Verse 3
3. For He now proves from Scripture that Abraham was justified otherwise than by works before God.
Abraham believed God In Ur of the Chaldees, (Note Acts 7:3-4,) where Abraham dwelt, the true God, as an infinite, living and holy person was but dimly recognized. Jehovah had faded to the popular view into a thin and nebulous pantheism, far in the background of the upper sky. In that cold and colourless mist, neither warming man’s heart to love nor raising it to holiness, the dim figures of the nature gods, finite, elemental powers, were visibly nearer at hand as objects of worship. Or the sun, the moon, the stars presented themselves as the highest and most definite objects on which man, forgetting God and good, could fix his dependence and worship. It was the middle stage of that terrible apostacy described in Romans i, in which men, not liking to retain God in their thoughts, were being given over to vileness. In the midst of the process a single faithful one was found to whom the Infinite could unfold himself and be in faith received. God revealed himself in his reality to Abraham, and Abraham committed himself fully and absolutely to God. A covenant and compact was formed between them of mutual fidelity, ratified with all the forms, divinely prescribed, of a treaty between man and man. (Genesis 15:9-21.) Repeatedly was the firmness of Abraham’s faith put to the test by God, and completely did he stand the ordeal. Thereby did he become the founder of the Church and the father of the faithful.
Abraham believed Genesis 15:6. In the passage of Genesis from which the quotation is made a particular act of faith exercised by Abraham is specified, but not his first justifying act of faith. Abraham believed God, surrendered himself in faith to God, as early at least as he obeyed the divine call to leave Ur of the Chaldees and migrate to the promised land. He was in a permanent state of active faith, living by faith, and of ever-flowing, consequent justification and approval from God. And this being his continuous history, any marked act of Abraham’s faith upon which the consequent justification is clearly apparent is conclusively sufficient for the apostle’s argument. The phraseology of Genesis 15:6, thereby renders it a fit passage for his purpose.
For righteousness As a sinner, Abraham’s faith, being an entire self-surrender to God, pregnant with holy obedience, was accepted in the lieu of past and perfect righteousness; so that he was accepted and held just, as if he had never sinned.
And as of Abraham, so of every man. Acceptance, justification, the being held righteous, can be attained never by the righteousness of any one work or many works of ours; for our works benefit not God, confer nothing upon him, buy nothing of him. But it comes most freely and gratuitously upon us when we perform the unreserved act of self-surrendering faith unto God, not for the merit of that self-surrender, but because that is the only proper position for a subject of God’s mercy. (See note Romans 1:17; Romans 2:7; Romans 3:22; Romans 3:24.) And when such receptive position is assumed and maintained, God’s free and abounding mercy, consequent on the mediation of Christ, is ever ready to flow forth in a full stream of grace upon the soul. Like Abraham, we enter into compact with God, and will ever find the Holy One faithful to his covenant. Paul, therefore, reasons conclusively with the Jews when he bases justification by faith in the foundations of their history.
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