When you were born, you were born into sin. You hadn’t sinned at that
point, but you were born as a sinner. All sinners can do is sin. We are
born under the wrath of God. We are born separated from God. The charges
against us stand and continue to stand unless we put our faith into and
upon the Lord Jesus Christ. At the moment we exercise that faith,
believing God, putting our faith into what He has done for us and into the
Lord Jesus Christ, then we are justified or acquitted or the charges are
dropped. If you go any way other than Jesus, any way other than the cross,
any way other than your faith in Him, then the charges are still against
you. One day you will stand at the judgment seat of God, and you will be
cast into hell forever because that is the penalty for a person not
putting their faith into the Lord Jesus Christ.
The Apostle Paul has been
showing us in Romans what our justification is all about, how the charges
are dropped, how we are acquitted. All of this is by faith; it is not by
the Law. He began this process in Ro 3:21 and has continued down to where we
are in Ro 4:13. Looking at chapter 4, we see that it is all about Abraham.
Ro 4:1-8 tell us works did not justify Abraham. Ro 4:9-12 show us
ordinances such as circumcision did not justify Abraham. In Ro 4:13-17
we find that the law did not justify Abraham. The whole point of this is
justification by faith and by faith alone.
Let’s look at Ro 4:13-17. The
whole passage has to do with a promise God made to Abraham. That promise
was not on the basis of works, but it was on the basis of faith. It wasn’t
through the Law that the promise was made; it was on the basis of faith.
He shows that faith, not law, is the divine method of blessing. Remember,
the Jewish audience that he was writing to would immediately understand
that the Mosaic law did not come about until 500 years after Abraham. Not
only did circumcision not come around until after he had been righteous,
the Law was 500 years later. Man has never been able to come to God by
means of an outward ceremony or a standard of conduct. God never accepts
that. So, when Paul starts this you must recognize that they have an
understanding already that the Law came much later on.
Ro 4:13: “For the promise to Abraham
or to his descendants that he would be heir of the world was not through
the Law, but through the righteousness of faith.”
Paul starts off by saying, “The
promise to Abraham was on the basis of faith.” What was this promise to
Abraham? First of all, the promise to Abraham recorded in Genesis involved
a land. That land we know today is Israel. Genesis 15:18-21 describes that
land and the promise of that land.
Secondly, it involved a people, a nation.
Genesis 15:5 says, “And He took him outside and said, ‘Now look toward the
heavens, and count the stars, if you are able to count them.’ And He said
to him, ‘So shall your descendants be.’” A nation, a physical nation, just
as we see Israel today. Then it involved a blessing. There is not only a
physical seed of Abraham, but there is a spiritual seed of Abraham. Some
people say, “No, one is the replacement of the other.” I don’t believe
that. Physical, tangible Israel is still there today, and God is not
finished with Israel. But there is a spiritual seed also promised here.
Genesis 12:3, “And I will bless those who bless you, and the one
who curses you I will curse. And in you all the families of the earth
shall be blessed.”
But the promise also involved a Redeemer. The Redeemer
is built into the promise given to Abraham. In Galatians 3:8 Paul writes “And
the Scripture, foreseeing that God would justify the Gentiles by faith,
preached the gospel [the good news] beforehand to Abraham, saying, ‘All
the nations shall be blessed in you.’” In Gal 3:16 Paul adds that the seed is
promised to Abraham and the seed is Jesus Christ. We see how all the nations
shall be blessed. It will be through the man, Jesus Christ, born in the
lineage of David, traced all the way back to Abraham.
So this promise was made to Abraham, but it was made to Abraham on the
basis of faith, not through the law. Read Romans 4:13 again: “For the
promise to Abraham or to his descendants that he would be heir of the
world was not through the Law, but through the righteousness of faith.” If
a Jewish person or any person would think that Abraham had something to
hang his hat on to deserve this promise, Paul is tearing that argument
down. Adam had failed; all of his successors had fallen. But Abraham had
succeeded in the sense that he had put his faith into God and it was
accounted to him as righteousness. From him now comes the method of how we
are reckoned righteousness. It is not by what we do, it is by putting our
faith into God and what God can do. He became known as the Father of
Faith. We don’t put our faith in Abraham, but we do what Abraham did, by
putting our faith into God.
Remember, Abraham was from Ur, a Chaldean. Chaldeans were Babylonians.
They were a very pagan people in this world. As a matter of fact,
Revelation says that God remembered Babylon. There has been a problem with
these kinds of people all through time. Abram was a man like you and me
whom God singled out. He was just a Chaldean. Secondly, he was old and had
no children. Not only no children, but no males to take up the family
line, which in that day was sort of a shameful thing. Not only that, he
was totally unworthy. There was not a thing in the world that he could
offer to God, not one single
thing. Old, barren, a Chaldean—and God singled him out.
This is what I
think the Apostle Paul is trying to show you here. The fact that it was by
faith, it certainly wasn’t through the Law. There was not one single thing
that Abraham could do to justify himself. As a matter of fact, let me read
to you the verses preceding Ge 15:6 where he believed and it
was accounted to him as righteousness.
Ge 15:1-5, “After these
things the word of the Lord came to Abram in a vision, saying, ‘Do not
fear, Abram, I am a shield to you; your reward shall be very great.’ And
Abram said, ‘O Lord God, what wilt Thou give me, since I am childless, and
the heir of my house is Eliezer of Damascus?’ And Abraham said, ‘Since
Thou hast given no offspring to me, one born in my house is my heir.’ Then
behold, the word of the Lord came to him, saying, ‘This man will not be
your heir; but one who shall come forth from your own body, he shall be
your heir.’ And He took him outside and said, ‘Now look toward the
heavens, and count the stars, if you are able to count them.’ And He said
to him, ‘So shall your descendants be.’”
Paul even called him heir of the
world. Now what kind of worthiness did Abraham have to be called the heir
of the world? Look at Genesis 15:6 “Then he believed in the
Lord; and He reckoned it to him as righteousness.” The only thing that God
would accept from Abraham was his faith. This is good news for you and me.
He didn’t have a heritage to depend upon. He didn’t have good works
to depend upon. He didn’t have a family. He
didn’t have anything. But he put his faith into what God had said and as a
result was reckoned righteousness and became what we know as the Father of
Faith.
But then second, the Apostle Paul is working an argument here that
is just beautiful. The promise would not be needed if a man could keep the
law. If Abraham could have kept the Law, the promise would not have been
needed. Look at Ro 4:14: “For if those who are of the Law are heirs,
faith is made void and the promise is nullified.” Paul is saying, “Now,
listen. If you can obey a law, any law, if you can obey that standard and
measure up and
think that you can earn righteousness and earn acceptance with God, then
you wouldn’t need the promise.” In other words, you would have to start
tearing pages out of your Bible. You could start with Genesis 3 and on.
Man sinned. You don’t want to know about that because, you might be
thinking, man can still live up to the law. You would have to rip it all
out. As a matter of fact, you would probably end up with “God created the
world” and that is about all. The Bible from Genesis to Revelation is the
story of how God has redeemed man and how God has been separated from man
and how man needs to come back into fellowship with God. That is what the
whole Bible is about. You would have to throw it away. If a man could live
up to the law, then it would nullify the promise. Faith and law are on two
different extremes.
I want to set that stage for you right now. We are
going to come back to it. Let’s just say that law is on one side. Law
works a certain way. Let’s put faith over on the other side. They are on
two different principles altogether, two different highways, two different
tracks altogether. They are diverse in the way that they are used. Those
who think that by obeying the law somehow they can be acceptable to God
are foolishly deceived. You see, there are many people today who still
think that they have to do their part to help God out in their salvation.
I have asked people, “Are you going to heaven?” They say, “I sure hope
so.” I say, “Well, what do you mean?” “Well, I am doing the best I can. I
sure hope I get there.” What principle are they under? They are not under
the principle of faith because the principle of faith has nothing to do
with the law. They must still be under the principle of the law. They are
trying to live up to a standard, thinking that by living up to a standard,
God can accept them in some way.
Well, Paul moves on. He keeps the
argument flowing. The promise given to Abraham was on the basis of faith.
But not only that, if a man could obey the law, then he wouldn’t even need
the promise. It would be nullified. Then he goes to a third step. He says
in Ro 4:15 that the law was given to show that the promise is needed. It
says in Ro 4:15: “for the
Law brings about wrath, but where there is no law, neither is there
violation.” He is contrasting something here. On one side is law. Law will
bring about wrath. Do you want to go that way? It will condemn you. It is
a dead-end street. But on the other side is faith, which is another
principle. It has nothing to do with the works of the law. Since there is
no law, there is no violation, no condemnation.
Let me work through that
with you. You see, some people think they can merit justification
by obeying the Law, but then Paul brings this whole point up. The promise
was given to Abraham on the basis of his faith, but if you could merit it
by the works of the Law, it would totally nullify it because the Law makes
a person subject to wrath. The term “brings” there means it works against
us. The longer I stay up under the Law, the more it is bringing me to
wrath, and the more it is bringing me to condemnation. The Law works
against me. It brings me under condemnation.
You may ask, “Why does it do that?” I will tell you why it does that. It
does that because no man can live up to it. You see, the very fact of why
God gave the Law is the proof of the fact that we need the promise. If man
could live perfectly, if man could live the way God accepted, then you
certainly wouldn’t need the Law and you certainly wouldn’t need the
promise. But the Law was given and it brings men up under wrath.
If the
Law hadn’t been given, then you wouldn’t need the promise. But the very
fact that the Law was given proves you need the promise. The Law was given
to show you what you
cannot do. Therefore, it makes you ready to receive the message of what
God can do in your life.
Well, Paul goes on. The promise then is according
to God’s grace, not according to His law. Look at Romans 4:16: “For this
reason it is by faith, that it might be in accordance with grace, in order
that the promise may be certain to all the descendants, not only to those
who are of the Law, but also to those who are of the faith of Abraham, who
is the father of us all.” Oh, what beautiful words, not by law but by
faith in accordance to grace. Grace. We haven’t looked at that word yet.
Although everything we have looked at is a matter of God’s grace, it now
comes up to the surface. “In accordance with God’s grace.” Now listen, if
my
acceptance with God, if my justification before Him, my acquittal before
Him was based on the works of the Law, then my hope would be totally
uncertain day by day. Do you know why? Because I never know if I have
obeyed enough laws. I never know when I have arrived because I am
constantly working, working, working. I never know if I have arrived or
not. But when I put my faith into Jesus Christ, my hope becomes certain
because the whole promise is based on faith in accordance with the grace
of God.
The word grace there is the word charis. Do you know what it
means? It is so simple. It means absolutely, totally, unmerited and
undeserved favor. You see, if I work one work, what God gives me is
deserved. But I can’t work one work. All of my works are filthy rags,
therefore, I come to put my faith into Jesus Christ and as a result of
that, God gives me grace which goes along with that faith. That grace is
God’s unmerited favor that He gives to me. He gives me something that I
could never repay. He gives me something that I could never earn, nor
deserve.
Paul goes on to say, “in order that the promise may be certain to
all the descendants [that is spiritual seed], not only to those who are of
the Law, but also to those who are of the faith of Abraham, who is the
father of us all.” He goes back to that promise that “through you all the
nations on earth would be blessed.” Circumcision came later on. The Law
came later on. Everything that Abraham did was strictly and solely on the
basis of faith. Why? So the Gentiles and Jews alike could have the same
opportunity to put their faith in the Lord Jesus Christ. It was done that
way so that Abraham could truly be said to be the Father of Faith to both
Jew and Gentile. He set the pace for the rest of us. It was not just for
the Jew. It was not just for the Gentile. It was done in such a way that
all men might have the opportunity, who by faith and according to grace
could be justified before God.
Then he comes to the final point in
Ro 4:17. I think what Paul is doing here is showing us that God can fulfill and
stand behind the promise He made to Abraham. Paul wants to make sure we
understand that. Ro 4:17 reads, “(as it is written, ‘A Father of many
nations have I made you’) in the sight of Him whom he believed, even God,
who gives life to the dead and calls into being that which does not
exist.” Paul quotes directly out of Genesis 17:5 which says, “For I will
make you the Father of a multitude of nations.” Take that verse and hook
it to Genesis 15:5: “Your descendants shall be as the stars in the
heavens.” Hook those to Genesis 12:3: “In you all the families of the
earth shall be blessed.” I still see two seeds coming from Abraham.
Israel, which still stands there, is rejecting the Lord. But what we are
talking about here is the spiritual seed of Abraham, those who have done
what he did by exercising their faith in God and what God has said. Then
righteousness is accounted to them. So there is a spiritual Israel and a
physical Israel that we are looking at here. You have to deal with both of
those. The context here is talking about the spiritual seed of Abraham.
Paul goes on to say that there is a two-fold promise here. One is
obviously to tangible Israel, but also to spiritual Israel. Galatians 3:16
says, “Now the promises were spoken to Abraham and his seed. He does not
say ‘to seeds,’ referring to many, but rather to one. He says, ‘and to
your seed,’ that is, Christ.” The coming of Christ was given in that
promise to Abraham. Then in Galatians 3:29 Paul says, “And if you belong
to Christ, then you are Abraham’s offspring, heirs according to promise.”
So what he is talking about here is the promise given him of many nations,
being heir of the world and all the different things he said from Romans
4:13-17. That promise was given to you on the basis of faith so that all
might come in and God gave it Himself.
The question might come up in
somebody’s mind, “What God?” Paul clears it up very clearly in Ro 4:17:
“in the sight of Him whom he believed, even God, who gives life to the
dead and calls into being that which does not exist.” First of all, He is
God who gives life to the dead. Abraham knew something about that, didn’t
he? As a matter of fact, verse 18 and
following describes his whole experience in that. Heb 11:11 says, “By
faith even Sarah herself received the ability to conceive, even beyond the
proper time of life, since she considered Him faithful who had promised.”
She was “dead” in the sense of child-bearing. She had gone way past that
time. But God says, “You are going to bear a son.” Abraham knew what God
he was dealing with.
Heb 11:12 says, “Therefore also
there was born of one man and him as good as dead at that, as many
descendants as the stars in heaven in number and innumerable as the sand
which is upon the sea shore.”
Paul is saying, “Do you know what
God it was that promised all this to Abraham? It was the God that brings
life from that which is dead. The proof being that Isaac was born in the
later years of their life.”
Then secondly, that God is the one who
calls into being things which do not exist. Who is this God that can bring
life from those things that are dead? He is the same God who created all
things. Paul quotes out of Hebrews 11:3, “By faith we understand that the
worlds were prepared by the Word of God so that what is seen was not made
out of things were visible.” He is the one true God. He speaks and it
comes about. This is the God who made the promise to Abraham and signified
it by the fact that He brought Isaac to them in the later years of their
life. He is a God who said, “Don’t come to me by the Law. Come to me by
faith. That is all that I am going to accept from you.” Therefore, when
Abraham was justified, it had nothing to do with the Law. But it had
everything to do with his putting his faith into that which God wanted to
do. Works did not justify Abraham nor do they us.
Ordinances did not justify Abraham nor do they us. The law did not justify
Abraham nor does it justify us.
Now, let’s come down to some application
here. This has been sort of heavy. We are seeing some things being
developed in our theology that I hope you are getting a handle on. You can
be under the Law before you get saved and you can also be under the Law
after you get saved. You can come up with these silly little rules that
say a person is spiritual if they come to church every Sunday, and if they
tithe, and if they do certain things. You can make up your own set of
rules and start judging everybody by that set of rules. But I want to tell
you something, the very standard you are using to judge them will somehow
come back to condemn you before it is over with. It is a fence that you
have rebuilt in your life. It is a wall that you put back up that God has
already torn down.
Faith according to grace lifts you out of those fences.
It gives you a freedom not to do as
you please but to do as you should. Now you are not restricted by all
these sets of rules that man wants to put on you. You get saved by grace.
Read the book of Galatians. Paul says to the Galatians, “O foolish
Galatians. Who has bewitched you? You were saved by grace. Do you think
you are now kept by the law?” He is saying, “You have gotten back up
under this kind of thing. You are not walking in that intimacy of
fellowship and oneness. You are not in the Word and listening to what God
is saying to you and by faith acting upon what God has said. Instead you
have gone back up under that law.”
When you get back up under this law as
a believer, you lose your joy, number one. You become suspicious of every
person who walks. Somehow you have got to figure them out and judge them
because you have a standard now that you are living up under and you are
judging everybody around you. If they don’t measure up to what you think
they ought to measure up to, then you spend your life criticizing and
condemning everybody else and missing out on all the joy you could have
yourself of being a part of what God is up to. You have a choice. You have
a choice to either go the way of the law or to go the way of faith in
accordance to grace.
Let me ask you a question.
Are you under the law? Or are you living under faith in accordance to
grace? Are you measuring everybody else by what you perceive or are you
daily coming before God as David did? He didn’t say, “O Lord, Nathan
sinned.” He said, “O Lord, I have sinned and against Thee and Thee only
have I sinned. Not only have I sinned, I am a sinner and can do nothing
else unless You forgive me and empower me to do differently.” You see,
that is the whole message to me. Romans is so fundamental to everything we
believe as Christians. You are either under the law or you are under
grace. My prayer is you are free to be what God wants you to be. You get
under grace and find out what God can do.