<h2>CHAPTER XI</h2>
<p class="center"><i>ABRAHAM</i> (ii)</p>
<p class="center small"><span class="smcap">Romans</span> iv. 13-25</p>
<p class="dropcap">AGAIN we approach the name of Abraham, Friend
of God, Father of the Faithful. We have seen
him justified by faith, personally accepted because
turning altogether to the sovereign Promiser. We see
him now in some of the glorious issues of that acceptance;
"Heir of the world," "Father of many nations."
And here too all is of grace, all comes through faith.
Not works not merit, not ancestral and ritual privilege,
secured to Abraham the mighty Promise; it was his
because he, pleading absolutely nothing of personal
worthiness, and supported by no guarantees of ordinance
"<i>believed God</i>."</p>
<p>We see him as he steps out from his tent under that
glorious canopy, that Syrian "night of stars." We
look up with him to the mighty depths, and receive
their impression upon our eyes. Behold the innumerable
points and clouds of light! Who can count the
half-visible rays which make white the heavens, gleaming
behind, beyond, the thousands of more numerable luminaries?
The lonely old man who stands gazing there,
perhaps side by side with his divine Friend manifested
in human form, is told to try to count. And then he
hears the promise, "So shall thy seed be."</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_118" id="Page_118">{118}</SPAN></span>
It was then and there that he received justification by
faith. It was then and there also that, by faith, as a
man uncovenanted, unworthy, but called upon to take
what God gave, he received the promise that he should
be "heir of the world."</p>
<p>It was an unequalled paradox—unless indeed we
place beside it the scene when, eighteen centuries later,
in the same land, a descendant of Abraham's, a Syrian
Craftsman, speaking as a religious Leader to His
followers, told them (Matt. xiii. 37, 38) that the "field
was the world," and He the Master of the field.</p>
<p>"<i>Heir of the world</i>"! Did this mean, of the universe
itself? Perhaps it did, for <span class="smcap">Christ</span> was to be the
Claimant of the promise in due time; and under His
feet all things, literally all, are set already in right, and
shall be hereafter set in fact. But the more limited,
and probably in this place the fitter, reference is vast
enough; a reference to "the world" of earth, and of
man upon it. In his "seed," that childless senior was to
be King of Men, Monarch of the continents and oceans.
To him, in his seed, "the utmost parts of the earth"
were given "for his possession." Not his little clan
only, encamped on the dark fields around him, nor even
the direct descendants only of his body, however
numerous, but "all nations," "all kindreds of the earth,"
were "to call him blessed," and to be blessed in him, as
their patriarchal Chief, their Head in covenant with God.
"We see not yet all things" fulfilled of this astonishing
grant and guarantee. We shall not do so, till vast
promised developments of the ways of God have come to
sight. But we do see already steps taken towards that
issue, steps long, majestic, never to be retraced. We see
at this hour in literally every region of the human world
the messengers—an always more numerous army—of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_119" id="Page_119">{119}</SPAN></span>
the Name of "the Son of David, the Son of Abraham."
They are working everywhere; and everywhere, notwithstanding
innumerable difficulties, they are winning
the world for the great Heir of the Promise. Through
paths they know not these missionaries have gone out;
paths hewn by the historical providence of God, and by
His eternal life in the Church, and in the soul. When
"the world" has seemed shut, by war, by policy, by
habit, by geography, it has opened, that they may enter;
till we see Japan throwing back its castle-doors, and
inner Africa not only discovered but become a household
word for the sake of its missions, of its martyrdoms, of
the resolve of its native chiefs to abolish slavery even
in its domestic form.<span class="fnanchor"><SPAN name="Ref_55" id="Ref_55" href="#Foot_55">[55]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>No secular conscious programme has had to do with
this. Causes entirely beyond the reach of human combination
have been, as a fact, combined; the world
has been opened to the Abrahamic message just as the
Church has been inspired anew to enter in, and has
been awakened to a deeper understanding of her glorious
mission. For here too is the finger of God; not only
in the history of the world, but in the life of the Church
and of the Christian. For a long century now, in the
most living centres of Christendom, there has been
waking and rising a mighty revived consciousness of
the glory of the Gospel of the Cross, and of the Spirit;
of the grace of Christ, and also of His claim. And at
this hour, after many a gloomy forecast of unbelieving
and apprehensive thought, there are more men and
women ready to go to the ends of the earth with the
message of the Son of Abraham, than in all time before.</p>
<p>Contrast these issues, even these—leaving out of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_120" id="Page_120">{120}</SPAN></span>
sight the mighty future—with the starry night when the
wandering Friend of God was asked to believe the
incredible, and was justified by faith, and was invested
through faith with the world's crown. Is not God
indeed in the fulfilment? Was He not indeed in the
promise? We are ourselves a part of the fulfilment;
we, one of the "many Nations" of whom the great
Solitary was then made "the Father." Let us bear our
witness, and set to our seal.</p>
<p>In doing so, we attest and illustrate the work, the ever
blessed work, of faith. That man's reliance, at that great
midnight-hour, merited nothing, but received everything.
He took in the first place acceptance with God, and
then with it, as it were folded and embedded in it, he took
riches inexhaustible of privilege and blessing; above all,
the blessing of being made a blessing. So now, in view
of that hour of Promise, and of these ages of fulfilment,
we see our own path of peace in its divine simplicity.
We read, as if written on the heavens in stars, the
words, "Justified by Faith." And we understand already,
what the Epistle will soon amply unfold to us,
how for us, as for Abraham, blessings untold of other
orders lie treasured in the grant of our acceptance.
"Not for him only, but for us also, believing."</p>
<p>Let us turn again to the text.</p>
<div class="sidenote">Ver. 13.<br/>Ver. 14.<br/>Ver. 15.</div>
<p><b>For not through law came the promise to
Abraham, or to his seed, of his being the world's
heir, but through faith's righteousness;</b> through the
acceptance received by uncovenanted, unprivileged
faith. <b>For if those who belong to law inherit</b>
Abraham's promise, <b>faith is ipso facto void,
and the promise is ipso facto annulled.<span class="fnanchor"><SPAN name="Ref_56" id="Ref_56" href="#Foot_56">[56]</SPAN></span>
For wrath
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_121" id="Page_121">{121}</SPAN></span>
is what the Law works out;</b> it is only<span class="fnanchor"><SPAN name="Ref_57" id="Ref_57" href="#Foot_57">[57]</SPAN></span>
<b>where law is not that transgression is not either.</b> As
much as to say, that to suspend eternal blessing,
the blessing which in its nature can deal only with
ideal conditions, upon man's obedience to law, is to bar
fatally the hope of a fulfilment. Why? Not because
the Law is not holy; not because disobedience is not
guilty; as if man were ever, for a moment, mechanically
compelled to disobey. But because as a fact man is a
fallen being, however he became so, and whatever is
his guilt as such. He is fallen, and has no true self-restoring
power. If then he is to be blessed, the work
must begin in spite of himself. It must come from
without, it must come unearned, it must be of grace, through faith.<span class="sni"><span class="hidev">|</span>Ver. 16.<br/>Ver. 17.<span class="hidev">|</span></span> <b>Therefore it is on</b> (literally, "<i>out
of</i>") <b>faith, in order to be grace-wise, to make
secure the promise, to all the seed, not only to that which
belongs to the Law, but to that which belongs to the
faith of Abraham,</b> to the "seed" whose claim is no less
and no more than Abraham's faith; <b>who is
father of all us, as it stands written,</b> (Gen.
xvii. 5), "<b>Father of many Nations<span class="fnanchor"><SPAN name="Ref_58" id="Ref_58" href="#Foot_58">[58]</SPAN></span>
have I appointed thee</b>"—<b>in the sight of the God whom he believed, who
vivifies the dead, and calls,</b> addresses, deals with, <b>things
not-being as being.</b> "<i>In the sight of God</i>"; as if to say,
that it matters little what Abraham is for "us all" in the
sight of <i>man</i>, in the sight and estimate of the Pharisee.
The Eternal Justifier and Promiser dealt with Abraham,
and in him with the world, before the birth of that Law
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_122" id="Page_122">{122}</SPAN></span>
which the Pharisee has perverted into his rampart of
privilege and isolation. He took care that the mighty
transaction should take place not actually only, but
significantly, in the open field and beneath the boundless
cope of stars. It was to affect not one tribe, but
all the nations. It was to secure blessings which were
not to be demanded by the privileged, but taken by the
needy. And so the great representative Believer was
called to believe before Law, before legal Sacrament, and
under every personal circumstance of humiliation and discouragement.<span class="sni"><span class="hidev">|</span>Ver. 18.<br/> to<br/>Ver. 22.<span class="hidev">|</span></span> <b>Who, past hope, on hope,
believed;</b> stepping from the dead hope of
nature to the bare hope of the promise, <b>so that he
became father of many Nations; according to what stands
spoken, "So shall thy seed be."<span class="fnanchor"><SPAN name="Ref_59" id="Ref_59" href="#Foot_59">[59]</SPAN></span>
And, because he failed not<span class="fnanchor"><SPAN name="Ref_60" id="Ref_60" href="#Foot_60">[60]</SPAN></span>
in his</b> (<span title="tê">τῇ</span>) <b>faith, he did not notice his
own body, already turned to death, near</b> (<span title="pou">που</span>) <b>a century
old as he now was, and the death-state of the womb of
Sarah. No, on the promise of God—he did not
waver by his unbelief,<span class="fnanchor"><SPAN name="Ref_61" id="Ref_61" href="#Foot_61">[61]</SPAN></span>
but received strength<span class="fnanchor"><SPAN name="Ref_62" id="Ref_62" href="#Foot_62">[62]</SPAN></span>
by his</b> (<span title="tê">τῇ</span>) <b>faith, giving glory to God,</b> the "glory" of
dealing with Him as being what He is, Almighty
and All-true, <b>and fully persuaded that
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_123" id="Page_123">{123}</SPAN></span>
what He has promised He is able actually to do. Wherefore
actually</b> (<span title="kai">καὶ</span>) <b>it was reckoned to him as
righteousness.</b> Not because such a "giving to
God the glory" which is only His eternal due was
morally meritorious, in the least degree. If it were
so, Abraham "would have whereof to glory." The
"<i>wherefore</i>" is concerned with the whole record, the
whole transaction. Here was a man who took the
right way to receive sovereign blessing. He interposed
nothing between the Promiser and himself. He treated
the Promiser as what He is, all-sufficient and all-faithful.
He opened his empty hand in that persuasion, and so,
because the hand was empty, the blessing was laid
upon its palm.</p>
<div class="sidenote">Ver. 23.<br/>Ver. 24.<br/>Ver. 25.</div>
<p><b>Now it was not written only on his account, that
it was reckoned to him, but also on account of us,
to whom it is sure</b> (<span title="mellei">μέλλει</span>) <b>to be reckoned,</b> in the
fixed intention of the divine Justifier, as each
successive applicant comes to receive; <b>believing as we
do on the Raiser-up of Jesus our Lord from the dead; who
was delivered up on account of our transgressions,
and was raised up on account of our justification.</b></p>
<p>Here the great argument moves to a pause, to the
cadence of a glorious rest. More and more, as we have
pursued it, it has disengaged itself from the obstructions
of the opponent, and advanced with a larger motion into
a positive and rejoicing assertion of the joys and wealth
of the believing. We have left far behind the pertinacious
cavils which ask, now whether there is any hope
for man outside legalism, now whether within legalism
there can be any danger even for deliberate unholiness,
and again whether the Gospel of gratuitous acceptance
does not cancel the law of duty. We have left the
Pharisee for Abraham, and have stood beside him to
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_124" id="Page_124">{124}</SPAN></span>
look and listen. He, in the simplicity of a soul which
has seen itself and seen the Lord, and so has not one
word, one thought, about personal privilege, claim, or
even fitness, receives a perfect acceptance in the hand
of faith, and finds that the acceptance carries with it
a promise of unimaginable power and blessing. And
now from Abraham the Apostle turns to "<i>us</i>," "<i>us all</i>,"
"<i>us also</i>." His thoughts are no longer upon adversaries
and objections, but on the company of the faithful, on
those who are one with Abraham, and with each other,
in their happy willingness to come, without a dream
of merit, and take from God His mighty peace in the
name of Christ. He finds himself not in synagogue
or in school, disputing, but in the believing assembly,
teaching, unfolding in peace the wealth of grace. He
speaks to congratulate, to adore.</p>
<p>Let us join him there in spirit, and sit down with Aquila
and Priscilla, with Nereus, and Nymphas, and Persis,
and in our turn remember that "it was written for us
also." Quite surely, and with a fulness of blessing
which we can never find out in its perfection, to us also
"<i>faith is sure to be reckoned</i>, <span title="mellei
logizesthai">μέλλει λογίζεσθαι</span>, <i>as
righteousness, believing as we do</i>, <span
title="tois pisteuousin">τοῖς πιστεύουσιν</span>, <i>on the
Raiser-up of Jesus our Lord</i>, ours also, <i>from the dead</i>."
To us, as to them, the Father presents Himself as the
Raiser-up of the Son. He is known by us in that act.
It gives us His own warrant for a boundless trust in
His character, His purposes, His unreserved intention
to accept the sinner who comes to His feet in the name
of His Crucified and Risen Son. He bids us—not forget
that He is the Judge, who cannot for a moment connive.
But He bids us believe, He bids us <i>see</i>, that He, being
the Judge, and also the Law-Giver, has dealt with His
own Law, in a way that satisfies it, that satisfies
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_125" id="Page_125">{125}</SPAN></span>
<span class="smcap">Himself</span>. He bids us thus understand that He now
"is sure to" justify, to accept, to find not guilty, to find
righteous, satisfactory, the sinner who believes. He
comes to us, He, this eternal Father of our Lord, to
assure us, in the Resurrection, that He has sought, and
has "found, a Ransom"; that He has not been prevailed
upon to have mercy, a mercy behind which there may
therefore lurk a gloomy reserve, but has Himself "set
forth" the beloved Propitiation, and then accepted Him
(not it, but Him) with the acceptance of not His word
only but His deed. He is the God of Peace. How do
we know it? We thought He was the God of the
tribunal, and the doom. Yes; but He has "brought the
great Shepherd from the dead, in the blood of the everlasting
Covenant" (Heb. xiii. 20). Then, O eternal
Father of our Lord, we will believe Thee; we will
believe in Thee; we will, we do, in the very letter of
the words Thou didst bid Thy messenger write down
here, "<i>believe upon Thee</i>," <span title="epi ton
Egeiranta">ἐπὶ τὸν Ἐγείραντα</span>, as in a
deep repose. Truly, in <i>this</i> glorious respect, though
Thou art consuming Fire, "there is nothing in Thee
to dread."</p>
<p>"<i>Who was delivered up because of our transgressions.</i>"
So dealt the Father with the Son, who gave Himself.
"It pleased the Lord to bruise Him"; "He spared not
His own Son." "<i>Because of our transgressions</i>"; to
meet the fact that we had gone astray. What, was
that fact thus to be met? Was our self-will, our pride,
our falsehood, our impurity, our indifference to God,
our resistance to God, to be thus met? Was it to be
met at all, and not rather left utterly alone to its own
horrible issues? Was it eternally necessary that, if
met, it must be met thus, by nothing less than the
delivering up of Jesus our Lord? It was even so.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_126" id="Page_126">{126}</SPAN></span>
Assuredly if a milder expedient would have met our
guilt, the <span class="smcap">Father</span> would not have "delivered up" the
<span class="smcap">Son</span>. The Cross was nothing if not an absolute <i>sine
quâ non</i>. There is that in sin, and in God, which
made it eternally necessary that—if man was to be
justified—the Son of God must not only live but
die, and not only die but die thus, delivered up, given
over to be done to death, as those who do great sin
are done.</p>
<p>Deep in the heart of the divine doctrine of Atonement
lies this element of it, the "<i>because of our transgressions</i>";
the exigency of Golgotha, due to our sins.
The remission, the acquittal, the acceptance, was not
a matter for the verbal <i>fiat</i> of divine autocracy. It was
a matter not between God and creation, which to Him
is "a little thing," but between God and His Law, that
is to say, Himself, as He is eternal Judge. And this, to
the Eternal, is <i>not</i> a little thing. So the solution called
for no little thing, but for the Atoning Death, for the
laying by the Father on the Son of the iniquities of us
all, that we might open our arms and receive from the
Father the merits of the Son.</p>
<p>"<i>And was raised up because of our justification</i>;"
because our acceptance had been won, by His deliverance
up. Such is the simplest explanation of the
grammar, and of the import. The Lord's Resurrection
appears as, so to speak, the mighty sequel, and also the
demonstration, warrant, proclamation, of His acceptance
as the Propitiation, and therefore of our acceptance in
Him. For indeed it <i>was</i> our justification, when He
paid our penalty. True, the acceptance does not
accrue to the individual till he believes, and so receives.
The gift is not put into the hand till it is open, and
empty. But the gift has been bought ready for the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_127" id="Page_127">{127}</SPAN></span>
recipient long before he kneels to receive it. It was
his, in provision, from the moment of the purchase;
and the glorious Purchaser came up from the depths
where He had gone down to buy, holding aloft in His
sacred hands the golden Gift, ours because His for us.</p>
<p>A little while before he wrote to Rome, St Paul had
written to Corinth, and the same truth was in his soul
then, though it came out only passingly, while with
infinite impressiveness. "If Christ is not risen, idle
is your faith; you are yet in your sins" (1 Cor. xv. 17).
That is to say, so the context irrefragably shews, you
are yet in the guilt of your sins; you are still unjustified.
"In your sins" cannot possibly there refer to the moral
condition of the converts; for as a matter of fact, which no
doctrine could negative, the Corinthians <i>were</i> "changed
men." "In your sins" refers therefore to guilt, to law,
to acceptance. And it bids them look to the Atonement
as the objective <i>sine quâ non</i> for that, and to the
Resurrection as the one possible, and the only necessary,
warrant to faith that the Atonement had secured its end.</p>
<p>"<i>Who was delivered up; who was raised up.</i>"
When? About twenty-five years before Paul sat
dictating this sentence in the house of Gaius. There
were at that moment about three hundred known living
people, at least (1 Cor. xv. 6), who had seen the Risen
One with open eyes, and heard Him with conscious ears.
From one point of view, all was eternal, spiritual,
invisible. From another point of view our salvation
was as concrete, as historical, as much a thing of place
and date, as the battle of Actium, or the death of
Socrates. And what was done, remains done.</p>
<div class="poetry-center">
<div class="poetry">
<div class="line quote">"Can length of years on God Himself exact,</div>
<div class="line">And make that fiction which was once a fact?"</div>
</div></div>
<div class="footnote">
<p class="nodent"><SPAN name="Foot_55" id="Foot_55" href="#Ref_55">[55]</SPAN>
In Uganda, 1893.</p>
<p class="nodent"><SPAN name="Foot_56" id="Foot_56" href="#Ref_56">[56]</SPAN>
We attempt thus to represent the perfects, <span title="kekenôtai,
katêrgêtai">κεκένωται, κατήργηται</span>.</p>
<p class="nodent"><SPAN name="Foot_57" id="Foot_57" href="#Ref_57">[57]</SPAN>
Read <span title="hou de">οὗ δὲ</span> not
<span title="hou gar">οὗ γάρ</span>.</p>
<p class="nodent"><SPAN name="Foot_58" id="Foot_58" href="#Ref_58">[58]</SPAN>
It is impossible to convey in English the point of the word <span title="ethnê">ἔθνη</span>
here, with its faint reference to the <i>Gentiles</i> (in the sense common
in later Judaism), spiritually "naturalized" among Abraham's descendants.</p>
<p class="nodent"><SPAN name="Foot_59" id="Foot_59" href="#Ref_59">[59]</SPAN>
Observe the characteristically <i>fragmentary</i> quotation, which
assumes the reader's knowledge of the context—the context of the
stars. Compare Heb. vi. 14, which similarly quotes Gen. xxii. 16, 17.</p>
<p class="nodent"><SPAN name="Foot_60" id="Foot_60" href="#Ref_60">[60]</SPAN>
<span title="Mê asthenêsas">Μὴ ἀσθενήσας</span>:—we attempt to convey the thought, given by the
aorist, that he <i>then and there</i> was "not weak."</p>
<p class="nodent"><SPAN name="Foot_61" id="Foot_61" href="#Ref_61">[61]</SPAN>
We render this clause as literally as possible. It is as if he
would have written "On the promise of God <i>he relied</i>," but changed
the expression to one more ample and more forcible. "<i>His</i> unbelief":
<span title="tê apistia">τῇ ἀπιστίᾳ</span>. Not that Abraham <i>had</i> unbelief actually, but
he had it potentially; he <i>might have</i> disbelieved. In that sense
unbelief was "<i>his</i>."</p>
<p class="nodent"><SPAN name="Foot_62" id="Foot_62" href="#Ref_62">[62]</SPAN>
<span title="Enedynamôthê">Ἐνεδυναμώθη</span>: the thought is of
strength summoned <i>at a crisis</i>.</p>
</div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_128" id="Page_128">{128}</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />