1
So how do we fit what we know of Abraham, our first father in the faith, into
this new way of looking at things? 2 If Abraham, by what he
did for God, got God to approve him, he could certainly have taken credit for
it. But the story we're given is a God-story, not an Abraham-story. 3What
we read in Scripture is, "Abraham entered into what God was doing for him,
and that was the turning point. He trusted God to set him right instead of
trying to be right on his own."
4 If you're a hard
worker and do a good job, you deserve your pay; we don't call your wages a
gift. 5 But if you see that the job is too big for you, that
it's something only God can do, and you trust him to do it - you could never do
it for yourself no matter how hard and long you worked - well, that
trusting-him-to-do-it is what gets you set right with God, by God. Sheer gift.
6 David confirms
this way of looking at it, saying that the one who trusts God to do the
putting-everything-right without insisting on having a say in it is one
fortunate man: 7 Fortunate those whose crimes are carted off,
whose sins are wiped clean from the slate. 8 Fortunate the
person against whom the Lord does not keep score. 9 Do you
think for a minute that this blessing is only pronounced over those of us who
keep our religious ways and are circumcised? Or do you think it possible that
the blessing could be given to those who never even heard of our ways, who were
never brought up in the disciplines of God? We all agree, don't we, that it was
by embracing what God did for him that Abraham was declared fit before God?
10 Now think: Was
that declaration made before or after he was marked by the covenant rite of
circumcision? That's right, before he was marked. 11 That
means that he underwent circumcision as evidence and confirmation of what God
had done long before to bring him into this acceptable standing with himself,
an act of God he had embraced with his whole life.
12 And it means
further that Abraham is father of all people who embrace what God does for them
while they are still on the "outs" with God, as yet unidentified as
God's, in an "uncircumcised" condition. It is precisely these people
in this condition who are called "set right by God and with God"!
Abraham is also, of course, father of those who have undergone the religious
rite of circumcision not just because of the ritual but because they were
willing to live in the risky faith-embrace of God's action for them, the way
Abraham lived long before he was marked by circumcision.
13 That famous
promise God gave Abraham - that he and his children would possess the earth -
was not given because of something Abraham did or would do. It was based on
God's decision to put everything together for him, which Abraham then entered
when he believed. 14 If those who get what God gives them only
get it by doing everything they are told to do and filling out all the right
forms properly signed, that eliminates personal trust completely and turns the
promise into an ironclad contract! That's not a holy promise; that's a business
deal. 15 A contract drawn up by a hard-nosed lawyer and with
plenty of fine print only makes sure that you will never be able to collect.
But if there is no contract in the first place, simply a promise - and God's
promise at that - you can't break it.
16 This is why the fulfilment
of God's promise depends entirely on trusting God and his way, and then simply
embracing him and what he does. God's promise arrives as pure gift. That's the
only way everyone can be sure to get in on it, those who keep the religious
traditions and those who have never heard of them. For Abraham is father of us
all. He is not our racial father - that's reading the story backwards. He is
our faith father.
17 We call Abraham
"father" not because he got God's attention by living like a saint,
but because God made something out of Abraham when he was a nobody. Isn't that
what we've always read in Scripture, God saying to Abraham, "I set you up
as father of many peoples"? Abraham was first named "father" and
then became a father because he dared to trust God to do what only God could do:
raise the dead to life, with a word make something out of nothing. 18 When
everything was hopeless, Abraham believed anyway, deciding to live not on the
basis of what he saw he couldn't do but on what God said he would do. And so he
was made father of a multitude of peoples. God himself said to him,
"You're going to have a big family, Abraham!"
19 Abraham didn't
focus on his own impotence and say, "It's hopeless. This hundred-year-old
body could never father a child." Nor did he survey Sarah's decades of
infertility and give up. 20 He didn't tiptoe around God's
promise asking cautiously skeptical questions. He plunged into the promise and
came up strong, ready for God, 21 sure that God would make
good on what he had said. 22 That's why it is said, "Abraham
was declared fit before God by trusting God to set him right." 23 But
it's not just Abraham; 24 it's also us! The same thing gets
said about us when we embrace and believe the One who brought Jesus to life
when the conditions were equally hopeless. 25 The sacrificed
Jesus made us fit for God, set us right with God.
-Romans 4 MSG
No comments:
Post a Comment