-
Righteousness by Faith
-
Articles by A.T Jones
-
Published in the Advent Review and
Sabbath Herold
-
(Article titles supplied by Allen
A. Benosn)
-
-
-
-
"For He Spake, and It Was."
-
December 27, 1898
-
-
-
Faith is the expecting the word of God to do what it says
and the depending upon that word to do what it says.
-
As that is faith and as faith comes by the word of God,
it is plain that the word of God, in order to inculcate faith, must teach
that the word has in itself power to accomplish what itself says.
-
-
-
And such is precisely the truth of the matter: the word
of God does teach just this and nothing else, so that it is truly "the
faithful word"--the word full of faith.
-
-
-
The greater part of the very first chapter of the Bible
is instruction in faith. That chapter has in itself no fewer than six distinct
statement that definitely inculcate faith; with the essential connective
of the first verse, there are seven.
-
-
-
The inculcation of faith is the teaching that the word
of God itself accomplishes the thing which is spoken in that word.
-
-
-
Read, then, the first verse of the Bible. "In the beginning
God created the heaven and the earth." How did He create them? "By the
word of the Lord were the heavens made, and all the host of them by the
breath of his mouth.
-
"For he spake, and it was." Ps. 33:6-9. Before He spoke,
it was not; after He spoke, "it was." Only by speaking, it was. What caused
it to be? The word only.
-
-
-
But darkness was upon all the face of the deep. God wished
light to be there, but how could there be light when all was darkness?
Again He spoke. "And God said, Let there be light; and there was light."
Whence came the light? The word which was spoken, itself produced the light.
"The entrance of thy words giveth light." Ps. 119:130.
-
-
-
There was no firmament, atmosphere. God wished that there
should be a firmament. How could it be produced? "God said, Let there be
a firmament . . . and it was so." Another translation for "it was so" is,
"And thus it came to pass." What caused the firmament to be? What caused
this thus to come to pass? The word only. He spoke, and it was so. The
word spoken, itself caused the thing to exist.
-
God next desired that there should be dry land. How could
this be? Again He spoke. "God said, Let the waters under the heaven be
gathered together unto one place and let the dry land appear; and it was
so."
-
-
-
Then there was no vegetation. Whence should this come?
Again God spoke. "And God said, let the earth bring forth grass, the herb
yielding seed, and the fruit-tree yielding fruit after his kind, whose
seed is in itself, upon the earth, and it was so."
-
-
-
-
Again He spoke. "And God said, let there be lights in
the firmament of heaven . . . and it was so."
-
-
-
Again He spoke. "And God said, Let the earth bring forth
the living creature . . . and it was so."
-
-
-
Thus it was that "by the word of the Lord" all things
were created. He spoke the word only, and it was so. The word spoken, itself
produced the thing.
-
-
-
Thus it was in creation. And thus it was in redemption.
He healed the sick; He cast out devils; He stilled the tempest; He cleansed
the lepers; He raised the dead; He forgave sins--all by His word. In all
this, also, "He spake and it was."
-
-
-
And so He is the same yesterday and today and forever.
Always He is the Creator. And always He does all things by His word only.
And always He can do all things by His word, because it is the very characteristic
of the word of God that it is possessed of the divine power by which itself
accomplishes the thing which is spoken.
-
-
-
This is why it is that faith is the knowing that in the
word of God there is this power, the expecting the word itself to do the
thing spoken and the depending upon that word itself to do that which the
word speaks.
-
-
-
The teaching of faith is the teaching that such is the
nature of the word of God; the teaching of people to exercise faith is
the teaching them to expect the word of God to do what it says and to depend
upon it to do the thing which is by it spoken; the cultivating of faith
is by practice to cause to grow confidence in the power of the word of
God itself to do what in that word is said and dependence upon that word
itself to accomplish what the word says.
-
-
-
And "the knowledge of what the Scripture means when urging
upon us the necessity of cultivating faith is more essential than any other
knowledge that can be acquired."
-
-
-
Are you cultivating faith?
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
[Back]
[Contents] [Next]
-
Site Contents]
-
[Adultery]
[Advent]
[Answers to Prayer]
[Biblical Snapshots]
[Country Living]
[Dear Brothers]
[Descriptions of Heaven]
[Disease and Its Causes]
[E-Mail] [Favorite
Scriptures] [Foxe's
Book of Martyrs] [God's
Remnant Church] [History
of God's People] [KJV]
[Language of Heaven]
[Ministry of Healing]
[Portrait Gallery]
[Prophets and Prophecy]
[Qualifications for Heaven]
[Righteousness by Faith]