His Belief was
Counted as Righteousness
Dear ones, would you
turn and look at Romans 4:23. You see it reads like this, “But the
words, ‘It was reckoned to him,’ were written not for his sake
alone,” and then the rest of the sentence at the beginning of 24,
“But for ours also.” And do you see that the words, "It was
reckoned to him," are in quotes, so that obviously means that
they were used before somewhere and that Paul is actually quoting
what was said elsewhere.
Now you’ll find
the original moment when those words were used if you turn to Genesis
15:6. There the words were spoken for the first time and that’s
why they are in quotes back there in Romans. Genesis 15:6, “And he
believed the Lord,” that was a man called Abraham, “And he
reckoned it to him as righteousness.” Now that’s the original
time that those words were used. “He reckoned it to him as
righteousness.”
Now why did he do
that? Well, Abraham had no children and God gave him a promise in
Genesis 15:5, “And he,” God, “Brought him outside and said,
‘Look toward heaven, and number the stars, if you are able to
number them.’ Then he said to them, ‘So shall your descendants
be.’ And he believed the Lord; and he reckoned it to him as
righteousness.” And so it was because Abraham believed what God
said that God regarded him as right with himself. And that was back
in the year 2000 BC.
Now do you see that
it was spoken at that time in the year 2000 BC and yet it was spoken
also in the year 57 AD? Romans 3:28 is another occasion when another
man said the same thing is true. Really, 2,050 years later, Romans
3:28, “For we hold that a man is justified by faith apart from
works of law.” So the whole world, even the religious world says,
“You make yourself right with the deity behind the universe by
being good or by entering into a special kind of knowledge that this
deity will give you.” But for 2,050 years at least the God whom
Jesus regarded as his Father has kept on saying, “If you believe
me, I’ll look upon that as righteousness. If you just trust me
I’ll regard that as righteousness; I’ll make you right with
myself.”
Now do you see that
that’s one of the greatest strengths of Christianity: that we’re
not listening to Jesus over a period of three years of ministry? But
that the things that he has said, this God who is his father has been
saying for thousands of years to thousands of different people down
through the centuries, and that this God has remained consistent
right down through the years. He has kept on saying, however much we
men and woman have tried to change the basis of our 'getting right
with him' to morality, or to some kind of special Gnostic knowledge,
yet this God has kept on saying, “No, I tell you if you believe
what I say, and I’m saying that my Son has died for the things
you’ve done against me, then as far as I’m concerned you’re
right with me.”
Now, do you see that
for thousands of years, brothers and sisters, God has been saying the
same thing? This is one of the reasons why so many of us trust the
revelation of the Creator that has come through Jesus, because it’s
a revelation that has remained consistent over thousands, and
thousands of years. Now, do you see that in the last 30 years of our
century there will spring up all kinds of antichrists? There will
come all kinds of gurus, and all kinds of mystic prophets who will
try to tell you that their particular vision of the Creator of the
universe is the right one. And do you see that you have to weigh one
man’s personal insight against the historical events of thousands
of years in order to say that this man is right and this Jesus is
wrong?
It’s like me
saying to you, “I had a vision last night, a dream, and I really
believe that God will treat you as being his child and as being right
with him if you’ll only believe what he says. If you’ll believe
what he says, he’ll make you right with himself.” Now do you see
that your immediate response should be, “How do I know that you’re
right? How do I know that your vision is right? How do I know your
dream is right? How do I know that you’re not having illusions?
How do I know that your personal experience is trust worthy?” And
the answer is really, you don’t.
Any man who comes to
you and says, “No, I supersede Christ. I am the new prophet. I am
Christ returned. I am the one who will bring the world to peace and
to complete joy and love.” You can tell one thing that that is one
of the antichrists that Jesus said would come and would try to
disillusion us all and would try to deceive us all. But actually,
all they’d ask us to do was believe in their personal experience.
Brothers and sisters
it’s so different when you bring thousands of years of historical
events where this Creator has dealt consistently over centuries and
centuries with different people, you’re dealing with a completely
different situation. And that’s really what you deal with you see,
in the Bible. If you look at Genesis 15:5, you get the dealing that
God did with Abraham and 2,000 years later he’s still dealing the
same way with a man like Paul. Genesis 15:5, “And he brought him
outside and said, ‘Look toward heaven, and number the stars, if you
are able to number them.’ Then he said to him, ‘So shall your
descendants be.’ And he believed the Lord; and he reckoned it to
him as righteousness.”
Now any one could
say he was having a dream, it didn’t really happen. But then you
look at Genesis 21:2-3. Genesis 21:2-3, “And Sarah conceived, and
bore Abraham a son in his old age at the time of which God had spoken
to him. Abraham called the name of his son who was born to him, whom
Sarah bore him, Isaac.” And then look at the completion of
Abraham’s life in Genesis 25:7-9. Genesis 25:7, “These are the
days of the years of Abraham’s life, a hundred and seventy-five
years. Abraham breathed his last and died in a good old age, an old
man and full of years, and was gathered to his people.” And it’s
very difficult to say that Abraham really was having a hallucination
when he thought that God made that promise to him, because the
historical events back up the promise. And then you need to add to
that thousands of years and thousands of other people’s experiences
that reinforce the same revelation that God is like this. That he
treats any of us as right with himself if we really believe him, if
we just put our trust in him. If we believe that what he says is
true, if we believe that Jesus really died for us, then God regards
that as right and righteousness. And really that’s one of the
biggest reasons why so many of us believe that the God revealed by
Jesus is the real God.
Now the amazing
thing is brothers and sisters that you don’t only have to depend on
historical events to back it up. The Bible is not only invaluable to
us because it tells us of actual historical events that prove that
what God said he would do he actually did. But the Bible is
invaluable to us because it actually tells us what God himself is
thinking.
Now that’s right,
if you look at Genesis 15:5, you’ll see that. Genesis 15:5, “And
he,” that is God, “Brought him outside and said, ‘Look toward
heaven, and number the stars, if you are able to number them.’
Then he said to him, ‘So shall your descendants be.’ And he
believed the Lord; and he reckoned it to him as righteousness.”
Who? Well, God. So we read not only what God said to Abraham, but
what God was actually thinking. And the Bible is invaluable to us
not only because it’s a history book of what God did but it’s
also a record of what God himself was thinking at different moments
in history.
Now how did he know
it? Well, God told it to Abraham. God said that to Abraham, “Look,
I regard your belief in me as righteousness.” Then Abraham told it
to his children, then they told it to their children, and then they
told it to Moses. And Moses decided, “I’ll try this out. I’ll
act on it myself. I’ll try to prove that this is true.” And so
he tried it in his own life and you see it in Exodus 3:10. Exodus
3:10, and God spoke you see, to Moses, “Come, I will send you to
Pharaoh that you may bring forth my people, the sons of Israel, out
of Egypt.”
Now that was an
incredible and really an impossible task if you think of the
situation. Moses, a shepherd on the backside of some mountain
looking after sheep and the Egyptians, the most powerful race in the
world and God says, “Come, I’m going to use you to bring my
people out of Egypt.” And then look at Exodus 12:51, “And on
that very day the Lord brought the people of Israel out of the land
of Egypt by their hosts.”
If I give you some
personal visions that I’ve had all you have to do is get me into
St. Peters [Reference to the insane asylum in St. Peter, Minnesota,
USA], or give me some basket work and you only have to knock down one
person to disprove my view of God. But you do see brothers and
sisters, to contradict the revelation of our Creator that we have
received through Jesus, you have to rewrite thousands of years of
history. And not only of Israelite history but the Egyptian history
makes no sense if the Exodus did not take place. Moreover, the
elements in the Jewish religion that originated in that time make no
sense. We have lots of effects without any cause if this is not
true.
Now this is why the
revelation that we get of the Creator through Jesus is so hard to
contradict, because it does not depend on one man’s vision but the
experiences of hundreds and thousands of men over hundreds and
thousands of years. And so it goes on, you know, right through the
Bible. And in the Bible you have not only an event you see, but you
have really God’s thought about the event. Down through the years
many religious authorities have taken historical events like the
Second World War and have tried to make some religious significance
out of them.
They’ve tried to
tell us what the god was really thinking who allowed those things to
come to past. And all that has resulted from that kind of personal
interpretation of events is a bundle of contradictory gods such as we
have in Hinduism, or a group of contradictory deities such as we have
among the Romans and Greeks. But we have nothing like a consistent
God who is the same century after century. Now this is why God has
not only recorded the events in the Bible but he has recorded his own
thoughts about them. He tells us what he is actually thinking at the
time. The theologians say that the revelation is not only factual but
propositional and tells us not only the events but it tells us the
significance of the events.
Now, why has all of
this taken place? Well you get the answer in Romans 4:23. Romans
4:23, God had gone to this kind of trouble for one purpose and it’s
in 4:23, “But the words, ‘it was reckoned to him,’ were written
not for his sake alone, but for ours also.” And that’s the
purpose of history.
God enabled a man
like Abraham to experience that for your sake. He enabled a man like
Paul to experience it for your sake and mine. See, a lot of us I
think, are under this deception that the way to get right with the
Creator of the world is to be as good as we can. And so you know, we
wear ourselves out. We wear ourselves out trying to please all our
families, all our relatives, all the authorities in our lives, our
professors, our teachers, all of our peer group, and especially all
people connected with churches. And so we’ve come into the
deception that Christianity is really just being moral.
Now, do you see that
God had a man who thought like that at one time and then he
discovered that that wasn’t true? That he could be made right with
God just by believing that God’s Son Jesus had made things right
between himself and his Father. And this man’s experience was
recorded for your sake and mine.
Now you’ll find
somebody like yourself who was concerned with grades if you look at
Philippians 3. And old Paul really was one of those conscientious
people such as so many of us are. In Philippians 3:4 he describes
his own attitude to things, “Though I myself have reason for
confidence in the flesh also. If any other man thinks he has reason
for the confidence in the flesh, I have more: circumcised on the
eight day, of the people of Israel, of the tribe of Benjamin, a
Hebrew born of Hebrews; as to the law a Pharisee.” You see A’s
right across the board, “As to zeal a persecutor of the church, as
to righteousness under the law blameless.” And then he says, “But
whatever gain I had,” because none of these things made me sense
that I was right with God, “I counted as loss for the sake of
Christ. Indeed I count everything as loss because of the surpassing
worth of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord.” And Paul believed what we
have said, that if he trusted what God said about Jesus he would be
right with God.
Is there any proof
that he was right with God? Yeah, if you look at his experience in
Acts 28 you’ll see it there. There’s incredible proof that he
was not just involved in some kind of deception in Acts 28:1, “After
we had escaped, we then learned that the island was called Malta.
And the natives showed us unusual kindness…” and this was Luke
writing this, you remember, he was traveling with Paul, “For they
kindled a fire and welcomed us all, because it had begun to rain and
was cold. Paul had gathered a bundle of sticks and put them on the
fire, when a viper came out because of the heat and fastened on his
hand. When the natives saw the creature hanging from his hand, they
said to one another, ‘No doubt this man is a murderer. Though he
has escaped from the sea, justice has not allowed him to live.’
He, however, shook off the creature into the fire and suffered no
harm. They waited, expecting him to swell up or suddenly fall down
dead; but when they had waited a long time and saw no misfortune come
to him, they changed their minds and said that he was a god.” And
Jesus said that that kind of thing would happen. He said, “Listen,
you’ll be made right with my Father if you believe in me and you’ll
even walk on scorpions and they will not touch you.” And that was
written for your sake and mine.
I don’t know if
you’re still lying under that business of trying to prove that
you’re as good as anybody else or if you’re still trying to make
yourself right with God by being moral and being successful. But do
you see that here’s a historical experience that shows that God
will treat you as right with himself if you’ll just believe in his
son Jesus.
Some of us, you
know, are in the position where we think, “Yeah, well that’s
okay, but I really think I’m almost too low for God to have
anything to do with me. All these people in this theater must be at
least a little better than me and in some way surely you have to
prove yourself worthy of Jesus dying for you? Surely you have to
improve your life a little bit for God to make you right with
himself?” And I think many of us think this way. We listen Sunday
after Sunday to this kind of talk but really in our own hearts we
think, “Yeah, but I have to improve a little better and a little
better and someday I’ll be able to believe in Jesus and God will be
able to make me right with himself.” But brothers and sisters, God
can do it this very morning, you see, because he did it with someone
like you, someone at least as bad as you, and probably worse.
Now, would you look
at that lady, her story really is in John 8:3-11? And you remember
the RSV Bible tries to indicate where some manuscripts do not contain
some of the text and so that’s why they put this into the small
print at the bottom of the page there. John 8:3, it just indicates
really that the manuscript that they were following didn’t have it
in it but that the other big ones Spatacanous and Alexandrinus had,
“The scribes and the Pharisees brought a woman who had been caught
in adultery, and placing her in the midst they said to him, ‘Teacher,
this woman has been caught in the act of adultery. Now in the law
Moses commanded us to stone such. What do you say about her?’
This they said to test him that they might have some charge to bring
against him. Jesus bent down and wrote with his finger on the
ground. And as they continued to ask him, he stood up and said to
them, ‘Let him who is without sin among you be the first to throw a
stone at her.’ And once more he bent down and wrote with his
finger on the ground. But when they heard it, they went away, one by
one, beginning with the eldest, and Jesus was left alone with the
woman standing before him.”
This was a woman you
see, that presumably was even caught in bed I suppose, caught in the
actual act of adultery really. “Jesus looked up and said to her,
‘Woman, where are they? Has no one condemned you?’ She said,
‘No one, Lord.’ And Jesus said, ‘Neither do I condemn you.’”
And then he did say the important part about repentance you see,
“Go, and do not sin again.”
But loved ones that
was written for our sakes, because Jesus will have the same attitude
to you this morning as he had to that woman. And do you see there’s
none of us here this morning that are too low that God is not willing
to deal with us in his son Jesus? There is no one here this morning
that God will not show the same forgiveness to as he showed that
lady. And so it is right through the Bible. In the Bible we have a
series of historical events that show beyond all doubt the kind of
God that we’re dealing with and that he is the Father of Jesus
Christ. And the reason for all that historical detail is so that we
will in no way, in these last days, be led away by those who have
personal visions of their own, but that we will know what God is like
and most of all that we will be prepared to deal with him ourselves.
So dear ones if you
ever feel, “Oh no, I’m too low, or I demand too much scientific
detail for God ever to deal with me.” All you have to do is look
at that woman or look at the man Thomas who said, “Unless I put my
finger into the holes in his hands I will not believe.” And then
you can be sure that if God showed himself and came through in some
way to a man as demanding and skeptical as Thomas, then he’ll come
through to you, too. He can deal with you and he can deal with me
also. And so it is with every difficulty we feel and many of us
feel, “Oh no, I’ve listened to this Sunday after Sunday and I’ve
tried to get through to God. I’ve tried, and I’ve tried and I
cannot, and I cannot get through. There must be some reason for it.”
There is.
There was a young
man who came to Jesus and said, “Listen, I’ve done everything.
I’ve obeyed all the laws. I’m absolutely obedient and yet
somehow I can’t find God real to me.” And then Jesus picked the
one thing that he had never looked at himself and said, “Listen,
you’re very rich. Would you give away all that you have? And then
God will be real to you.” And so it is with us who claim we’ve
tried everything, we’ve done everything, we’ve obeyed every law
we can, yet when you go to Jesus and say, “Lord, will 'you' show me
why God cannot be real to me?” Jesus will be faithful to you as he
was with that man. And he’ll pick out the one thing that is
preventing God showing himself to you.
And really the
reason for all these things is for us. It was reckoned to him it was
written not for his sake but for ours this morning, because this God
is the same yesterday, today, and forever, and he’ll deal with you
in just the same way. And he’ll be as faithful to you this moment
as he has been with these people. And that’s why he recorded all
this for us.
So when you begin
the question could God possibly come through to you, will you have a
look at what he did in the past and ask yourself, “Well, is he the
same today? If he is then he’ll deal with me.” And he will
really. He will.
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