| WAS it not on Golgotha that Christ in the supremest sense asserted His Lordship? From the wilderness conflict onward, He had been invincible, and now, as the Lord, strong and mighty--mighty in battle, He conquers the foe in the most glorious victory earth and heaven ever witnessed. In cottage and temple, wayside and lonely shore, the battle spirit shone out from those eyes of dignity and steadfastness, as they looked upon the victims of the enemy's power. And to the great invisible hosts of darkness, the satellites of Satan, His was the voice of command. Mighty deeds were wrought in Galilee, at which the people marvelled. But mightier still, the Calvary conquest when, "stripping off the sovereignties and authorities, boldly making a show of them," He so gloriously triumphed, even "abolishing him who has the control of death, that is, the devil." And this is the victory, the power of which we need to known. For it is a power, and with potentialities which opportunities will prove again and again. How then shall we realize this power and triumph over the enemy? The place of victory is in the heavenlies, "up above every sovereignty and authority and power and dominion and every name that is named." This is the glory sphere in which, in spirit, we are to abide. But we cannot truly abide and know unbroken victory, except we enter deeply the likeness of Christ's death. Only a likeness, but let it be deep and true, and your spirit will rise to victory. The enemy is powerless, entirely silenced on that high plane. He wars below, in and through the force of circumstance, the passions and obsessions of the soul. In these elements the hosts of darkness concentrate, and, as past masters of soul-craft, entice and ensnare. Are we then so detached from tangs of the soul life, so in the place of death to them, that their charm is gone? If not, then at some point we give ground to the adversary, and defeat comes swiftly. But victory life is ours to know. "For if we died together we shall live together also; if we are enduring, we shall also be reigning together" (2 Tim.2:11,12). Paul voiced the power he knew, the power which served him in all the contingencies of his course. And his word comes to our needy spirits. "Be strong in the Lord!" Strong in Him, for is He not "the Lord, strong and mighty, the Lord mighty in battle?" We are to know the strength of His might, that very strength which set Him at God's right hand, high above all. Let your spirit rest there, amid all the ebb and flow of things around, and victory will be yours. God would have us buoyant and victorious, so alive to Him that our spirit arises to Him in the joy and strength of the Lord. Stand then, in Christ! Dread not, be unafraid! Live that your spirit may be in victory. And with spirit triumphant, vision and perception will be clear. But there must be the walk in righteousness, and in faithfulness, step by step, to the light God gives. We stand then, in Christ's victory, and, in the power which raised and exalted Him, exult. For this power alone energizes us in the warfare, and not only places us above the unseen forces which assail us through others, but gives us victory over their subtle attempts to enslave us personally, in body or in mind. And this may be of such a character as to continue for years. There are so many refined forms of the soul life whereby the enemy gets a hold, and then, given a suitable occasion, he can oppress with vengeance. Then it is that we, in very deed, prove the blessedness of Paul's wondrous enunciation in the sixth of Romans. Absolute death, to be practically and savingly known. And here is the basis of victory, the one sure ground. But if death, then also corresponding life. And with the life, victory and peace. Now this victory is the quiet, unseen mastery which the members of the body of Christ are justly entitled to experience day by day. And the call is upon us to realize here and now the blessedness of its character. Again and again it gives occasion for praise, and is at the same time a testimony to celestial powers concerning the manifold wisdom of God. A strong spirit, strong to resist, refuse and endure. Strong, as against soul weakness, with its varied tendencies and impulses. Strong, to resist the enemy's encroachment on our peace, and strong to refuse depression find oppression as they come to our spirit. Strong also, to endure with patience and longsuffering all that is in the will of God for our enrichment. Ours is a spirit-life, spirit-fellowship, a spirit-warfare. And for true life and fellowship we must know spirit-victory. We can only breathe freely on the heights. Below, in the earthlies we are out of adjustment, finding its atmosphere a frequent pall upon the spirit. The new life longs for the new creation element, and can only flourish therein. Hence the warfare, the contesting of advance. How then, shall we be mighty in battle, mighty in breaking through to victory! The onset is from the enemy side and comes in varied form. It may be a heaviness or deadness of spirit, a disquietude or restlessness. But, what ever it is, we know it to be a foreign element, that should not be with us. What then? Are we to fight it? By no means. We are to stand--stand in Christ, and withstand. And above all else, use the sword of the spirit, voicing a divine declaration as a weapon of God to scatter the enemy's smoke-clouds. For at times the air seems thick with their presence, so that we need to stand firmly and as Paul enjoins, "In every prayer and petition be praying on every occasion, in spirit, and being vigilant for it with all perseverance and petition concerning all saints" (Eph.6:18,19). There we have it. Paul shows us in grand, unerring language, the place of victory, the unassailable position of the Victor, and all the riches of His great ascension place. And then, aware of the aerial hosts and their malignant chief, he shows the way of victory. Let the sword of the spirit then be as a keen Damascene blade, to cut a way through the hosts of darkness. Standing as sons of light, let us be vigilant, pressing into the fabric of our prayer life all the pointed declarations of God which His spirit prompts to meet the case. And do not forget the catholic note which should pervade our prevailing prayer, "petition concerning all saints." There is nothing finer with which to cut through to a clear sense of victory in spirit than those texts and living declarations of Scripture which so surely and immediately serve to the defeat of the foe. The warfare is spiritual, and a war always on. And just because we are out for God's greatest and best, the adversary is relentless, and if he could, would bring us down to utter despair and defeat. Let us remember that he and his are out to silence testimony, especially in the matter of the cross. Anything but death gives him some lodgement, but to die to things we once so keenly lived for, and to have things drop from us as dead leaves, makes the forces of oppression powerless. Mighty in battle? It must needs be as we stand inflexible foewards, but Godwards, ah, then indeed are we pliant, receptive, and above all, reposeful in that peace which so immovably garrisons our hearts in Christ Jesus. Declarations of God, fiats of the Lord of Glory! As such, wield them to the discomfiture of the enemy. You will then walk in victory, will develop in strength, alertness, and realization of God. How then are we to be mighty in battle, mighty in breaking through to victory? The onset is from the enemy side and is felt by us in many ways. It may be a heaviness or deadness of spirit, a sense of defeat, in that we are not in strong repose and spirit mastery. Take to yourself the great thought that you are a son of God. Live in the dignity of it, lift up your head, remembering that as you stand in Christ, you veritably stand in the presence of God. When alone, audible expression helps, and it works. Let us remember, too, that in our use of God's declarations, we are not confined in doctrinal sense, as to dispensational truth alone. We can wield all those declarations of our God which His spirit at the moment gives. And so, again and again will you find expression or exclamation from prophet and psalmist, as sure a weapon as the words of Paul. But there will always be the wondrous adjustment of such words with our position as members of the body of Christ, and with our place of victory in the heavenlies. For with us they take on the highest meaning possible, and the life in them overcomes the assault of the enemy. From experience and the testimony of others the writer has proved the possibilities which a stand for victory can see accomplished. It is a wonderfully real thing, a bringing into the immediate present, something of the glory and splendor of the unsearchable riches of Christ. Let your will, then, be for it, as one in God's great secret administration. "I will extol Thee, O Lord, for Thou hast lifted me up, and hast not made my foes to rejoice over me... Though an host should encamp against me, my heart shall not fear. Whom shall I fear? The Lord is the p222 The Lord is With Us strength of my life! Of whom shall I be afraid!" Then, too, Paul's grand note: "Thanks be to God, Who always gives us a triumph in Christ!" O to prove the mighty power of God--mighty to the overthrowing of strongholds. And this proving will be as we concentrate our thoughts on Christ in all His fullness. But for this we must be emptied of so very much we may have hitherto considered as quite in keeping with our walk. We lose to gain, die to live, and dying with Him, we live with Him. And we live by the faith of the Son of God Who so gloriously triumphed over the adversary. Through all that comes, then, seek to know victory, repose in God's peace. For "the God of peace will be crushing Satan under your feet swiftly." Potentially, he is a vanquished foe, and as prince of the power of the air, his time is short. Hence, his malignity to all those who are out for God's best. Like Caleb and Joshua, shall we not say, "We are well able to overcome...the Lord is with us!" With these men it was God all the time--His viewpoint, His might. And this is the way of victory, victory personal, victory in spirit over the powers of darkness. Shall we not then rise to it, go all out for it, in the might of the Lord?
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