- Righteousness
by Faith
- Lessons on Faith
- By A. T. Jones
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- Chapter 3 Lessons
on Faith
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Without faith it is impossible to please God.
The reason for this is that "whatsoever is not of faith
is sin" (Rom. 14:23), and of course sin cannot please God.
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This is why it is that, as stated by the Spirit
of Prophecy on the first page of the Review, Oct. 18, 1898, "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."
- And for this cause we shall hereafter,
in this place in each number of the Review give a Scripture lesson
on faith--what it is, how it comes, how to exercise it--that
every reader of this paper may have this knowledge that "is
more essential than any other knowledge that can be acquired."
RH Nov. 29, 1898
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- In order to be able to know what the Scripture
means when urging upon us the necessity of cultivating faith,
it is essential to know, first of all, what is faith.
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- \Plainly, it must be to little purpose
to urge upon a person the necessity of cultivating faith, while
that person has no intelligent idea of what faith is. And it
is sadly true that, though the Lord has made this perfectly plain
in the Scriptures, there are many church-members who do not know
what faith is. They may even know what the definition of faith
is, but they do not know what the thing is. They do not grasp
the idea that is in the definition.
- For that reason the definition will not
be touched now, but rather there will be cited and studied an
illustration of faith-an instance which makes it stand out so
plainly that all can see the very thing itself.
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- Faith comes "by the word of God."
To the Word, then, we must look for it.
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- One day a centurion came to Jesus and
said to him, "Lord, my servant lieth at home sick of the
palsy, grievously tormented. And Jesus saith unto him, I will
come and heal him. The centurion answered and said, Lord, I am
not worthy that thou shouldest come under my roof, but speak
the word only, and my servant shall be healed . . . When Jesus
heard it, he marveled, and said to them that followed, Verily
I say unto you, I have not found so great faith, no, not in Israel."
Matt. 8:6-10.
- There is what Jesus pronounces faith.
When we find what that is, we have found faith. To know what
that is, is to know what faith is. there can be no sort of doubt
about this, for Christ is "the Author . . . of faith,"
and He says that that which the centurion manifested was "faith"--yes,
even "great faith."
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- Where, then, in this is the faith? The
centurion wanted a certain thing done. He wanted the Lord to
do it. But when the Lord said, "I will come" and do
it, the centurion checked Him, saying, "Speak the word only,"
and it shall be done.
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- Now what did the centurion expect would
do the work? "The word ONLY." Upon what did he depend
for the healing of his servant? Upon "the word ONLY."
- Now, brother, sister, what is faith?
RH Dec. 6, 1898
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- 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.
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- 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.
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- The inculcation of faith is the teaching
that the word of God itself accomplishes the thing which is spoken
in that word.
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- 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.
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- 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.
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- 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."
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- 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."
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- Again He spoke. "And God said, let
there be lights in the firmament of heaven . . . and it was so."
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- Again He spoke. "And God said, Let
the earth bring forth the living creature . . . and it was so."
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- 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.
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- 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."
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- 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.
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- 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.
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- 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.
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- 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."
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- Are you cultivating faith?
- RH Dec. 27, 1898
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- Faith is the expecting the word of God
itself to do what the word says and depending upon that word
itself to do what the word says.
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- When this is clearly discerned, it is
perfectly easy to see how it is that "faith is the substance
of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen."
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- Since the word of God is imbued with creative
power and so is able to produce in very substance the thing which
that word speaks and since faith is the expectation that the
word itself will do what the word says and depending on the word
only to do what that word says, it is plain enough that faith
is the substance of things hoped for.
- Since the word of God is in itself creative
and so is able to produce and cause to appear what otherwise
would never exist nor be seen, and since faith is the expecting
the word of God only to do just that thing and depending upon
"the word only" to do it, it is plain enough that faith
is "the evidence of things not seen."
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- Thus it is that "through faith we
understand that the worlds were framed by the word of God, so
that things which are seen were not made of things which do appear."
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- He who exercises faith knows that the
word of God is creative and that so it is able to produce the
thing spoken. Therefore, he can understand, not guess, that the
worlds were produced, were caused to exist, by the word of God.
- He who exercises faith can understand
that though before the word of God was spoken, neither the things
which are now seen nor the substances of which those things are
composed, anywhere appeared, simply because they did not exist;
yet when that word was spoken, the worlds were, simply because
that word itself caused them to exist.
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- This is the difference between the word
of God and the word of man. man may speak, but there is no power
in his words to perform the thing spoken. If the thing is to
be accomplished which he has spoken, the man must do something
in addition to speaking the word--he must make good his word.
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- Not so the word of God.
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- When God speaks, the thing is. And it
is, simply because He has spoken. It accomplishes that which
He was pleased to speak. It is not necessary that the Lord, as
man, must do something in addition to the word spoken. He needs
not to make His word good; it is good. He speaks "the word
only," and the things is accomplished.
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- And so it is written: "For this cause
also thank we God without ceasing, because, when ye received
the word of God, which ye heard of us, ye received it not as
the word of men, but as it is in truth, the word of God, which
effectually worketh also in you that believe"--in you that
exercise faith. 1 Thess. 2:13.
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- This also is how it is that it is "impossible
for God to lie." It is not impossible for God to lie only
because He will not, but also because He cannot. And He cannot
lie, just because He cannot. It is impossible. And it is impossible,
because when He speaks, the creative energy is in the word spoken,
so that "the word only" causes the thing to be so.
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- Man may speak a word and it not be so.
Thus man can lie, for to speak what is not so is to lie. And
man can lie, can speak what is not so, because there is no power
in his word itself to cause the thing to be. With God this is
impossible; He cannot lie, for "he spake, and it was";
He speaks, and it is so.
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- This is also how it is that when the word
of God is spoken for a certain time, as in a prophecy for hundreds
of years to come when that time actually has arrived, that word
is fulfilled. And it is then fulfilled, not because, apart from
the word, God does something to fulfill it, but because the word
was spoken for that time, and in it is the creative energy which
causes the word at that time to produce the thing spoken.
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- This is how it was that if the children
had not cried, "Hosanna to the Son of David," the stones
would have immediately cried out; and this is how it was that
when the third day had come, it was "impossible" that
He should be any longer holden of death.
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- O, the word of God is divine! In it is
creative energy. It is "living and powerful." The word
of God is self-fulfilling, and to trust it and depend upon it
as such, that is to exercise faith. "Hast thou faith?"
- RH Jan 3, 1899
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"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."
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- Notice that it is the knowledge of what
the Scripture means as to the "necessity of cultivating
faith"--not particularly having faith but cultivating it.
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- There is not much said in the Scriptures
about any necessity of our having faith, while very, very much
is said about our cultivating faith.
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- The reason of this is that to all people
there is given faith to begin with, and all they need to do is
to cultivate faith. Nobody can have more faith than is already
given him without cultivating the faith that is already given.
And there is nothing known to man that will grow so fast as faith,
when it is cultivated--"faith groweth exceedingly."
- Faith is the expecting that the word of
God itself will accomplish what that word says, and the depending
upon "the word only" to accomplish what the word says.
To cultivate dependence on the word of God, "the word only,"
itself to do what the word says is to cultivate faith.
- Faith is "the gift of God" (Eph.
2:8), and that it is given to everybody is plainly stated in
the Scriptures. "God hath dealt to every man the measure
of faith." Rom. 12:3. This measure of faith which "God
hath dealt to every man" is the capital with which God endows
and starts "every man that cometh into the world,"
and every man is expected to trade upon this capital--cultivate
it--to the salvation of his soul.
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- There is no danger of ever lessening this
capital when it is used; as certainly as it is used at all, it
will increase. It will grow exceedingly. And as certainly as
it grows, the righteousness, the peace, the joy, of the Lord,
are assured to the full salvation of the soul.
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- Again, faith comes by the word of God.
Therefore, it is written, "The word is nigh thee, even in
thy mouth, and in thy heart: that is, the word of faith, which
we preach." Rom. 10:8. Thus faith, the very word of faith,
is in the mouth and in the heart of every man.
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- How is this? Thus: When the first pair
sinned in the garden, they wholly believed Satan. They gave themselves
wholly to Satan. They were taken completely captive by him. Then
there was perfect agreement and peace between them and Satan.
But God did not leave it so. He broke up this agreement; He spoiled
this peace. And He did it by His word, saying to Satan, "I
will put enmity between thee and the woman and between thy seed
and her seed." Gen. 3:15.
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- "It is God alone that can continually
put enmity between the seed of the woman and the serpent's seed.
After the transgression of man, his nature became evil. Then
was peace between Satan and fallen man. Had there been no interference
on the part of God, men would have formed an alliance against
heaven, and in the place of warfare among themselves, carried
on nothing but warfare against God. There is no native enmity
between fallen angels and fallen men. Both are evil and that
through apostasy, and evil, wherever it exists, will always league
against good. Fallen angels and fallen men join in companionship.
The wise general of fallen angels calculated that if he could
induce men, as he had angels, to join in rebellion, they would
stand as his agents of communication with men to league in rebellion
against heaven. Just as soon as one separates from God, he has
no power of enmity against Satan. The enmity on earth between
man and Satan is supernaturally put there. Unless the converting
power of God is brought daily to bear upon the human heart, there
will be no inclination to be religiously inclined, but men will
choose to be the captives of Satan rather than to be free men
in Jesus Christ. I say God will put enmity. Man cannot put it.
When the will is brought into subject to the will of God, it
must be through man's inclining his heart and will to be on the
Lord's side." Unpublished Testimony.
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- This enmity against Satan, this hatred
of evil, which God puts in every person by His word, causes each
soul to long for deliverance, and the deliverance is found alone
in Jesus Christ. Rom. 7:14-25.
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- Thus this word of God, which plants in
each soul enmity against Satan, this hatred of evil that calls
for deliverance which is found alone in Jesus Christ, this is
the gift of faith to men. This is "the measure of faith"
which God has dealt to every man. This is the "word of faith,"
which is in the mouth and in the heart of every person in the
world.
- This "is the word of faith, which
we preach: That if thou shalt confess with thy mouth the Lord
Jesus and shalt believe in thine heart that God hath raised him
from the dead, thou shalt be saved. For with the heart man believeth
unto righteousness; and with the mouth confession is made unto
salvation." Rom. 10:8-10.
- Therefore say not in thine heart, Who
shall ascend into heaven, to bring faith to us? Neither say,
Who shall descend into the deep, or, Who shall go far off to
find faith and bring it to us? For "the word is nigh thee,
even in thy mouth, and in thy heart; that is, the word of faith,
which we preach." Deut. 30:11-14; Rom. 10:6-8.
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- Say that--and exercise the faith which
God has given to you, as to every other person in the world,
for "understanding how to exercise faith, this is the science
of the gospel."
- RH Jan. 10, 1899
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- Faith is the depending upon the word of
God only, and expecting that word only to do what the word says.
- Justification by faith, then, is justification
by depending upon the word of God only and expecting that word
only to accomplish it.
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- Justification by faith is righteousness
by faith, for justification is the being declared righteous.
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- Faith comes by the word of God. Justification
by faith, then, is justification that comes by the word of God.
Righteousness by faith is righteousness that comes by the word
of God.
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- The word of God is self-fulfilling, for
in creating all things, "he spake and it was." And
when He was on earth, He stilled the raging sea, cleansed the
lepers, healed the sick, raised the dead, and forgave sins, all
by His word: there, too, "he spake, and it was."
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- Now the same One who, in creating, "spake,
and it was", the same One who said, "Let there be light,
and there was light," the same One who on earth spoke "the
word only," and the sick were healed, the lepers were cleansed,
and the dead lived--this same One speaks the righteousness of
God unto and upon all that believe.
- For though all have sinned and come short
of the righteousness of God, yet we are "justified freely
by his grace through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus,
whom God hath set forth . . . to declare his righteousness for
the remission of sins that are past, through the forbearance
of God."
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- In creating all things in the beginning,
God set forth Christ to declare the word which should cause all
things to exist. Christ did speak the word only, and all things
were. And in redemption, which is creation over again, God set
forth Christ to declare the word of righteousness. And when Christ
speaks the word only, it is so. His word, whether in creating
or in redeeming, is the same.
- "The worlds were framed by the word
of God, so that things which are seen were not made of things
which do appear." Once there were no worlds, nor was there
any of the material which now composes the worlds. God set forth
Christ to declare the word which should produce the worlds, and
the very material of which they should be composed.
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- "He spake, and it was." Before
He spoke, there were no worlds; after He spoke, the worlds were
there. Thus the word of God spoken by Jesus Christ is able to
cause that to exist which has no existence before the word is
spoken, and which, except for that word, never could have existence.
In this same way precisely it is in man's
life. In man's life there is no righteousness. In man there is
no righteousness from which righteousness can appear in his life.
But God has set forth Christ to declare righteousness unto and
upon man. Christ has spoken the word only, and in the darkened
void of man's life there is righteousness to everyone who will
receive it. Where, before the word is received, there was neither
righteousness nor anything which could possibly produce righteousness,
after the word is received, there is perfect righteousness and
the very Fountain from which it springs. The word of God received
by faith--that is, the word of God expected to do what that word
says and depended upon to do what it says--produces righteousness
in the man and in the life where there never was any before;
precisely as, in the original creation, the word of God produced
worlds where there never were any worlds before. He has spoken,
and it is so to everyone that believeth: that is, to every one
that receiveth. The word itself produces it.
- "Therefore being justified (made
righteous) by faith (by expecting and depending upon the word
of God only) we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ."
Rom. 5:1. That is so, bless the Lord! And feeding upon this blessed
thing is cultivating faith.
- RH Jan. 17, 1899
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- "The knowledge of what the Scripture
means when urging upon us the necessity of cultivating faith
is more important than any other knowledge that can be obtained."
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- Faith is the expecting the word of God
to do the thing which that word speaks and the depending upon
the word only to accomplish the thing which that word speaks.
- Abraham is the father of all them which
be of faith. The record of Abraham, then, gives instruction in
faith--what it is and what it does for him who has it.
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- What shall we say, then, that Abraham
our father, as pertaining to the faith, has found? What saith
the Scripture?
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- When Abram was more than eighty years
old and Sarai his wife was old and he had no child, God "brought
him forth abroad and said, Look now toward heaven, and tell the
stars, if thou be able to number them: and he said unto him,
So shall thy seed be."
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- And Abram "believed in the Lord;
and he counted it to him for righteousness." Gen. 15:5,6.
Abram accepted the word of God and expected by the word what
the word said. And in that he was right.
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- Sarai, however, did not put her expectation
upon the word of God only. She resorted to a device of her own
to bring forth seed. She said to him, "The Lord hath restrained
me from bearing: I pray thee, go in unto my maid; it may be that
I may obtain children by her." Gen. 16:2.
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- Abram, for the moment, swerved from the
perfect integrity of faith. Instead of holding fast his expectation
and dependence upon the word of God only, he "harkened to
the voice of Sarai."
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- Accordingly, a child was born, but the
whole matter proved to be so unsatisfactory to Sarai that she
repudiated her own arrangement. And God showed His repudiation
of it by totally ignoring the fact that any child had been born.
He changed Abram's name to Abraham and continued to talk about
making him the father of nations through the seed promised and
of making his covenant with Abraham and the seed that was promised.
He also changed Sarai's name to Sarah, because she should "be
a mother of nations" through the promised seed.
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- Abraham noticed this total ignoring of
the child that had been born and called the Lord's attention
to it, saying, "O, that Ishmael might live before thee!"
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- But "God said, Sarah thy wife shall
bear thee a son indeed, and thou shalt call his name Isaac, and
I will establish my covenant with him for an everlasting covenant
and with his seed after him. And as for Ishmael, I have heard
thee: behold, I have blessed him, and will make him fruitful
and will multiply him exceedingly; twelve princes shall he beget,
and I will make him a great nation. But my covenant will I establish
with Isaac, which Sarah shall bear unto thee at this set time
in the next year." Gen. 17:15-21.
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- By all this both Abram and Sarai were
taught that, in carrying out the promise, the fulfilling of the
word of God, nothing would answer but dependence upon that word
only. Sarai learned that her device brought only trouble and
perplexity and delayed the fulfillment of the promise. Abram
learned that in harkening to the voice of Sarai, he had missed
the word of God, and that now he must abandon that whole scheme
and turn again to the word of God only.
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- But now Abraham was ninety-nine years
old and Sarah was eighty- nine. And, if anything, this seemed
to put farther off than ever the fulfillment of the word and
called for a deeper dependence upon the word of God--a greater
faith than before.
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- It was perfectly plain that now there
was no possibility of dependence upon anything whatever, but
the naked word only; they were shut up absolutely to this for
the accomplishment of what the word said. All works, devices,
plans, and efforts of their own were excluded, and they were
shut up to faith alone--shut up to the word alone and to absolute
dependence upon that word only for the accomplishment of what
that word said.
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- And now that the way was clear for "the
word only" to work, that word did work, effectually, and
the promised "seed" was born. And so "through
faith," through helpless, total dependence upon the word
only--"Sarah herself received strength to conceive seed
and was delivered of a child when she was past age, because she
judged him faithful who had promised."
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- And "therefore sprang there even
of one, and him as good as dead, so many as the stars of the
sky in multitude, and as the sand which is by the seashore innumerable."
Heb. 11:12.
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