Abraham Believed God
"For what saith the Scripture? 'Abraham believed God, and
it was counted unto him for righteousness'"
(Romans 4:3).
Abraham Believed
God
In these words we have the essence of the Gospel of God, and
of His Grace. That Gospel is explained in Romans 1:1 to be the "Gospel of God."
God's Good News; and faith cometh by hearing it. This is the Gospel that
Abraham believed; he believed God; believed what God said. The patriarch's feet
were firmly planted on God's ground; his eyes were fixed on God Himself. He had
no shadow of doubt as to his possessing, in due time, all that God had
promised. He did not hope it, still less did he doubt it, or go on asking for
what God said He had given.
Oh! how few comparatively among the
children of God really believe God, and without any reserve take this blessed
ground of having died with Christ, of being risen with Christ, of being
forgiven all sins, accepted in the Beloved, and sealed by the Holy Spirit! At
times they hope it; when all goes smoothly with them they can venture to speak
hopefully, but when things go against them, they feel the working of the old
nature, and at once they begin to reason about themselves, and to question
whether after all they are in reality the children of God. From such reasonings
the passage to despondency and despair is an easy one.
All this is
destructive to peace, because it is dishonouring to God. It is impossible to
make progress in this condition. How can one run a race if he is not sure
whether he has started? How can one erect a building if he has not laid the
foundation? How can any one grow in grace if he is in doubt whether he has
life, or has been "planted"? But some may ask, "How can I be sure about this?
How may I know that I am saved?" The answer is, How do you know that you are a
sinner and need saving? Is it because you feel you are one ? Possibly so, but
feeling is not a ground of faith; faith that is based on feeling is not a
Divine faith at all. "Faith cometh by hearing." Faith must have respect to a
promise not to a feeling. True faith rests on the testimony of God's Word. No
doubt it is by the gracious energy of the Holy Spirit that any one can exercise
this living faith, but we are speaking now of the true ground of faith, the
authority for faith, the basis on which alone it can rest, and that surely is
the Word of God, which is able to make wise unto salvation without any human
intervention whatsoever.
Religion versus
Christianity
There is scarcely a point on which Religion is more
opposed to Christianity. Religion makes the word of God of none effect by its
tradition and its superstition, and is thus in direct hostility to the truth of
God. Religion has to do with the flesh; it admits that there is a Divine
revelation; but it denies that anyone can understand it save by the
interpretation of man; or, in other words, the Word of God is not sufficient
without man's authority. God has spoken, but I am told I cannot hear His voice
or understand His Word without; human intervention. This is Religion!
Infidelity, on the other hand, boldly denies a Revelation; it does not believe
in such a thing. Infidels can write books, they can tell us their mind, but (so
they say) God cannot! But where is the difference between denying that God has
spoken, and maintaining that He cannot make us understand what He says? Both
are alike dishonouring to God. Both deprive man of the priceless treasure of
His Word. Both exalt the creature and blaspheme the Creator. Both alike shut
out God, and rob the soul of the foundation of its faith. This has ever been
the device of the enemy, to quench the light of inspiration, to plunge the soul
into the darkness of infidelity and superstition, to set aside the authority of
the Word of God by any means in his power. He cares not by what agency he gains
this end. Witness how he brought about the Fall by casting doubt on the Word of
God. "Yea, hath God said?" It is therefore very important for us to seize this
great fact which is brought out in our text, "Abraham believed God." Here was
Divine faith. It was not a question of feeling or Religion. Indeed, if Abraham
had been influenced by his feelings he would have been a doubter instead of a
believer. For what had he in himself to build his faith on? "His own body now
dead" (verse 19)? A poor ground surely on which to base a faith in the promise
of an innumerable posterity. But we are told that "he considered not his own
body now dead." What then did he consider? The Word of the living God, and on
that he rested. This is faith.
Mark what the Holy Spirit says of him.
"He staggered not at the promise of God through unbelief... therefore it was
imputed unto him for righteousness" (verses 20-22). Ah, but the anxious one may
say, "What has all this to do with my case? I am not Abraham! I cannot expect a
special revelation from God. How am I to know that God has spoken to me? How
can I possess this precious faith?" Mark the answer to these questions in the
Spirit's further words in verse 23. "Now it was not written for his sake alone
that it was imputed to him, but for us also. if..." If what? If we feel it? If
we realise it? If we experience anything in ourselves? Nay! But "if we believe
on Him that raised up Jesus our Lord from the dead." Oh! what solid comfort is
here, what rich consolation! It assures the anxious one that he has the
self-same ground and authority to rest upon that Abraham had, with much more
light than Abraham had. For Abraham was called to believe God's Word as to what
He promised, whereas we are privileged to believe in a fact which God has
accomplished. He was called to look forward to something yet to be done; we
look back at something that has been done, even an accomplished redemption
attested by the fact of a risen and glorified Saviour, seated at the right hand
of the Majesty on high.
But as to the ground or authority on which this
faith is to be based, it is the same in our case as in that of Abraham -- the
Word of God. So it is written, "faith cometh by hearing, and hearing by the
Word of God." There is no other foundation for faith but this; and the faith
that rests on any other foundation is not true faith at all. A faith resting on
human tradition, or on the authority of a Church, is not Divine faith; it is a
mere superstition, it is a faith which stands in the wisdom of men, and not in
the power of God (I Corinthians 2:5). It is impossible for us to overstate the
value and the importance of this grand principle, the ground of a living faith.
This is the Divine antidote to all the errors, evils, and hostile influences of
the present day. There is a tremendous shaking going on around us, and it will
grow worse. Minds are agitated; disturbing forces are abroad; foundations are
being loosened; institutions are tottering; souls which found shelter in them
are being dislodged and know not whither to turn. Confusion and judgment is
written on all things ecclesiastical and political.
What is the one
thing that we need? Simply this. A living faith in the living God! This is what
is needed for all who are disturbed by what they see without, or feel within.
Our unfailing resource is this, trust in a living God, and in His Son Jesus
Christ, revealed by the Eternal Spirit in the Scriptures of Truth .
Here is the resting-place for faith. Here we solemnly exhort you to stay your
whole souls. Here we have authority for all that we need to know, to believe,
and to do. Is it a question of anxiety about your safety? Hear the Divine
words, "Wherefore also it is contained in the Scriptures: Behold I lay in Zion
a Chief Corner Stone, elect, precious, and he that believeth on Him shall not
be confounded" (I Peter 2:6). What solid comfort is here, what deep, settled
repose! God has laid the foundation, and that foundation is nothing less than
His own Eternal, co-equal Son. This foundation is sufficient to sustain all the
counsels of God, to meet all the needs of the soul. Christ is God's own
precious, tried, Chief Corner Stone. That blessed One who went down into
death's dark waters; bore the heavy judgment and wrath of God against sin, and
robbed death of its sting, and, having done this, was raised from the dead, was
received up into Glory, and is now seated at the right hand of the Majesty in
the Heavens. Such is God's foundation to which He graciously calls the
attention of every one who really feels the need of something divinely solid on
which to build, in view of the hollow and shadowy scenes of the world, and in
prospect of the stern realities of the future.
Dear reader, if this is
your position, if you have come to this point, be assured that it is for you as
positively and as distinctively as though you heard a voice from Heaven
speaking to your own very self. In spite of sin in all its forms, and in all
its consequences, in spite of Satan's power and Satan's malice, God has spoken!
He has caused His voice to be heard in this dark and sinful world, and what has
He said? "Behold, I lay in Zion... a foundation!" This is something entirely
new! It is as though our blessed, loving and ever-gracious God had said to us,
"Here I have begun anew, I have laid a foundation, and I pledge My word that
whosoever commits himself to My foundation, whosoever rests in Mine Anointed,
i.e., in My Christ, whosoever is satisfied with My precious, tried, Chief
Corner Stone, shall never, no never, no never, be confounded, never be put to
shame, never be disappointed, never perish, world without end!" Oh, how
blessed, how safe, how secure! If there were any question raised, any condition
imposed, any barrier erected, you might well hesitate. If it were made a
question of feeling, or experience, or of anything else that you could do,
feel, be or produce, then you might justly pause, but there is absolutely
nothing of the sort. There is the Christ of God, there is the Word of God, and
what then? "He that believeth shall not he confounded."
In short, it is
no more and no less than believing what God says, because He says it! It is
committing your self to the word of Him that cannot lie. It is doing exactly
what Abraham did. "Abraham believed God, and it was counted unto him for
righteousness." It does not say Abraham understood God, because he did not; nor
that Abraham believed something about God, but Abraham believed God, i.e., what
He said. Thus he lived in peace with God, and died in the hope of Resurrection,
of a Heavenly City, of a Heavenly Home. It is resting on the immovable rock of
Holy Scripture, and thus proving the Divine and saving virtue of that which
never failed any who trusted to it, never did, and never will, and never can.
Oh! the unspeakable blessedness of having such a foundation in a world like
this, where death and decay and change are stamped upon all, where friendship's
fondest ties are snapped in a moment by death's rude hand, where all that seems
(to nature's view) most stable is liable to be swept away in a moment by a
popular Revolution, where there is absolutely nothing on which the heart can
lean and say, "Now I have found permanent repose." Oh! what a mercy in such a
scene to have a living faith in the living Word and in the written Word of the
living God.