I was told fairly often by my mom when I was younger that I needed to get right with God. Were you ever told that when you were younger? In a way that’s what today's blog is about.... getting right with God.
A question that Paul is laying out in the book of Romans is are we made right with God by what we do? This is called justification by works. There were some people that Paul is writing to here, that said to be a Christian you have to be circumcised, that is the mark that is needed. They are bringing in some rules of being Jewish into their new Jewish-Christian life.
Or, are we made right
with God by believing and trusting in Him? This is called justification by
faith. And then good works come after this as we are justified, made righteous,
because then we seek to do good for other people with pure motives and a clean
heart.
It is a question that we need to look at today, because being made right with God allows us to do good works, but it all begins with faith.
So, faith is a pretty important mark of who we are as Christians.
So, let’s define it and then we’ll get into this about Abraham and faith and promises.
Faith= a belief or a
trust, and those are 2 good words to help us.
When we say “I believe in God the Father almighty, creator of heaven and earth and in Jesus Christ his only son, our Lord” we are saying this is where we place our faith because we believe in this.
I have heard faith described like a muscle, the more you use it the stronger it gets. And there is something there that faith has a potential of growth. That’s why Jesus said that just a little faith, the size of a mustard seed, could move mountains in your life. Not that you are doing it but that you place your faith, your beliefs and your trust, even if you only have a little bit today, in the mountain-moving God who is ready to move on your behalf.
You just gotta have, faith, as George Michaels said.
Martin Luther said that “faith is a living, bold hope in God’s grace” That’s pretty powerful.
And probably the best definition comes from Hebrews 11:1, “Now faith is confidence in what we hope for and assurance about what we do not see”.
And so Paul uses the example of Abraham, this OT patriarch, who had faith in God, confidence in what God promised him, even though the promise was far off, he couldn’t see it yet.
Before we get into the promise that Abraham was hoping for, I wonder if there is anybody reading this who is trusting God for a promise that you can’t see the results of yet?
Is there anybody who needs to believe God for something specific in your life that you aren’t seeing the fruits of yet?
If so, then that’s good, because that’s faith.
And that’s good,
because if we could see it, then the promise is already being fulfilled. But
when we can’t see it yet, we have hope because of our faith. And we walk by
faith, not by sight.
But we still walk.
When your promise is waaayyyyy over there, and you’re waaayyyy over here. The distance from where you are to the promise that you are seeking is called you faith….walk.
It’s a walk. It’s a
journey.
That’s what faith
is.
It takes faith to access the promises that God has made to you.
We need to stop starting and stopping in our faith walk because we get discouraged or bogged down by external circumstances that are trying to trip us up, cause that’s what the enemy is doing when you’re walking, tripping us up, blocking the path, putting little detours in there that seem easier, but the devil can’t mess with the promise because the promise was made by God to you and nothing will stop that, unless you quit walking toward it.
I heard another preacher say once that this is called a “finishing faith”.
And he took that
from 2 Timothy 4:7. There the apostle Paul is writing old and about done with
his walk but he’s writing to encourage Timothy, a young preacher to keep on
walking in faith.
Paul writes, “I have fought the good fight, I have finished the race, I have kept the faith.”
A finishing faith will allow us to live those words one day, a finishing faith will help us walk this way keeping our eyes on the promise, our eyes on the prize, and will give us the strength we need to do that.
We are marked with a
finishing faith, a faith that goes the distance.
Just like Abraham.
The promise made to
Abraham is that he would be the father of many nations. That he would have
descendants as numerous as the sands on the seashore or the stars in the sky.
The only issue is that when the promise was made Abraham was 75 years old and his wife, Sarah, was about 70.
But Abraham had
faith in the promise because it was made by the Promise-Maker.
But like then the
next month nothing happened, and then the next month nothing happened. Have you
ever been there? Like, "I know I trust in the promises God is making to me, but
it’s been like 45 minutes, what are you doing up there?"
And Sarah had we
could call a laughing faith. When she heard the promise she laughed at it.
Cause it’s a crazy promise. It seems that it’s an Impossible promise.
And if it was only biologically left up to Abraham and Sarah it would have been impossible, but the promise isn’t based on their works, the promise isn’t about what they do or don’t do, although I guess that there is ONE thing they would need to do to FULFILL that promise, but Genesis 15:6 says “Abraham believed the Lord, and he credited it to him as righteousness”.
Abraham was justified, or made right with God because of his faith in God.
25 years later,
Abraham and Sarah had a son named Isaac. That’s 25 years of walking by faith
when there was no visible sight or signs of the promise.
But he had to just keep walking.
V18 “Against all
hope, Abraham in hope, believed and so became…”
That’s a finishing
faith, walking into the promise and becoming what God has called you to be in
the process of your faith walk.
It’s amazing how
people believe what is said about them and then become, or live into, those
defining statements.
If a parent
constantly yells insults at their children and tells them that they are
worthless, if they hear they are stupid or no good then they believe it and in
some ways they…become it.
But if words of affirmation and hope and encouragement are spoken over children then their self esteem is raised to where they believe that they are beautiful, that they are smart, that they can do anything.
The same is true in our faith walk. What words are you hearing spoken about you? Are there words from your past that keeps up coming up to mark you when the reality is that you have been marked by God himself, set apart as a beautiful and to-die-for, literally, child of God?
Maybe today you feel like you are living those words, against all hope. Then I want to encourage you to see it the way Abraham did, through believing and becoming.
Maybe sometimes God places the promise a little further out because he needs to work on your hope a little bit more in your walk. Maybe the length of the walk is strengthening you for the claiming of the promise when you actually get there.
V19 “Without weakening in his body he faced the fact”
The fact is he’s old
and his wife is old.
Walking in faith
involves facing the facts. Faith is not a pie-in-the-sky denial of reality.
Faith is not some
sugar-coated ideology that “everything is peaches and cream”.
Faith is not blindly
saying that everything is ok.
I have ministered
with church members who have been sexually abused, everything is not ok.
I have walked with
church members through the death of parents, children, and spouses. Everything
is not OK.
I have talked to
couples on the brink of divorce because of infidelity. Everything is not OK.
I have been with
Christians wrecked by addition. Everything is not OK.
I have sat with
people overcome by anxiety and depression. Everything is not OK.
Faith is about
recognizing the reality of the situations and saying, “everything is not OK.
But my faith can handle that because my God can handle that”.
There are 6 words
printed in the bulletins of the churches where I serve.
Be Real. Be Loving. Be Involved.
I believe that this points to our faith walk. But the first 2 words, “be real” is about honesty and authenticity. And that is where faith starts.
Faith is not about
having it all together, faith is an acknowledgement that we don’t have it all
together but we are trusting in the promises of the One who does. And so we
keep on walking, one step at time. One day at a time.
That’s why the
Lord’s Prayer is prayer of faith. We are
asking in faith for our daily bread. We have to ask daily, for daily
bread. If God gave us weekly bread some people probably wouldn’t even talk to
him the other 6 days.
Daily bread is about
faith. It is about coming to God every day and saying, “thank you for taking
care of me yesterday. I trust you that you will take care of me today.”
And then you just keep walking, walking this way.
Every step you take on your faith walk is taking you somewhere. And we need a finishing faith when we feel that we are against ALL HOPE, so that we will not weaken in our faith but claim the promises of God even when we don’t see them yet.
V20 “Abraham was strengthened in his faith and gave glory to God”—this is before the prayer was answered. This was before the promise was realized. The only physical things that have changed at this point is that Abraham and Sarah keep on getting older. The spiritual part though is that they keep on walking, and trusting, and in that giving glory to God
V21 “being fully persuaded that God had the power to do what he promised”
We can get persuaded
by all sorts of stuff at times. About 15 years ago the Kirby door to door
vacuum salesmen persuaded me and Heather to buy a vacuum that cost more than
some cars I owned.
Are you fully persuaded today that God has the power to do what God has said that he will do?
And all this promise business isn’t just about Abraham, V24 says, “but also for us, to whom God will credit righteousness—for us who believe in him who raised Jesus our Lord from the dead. He was delivered over to death for our sins, and was raised to life for our justification.”
And this happens through faith.
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