Becoming God in Life and Nature: Watchman Nee and Witness Lee on Sanctification, Union with Christ, and Deification
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Brief Biographical Sketch of Watchman Nee
3. From Keswickian Sanctification to Deification
- Thy Spirit, Lord, in mine, I pray,
- O’erflow my being as a flood,
- That every part with glory shine
- And everywhere be Thee and God.
- 9 How close we are in such a life,
- In one is blended earth with heav’n;
- Thy presence sweetly fills our souls;
- Our hearts are to Thy praises giv’n.
4. Introducing Witness Lee
5. Sanctification as the Holding Line of God’s Economy
This statement signals a unique theological emphasis within his intellectual topography. Unlike earlier Protestant approaches to sanctification that emphasize moral development or forensic righteousness, Lee situates sanctification within an ontological participation in the life and nature of God—a process he refers to as being “sonized”—through which a believer grows unto full sonship, the destiny God marked out in eternity past for those He predestinated (Eph 1:4–5):If you are holy, you must have the holy essence, and the holy essence in the whole universe is God Himself.
In regeneration we were sonized, but that sonizing is just a start, an initiation. After being regenerated we need to grow to reach maturity. We become mature when our soul is fully sonized. Eventually, our body, which is still full of weakness, sickness, lust, and sinfulness, will be transfigured, glorified in full.
- Seeking Sanctification—the believer’s initial sanctification resulting in their repentance;
- Redeeming Sanctification—a positional shift from Adam to Christ via the blood of Christ;
- Regenerating Sanctification—the beginning of dispositional sanctification which makes sinners into sons of God;
- Renewing Sanctification—the transformation of the soul, beginning with the mind, to make believers’ souls part of God’s new creation;
- Transforming Sanctification—a daily metabolic reconstitution with the divine element to make believers into constituents of the Body of Christ;
- Conforming Sanctification—a stage when believers are shaped into the image of Christ;
- Glorifying Sanctification—the consummation of sanctification, i.e., bodily transfiguration.
6. Attempts at Defining Deification
7. What Deification Is Not
8. What Deification Is
We want to see the practical way to live a life according to the high peak of the divine revelation, which is not out of man’s imagination but in the Holy Scriptures. This high peak is that God became man that man may become God in life and nature but not in the Godhead.
But now in the New Testament age, the time has come in which God would go further and deeper to make man absolutely one with Him, to make man Him and to make Him man. Athanasius, who was one of the church fathers, said concerning Christ, “He was made man that we might be made God”. This means that we are made God in life and in nature but not in the Godhead.
We become the same as God and Christ in life, nature, expression, and function, but not in the Godhead. To say that we are the same as God in His Godhead is a great blasphemy, but to say that we cannot be the same as God in life, nature, expression, and function is unbelief. The Bible tells us again and again that God wants to be one with us and to make us one with Him. This is God’s intention.
- God’s life (John 3:15; Col. 3:4)—that is, the eternal life of God, through regeneration by their believing in Jesus.
- God’s nature (Eph. 1:4; 2 Pet. 1:4)—that is, to be “sanctified, separated unto God”, and even to be “saturated and permeated with His holy nature”.
- God’s mind (Eph. 4:23; Phil. 2:5)—to allow the “divine mind” to penetrate and saturate the believer’s mind.
- God’s being (2 Cor. 3:18b; Eph. 3:8)—to be transformed by virtue of having God’s unsearchable riches dispensed unto them.
- God’s image (2 Cor. 3:18a; Rom. 8:29)—by virtue of their spiritual transformation, an organic and metabolic process, to conform to the resurrected and glorified Christ.
- God’s glory (v. 30; Heb. 2:10)—to have their bodies eventually saturated by the divine glory at Christ’s return.
- God’s sonship (Eph. 1:5; Rom. 8:23)—to truly become sons of God, an identity and organic reality that far transcends juridical and/or forensic notions of adoption.
- God’s manifestation (v. 19)—to participate in the manifestation that one day God will be manifested with His many sons to the entire cosmos.
- God’s likeness (1 John 3:2)—to bear God’s likeness, which is their “great blessing and enjoyment”.
- Being Godkind–God’s species (John 1:12; Rom. 8:14, 16)—Ultimately, regenerated humans truly possess God’s life and are thereby God-men.24
9. Ecclesial Deification
The church is the Body of Christ, who is the Son of God. Just as a person’s body is the enlargement of a person, the church as the Body of the Son of God is the enlargement of the Son of God. The church and Christ, the Son of God, form a new man, a complete universal man.
We need to realize that Satan hates the high peak of the divine revelation concerning the ultimate goal of God’s economy. He hates this one main point—that God became a man so that man may become God in life and in nature but not in the Godhead to produce the organic Body of Christ for the fulfillment of God’s economy to close this age and to bring Christ back to set up His kingdom.
God’s New Testament economy is to make the believers God-men for the constitution of the Body of Christ so that the New Jerusalem may be consummated as the eternal enlargement and expression of the processed and consummated Triune God (Gal. 3:26; 4:7, 26, 31)…For us to be deified means that we are being constituted with the processed and consummated Triune God so that we may be made God in life and in nature to be His corporate expression for eternity (Rev. 21:11). The New Jerusalem is built by God’s constituting Himself into man to make man the same as God in life, nature, and constitution so that God and man may become a corporate entity.
When I was young, I was instructed that the term the Body of Christ was merely a metaphor signifying what the church is to Christ. I accepted this teaching at that time, but gradually, after many years, I found out that the Body of Christ is not a metaphor; it is a great reality in the universe. Rather, our physical body is a metaphor portraying the Body of Christ.
The Lord Jesus is the Head, and He is also the Body. We cannot say, however, that we are the Body and also the Head. We can be only the Body and cannot be the Head, but the Lord Jesus can be both the Head and the Body. In Himself, He is the Head, and in us collectively, He is the Body. The Head is individual, while the Body is corporate. Both are Christ…We worship God in His Godhead; we do not worship those who have His divine nature…As I have said, Christ is the Head and the Body, but we are the Body and cannot be the Head; the Head is a matter related to the Godhead.
Christ as life is the essence of the Body as an organic entity. This organism is not for organization; it is for a living that expresses Christ. Christ is the essence of His Body and His Body is an organic entity which lives, grows, and matures with Himself until it eventually expresses Him. In [1 Corinthians] 12:12–27 the main thought is not activity or enterprise. It is that the Body is an organism to live, grow, mature, and express Christ as the inward essence.
In the first passage, we see that Lee conceives of the Body of Christ is an organism. Like any organic entity, it must grow and mature to fully express its inward essence—in this case, Christ. In the second passage, Lee links the growth of God within each individual believer to the church’s corporate transformation. This is a crucial move, as it entails that the individual sanctification of believers is not an end in itself, but rather, has a directed end—ecclesial deification where the “highest peak of the church’s growth” results in “Christ’s expression in full”. Underscoring this point elsewhere, he states,God’s growth in us is unto our maturity in the divine life ([Col.] 1:28; Eph. 4:13b). As we are growing, we are maturing until we reach the measure of the stature of the fullness of Christ (v. 13c). The fullness of Christ is the organic Body of Christ (1:23); thus, the measure of the stature of the fullness of Christ is the measure of the stature of the Body of Christ. Christ fills all in all, and He needs a great Body as His fullness. The Body of Christ, which is His expression, has a stature, and this stature has a measure. The church grows with the growth of God until it reaches maturity. When it reaches maturity, it arrives at the measure of the stature of the fullness of Christ (4:13). By then the church will be Christ’s expression in full. This is the highest peak of the church’s growth.
Apparently, growth is for individual believers and building is corporate. Actually, both growth and building are corporate. The feet do not grow at one time, and the hands at a later time, as if the two were autonomous. The entire body grows together as a corporate entity.
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | Khaled Anatolios offers especially insightful commentary about this historical reality: “The normative trinitarian and christological doctrines of the first seven ecumenical councils presumed and prescribed a conception of salvation as the deification of human beings through their graced inclusion into trinitarian life. This deification was understood to be accomplished through the hypostatic union of divinity and humanity in Christ, whereby divinity transforms the humanity, assimilating it to itself. Salvation thus essentially consists of graced incorporation into Christ’s humanity, which brings about assimilation to Christ’s divinity and inclusion into trinitarian life from the position of the Son’s relations to the Father and the Spirit. None of these constituent elements of this normative, albeit implicit, definition of salvation—neither deification nor hypostatic union nor the assimilation of Christ’s humanity to his divinity—can be construed as soteriological “models” from which we may pick and choose. Rather, any legitimate conception of Christian salvation, whatever metaphors or imagery it may choose to employ, must not conflict with this dogmatic core, and more than that, must positively depend on it as the source and goal of its inner logic. Conversely, any soteriology that does not manifest this dependence must be deemed an inadequate conception of what it means to be saved by Jesus Christ” (Anatolios 2022, p. 168). |
2 | One example of this tendency is the Hellenization thesis proposed by the nineteenth-century liberal Protestant Adolf von Harnack (1851–1930). Harnack argued that deification was a pagan corruption of the Bible’s original message; this position influenced generations of later scholars in the Western academy. See Alister McGrath’s essay, “Deification or Christification: Martin Luther on Theosis” (Copan and Reardon 2024, pp. 109–12) Also see John Lenz‘s essay “Deification of the Philosopher in Classical Greece” (Christensen and Wittung 2008, p. 56). |
3 | This recent impetus in the academy is evidenced by at least fifteen new books or collections of essays examining the doctrine, all published within the past two decades: (1) Norman Russell, The Doctrine of Deification in the Greek Patristic Tradition; (2) Stephen Finlan and Vladimir Kharlamov (eds.), Theosis: Deification in Christian Theology; (3) Michael L. Christensen and Jeffrey A.Wittung (eds.), Partakers of the Divine Nature: The History and Development of Deification in the Christian Traditions; (4) Vladimir Kharlamov (ed.), Theosis: Deification in Christian Theology, vol. 2; (5) Daniel E.Wilson, Deification and the Rule of Faith: The Communication of the Gospel in Hellenistic Culture; (6) David Meconi and Carl E. Olson (eds.), Called to Be Children of God: The Catholic Theology of Human Deification; (7) Mark Edwards and Elena Ene D-Vasilescu (eds.), Visions of God and Ideas on Deification in Patristic Thought; (8) John Arblaster and Rob Faesen (eds.), Theosis/Deification: Christian Doctrines of Divinization, East and West; (9) John Arblaster and Rob Faesen (eds.), Mystical Doctrines of Deification: Case Studies in the Christian Tradition; (10) Jared Ortiz, Deification in the Latin Patristic Tradition; (11) Jared Ortiz (ed.), With All the Fullness of God: Deification in the Christian Tradition; (12) Khaled Anatolios, Deification Through the Cross: An Eastern Christian Theology of Salvation; (13) Paul L. Gavrilyuk, Andrew Hofer, and Matthew Levering (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Deification; (14) Norman Russell, Theosis and Religion: Theosis Participation in Divine Life in the Eastern and Western Traditions; and (15) Paul Copan and Michael M. C. Reardon (eds.), Transformed into the Same Image: Constructive Investigations into the Doctrine of Deification. |
4 | One of the authors of this article, Michael M. C. Reardon, recently published a comprehensive bibliography of publications associated with these investigations (Reardon 2023, p. 84). |
5 | Over nearly thirty years of ministry, Nee focused on preaching the gospel, teaching the Bible, establishing churches, and training Christian workers. In 1952, he was imprisoned for his faith and remained in prison until his death in 1972. His teachings continue to provide spiritual insights and supply to Christians worldwide. For further information, see https://www.watchmannee.org/. Nee’s writings have been compiled into a 62-volume set that was published by Living Stream Ministry between 1992–1994. Throughout this paper, his writings from this collection are cited as (Nee 1992–1994), followed by the volume number the spoken message or treatise is found in. |
6 | In 1927, Dora Yu was invited to England to attend the famous Keswick Convention and serve as the featured guest (see Wu 2002). Nee himself was later invited to attend the convention in 1938, at which he offered a prayer (Lee 1991, p. 204; citing Keswick 1938, p. 246). |
7 | Additionally, “Pietism as an important antecedent to Pentecostalism alongside Wesleyanism or the Keswick Movement” (Olson 2012, p. 321). |
8 | In The Normal Christian Life, Nee states the following: “What is the normal Christian life? We do well at the outset to ponder this question. The object of these studies is to show that it is something very different from the life of the average Christian. Indeed a consideration of the written Word of God—of the Sermon on the Mount for example—should lead us to ask whether such a life has ever in fact been lived upon the earth, save only by the Son of God Himself. But in that last saving clause lies immediately the answer to our question. The Apostle Paul gives us his own definition of the Christian life in Galatians 2:20. …He [Paul] is, we believe, presenting God’s normal for a Christian, which can be summarized in the words: I live no longer, but Christ lives His life in me” (Nee 1992–1994, vol. 33, p. 5). |
9 | Lee testified that as early as 1934, when he began being trained and working with Nee in Shanghai, Nee had affirmed the idea that the resurrected Christ is identified with the Spirit, though they are distinct (Lee 2004–2020, vol. 81, pp. 81–82). This indicates that Nee had been reflecting on the Spirit and its connection with Christ even before his experience of Spirit baptism in 1935. The Collected Works of Witness Lee (CWWL), containing the entirety of Lee’s ministry from 1932 to 1997, was published in its entirety by Living Stream Ministry in 2020. The volumes of CWWL are organized chronologically by year. |
10 | For example, these related terms appear at least 229 times in his early classic work, The Spiritual Man Chiu (2024, p. 230). |
11 | Per Nee, “When we speak of our new life and new nature, it is as if life and nature are the same thing, but strictly speaking, there is a difference between life and nature. It seems that life involves something more than nature. Every life has its own nature. The nature is the natural principle of that life; it is the inclination and desire of the life” (Nee 1992–1994, vol. 1, pp. 27–28). (Emphasis added.) |
12 | Nee in The Normal Christian Life states: “In respect of His divinity the Lord Jesus remains uniquely ‘the only begotten Son of God’. Yet there is a sense in which, from the resurrection onward through all eternity, He is also the first begotten, and His life from that time is found in many brethren. For we who are born of the Spirit are made thereby ‘partakers of the divine nature’ (2 Peter 1:4)” (Nee 1992–1994, vol. 33, p. 76). Elsewhere, he states: “But in relating us again to the divine purpose—in, as it were, restoring to us access to the tree of life—redemption has given us far more than Adam ever had. It has made us partakers of the very life of God Himself” (ibid., pp. 81–82). (Emphasis added.) |
13 | In The Normal Christian Life, Nee states: “He was ‘begotten...of the Holy Spirit’ (Matthew 1:20 mg.), and we were ‘born of... the spirit’, ‘born…of God’ (John 3:5; 1:13). So, God says, we are all of One. ‘Of’ in the Greek means ‘out of’. The first begotten Son and the many sons are all (though in different senses) ‘out of’ the one Source of life” (Nee 1992–1994, vol, 33, p. 81). |
14 | Speaking on this matter, Nee states: “It is for that reason that we can live a life of holiness, for it is not our own life that has been changed, but the life of God that has been imparted to us” (Nee 1992–1994, vol. 33, p. 81). |
15 | In stanza 4 of Nee’s hymn, “But as the Spirit now Thou art, Another Comforter become; Reveal Thyself within my heart, Since to Thy temple Thou hast come.” (Hymns 1966, #489). In this aspect, Nee’s expression found resonance with Sinclair B. Ferguson, who also regards that “Christ on his ascension came into such complete possession of the Spirit who had sustained him throughout his ministry that economically the resurrected Christ and the Spirit are one to us. He is alter Christus, another Christ, to us; ministerially he is indicated allos parakletos.” (Ferguson 1996, p. 54). (Emphasis added.) |
16 | (Hymns 1966), #489.
For other Nee’s hymns on the Holy Spirit, see (Hymns 1966), #490, 491, 492, 493. |
17 | In The Normal Christian Life, Nee states the following: “What is God’s purpose in creation and what is His purpose in redemption? It may be summed up in two phrases, one from each of our two sections of Romans. It is: ‘The glory of God’ (Romans 3:23), and ‘The glory of the children of God’ (Romans 8:21) …The result of sin is that we forfeit God’s glory: the result of redemption is that we are qualified again for glory. God’s purpose in redemption is glory, glory, glory” (Nee 1992–1994, vol. 33, p. 73). |
18 | Witness Lee used the term “Christification/Christified” several times (see Lee 2004–2020, vol. 60, p. 469; vol. 68, pp. 27, 271, 399; vol. 69, p. 482; vol. 71, pp. 27, 68; vol. 73, p. 256; vol. 90, pp. 53, 209; Lee 2010b, p. 4079). |
19 | The CWWL (Anaheim: Living Stream Ministry), containing the entirety of Lee’s ministry (excluding LS, CNT, and certain publications) from 1932 to 1997, was published in its entirety in 2020. |
20 | When Lee speaks of “union”, “mingling”, and “incorporation”, he refers to different aspects of believers’ participation in the Triune God. Union, for Lee, is a matter of lives, mingling a matter of natures, and incorporation a matter of persons. The telos of Christian salvation for Lee is for believers to be united in life, mingled in nature, and incorporated as persons with the Triune God. |
21 | These “exchange” formulas refer to statements such as “the Word of God, our Lord Jesus Christ, who did, through His transcendent love, become what we are, that He might bring us to be even what He is Himself” (Adversus Haereses, Book V, preface; found in Irenaeus 1981, vol. 1, p. 526), and “for He was made man that we might be made God” (De Incarnatione, §54; found in Athanasius 1995, vol. 4, p. 65). |
22 | Cf. (Gorman 2019, pp. 214–35). In patristic language, it is because God became flesh that humans can become gods. |
23 | For example, Lee states: “The true meaning of the church involves the mingling of God and man, the union of God and man, which is a great mystery through which God is expressed in man (Eph 5:32). The church is the enlargement of Christ, the magnification of Christ. Christ is the mingling of God and man, and the principle of Christ is God manifested in the flesh, that is, God mingled with man, divinity mingled with humanity to be manifested in and expressed through humanity. The church is the enlargement of this principle. She is the enlargement of the manifestation of God in the flesh, the enlargement of the mingling of God and man. She is the enlargement of divinity mingled with humanity to be manifested in and expressed through humanity… The church is the most marvelous thing in the universe because the church contains both the elements of humanity and divinity. The church is both man and God, and God and man.” (Lee 2004–2020, vol. 4, p. 413). |
24 | The preceding ten-point schematic is quoted, verbatim, from Reardon and Chiu (2025b, p. 481). |
25 | As noted at the outset, a growing body of literature examining deification, especially within the context of biblical studies, has emerged within the past two decades. These investigations, however, have prioritized individualistic deification above corporate deification (and in several instances, neglected the latter issue altogether as an important area of study). For further reading, see (Reardon 2023, pp. 83–107). Additionally, it is noteworthy that biblical scholars have published a number of investigations that explore Paul’s notion of the ‘cosmic Christ’, specifically in Ephesians and Colossians, but also implicitly referenced in other epistles. Virtually all of these studies, however, fail to make an explicit connection between deification and the expansive Christology they propose. Narrowing focus upon ‘ecclesial deification’, that is, the relationship between soteriology and cosmic Christology, is thus both necessary for our purposes and is the focus of this section. |
26 | “The church as the Body of Christ is a group of people who are united, mingled, and incorporated with the Triune God” (Lee 2010a, p. 3408). For Lee, these three terms denote different aspects of one’s relationship with God. Believers are united with God in life, mingled with Him in nature, and incorporated into Him as persons (Lee 2004–2020, vol. 131, pp. 348–49). |
27 | With Lee being an avid hymn writer, consider the following stanza of one of Lee’s hymns (Hymns 1966, #496):
Readers may refer to http://www.witness-lee-hymns.org/hymns/H0496.html to see the full text of this hymn (accessed on 10 May 2025). |
28 | For Lee, regeneration specifically refers to infilling of the Spirit, outpouring of the Spirit, and reception of God’s life, which, as noted, is actuated by faith (Lee 2004–2020, vol. 109, p. 393). |
29 | It should be noted that the notion of each city only having one church is not a concept unique to Lee but rather is inherited from Nee who discusses it as early as 1926 (for further reading, see Nee 1992–1994, vol. 4, pp. 194–95; Buntain 2019, pp. 44–45). On this point, Lee states the following:
|
30 | “A local church needs to be open to all genuine believers. We must receive all believers, no matter what their denominational background or what they practice or believe about nonessential doctrines. We must receive them because we have no right to reject those whom God has received. As a local church we must be general—open to all believers” (Lee 2004–2020, vol. 67, p. 308). |
31 | Lee rejects the notion of sacraments. Here we use the vocabulary utilized within his ministry. |
32 | To be clear, for Lee, these are two separate realities signified by the bread. That is, the historical act of Christ’s individual body being broken on the cross is not conflated in any way with the corporate Body of Christ comprising all believers. |
33 | As a note, Lee’s notion of eating and drinking the Lord references exercising the human spirit to engage in Christian practices such as praying the words of Scripture, reading and memorizing Scripture, and singing hymns. |
34 | The verse reads “As the living Father has sent Me and I live because of the Father, so he who eats Me, he also shall live because of Me.” |
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Reardon, M.M.C.; Chiu, B.S.K. Becoming God in Life and Nature: Watchman Nee and Witness Lee on Sanctification, Union with Christ, and Deification. Religions 2025, 16, 933. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16070933
Reardon MMC, Chiu BSK. Becoming God in Life and Nature: Watchman Nee and Witness Lee on Sanctification, Union with Christ, and Deification. Religions. 2025; 16(7):933. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16070933
Chicago/Turabian StyleReardon, Michael M. C., and Brian Siu Kit Chiu. 2025. "Becoming God in Life and Nature: Watchman Nee and Witness Lee on Sanctification, Union with Christ, and Deification" Religions 16, no. 7: 933. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16070933
APA StyleReardon, M. M. C., & Chiu, B. S. K. (2025). Becoming God in Life and Nature: Watchman Nee and Witness Lee on Sanctification, Union with Christ, and Deification. Religions, 16(7), 933. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16070933