When Abraham and Sarah had cleared themselves
of all the scheme of unbelief which had produced Ishmael and had stood upon faith alone -- dependence on
the word of God alone -- Isaac, the true child of the promise, was born.
In harkening to the voice of Sarai (Gen.
16:1), Abram had swerved from the line of strict integrity to the word of God,
from the strictness of true faith, and now that he had returned to the word
only, to true faith, he must be tested before it could be certainly said of
him that his faith was counted for righteousness.
He had
trusted the naked word of God as against Ishmael and had obtained Isaac, the
true child of the promise of God. And now, having obtained Isaac, the
question must be determined whether he would trust the naked word of God as
against even Isaac himself.
Accordingly,
God said to Abraham, "Take now thy son, thine only son Isaac, whom thou
lovest, and get thee into the land of Moriah; and offer him there for a burnt
offering upon one of the mountains which I will tell thee of."
Abraham had
received Isaac from God by trusting the word of God only. Isaac
alone was the seed promised by the word of the Lord. After Isaac was born,
God had confirmed the word by declaring, "In Isaac shall thy seed be
called." Gen. 21:12. And now came the word of God, Take thy son, thine
only son Isaac, and offer him for a burnt offering.
God had
declared to Abraham, Thy seed shall be as the stars of heaven for multitude. "In
thy seed shall all the nations of the earth be blessed." "In Isaac shall
thy seed be called," and now, Offer Isaac for a burnt offering!
But, if
Isaac is offered for a burnt offering, if Isaac is burned up, what will become
of the promise of the blessing of all nations in him? What will become of the promise, Thy seed
shall be as the stars of heaven innumerable? Yet there stood the word,
Offer Isaac for a burnt offering. Abraham had trusted the word of God only,
as against Ishmael, but this is more than trusting the word of God as
against Isaac -- it is trusting the
word of God as against the word of God!
And Abraham
did it, hoping against hope. God had said: Thy seed shall be as the
stars of heaven; In Isaac shall thy seed be called. Offer Isaac for a burnt
offering. Abraham did not insist that
God should "harmonize these passages." It was all sufficient
for him to know that the statements were all the word of God. Knowing this, he would trust that word,
would follow that word, and would let the Lord "harmonize these
passages," or "explain these texts," if any such thing were
needed.
Said
Abraham: God has said, Offer Isaac for a burnt offering. That I will do. God has
said, "In Isaac shall thy seed be called." And, Thy seed shall be as
the stars of heaven for multitude. I interfered once in the promise and
hindered it till I repudiated all that I had done and came back to the word
only. Then, by a miracle, God gave
me Isaac, the promised seed. Now He says, Offer Isaac, the promised seed,
for a burnt offering. I will do it. By
a miracle God gave him at the first, and by a miracle God can restore him. Yet
when I shall have offered him for a burnt offering, he will be dead, and the
only miracle that can then restore him is a miracle that will bring him back
from the dead. But God is able to do
even that, and He will do it, for His word is spoken, Thy seed shall be as
the stars of heaven for multitude, and In Isaac shall thy seed be called. And even the bringing back of Isaac from
the dead will be to God no more than He has already done, for, as
to offspring, both my body and Sarah's were as good as dead, and yet
God brought forth Isaac from us. He can raise Isaac from the dead, and He
will. Bless the Lord!
It was
settled. He arose and took his servants and Isaac and went three days'
journey "unto the place of which God had told him." And when on the
third day he "saw the place afar off," "Abraham said unto his
young men, Abide ye here with the ass; and I and the lad will go yonder and worship and come again to you."
Gen. 22:5. Who will go? "I and the lad will go." And who will come again? "I and
the lad will go . . . and come again to you." Abraham expected to have Isaac come back with
him as certainly as that he went with him.
Abraham
expected to offer Isaac for a burnt offering and expected then to see Isaac
rise from the ashes and go back with him. For the word of God had gone
forth, In Isaac shall thy seed be called, and, Thy seed shall be as the stars
of heaven for multitude. And Abraham
would trust that word only, that it could never fail. Heb. 11:17-19.
THIS IS FAITH. And thus
"the scripture was fulfilled which saith, Abraham believed God, and it was
imputed unto him for righteousness." James 2:23. But yet above this,
"It was not written for his sake
alone, that it was imputed to him, but for us also to whom it shall be imputed;
if we believe on him that raised up Jesus our Lord from the dead; who was
delivered for our offenses and was raised again for our justification."
Rom. 4:23-25.
To trust the
word of God only, to depend upon the word of God only, to depend upon the word
of God, even as against the word of God -- this is FAITH. This is
the faith which brings the righteousness of God.
This is what
it is to exercise faith. This is "what the Scripture means when
urging upon us the necessity of exercising faith.” And "understanding how to exercise faith," this is the
science of the gospel. And the science of the gospel is the science of
sciences.
RH Jan. 31, 1899
#Faith #Abraham #Sarah #Unbelief #Belief #Word #God #Alone
#Trust #Offer #Isaac #Burnt #Offering #Promise #Seed #Come #Righteousness #Justification
#Nations #Blessed
No comments:
Post a Comment