Crucified with Christ
by E.W. Bullinger
"I am crucified with Christ, nevertheless I live, yet not I,
but Christ liveth in me; and the life which I now live in the flesh I
live by the faith of the Son of God, Who loved me and gave Himself for
me." (Galatians 2:20).
"God forbid that I should glory, save in the cross of our Lord
Jesus Christ, by whom the world is crucified unto me, and I unto the
world. For in Christ Jesus neither circumcision availeth any thing nor
uncircumcision, but a new creature" (Galatians 6:14,15).
These last words the Apostle Paul sums up his important letter to the
churches of Galatia, and he emphasizes the great sum and substance, the
essence and marrow of the Gospel of Christ, and of true Christianity.
This is utterly and entirely opposed to the world and to the world's
religion. The world is that which is opposed to the Father (I John
2:16). The world has always been willing to support religion, and even
Christianity, provided it has been allowed to alter it, and adapt it,
and put its own marks upon it. And in all ages Christians have been
willing to comply with this condition, and have allowed its sacred
deposits to be tampered with.
To such St. Paul says, "As many as desire to make a fair show in
the flesh, they constrain you to be circumcised; only lest they should
suffer persecution for the cross of Christ" (Galatians 6:12). It
was the fear of the world that constrained Christians to submit to
circumcision. They allowed themselves to be made bad Jews lest they
should be persecuted for being good Christians. "Marvel not,"
said Christ, "if the world hate you"; but His followers grew
weary of being despised and hated, and so they listened to the world's
overtures of peace, and accepted the world's terms to gain for
themselves the world's security and luxury. But the world has ever
broken its promise, and will yet break it more and more! "The
friendship of the world is enmity with God." We cannot purchase
peace with the world without losing peace with God. Its last work will
be to strip and destroy that church, which has purchased peace at the
cost of disobedience to the Lord and by compliance with the requirements
of man!
St. Paul's counsel here is, that mere religion without Christ is
nothing, is useless, is worthless. Circumcision is useless without
Christ, and uncircumcision is useless without Christ, i.e., the old
nature in any shape is nothing. Man's thought ever is that it is
something, that something can be made of it. Hence no effort-has been
spared. In one age restraint has been tried, in another, liberty. In one
age discipline cuts it down, in another, indulgence lets it grow. One
school advises , and tries monasticism, another believes in the
development of man, but no modification of the natural man will suffice;
it must be a "new creation" (II Corinthians 5:17, R.V.,
margin).
We must be made new
Man must be made over again, made anew. This is the great point on
which the Apostle lays such stress here. He says, "From henceforth
let no man trouble! me, for I bear in my body the marks of the Lord
Jesus" (Galatians 6:17). There is a double reference in his words,
when translated more closely, "Administer not to me your
cuts." I need them not, I am crucified with Christ. It is not marks
nor brands made by man upon the flesh that we want, but it is the brands
of the Lord Jesus. He was crucified for us, "wounded for our
iniquities," and those who are crucified with Christ have His marks
on them, and to such can be said, "the grace of our Lord Jesus
Christ be with your spirit (verse 18). This is the cry from Heaven to
all who are crucified with Christ, this "grace" in them and
with them is the "mark" and "brand" which the world
will never countenance and approve.
The world threatens with loss all who are thus marked as the Lord's. But
what says He to such? "Seek first the Kingdom of God and His
righteousness and all these things shall be added unto you."
"God shall supply all .your need." We need not fear about not
pleasing the world; Christ takes all excuses away. "Take no
thought, saying, 'What shall we eat'? or 'what shall we drink' or
'wherewithal shall we be clothed?'... Take therefore no thought for the
morrow; for the morrow shall take thought for the things of itself"
(Matthew 6:31, 34). This is godliness, and godliness has the promise of
this life as well as of that which is to come.
Thus we see that the Apostle's argument is based on the declaration of
our Lord. We see that the only thing we can really glory in is the Cross
of Christ, by which we are crucified to the world, because we are
crucified with Christ, and this may mean perils and hardships. But there
is a very important point connected with this matter -- and it is, that
it is a very personal and individual concern. The Apostle says, "I
and Me." "I am crucified with Christ... He gave Himself
for me" (Gal. 2. 20). This is the glory of the Gospel. The
world talks about "man," and would deify "man "; but
God, while he has condemned "man," saves "men."
Men lose themselves in masses, and attempt to hide themselves in the
multitude; but so soon as God speaks He separates one from the other,
and deals with individual souls.
The Gospel does not deal with the masses as such; it takes out from the
masses "a people for His Name." The Cross stands out in
relation to all who are crucified with Christ. It is not that you have
been born in a land where the Cross is honoured; it is not I that you
have relations with a church that holds forth the Cross; it is not that
you wear a cross, but that you are in living vital union with the
crucified, so that you may say, "I have been crucified with
Christ." Oh, what a wonderful expression! What a mysterious truth,
when a lost sinner comes into the vital experience of it! Then for him
these 1,800 years are blotted out, and he counts himself as being on
Calvary in Christ.
So real is this great truth that the very crucifixion scene becomes part
of our experience. In God's sight, in the Divine view, the saved sinner
is identified with Christ Everything he gets from God is in Christ. He
is "chosen in Christ," accepted in Christ, redeemed in Christ,
and represented by Christ. Not only is this great fact and truth for
every saved sinner, but in measure and in part the very experiences of
Christ are ours. There is a sense in which they become true in our
experience.
Rejection
Take, first, His rejection. He was "rejected of men," not
rejected of the Father! No. We must make the distinction which the
Scripture of truth makes. Not as is commonly said that the Father hid
His face from the Son, but it was God against man.
"Awake, O sword, against... the man that is My fellow"
(Zechariah 13:7) -- "against the man," not against "My
Son." "The Son of Man" was "rejected of men,"
and the penitent soul, the sin-convicted sinner, has this experience.
The first thought of such an one is, "I am accursed before
God." Never before has the sinner known the terrible weight of
Divine rejection till the Holy Law of the Holy God is written by the
Holy Spirit on the fleshy tables of his heart. He that has been
crucified with Christ enters into the real positions and in measure and
in part into the experience of the darkness which overspread the heavens
when Christ as man hung upon the cross, being made a curse for us
The death due by the law is realised by such an one; conscience is now
for the first time awakened; sin now for the first time is seen as that
which separates from God; and the sinner loathes himself, as he thus
enters into the first experience of what it is to be crucified with
Christ.
Acceptance
But, secondly, there is, thank God, another experience. There is
another view of the Cross of Christ, a Divine view, that of acceptance.
If at His baptism and transfiguration the testimony of heaven was,
"My beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased," surely it
was so here when that Beloved One was accepted; for the
holiness of God was then vindicated, the law of God was then honoured,
the majesty of God was then magnified, and the same words are pronounced
over every sinner who can say, "I have been crucified with
Christ." The Father in heaven declares of Him and of every such an
one, "My beloved son, in whom I am well pleased," and this,
just because he is "accepted in the Beloved." Oh what a mighty
reality there is in this great truth! How great the merits of this
Saviour who has thus stood in the sinner's place, that the sinner might
stand in His! No wonder that of all such the Holy Spirit has written,
"There is now no condemnation to them that are in Christ
Jesus." What a perfect satisfaction do we present! Who can measure
the glorious answer to the law, the vindication of God's holiness, which
the man (who a little while ago was a poor forlorn outcast sinner)
brings before God, as soon as by grace he is enabled to say, "I
have been crucified with Christ." Ah, this is light that will
dissipate our darkness: all our bondage and fear would be instantly gone
if we could only realize what it means to be "crucified with
Christ."
His words become ours
But more than this is contained in the truth: not only Christ's acts
and position are ours, but His words and utterances become in
part ours. We know what it is to cry, "My God, my God, why has Thou
forsaken me?" It is our cry of felt helplessness; it says, if God
should cast us out for ever, "just and true is He." No reason
can we find in ourselves, no ground for our acceptance can we find in
our past living or present feelings. If saved at all, it must be by
grace. and grace alone; and it shews that even this cry is the result
of life which has been given; for though we cry, we say "My --
my God." This is the beginning of the end, all else is assured
when we can say my God. But the full measure of our absolute unworthiness
is never experienced by us until this life and light has been imparted.
It was when God said, "Let there be light," that ruin and
desolation was seen at its worst, and so it is with the sinner. Talk not
about repentance or contrition as a preparation for coming to Christ,
for if we "have been crucified with Christ," we will surely
experience the horror of this great darkness, but it will be coupled
with hope. "My God."
Then another cry, "It is finished." What a blessed confession
is this for Christ and for us! He who is crucified with Christ may take
it upon his lips, and claim it as his own. His salvation is finished,
the work is complete and perfect, nothing can be put to it nothing can
be taken from it. Of course, if we mean to be saved by our own merits it
will never be finished, and if we hesitate to say this, it is a proof
that we are trusting to our own merits. If we are seeking to be saved by
anything we can produce, our rest will always be unrest. But if saved by
Christ, in Christ, with Christ, "for Christ's
sake," then it is presumption if we do not admit to their fullest
extent such statements as these, "He that believeth hath
everlasting life," "is passed from death unto
life," "shall not come into condemnation." It is not
presumption to claim these words, but it is presumption, and unbelief
too, if we hesitate as saved sinners to confess them. Come, all ye that
are going about to establish your own righteousness, all ye that are
seeking some other way to the glory of God, listen to this joyful sound
of a finished salvation for all who have been crucified with Christ.
The world and the crucified
We cannot follow all the other thoughts which gather round
"Christ Crucified," but there are two other facts that we must
not omit. The Apostle says, "By whom the world is crucified to me,
and I unto the world" (Galatians 6:14).
(1). What is the relation of the world to the crucified? Ah, it wore a
very solemn aspect as the Crucified looked upon it, and he who is
crucified with Christ sees it in the same way (in part and in measure).
This is more than a figure. What did Paul mean when he said, "If ye
be dead with Christ" -- and "Ye are dead"? Not
that we are actually dead, but judicially dead in God's sight,
and therefore we are so to reckon ourselves. "If ye be dead
with Christ," says the Apostle. "If ye then be risen with
Christ, set your affections on things above, not on things on the earth,
for ye are dead, and your life is hid with Christ in God"
(Colossians 2:20; 3:1-3). What does this language imply? We are to be
blind and deaf and indifferent to the world, as was Christ upon the
cross. We are in the world, indeed, but rejected by it, not of
it. All the hum and distracting noises fell upon unheeding ears, as they
rose from Jerusalem and were wafted by the winds towards Calvary! If we
are crucified with Christ we shall know something of this experience;
only remember always that it is the effect and not the cause
of being thus crucified. We cannot crucify our selves, we cannot make
ourselves dead. How did the Lord Jesus pray? "I pray not that Thou
shouldst take them out of the world, but that Thou shouldst keep them
from the evil" (John 17:15). "Let me see life," says the
man of the world, and he plunges into sin. "Let me see life,"
says the saved sinner, and he separates himself from sin. He only
lives who is crucified and risen with Christ.
Joy and the crucified
(2). Those who are crucified with Christ know something of His
sustaining joy. We are not left to imagine what this was, but we know
that "For the joy that was set before Him He endured the cross,
despising the shame" (Hebrews 12:2). Great were His sufferings, but
greater still His joy. So it will be with us. This alone will support
those who have been crucified with Christ. We shall never know the
measure of His sorrow, but we shall know something of His joy. For a joy
is set before us, and it will enable us to despise the shame and endure
the suffering, and confess that "The sufferings of this present
time are not worthy to be compared with the glory which shall be
revealed in us" (Romans 8:18). "Our light affliction which is
but for a moment worketh for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight
of glory" (II Corinthians 4:17). Only those who have been crucified
with Christ can truly say, "I live" (Galatians 2. 20), and I
have the blessed hope of everlasting life. Can we say this? If we
cannot, "What is our life?" Your life which you are living for
yourselves? Let us not call this life. Let us not call our sinful
pleasures joy. For what is our experience? Is it not a consciousness of
a disappointed present, and a future without hope? Is it not a heart
unsatisfied with earthly objects? Is it not a will at cross purposes
with God's will? Do we call this life? Nay, call it what it is, death.
Not dead with Christ, not dead to sin, but dead in sins.
May this testimony for the Crucified One quicken us together with
Christ, that we may be able to say, "I have been crucified with
Christ, nevertheless I live, yet not I, but Christ liveth in me; and the
life which I now live in the flesh, I live by the faith of the Son of
God, who loveth me, and gave Himself for me (Galatians 2:20).