Walking by Faith; Gen 12:1;
Acts 7:2; Heb 11:8
What
we have been emphasizing as we go through Genesis is that the events are not
simply historical events. They are not just nice stories, biographies, and not just
to help us understand certain individuals, but they have to do with teaching
specific doctrines and upholding certain doctrines historically. Here the shift
in Abraham is going to be on faith, justification, and God’s provision of the
savior historically. What we see here is how faith is strengthened in Abraham.
In Genesis chapter 12 Abram hears a command from God but he is incomplete or
partial in his obedience. We will see from Hebrews 11 that Abram is not an
immature baby believer at this point. There are certain things that he
understands about the plan and purpose of God. When he obeys God by leaving Ur
he is obeying because he understands that there is a city built without hands.
In other words, he is at a point where he is perceiving that he is making
present time decisions based on his future destiny. So we call that a personal
sense of eternal destiny. He is reaching spiritual adolescence. But in chapter
12 he is partial in his obedience, and when we look at the outworking of God in
his life we see the removal of his father through death, and that is when he
moves on, but he still takes Lot with him. Then Lot is removed. So God works
with us where we are. That is a crucial principle of grace. God doesn’t meet us
where we ought to be, He meets us where we are. When God starts dealing with
Abraham his faith is partial, and we see God dealing with Abraham through
various tests, various situations; there is increased relationship with God,
Abraham becomes known as the friend of God, and then when we come to Genesis
chapter 22 we see the apex of Abraham’s spiritual growth when God appears to
Abraham and tells him to sacrifice his only son, the one who was the promised
seed. Abraham is immediately on his way and takes Isaac with him up to the
mountain with no hesitancy whatsoever. See what has happened to Abraham’s
faith? He has gone from incomplete, partial obedience, taking halting steps, to
where he has this tremendous example of trusting God in Genesis 22 and he
demonstrates that he has reached spiritual maturity. That is the progress we
all go through.
So
as a result of teaching about faith we are going to focus on two elements
actually in Abraham. One is faith in relation to justification because he
becomes the standard example in the New Testament for justification by faith
alone. Then faith in terms of the faith-rest drill as it applies to
sanctification—experiential sanctification, our spiritual growth and spiritual
advance.
With
regard to the doctrine of separation we have to be careful of a distorted
concept of separation. Separation ultimately has to do with separation from
sin. We have to learn to separate from sin in our own life. Romans 7ff talks
about putting to death the deeds of the flesh. This also involves separation
from the world. That doesn’t mean leaving the world, isolating in monastic
churches, etc. Separation from the world means to quit thinking like a pagan,
to think biblically; not just from the content of our thought but the structure
of our thought. Separation is from the sin nature first of all, and from the
world, and as we do that it is going to have some effect perhaps on family,
friends, and social life. What begins to occur to us, despite the fact that we
may truly enjoy friendship of some people who aren’t believers, we realize that
they can become a distraction in our own lives. As we grow up we realize that
there are some friends that we have had since we were kids who get in the way
of our Christian life. Separating in Scripture has to do with separating from
those people, circumstances, and cultural things that are a distraction to
one’s Christian life: spiritual growth and occupation with Christ. Hebrews
12:1, “Wherefore seeing we also are compassed about with so great a cloud of
witnesses, let us lay aside every weight, and the sin which doth so easily
beset us, and let us run with patience the race that is set before us.” The
Christian life is a race and sometimes family and friends, favorite hobbies,
are nothing more than distractions to the spiritual life.
Acts
7:2, “And he said, Men, brethren, and fathers, hearken; The God of glory
appeared unto our father Abraham, when he was in Mesopotamia, before he dwelt
in Charran.” The word “appear” is the Greek verb HORAO [o(raw] in an aorist passive indicative. The aorist refers
to a past event in terms of its entirety without reference to its beginning,
its progress or its ending. The passive looks odd because, you say, How do you
passively appear? But Arndt and Gingrich lexicon notes that the passive voice
of HORAO has an active sense of
becoming visible or appearing to someone. This is the idea: that God is always
present to us but in this sense He manifests Himself. So this is an Old
Testament theophany—the word comes from a combination of THEOS [qeoj], God, and PHONEO [fonew], to appear. Here this
means an appearance of God, but it is not God the Father, it is God the Son.
God the Father never appeared to anyone; only God the Son—John 1:18. “...when
he was in Mesopotamia,” not in Haran, which is up in Syria. The Lord Jesus
Christ appeared to Abraham before he left. This tells us that the threefold
command there to leave Ur with the threefold promise of land, seed, and
blessing came when he was still back in Ur. The verb there when it says, “the
Lord [had] said” in Acts is a tense in the Hebrew of Genesis 12:1 which should
be translated with a completed sense. The result is Acts 7:4, “Then came he out
of the land of the Chaldaeans, and dwelt in Charran: and from thence, when his
father was dead, he removed him into this land, wherein ye now dwell.” So why
does Abram move? He moves because God spoke to him. God gave him a specific
body of revelation; God gave him content. He is not just moving out because he
“felt the Spirit was moving him.”
Acts
7:5, “And he gave him none inheritance in it, no, not so much as to set his
foot on: yet he promised that he would give it to him for a possession, and to
his seed after him, when as yet he had no child.” The concept of inheritance
comes out of the Old Testament and this is one of the first places to
understand it. It is the Greek word KLERONOMIA [klhronomia]. When we think of the word “inherit” we think of
receiving something from someone who has died. We receive certain possessions,
and this is really the core idea in inheritance: the idea of possession, of
ownership, of having something that is one’s own. So Stephen emphasizes the
principle that God gave Abraham historically no inheritance. He had no
possession in the land. God promised him the land, that the land would be his;
but he lived out his life without ever owning land. The only piece of land that
he owned was the burial ground for his wife Sarah, and then for himself. But
there was the promise that God was going to give it to him.
What
was it that that enabled Abraham to pack his bags and to move out of his
comfort zone in Ur of the Chaldees? That is given to us in Hebrews 11:8. This
is the key dynamic. Hebrews 11 is often understood as the hall of faith chapter
on the Old Testament, and there is a lot of truth to that. It is an emphasis on
Old Testament heroes who trusted God and had doctrine in their souls. It starts
of with the familiar “By faith” which is simply the dative case of the noun pistis [pistij]. Here we are making a
distinction between the noun and the verb. The verb will emphasize more than
anything the act of trusting or relying on something; the emphasis is on
action, whereas the noun indicates frequently not simply the act but the
object, the reality. Faith isn’t simply an act of trusting, it is trusting in
something. The concept of faith for Abraham is not just the act of trusting but
it is what he is trusting in. It is the doctrine in his soul, the revelation
that God gave him. So we read in Hebrews 11:8, “By faith [by doctrine, the
content and focus of faith, the object of faith] Abraham, when he was called to
go out into a place which he should after receive for an inheritance, obeyed;
and he went out, not knowing whither he went.” The very verb “obeyed”
emphasizes the fact that there was something to obey. It is the aorist active
indicative of HUPAKOUO [u(pokouw] and it means he obeyed,
submitted to God. It means to trust God and do what God says to do. Has Abraham
received an inheritance yet? No. This is one of the arguments Jesus used for
resurrection when speaking to the Pharisees.
Abraham
knew that God had spoken to him but he did not know where he was going. The
only way we know that God is speaking to us is to open our Bible and read what
the Bible says. Our decisions are based on revelation. God doesn’t speak to us
face to face as He did with Abraham or Moses, but through the Word of God and
knowledge of the principles of the Word of God.
Hebrews
11:9, “By faith [by trust in the doctrine he had received] he sojourned in the
land of promise, as in a strange country, dwelling in tabernacles with Isaac
and Jacob, the heirs with him of the same promise.” He knew the land would be
his but it wasn’t his yet. He wasn’t to live today as if he were already the
king or ruling royal authority in the Millennial kingdom. Why is that
important? Because that is what the charismatics are doing with “name it, claim
it” stuff! That is why at the very core of their whole concept is this idea
that we are in a present form of the kingdom. But if we are not in a present
form of the kingdom and are in the church age, and if we are a believer in the
Lord Jesus Christ we are like Abraham. This is going to be the inheritance, but
it is not now. So we don’t act as though we own it now. It won’t be ours until
we return in the Millennial kingdom. Abraham had to live his life in light of
eternity, the same as we do. We live today in the light of eternity with our
focus on where God is taking us in preparation. Abraham recognized that he was
in a temporary circumstance.
Hebrews
11:10, “For he looked for a city which hath foundations, whose builder and
maker is God.” This city wasn’t there; this city was the new Jerusalem and it
was not present during his life time. This city is not coming until the future,
until the Millennial kingdom.
How
did Abraham know about this city? It is not in the text. What does that tell
us? It tells us that there was some sort of 9overstating it a little bit)
Noahic or Adamic Bible—not necessarily a canon of Scripture, but just using the
term generally, but there was some body of revelation that was known to
Abraham, to Noah, to Enoch who walked with God before the flood, that isn’t
present for us today. We don’t know some of the things that they knew but
obviously Abraham knew some things that aren’t included in the Pentateuch.
Moses doesn’t reveal to us the basis for Abraham’s knowledge about God and the
specific things that Abraham knew about the plan and purposes of God. We also
get hints from the book of Jude which quotes the apocryphal book about Enoch
that apparently Enoch knew some things related to prophecy and eschatology that
aren’t given to us in Genesis. New Testament passages give us hints that these
guys really had a body of revelatory knowledge that isn’t available to us
today, and it was on that basis that they lived their spiritual lives. Abraham
knew that there was a future and he knew what that future was, he is not just
stumbling around. He has an understanding of dispensations and he has an
understanding of eschatology.
The
basic issue is the walk by faith. This is an example of walking by faith.
Abraham doesn’t know where God is taking him but he knows that to fulfill his
responsibilities as a believer in the Old Testament he has to leave Ur and go
forward, and that God is going to provide for him along the way. There is
nothing that Abraham is going to encounter that God didn’t know in eternity
past and make provision for. God knew that Abraham would run into a famine.
What did Abraham do? He said in effect, “I’m not going to trust you, Lord, I’m
going down to Egypt.” Time and again we see Abraham learn lessons the hard way,
just as we do. But we know that when we are obeying Him, God is always going to
make provision. No matter what happens in our life God is always going to
provide what we need for our spiritual sustenance and growth. The basic
mechanic for walking in the Christian life is that we walk by faith.
The
basic meaning of the word “faith.” There are a couple of different words that
are used in the New Testament related to faith and are based on the same root.
The first is the noun PISTIS
[pistij]
and is used as an attribute, a description or an adjective, and indicates
reliability and trustworthiness, that which is dependable and has integrity.
For example, Titus 2:10, “Not pilfering, but showing all good faith; that they
may adorn the doctrine of God our Saviour in all things.” There faith is used
in the sense of reliability, dependability and integrity. As believers we
should show all integrity. It comes from faith, from our knowledge of doctrine
and application of doctrine. Another passage that is used this way is 2
Thessalonians 1:4, “So that we ourselves glory in you in the churches of God
for your patience and faith …” It is talking about the results of their trust
in doctrine which produces dependability and integrity. A second way in which it
is used is the idea of the action. It means faith, confidence, trust, that we
recognize and accept Bible doctrine. So in the active sense it has the sense of
trust or reliance upon something. Then we can break that sense down into three sub-categories.
The
first is in the arena of saving faith. The faith that is operational at the
instant of salvation is a faith or a trust that has as its object the cross,
the work of Christ. It is used in the sense in Ephesians 2:8, “For by grace are
ye saved through faith; and that not of yourselves: it is the gift of God.”
That is trust in the cross. The second way in which it is used is
post-salvation faith-rest drill, the basic mechanic of how the believer grows
and matures. Here the object is not the cross, it is still trust, but the
object is now the revelation of God—Bible doctrine. We are going to trust the
promises of God, the principles given in the revelation of God. This is the
basis for the faith-rest drill. The first stage is mixing faith with promises,
the second stage is that we draw from those promises various rationales or
reasons for trusting God, and third, we draw from those rationales doctrinal
conclusions and apply them to the situation. All of this has to do with that
active sense of trusting God in our post-salvation Christian life and growth. Then
we have a sort of passive meaning to faith. It is not the act of believing but
it is focusing on what is believed, the content or the object of faith. In
other words, the doctrines we believe. It is used this way in Galatians 1:23, referring
to Paul himself: “But they had heard only, That he which persecuted us in times
past now preacheth the faith [the doctrine, the body of belief] which once he
destroyed.” This is the sense that we have in Hebrews 11. It is not just the
act of faith, it is what is believed, the doctrine, the body of doctrine. So we
could say that these mean’s faith was the body of doctrine they believed. Faith
resulted in action. By the doctrine Abraham believed, he obeyed...by the
doctrine he believed he dwelt in the land of promise. It is the belief in that
doctrine; it is trusting that doctrine.
The
object of faith at salvation is the person and work of the Lord Jesus Christ.
The object of faith for the spiritual life is the promises and principles of
Scripture and Bible doctrine. That is the function of growing up. Faith, then,
focuses on the body of doctrine, revealed content. This is what happened with
Abraham and is how he was able to go forward and advanced in his spiritual
life, because God gives him specific content, specific directions, and he trusts
in that even when he can’t see where it is going. Do we make mistakes? Sometimes, but God’s grace is always there.
If we are still alive God still has a plan for us.