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INDEX
PREVIOUS
NEXT
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COLLECTIONS
Commentaries, Word
Studies, Devotionals, Sermons, Illustrations
Old and New Testament. |
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ROMANS ROAD
to
RIGHTEOUSNESS |
Romans
1:18-3:20
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Romans
3:21-5:21 |
Romans
6:1-8:39 |
Romans
9:1-11:36 |
Romans
12:1-16:27 |
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SIN
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SALVATION
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SANCTIFICATION |
SOVEREIGNTY |
SERVICE |
NEED
FOR
SALVATION |
WAY
OF
SALVATION |
LIFE
OF
SALVATION |
SCOPE
OF
SALVATION |
SERVICE
OF
SALVATION |
God's Holiness
In
Condemning
Sin |
God's Grace
In
Justifying
Sinners |
God's Power
In
Sanctifying
Believers |
God's Sovereignty
In
Saving
Jew and Gentile |
Gods Glory
The
Object of
Service |
Deadliness
of Sin |
Design
of Grace |
Demonstration
of Salvation |
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Power Given
|
Promises
Fulfilled |
Paths Pursued |
Righteousness
Needed |
Righteousness
Credited |
Righteousness
Demonstrated |
Righteousness
Restored to Israel |
Righteousness
Applied |
God's
Righteousness
IN LAW |
God's
Righteousness
IMPUTED |
God's
Righteousness
OBEYED |
God's
Righteousness
IN ELECTION |
God's
Righteousness
DISPLAYED |
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Slaves to Sin |
Slaves to God |
Slaves Serving
God |
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Doctrine |
Duty |
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Life by Faith |
Service by
Faith |
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Modified from Irving L.
Jensen's excellent work "Jensen's
Survey of the NT" |
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Romans 4:18:
The Detail of God's Good News, Part 5
by Dr. Wayne A.
Barber |
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you ever wondered what Abraham believed that was accounted unto him as
righteousness? I want to assert to you that Abraham put his faith into
Christ just like we put our faith into Christ. The difference is, he
looked forward to Christ; we look back to Christ and the fact that He has
already come. Immediately you might have questions, so I want to take you
on a journey through the Old Testament to see if we can’t document this
for you.
Christ, the Messiah, was the one
promised to come to suffer and die for our sin. Abraham, along with other
Old Testament figures, looked forward to it, knowing that they were
sinners and could not justify themselves. They put all their faith and
hope into the one who would come. We now rest our faith and hope on the
one who has already come and has died for us on the cross.
When I was a child, I always liked it
better when my parents were up and awake when I went to bed. I felt more
secure when I could hear voices somewhere in the house. I remember my Mama
would come and check on me. I knew she was going to come and check on me.
I always liked that. She would open up the door just a crack. I couldn’t
see her, but I knew she was out there. If I was moving around, I knew she
would open the door just a little bit further. I could just about see her
then. I could see the outline of her. If I coughed or did something to
make her have to come into the room, she would open the door all the way
up and there she was! When she just cracked the door, I really couldn’t
see her. I didn’t really get a full picture of her, but I knew she was
there. But the more the door opened, the more I could see that she was
there. When the door finally opened, there she was!
I know that is a simple illustration,
but I think that is the way it is in Scripture as God begins to reveal the
Messianic Redeemer. All the way back in Genesis He cracks the door just a
little bit. Now, they didn’t understand it like we understand it, but they
got a glimpse. Then in Abraham, He opens it a little further. Then you
jump 500 or so years to the Mosaic period, the Law. He really opens it up
and you start seeing the sacrificial system and the suffering Savior in
that, the coming Redeemer. Then you get into the Prophetic period and all
the prophets. The door is opening more and more. Then another 400 years go
by and the door swings open and there He is.
You can’t take the fact that He is a
suffering Savior and put it only in the New Testament. He was the Lamb
standing in the portals of heaven before the foundation of this world,
ready to come and die for our sins. Faith in Him and what He alone could
do is the only means by which a person can ever be justified and made
righteous before God in the Old Testament and in the New Testament.
Genesis 3:15 gives us the first glimpse. The door
cracks open just a little bit. This is right after the fall. God comes and
is speaking to the serpent, the devil, who has tempted man in the garden.
Man has sinned. Verse 15 reads, "And I will put enmity between you and the
woman, and between your seed and her seed; He shall bruise you on the
head, and you shall bruise him on the heel." The Lord is speaking to the
serpent, who was the devil, in the garden after the fall. "Sin" had
become, for the first time, a word in the human vocabulary. Man now had
been separated from God.
In Genesis 2:16-17 God had said, "If you eat of
the tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil, you shall surely die in that
day." Well, now they had eaten of it. They didn’t die instantly, but they
began to die physically. They didn’t die mentally, but they began to die
because they couldn’t think anymore like God wanted them to think. They
immediately died spiritually. They were immediately estranged from God.
Just a quick glimpse at the passage lets you know the seriousness of when
sin entered the world. You can see the estrangement and the guilt and the
depravity that came in man’s heart.
The awful consequence of sin had
happened. Man had sinned. He was separated now from God. The Lord Himself
came into the garden and foretold an age-long conflict between the seed of
the woman and the seed of the serpent. He also said the conflict will be
won by the seed of the woman.
I want you to see something. In the
Hebrew here, the word "seed" is singular and masculine. Here is Adam, here
is Eve and here is the serpent. God comes and promises that there is going
to be a seed to come. A man is going to come. Here is the beginnings of
the door cracking open of the Suffering Savior, the Messianic Redeemer who
will one day come, the Messiah of Israel, the Christ in the New Testament
to us, the one who is promised even in Genesis 3:15. He will come one day,
born of a woman, and He will be no ordinary man. When God tells you this,
you know it will be no ordinary man.
In verse 21 the fact that there would be
a sacrifice, a costliness for sin, a shedding of blood, is seen even more
clearly. It says, "And the Lord God made garments of skin for Adam and his
wife, and clothed them." Remember, they tried to clothe themselves. It is
the depraved nature of every man’s heart to cover his sin, to do something
to mask it. But God shows them that covering won’t work. He killed an
animal. You don’t have skins of an animal without an animal having to die.
We know from the Old Testament that is the beginning of the foreshadowing
of the Messianic Redeemer who will come one day, who will not only come to
rule and to reign over the seed of the serpent, but the way He will come
is one who will die for our sin.
You are probably saying, "They didn’t
understand all of that." I know. The door was only cracked a little. But
they got enough of it to know that it would be a man, no ordinary man,
born of a woman and what He will do will be so costly that only what He
can do will be the covering of man’s sin. Only God can cover man’s sin.
Only God can deal with all of that. So we see in a very primitive part of
history God cracking the door open to a plan He had before the creation of
this world.
The scarlet thread, the suffering
Savior, the suffering Redeemer, the God-man, starts in Genesis 3 and runs
all the way through Scripture to Revelation. You cannot take the blood
out. You cannot take the suffering out. You cannot take away the fact that
man is desperate for someone to come and redeem him from his lowly, sinful
estate.
Well, let’s follow the Scriptures. God
judged the world with the flood. He saved a family. He covenanted with
Noah and spared a family in the Ark, another picture of that Redeemer who
would one day come. The people in the water died. The people in the Ark
were saved.
Then in Genesis 9 we find Noah, the
great hero, drunk. You see, these are sinners like you and me. Man was not
a good person. In Genesis 11 they all get together at this point. There
are no nations on this earth. This is a group, one big family of creation.
They come together and say, "You know, we can build a tower unto God." So
they built the Tower of Babel. It angers God. God destroys the Tower,
scatters the people and confuses their languages
Now you don’t have one
family on the earth, you have families on the earth which later on are
going to be called nations. Those nations one day would be called the
Gentile world. It is out of that Gentile world that God, in Genesis 12,
extracts a 75-year-old Chaldean from the city of Ur by the name of Abram who
later became Abraham. God begins to open the door just a little bit more.
The fact of a Redeemer was certainly known in their day. As a matter of
fact, Job is the oldest book in Scripture, and Job 19:25 says, "I know
that my Redeemer lives." The idea of a kinsman Redeemer was in their
culture. They understood that a kinsman redeemer was one who came and paid
a price to get you out of the mess that you were in. That is exactly what
Job talks about. They had an understanding way back in primitive times of
a Redeemer, of the promise of a coming Messiah. So God decides to really
crack the door open and give us more and more light of what He is doing.
He singles out Abraham. Genesis 12:1 says, "Now the Lord said to Abram,
‘Go forth from your country, and from your relatives and from your
father’s house, to the land which I will show you; and I will make you a
great nation, and I will bless you, and make your name great; and so you
shall be a blessing; 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.’" That is not a physical promise. That is a spiritual promise to
Abram. Who was he? A 75-year-old Chaldean. He was not a good man or a
worthy man, but a man God chose to work through.
At this point it doesn’t record that Abraham believed and it was accounted
unto him as righteousness. We do know that he believed. Hebrews 11:8
(note) says,
"By faith Abraham, when he was called, obeyed by going out to a place
where he was to receive for an inheritance; and he went out, not knowing
where he was going." If you want to see the fact that he was a sinful man
like you and me and wanted to do things his way and at the same time doing
what God was saying, you don’t have to go very far. Verse 1 says, "You get
up and go away from your relatives and away from your father’s house." But
verse 5 says, "And Abram took Sarai his wife, and Lot his nephew." What
did the Word say? Leave your relatives. But he takes Lot, his nephew, with
him.
You don’t have to go very much further to find that he has his own road
map. Ge 12:10 says "Now there was a famine in the land;
so Abram went down to Egypt to sojourn there, for the famine was severe in
the land. And it came about when he came near to Egypt, that he said to Sarai his wife, ‘See now, I know that you are a beautiful woman; and it
will come about when the Egyptians see you, that they will say, "This is
his wife"; and they will kill me, but they will let you live. Please say
that you are my sister so that it may go well with me because of you, and
that I may live on account of you.’"
Abraham has a lot to learn, doesn’t he? Abraham, you don’t lie. You don’t
run down to Egypt because there is a famine. But at the same time, he
exercised faith by following the Lord Jesus Christ.
The door is cracking more and more. The light is coming in. He finally
gets to the land that God directs him to. Then God speaks to him again,
but this time, Abram has some questions he wants to ask the Lord. You see,
he heard what He had said, "Through you all the families on this earth
will be blessed." What does that mean to you? It means somehow you are
going to have a child. At this time he is still childless and
75-years-old. Watch what happens in the conversation. Genesis 15:1 says,
"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 Abram
said, ‘Since Thou hast given no offspring to me [In other words, "How can
the promise be fulfilled through me if I don’t have any children?"], 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.’ Then
he believed in the Lord; and He reckoned it to him as righteousness."
Now, right there, the door has opened enough that Abraham now knows that
through him one day the promised Messiah, the one who will redeem the
world, will come. When? He doesn’t know. But he knows he is going to have
a child. It starts with Isaac. But one day the Messiah will come through
that child. You say, he couldn’t have known that. Hold that question. I am
not through yet.
Abraham and Sarah tried for ten years. "Okay, Lord, you said He was going
to come through us." Ten years they tried. He is now 85-years-old. Things
are getting a little more difficult. We are getting older and older. Look
at Ge 16:1: "Now Sarai, Abram’s wife had borne him no children, and she had
an Egyptian maid whose name was Hagar. So Sarai said to Abram, ‘Now
behold, the Lord has prevented me from bearing children. Please go into to
my maid; perhaps I shall obtain children through her.’ And Abram listened
to the voice of Sarai. And after Abram had lived ten years in the land of
Canaan, Abram’s wife Sarai took Hagar the Egyptian, her maid, and gave her
to her husband Abram as his wife."
Skip down to Ge 16:16: "And Abram was eighty-six years old when Hagar bore
Ishmael to him." Please understand something. Abraham wasn’t wavering in
his faith. He was growing in his faith. He still believed God. God had
said, "It will come through your loins. It will come through you." He
didn’t understand that it would be through Sarah. They did the best they
could. They put their own best human effort forward. As far as he knew
everything was fine. Almost 24 years go by before God really shows up and
says anything.
Look at Ge 17:1: "Now when Abram was ninety-nine years old, the Lord appeared
to Abram and said to him, ‘I am God Almighty; walk before Me, and be
blameless. And I will establish My covenant between Me and you, and I will
multiply you exceedingly.’ And Abram fell on his face, and God talked with
him, saying, ‘As for Me, behold, My covenant is with you, and you shall be
the father of a multitude of nations. No longer shall your name be called
Abram, but your name shall be Abraham; for I will make you the father of a
multitude of nations.’"
Now very obviously here, that is spiritual seed. It says "father of a
multitude of nations" in the plural. He is not talking about Israel. He is
talking about the spiritual descendants, the spiritual seed that will come
from him.
Now Abraham’s response, when God finally tells him this, is interesting.
Look Genesis 17:17: "Then Abraham fell on his face and laughed, and said
in his heart, ‘Will a child be born to a man one hundred years old? And
will Sarah, who is ninety years old, bear a child?’ And Abraham said to
God, ‘Oh that Ishmael might live before Thee!’" That is not wavering in
his faith. That made pretty good sense. That was his human effort. He was
saying, "If it was going to come through me, let it be through Ishmael. He
is my son."
God answered him in Ge 17:19: "But God said, ‘No, but Sarah your wife
shall bear you a son, and you shall call his name Isaac; and I will
establish My covenant with him for an everlasting covenant for his
descendants after him."
Now skip over to Genesis 21:5: "Now Abraham was one hundred years old when
his son Isaac was born to him." It started with a little crack of light in
Genesis 3. It began to broaden in Genesis 12. It began to broaden even
more in Genesis 15. But now it is opening up and they are beginning to
see, "Yes, one day the Messiah is coming. Someone will come from God. God
will become a man. He will redeem the world from sin, and it will be
through the line of Abraham, through Isaac." He begins to understand.
Then God begins to test him to see if he really did understand. In Genesis
22 God asks him, "Do you really believe He is coming through Isaac?" (He
really didn’t say that, but I am reading in between the lines.) Abraham
said, "Absolutely." He said, "Okay, let’s just see if you believe it. I
want you to take Isaac up on the mountain and kill him." Abraham didn’t
blink an eye, because it was getting clearer and clearer to him. He knows
now that it is coming. Look at what he does. In chapter 22 he takes his
son and some men and they go to the mountain. Ge 22:5 says, "And Abraham
said to his young men, ‘Stay here with the donkey, and I and the lad will
go yonder; and we will worship and return to you.’" We will worship and
return to you. Wait a minute! How are you going to kill your son and
return with him after you have worshipped?
Then Ge 22:7 says, "And Isaac spoke to Abraham his father and said, ‘My
father!’ And he said, ‘Here I am, my son.’ And he said, ‘Behold, the fire
and the wood, but where is the lamb for the burnt offering?’ And Abraham
said, ‘God will provide for Himself the lamb for the burnt offering, my
son.’ So the two of them walked on together." You are seeing more and more
of the Light that is coming.
Hebrews 11:17 (note) says, "By faith Abraham, when he was tested, offered up
Isaac. And he who had received the promises was offering up his only
begotten son. It was he to whom it was said, ‘In Isaac your descendants
shall be called.’ He considered that God is able to raise men even from
the dead; from which he also received him back as a type." You have a
picture of what our redemption is all about in the father and the son and
resurrection of the son. When Abraham went up, he understood this. When he
went up he said, "God, if you want me to kill him, I will kill him because
that promise is coming through him. You will raise him from the dead. I
believe your promise is right."
You are seeing the door open wider and wider to get a glimpse of the
Messianic Redeemer. They understood in their day. It seems significant to
me that he knew God would do what He promised. He knew if He told him to
kill him, God would raise him back up from the dead. That seed would still
come through Isaac.
Well, Abraham passed the test. Here is where I am going. I could have
started here and saved you all of this, but I wanted to take you on the
same journey I went on to see this thing unfold. You think Abraham didn’t
understand about Jesus Christ? In Ge 22:16 he has passed the
test. "‘By Myself I have sworn,’ declares the Lord, because you have done
this thing, and have not withheld your son, your only son, indeed I will
greatly bless you, and I will greatly multiply your seed as the stars of
the heavens, and as the sand which is on the seashore.’" Right here you
will miss it if you are not careful. If you will get a Hebrew Interlinear
Bible it will not read the way the translation brings it out. The verse
goes on to say, "and your seed shall possess the gate of their enemies."
That is not a good translation of the Hebrew. The masculine singular is
used there. Instead of "your seed," you could put "he." It would read, "He
shall possess the gate."
It also should not read "their enemies." It should read "His enemies." It
is right there that you know for a fact that Abraham knew that Christ was
coming. He knew that He would be the Redeemer, the promised Messiah. The
term "seed" is the key. It is the same way it is rendered in Galatians 3:
He shall rule over the seed of the serpent.
Now you may say, "I can’t buy this." Well, hold it. The Apostle Paul gives
commentary on Genesis 22:18. Look at Galatians 3. Let’s just find out if
it means one seed or more than one seed. Did he say "seeds" or did he say
"seed?" Paul brings it out as only Paul could bring it out. Galatians 3:8
reads, "And the Scripture, foreseeing that God would justify the Gentiles
by faith, preached the gospel beforehand to Abraham, saying, ‘All the
nations shall be blessed in you."
Abraham understood that. You may ask, "Did he understand it as much as we
understand it?" I don’t know how much he understood it. I know the door is
cracking wider and wider and wider. I do know he understood it from what
Paul says. Look at John 8:56 if you don’t think that. Jesus is talking to
some skeptical, religious Jewish people: "Your father Abraham rejoiced to
see My day, and he saw it and was glad."
Now go back to Galatians 3:13: "Christ redeemed us from the curse of the
Law, having become a curse for us—for it is written, ‘Cursed is everyone
who hangs on a tree’—in order that in Christ Jesus the blessing of Abraham
might come to the Gentiles, so that we might receive the promise of the
Spirit through faith."
Gal 3:15 shows that you can’t change a covenant. He says, "Brethren, I
speak in terms of human relations: even though it is only a man’s
covenant, yet when it has been ratified, no one sets it aside or adds
conditions to it." You can’t change it. It stands like it was told to
Abraham. Gal 3:16 goes on, "Now the promises were spoken to Abraham and to
his seed." If you go back to Genesis 22:18 and make that plural, Paul is
going to clear up your misunderstanding. "He does not say, ‘And to seeds,’
as referring to many, but rather to one." Then Paul quotes it like it
should read, "And to your seed, that is, Christ."
Abraham saw it, understood it and based his faith upon it. Here Paul is
quoting from Genesis 22:18. The seed is a man, the God-man. Oh, the door
has swung open. He has come. Way back in Genesis it is barely cracked.
With Abraham, it begins to open and expand. The Mosaic period, when the
Law came out, it began to get wider and wider. With the prophets, it
became more and more open. Now it is swung open and here He is, Jesus
Christ, the Messiah, the Savior, the Redeemer of the world. It has never
been anything different. This is God’s plan before He ever created man
because He knew when He created him, man would sin against Him.
They looked forward to the Christ who was coming. On the basis of placing
their faith on the suffering Messiah that would come, they were justified,
just like we look back to the suffering Savior that has come, the Messiah,
when we put our faith into what He did for us on the cross. They were no
more worthy back then than we are today. The Law did not make them worthy.
Oh, no. They obeyed the Law out of expectancy of one day a Redeemer
coming, not so that they could be made righteous. The ones who perverted
it are the ones who are to this day confused. We do the very same thing on
this side of the cross. Good news, good news, good news.
Oh, what is salvation, folks? The Apostle Paul is going through all this
to try to tell us one simple message—you can’t save yourself. It doesn’t
matter how good you think you are. No man could ever measure to the
righteousness of God. Jesus came to do what no man could have ever done in
his own power or energy. He fulfilled the Law, became our perfect
sacrifice on the cross, identified with our sin completely on that cross,
and resurrected, proving who He was. |
|
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