New Wine, Skinny Jeans
Introduction
A Question About Fasting
The Gospel Is Good News
The Gospel Doesn’t Fit
Shortly after the Armistice of World War I, Dr. Donald Grey Barnhouse visited the battlefields of Belgium. In the first year of the war, the area around the city of Mons had been the scene of a great British retreat. In the last year of the war it was the scene of a great German retreat. For miles to the west of the city, the roads were lined with artillery, tanks, trucks, and other equipment of war that the enemy had abandoned in their hasty flight.
It was a lovely spring day. The sun was shining, and not a breath of wind was blowing. As Barnhouse walked along examining the German war equipment, he noticed that leaves were falling from the great trees arching above the road. He brushed at a leaf that had blown against his breast, and it caught in the belt of his uniform. As he removed it, he pressed it in his fingers, and it disintegrated. He looked up curiously and saw several other leaves falling from the trees. It was not autumn. There was no wind to blow them off. These leaves were seemingly falling without cause.
Then he realized that the most potent force of all was causing them to fall: it was spring. The sap was beginning to run, and the buds were pushing from within. From down beneath the dark earth, roots were sending life along trunk, branch, and twig until that life expelled every bit of deadness that remained from the previous year. It was, as a great Scottish preacher termed it, “the expulsive power of a new affection.”
When Christ fills our lives, the swelling life within expands us beyond our imagining. The inner life expels unneeded qualities and fills every aspect of life. Once Christ takes up residence in our lives, every aspect of our being—from our intellect to our emotions to our will—undergoes change. And Christ keeps increasing our spiritual capacity, so that we will always be able to hold more of his fullness. The more we receive, the more we are able to receive.
Jesus brings a superior relationship in that he is the temple, the focus and means for fellowship with God. Everything the old temple did, he does better. And when he indwells us, wonder of wonders, we become temples.