness 
			was [became] on the face of the deep. . . . (Genesis 
			1:2a).
			
 
			
All of this 
			occurred over 6,000 years ago, during a dateless past.  That’s 
			really all man can know about “time” concerning that which is 
			revealed in Genesis 1:1, 2a.  The things revealed in these 
			verses could have occurred over aeons of time or they could have 
			occurred over a relatively short period within one aeon.  We’re 
			simply not told.
			
The latter part of verse two is where God begins to count time insofar as the revelation of Himself, His plans, and His purposes are concerned. The movement of the Spirit of God upon the face of the waters, covering the ruined creation below, marks the beginning point of a six-day period that God used to restore the ruined material creation (1:2b-25). Then, at the end or His restorative work on the sixth day, God created man (1:26ff). And on the seventh day God rested from all His work (2:1-3).
			
The preceding is the skeletal framework upon which all subsequent Scripture rests. The six and seven days foreshadow six and seven thousand years of time (2 Peter 3:4-8; cf. Matthew 17:1ff; 2 Peter 1:15-18); and, with very few exceptions, the whole of Scripture concerns itself with events during these 7,000 years. Scripture reveals events preceding the 7,000 years (e.g., Genesis 1:1, 2a; Isaiah 14:12-14; Ezekiel 28:11ff) or events following the 7,000 years (e.g., 2 Peter 3:10-13; Revelation 21:1ff) only to an extent that would allow man to properly understand and place events in their proper perspective within the framework of the revealed 7,000 years.
			
As God worked six days to restore the ruined material creation in Genesis 1:2b-25, He is presently working six days — 6,000 years — to restore two presently ruined creations (ruined man and the material creation under a curse). At the end of His restorative work in Genesis, God rested on the seventh day. And He is going to do exactly the same thing at the end of His restorative work in the present restoration. At the end of six days — at the end of 6,000 years — He is going to rest for one day once again. That is, He is going to rest for 1,000 years, the earth’s coming Messianic Era.
			
Then events outlining God’s activity within the six and seven days in Genesis 1:2b-2:3 are fraught with symbolism and meaning. The skeletal framework is complete within these verses (including Genesis 1:1, 2a, for the “Restoration” and the “Time” of the restoration, followed by “Rest” [1:2b ff], could not be understood apart from the prior revealed “Creation” and “Ruin” of the creation). Nothing superfluous has been given in these verses. All is by divine design.
			
Thus, Genesis 1:1-2:3 provides the skeletal foundation upon which all subsequent Scripture rests, given at the very outset of God’s revelation to man. And a person reading this book must either attach the sinews, flesh, and skin (all subsequent revelation) to these bones (Genesis 1:1-2:3) or lack for a foundation upon which to build, for God has provided no other.
			The latter part of verse two is where God begins to count time insofar as the revelation of Himself, His plans, and His purposes are concerned. The movement of the Spirit of God upon the face of the waters, covering the ruined creation below, marks the beginning point of a six-day period that God used to restore the ruined material creation (1:2b-25). Then, at the end or His restorative work on the sixth day, God created man (1:26ff). And on the seventh day God rested from all His work (2:1-3).
The preceding is the skeletal framework upon which all subsequent Scripture rests. The six and seven days foreshadow six and seven thousand years of time (2 Peter 3:4-8; cf. Matthew 17:1ff; 2 Peter 1:15-18); and, with very few exceptions, the whole of Scripture concerns itself with events during these 7,000 years. Scripture reveals events preceding the 7,000 years (e.g., Genesis 1:1, 2a; Isaiah 14:12-14; Ezekiel 28:11ff) or events following the 7,000 years (e.g., 2 Peter 3:10-13; Revelation 21:1ff) only to an extent that would allow man to properly understand and place events in their proper perspective within the framework of the revealed 7,000 years.
As God worked six days to restore the ruined material creation in Genesis 1:2b-25, He is presently working six days — 6,000 years — to restore two presently ruined creations (ruined man and the material creation under a curse). At the end of His restorative work in Genesis, God rested on the seventh day. And He is going to do exactly the same thing at the end of His restorative work in the present restoration. At the end of six days — at the end of 6,000 years — He is going to rest for one day once again. That is, He is going to rest for 1,000 years, the earth’s coming Messianic Era.
Then events outlining God’s activity within the six and seven days in Genesis 1:2b-2:3 are fraught with symbolism and meaning. The skeletal framework is complete within these verses (including Genesis 1:1, 2a, for the “Restoration” and the “Time” of the restoration, followed by “Rest” [1:2b ff], could not be understood apart from the prior revealed “Creation” and “Ruin” of the creation). Nothing superfluous has been given in these verses. All is by divine design.
Thus, Genesis 1:1-2:3 provides the skeletal foundation upon which all subsequent Scripture rests, given at the very outset of God’s revelation to man. And a person reading this book must either attach the sinews, flesh, and skin (all subsequent revelation) to these bones (Genesis 1:1-2:3) or lack for a foundation upon which to build, for God has provided no other.
(and from chapter four)
			
			If the foundations are destroyed, 
			what can the righteous do? (Psalm 11:3)
			
Scripture begins 
			with the creation of all that exists (Genesis 1:1), the ruin 
			of one part of that creation (1:2a), the restoration of that 
			one part (1:2b-25), the creation of man to rule the restored 
			domain (1:26-31), and then God resting (2:1-3).
			
These opening 
			verses of Genesis provide not only one complete section of 
			Scripture but also the foundational structure upon which the whole 
			of all subsequent Scripture is built and must be understood.  There 
			is a creation, a ruin of a part of that creation, a restoration of 
			the ruined portion occurring over six days of time, and then God 
			resting on a seventh day.  And to illustrate how these verses 
			establish the foundation for the whole of Scripture, note events 
			surrounding man’s creation, his ruin, the time that God takes to 
			restore man, and that which will occur following man’s restoration.
			
It has all 
			been set forth at the very beginning. 
			
			
God took six 
			days to restore the ruined material creation (ruined because of the 
			sin of the incumbent ruler, Satan [Isaiah 14:12-17; 
			Ezekiel 28:14-19]); and God, in accord with the pattern that He 
			Himself established at the very beginning, is presently taking six 
			days to restore two subsequent ruined creations — man and the 
			material creation once again (both ruined because of the sin of the 
			one created to take the scepter, ruined because of man’s sin [Genesis 
			3:1-7, 17, 18; Romans 8:20]).  And then, in 
			accord with the pattern established at the beginning, there will be 
			a seventh day that will be a day of rest (Genesis 2:1-3; 
			Hebrews 4:4, 9).
			
Each day in the 
			former restoration and rest was twenty-four hours in length, but 
			each day in the latter restoration and rest is one thousand years in 
			length (Genesis 1:14-19; Matthew 17:1-5; 2 Peter 
			1:15-18; 3:5-8).  Just as God restored the ruined 
			creation at the very beginning in six days comprised of twenty-four 
			hours each, He is going to restore the two subsequent ruined 
			creations in six days comprised of one thousand years each.  Then, 
			just as God rested for one twenty-four-hour day at the completion of 
			his restoration work in Genesis, He is going to rest for a 
			one-thousand-year day at the completion of His subsequent 
			restoration work.
			
Accordingly, the 
			whole of the latter restoration and rest is set forth in 
			foundational form at the very beginning.  The six days of work and 
			one day of rest foreshadow six thousand years of work and a thousand 
			years of rest.  And this covers the whole of God’s revelation 
			to man (save for several brief instances of events either preceding 
			or following the 7,000 years, given so man can place events 
			occurring during the 7,000 years within their proper perspective).
			
Thus it is easy 
			to see and understand how all Scripture following Genesis 1:1-2:3 
			must relate to this opening section of Scripture, which forms the 
			foundation.  The whole of Scripture, as this opening section, covers 
			events relating to restoration and rest during six and seven days 
			(six and seven thousand years).  The latter is patterned after the 
			former; and to properly understand the latter, one must have a 
			proper understanding of the former.  A solid foundation must 
			first be laid (Genesis 1:1-2:3) before a stable 
			superstructure can be built (Genesis 2:4ff).  And note that 
			any stable structure must always rest on its foundation.
			
God didn’t place
			Genesis 1:1-2:3 at the very beginning of His revelation to 
			man and structure the material in these verses after a certain 
			fashion for man to ignore; nor would God expect man to begin his 
			study of Scripture elsewhere.  Rather, the opposite is true.  God 
			structured His revelation to man after a particular fashion for a 
			reason, and man is to begin where God began.
			
(and)
			
The word, 
			“eschatology,” comes from the Greek word, eschatos, which 
			means “last.”  The word is used in theology to refer to doctrinal 
			teachings surrounding future events (last things), i.e., prophecy.
			
And, if a person 
			would have a proper grasp of that which is being dealt with on the 
			subject of eschatology at points throughout Scripture, his study 
			must begin in the opening chapters of Genesis.  The whole 
			of the eschatological framework is set forth within the foundational 
			framework surrounding that which God has revealed about the six and 
			seven days in Genesis 1:1-2:3.
			
From within that 
			which is taught in the framework, a person can begin to move forward 
			and see any biblical doctrine (doctrine of man, salvation, angels, 
			etc.) within its correct perspective.  Apart from beginning after 
			this fashion, such can never be the case.
			
In eschatology, 
			everything moves toward that coming seventh day; but it begins on 
			the first day.  And a person works his way toward that seventh day 
			in Scripture by moving through the previous six, viewing man’s fall 
			and God’s redemptive work throughout the six days (throughout 6,000 
			years of redemptive work), with a view to the seventh day (the 
			coming 1,000 years of rest).
			
			(Eschatology in relation to man 
			begins on the first day.  Scripture though reveals a few things 
			occurring prior to the events of day one, in eternity past, which 
			must be understood if all things in Genesis 1:1-2:3 are to, 
			in turn, be properly understood.  These things would include God 
			placing Satan over this earth as its first provincial ruler, Satan 
			seeking to exalt his throne, and the ruined kingdom which resulted 
			[over which Satan continued to rule, which he continues to rule 
			today].  
			
			And a person understanding these 
			things is then in a position to begin in Genesis 1:2 [where 
			the kingdom is seen falling into this ruined state] and move 
			forward.)
			
Starting at the 
			beginning within the foundational structure, following man’s 
			creation and fall, two days pass, 2,000 years pass, and Abraham 
			appears (allowing the nation of Israel to later appear); then two 
			more days pass, 2,000 additional years pass, and Messiah appears 
			(followed by His death, burial, and resurrection, allowing the 
			Church to be brought into existence [a Scriptural truth that has its 
			foundational teachings within God’s action in Genesis 2:21-25 
			and Adam’s action in Genesis 3:6]).  And events surrounding 
			Messiah’s appearance all rest on the foundation established in 
			Genesis chapter one, with a view to realizing that which 
			is foreshadowed by events on the seventh day in chapter two.
			
And that’s the 
			way it is with soteriology, anthropology, eschatology, or any other 
			biblical doctrine (Ecclesiology [doctrine of the Church], 
			Christology [doctrine of Christ], Pneumatology [doctrine of the Holy 
			Spirit], etc.).  The foundational teachings for all biblical 
			doctrine can be found in the opening chapters of Genesis, 
			and particular attention has been called to three (soteriology, 
			anthropology, and eschatology) only to illustrate the point.
			
			(The Study of Scripture, Arlen 
			L. Chitwood)
			
Study the Word always interpreting passages 
			within their context
			
It is amazing how many misinterpretations have 
			been made by violating this rule.  It is often said that anyone can 
			make the Bible say anything one wants it to say; and, this is true 
			BUT only when one takes passages of Scripture out of context.  And 
			of course this involves the utilization of the preceding rules.  To 
			do otherwise is to give support to the following statements made by 
			Chitwood in his book, The Study of Scripture:
			
There exists in 
			the world today every conceivable difference in biblical 
			interpretation that man can possibly imagine.  This ranges all the 
			way from what might be considered minor differences existing among 
			Christians in the various denominational and independent groups to 
			major differences exhibited by the cults. But, viewing these 
			differences as a whole, things often become clouded.  A sharp line 
			in doctrinal thought between the cults and the denominational or 
			independent groups (usually considered to be generally sound) is not 
			always so evident.
			
In fact, the 
			absence of sharp distinctions in various types of unsound doctrinal 
			thought proclaimed by different groups of this nature is far more 
			prevalent than many may realize.  The leaven that the woman placed 
			in the three measures of meal in Matthew 13:33, apparently 
			very early in the dispensation, is no respecter of names or any 
			other type divisions among Christian groups; and this leaven, which 
			has been working since possibly the very inception of the Church, is 
			going to continue doing its damaging work until “the whole” 
			has been leavened, i.e., until “the whole” has been 
			corrupted.
			
One of the best 
			examples of the outworking of the leaven within the mainstream of 
			Christendom today would be the widely accepted Lordship Salvation 
			teaching, a teaching that has infiltrated practically all 
			denominational and independent groups.  And a high percentage of 
			those holding to this line of thought today are to be found in the 
			so-called fundamental circles.  The teaching itself though 
			undermines the whole of God’s restorative work throughout Man’s Day, 
			for it not only corrupts the gospel of the grace of God (negatively 
			reflecting on the foundation set through events of day one in 
			Genesis chapter one) but it obscures the gospel of the 
			glory of Christ (negatively reflecting on the foundation set through 
			events of days two through six in Genesis chapter one).
			
Then another 
			example would be the lack of (and, really, “aversion to” in many 
			instances) teachings dealing with the salvation of the soul within 
			the same so-called fundamental circles (again, negatively reflecting 
			on the foundation set through events of days two through six in 
			Genesis chapter one).  This is the message that Satan 
			hates, and he will do everything within his power to prevent its 
			proclamation or understanding (cf. Matthew 13:3-7, 18-22; 
			2 Corinthians 3:3-6).
			
			(“So-called fundamental circles” 
			because the name fundamentalism portends a return to the 
			fundamentals of the faith, which, in turn, portends a return to the 
			foundational truths in Genesis.  Such a return would be true 
			fundamentalism, in which the manifested errors among many using this 
			name today would not — they could not — exist.)
			
So that’s where 
			we are today.  Men have gone astray because they have ignored that 
			which God established, after one fashion, at the beginning.  There 
			has been a departure from the established foundation and subsequent 
			preliminary foundational truths, which has resulted in the 
			manifested error.
			
And that’s it!  
			The matter is that simple.  If you want to remain correct as you 
			work your way through Scripture, then it is absolutely necessary 
			that you start out in a correct manner at the beginning.  
			
			
Begin at the 
			beginning, find out how 
			God structured His Word, study it after that fashion, 
			and you will not go wrong. 
			
Study the Word recognizing the value of the 
			“rule of first-mention”
			
This rule is best expressed by Chitwood when 
			considering 2 Timothy 3:16 
			in the first chapter of his book, The Study of Scripture, as 
			follows:
			
2 Timothy 
			3:16 in the KJV reads,
			
			All Scripture is given by inspiration 
			of God, and is 
			profitable for doctrine [teaching], for reproof, 
			for correction, for instruction in righteousness. 
			
			
The words, “given 
			by inspiration of God,” are a translation of the one Greek word,
			theopneustos, meaning “God-breathed.”  This is a compound 
			word comprised of Theos (“God”) and pneuma (“breath” 
			in this particular usage [this is also the word used for “Spirit” in 
			the New Testament — the Holy Spirit, man’s spirit, and the use of 
			spirit in general; also “wind” in John 3:8]).
			
That which is meant by and the implications of Scripture being God-breathed are given in a somewhat simple manner in Scripture, but one has to look at and compare related parts of both Testaments before he can really begin to see and understand that which is involved. A person has to reference passages in one Testament, then passages in the other. He has to compare Scripture with Scripture, i.e., he has to compare “spiritual things with spiritual.”
			
Note first of all Hebrews 4:12:
			That which is meant by and the implications of Scripture being God-breathed are given in a somewhat simple manner in Scripture, but one has to look at and compare related parts of both Testaments before he can really begin to see and understand that which is involved. A person has to reference passages in one Testament, then passages in the other. He has to compare Scripture with Scripture, i.e., he has to compare “spiritual things with spiritual.”
Note first of all Hebrews 4:12:
			For the Word of God is living and 
			powerful, and sharper 
			than any two-edged sword. . . . 
			
Now, the 
			question: Why is the Word of God “living,” “powerful,” 
			and “sharper than any two-edged sword”?  The answer: Because 
			of its origin.  The Word is “theopneustos”; the Word is 
			“God-breathed.”
			
But, what does that mean? And why is the Word “living” because of its origin? This is where one has to go back to beginning points in the Old Testament and find the first mention in Scripture of God bringing a matter to pass through the use of His breath.
			
This is necessary not only because of the need to compare Scripture with Scripture but also because of a principle of biblical interpretation, called, “the First-Mention Principle.” This principle has to do with unchangeableness, and it centers on an unchangeable structure of the Word given by the unchangeable God. Because of the inherent nature of the Word, the first time a subject is mentioned in Scripture, a pattern, a mold is established at that point that remains unchanged throughout the remainder of Scripture.
			
Remaining within this principle, the first time one finds the breath of God mentioned in Scripture is in Genesis 2:7, in connection with life imparted to man; and, consequently, at this beginning point, this verse connects life with the breath of God after an unchangeable fashion. God formed and fashioned man from the dust of the ground, but man was not created alive. Life was subsequently imparted through God breathing into man’s “nostrils the breath of life,” resulting in man becoming “a living being [KJV: soul].” Thus, at this point in Scripture the unchangeable connection between God’s breath and life is established and set. Only God can produce life, and any time life is produced beyond this point it must always be through the one means set forth at the beginning, revealed in Genesis 2:7.
			But, what does that mean? And why is the Word “living” because of its origin? This is where one has to go back to beginning points in the Old Testament and find the first mention in Scripture of God bringing a matter to pass through the use of His breath.
This is necessary not only because of the need to compare Scripture with Scripture but also because of a principle of biblical interpretation, called, “the First-Mention Principle.” This principle has to do with unchangeableness, and it centers on an unchangeable structure of the Word given by the unchangeable God. Because of the inherent nature of the Word, the first time a subject is mentioned in Scripture, a pattern, a mold is established at that point that remains unchanged throughout the remainder of Scripture.
Remaining within this principle, the first time one finds the breath of God mentioned in Scripture is in Genesis 2:7, in connection with life imparted to man; and, consequently, at this beginning point, this verse connects life with the breath of God after an unchangeable fashion. God formed and fashioned man from the dust of the ground, but man was not created alive. Life was subsequently imparted through God breathing into man’s “nostrils the breath of life,” resulting in man becoming “a living being [KJV: soul].” Thus, at this point in Scripture the unchangeable connection between God’s breath and life is established and set. Only God can produce life, and any time life is produced beyond this point it must always be through the one means set forth at the beginning, revealed in Genesis 2:7.
			(The Study of Scripture, Arlen 
			L. Chitwood)
			
In 
			Conclusion
			
The study (absorption, consumption) of God’s 
			Word, particularly as one progresses from the “milk” to the “meat” 
			of it, is the pathway to spiritual maturity and the coming glory 
			for the Christian.  It is the only pathway provided by God. 
			
			
The Word is the only living food that 
			can be and is utilized by the Holy Spirit to feed “children 
			of God” so that they may indeed grow to maturity, with a 
			resultant and continuous change in their spiritual life; and one 
			day, as a result of decisions and determinations made at the 
			Judgment Seat of Christ, inherit positions as “sons 
			of God” during the Messianic Era.
			
There is no more important an activity in which 
			a Christian may and can engage than to study God’s holy, living 
			Word!
			
 
 
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