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John Follette

Bride of Christ

To become the Bride of Christ, we must be willing to be separated from the world, reduced and depleted of our self-effort, and dependent on God.
John Follette preaches about the process of the Bride of Christ being formed from the Body of Christ, emphasizing the need for separation and overcoming to be part of the Bride. He highlights the importance of the Bride identifying with the sufferings and defeat of the Bridegroom, ultimately going home as a slain Bride in union with Him. The sermon focuses on the Bride's dependence on the Bridegroom, the intense longing for union, and the separation from worldly influences to be fully devoted to God.

Text

Eve was taken OUT of the body of Adam. Notice that it was not the whole body of Adam which made the bride. So, too, out of the Body of Christ can come His Bride. This also is brought about by a separation -- He calls the overcoming group His Bride. The whole group, or body, is not the Bride. The highest expression in God's thought, He calls the Bride.

God is using the world to hammer out a Bride. They Crucified Jesus. Do you think we are going to have any more glorious ending? Don't worry; we will have to know something of the fellowship of the sufferings and defeat of the Bridegroom. He went home in shame and disgrace, without the applause and satisfaction of the world -- He went out in darkness. Do you think the Bride is going home on a bandwagon? A lot of people are trying to get that bandwagon painted up now, so it will play real good.

Where will the Bride -- the overcomers -- be in this picture? She will be identified with a slain Bridegroom, and the Bride will know something of being slain. The Bride of Christ will know the slain life, and she will go home as a slain Bride in union with the Bridegroom. She comes from the desert, leaning. As long as there is an ounce of flesh, she will stand in her own strength. God has to reduce and deplete her, and bring her to complete exhaustion of self-effort. In Song of Solomon we read: "Who is this that cometh up from the wilderness, leaning upon her beloved?" In Hosea 2:14 it says, "... I will allure her, and bring her into the wilderness, and speak comfortably unto her." -- He charms her and allures her into the wilderness so that He can speak love words to her. It is a love scene; a trysting, so that He might speak love words to her; to have her whole attention; to have her whole heart. Leaning means dependence. We see John at the Last Supper leaning on Jesus' bosom; there is a language between them. Jesus waits for somebody to come near enough to hear His heartbeat -- breaking.

In the Song of Solomon, toward the end, the Bride becomes so intense with longing for her Bridegroom, that she dares to speak. I suppose as we, too, go on with God, we become so bold in our resistance to the world that we become almost offensive to people. They will say: "Where are your interests? Don't you have any touch for the world? Can't you be absorbed in it?" We just say, "We can't. We 'have none. Our interests are not here. They are over there with Him: The Bride, fight in the presence of that King Solomon (the world) declares it, as he turns and describes her beautifully as she really is. He describes her, and the world knows there is something peculiar, because she won't come under the philosophy of this world, but under the philosophy of the Spirit. "Forget thy people;' (human contacts) who have served us. The time comes when God won't let us have a crutch to stand on. HE wants to be the satisfying portion. "Forget thy people" -- it doesn't mean we don't like them any more -- but we don't let them have an influence in our life. We become independent of them; released. We keep them in their proper place. "Forget thy people and thy father's house;' -- a separation as was the case with Rebekah. (Genesis 24) "My father's house" is our natural concept of life; the natural flesh concept.

If we dare to lean, we will hear! He is wooing us again to a mystical union with the eternal heart of God.

The Church is holding us back from the coming of the Lord. "Let us be glad and rejoice, and give honour to Him: for the marriage of the Lamb is come, and His wife hath made herself ready." (Revelation 19:7)

Sermon Outline

  1. The Bride of Christ
  2. The process of becoming the Bride
  3. The characteristics of the Bride
  4. The Bride is bold and resistant to the world
  5. The Bride is independent and released from human influences
  6. The Bride is satisfied in God and not in human contacts

Key Quotes

“Who is this that cometh up from the wilderness, leaning upon her beloved?” — John Follette
“Forget thy people; who have served us. The time comes when God won't let us have a crutch to stand on.” — John Follette
“Let us be glad and rejoice, and give honour to Him: for the marriage of the Lamb is come, and His wife hath made herself ready.” — John Follette

Application Points

  • We must be willing to let go of our self-effort and fleshly desires to experience the mystical union with God.
  • We must be bold and resistant to the world to become the Bride of Christ.
  • We must be independent and released from human influences to be satisfied in God.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does it mean to be the Bride of Christ?
To be the Bride of Christ means to be in a mystical union with Him, where we are dependent on Him and satisfied in Him.
Why must we be separated from the world to become the Bride?
We must be separated from the world because it will try to hold us back from experiencing the mystical union with God.
What is the process of becoming the Bride?
The process of becoming the Bride involves being reduced and depleted of our self-effort and fleshly desires, and being allured into the wilderness to speak love words to God.
What are the characteristics of the Bride?
The characteristics of the Bride include being bold and resistant to the world, independent and released from human influences, and satisfied in God and not in human contacts.

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