In Genesis chapter 12, Abraham’s story begins with God calling him and giving him a HUGE promise: to bless him and make him a blessing to all nations. God promises that this will happen through his offspring in a land God will give him, and from there all peoples will be blessed. Things will be set right again. Big promises!!
But what happens next? The land he is sent to is hit with a famine. Abram wanders into Egypt and makes a bunch of mistakes. Then his nephew gets captured as a prisoner of war. Abram rescues nephew. All the while, Abram is getting old, and many years have passed since he heard the call of God. To top it off, he has no child and no land of his own.
Abram has the Promises of God. Abram sees his situation. But there is a huge gap. As if he is on one side of the Grand Canyon and God and His promises are on the other side, Abram is “living in the gap between promise and reality”.
Then we come to Genesis 15, which gets to the very heart of how it is possible to live by faith even when we feel like the gap between us and God’s promises is huge. There are 3 things we are given in the chapter that are essential vital components to the life of faith.
Permission to honestly name our struggles to believe
Declaration of God for those who believe despite the struggle and doubts
Guarantee of God to assure us he will certainly keep all his promises.
1. Permission | God gives us permission to name our struggles with honesty. In verse 1, God comes to Abram in a vision and speaks personally to Abram. He calls him by name and speaks tenderly to him, meeting him in his fears and anxiety. God is his shield, his protector, and his defense!
Abram’s response to God is humble and reverent, yet honest and raw. Abram admits honestly that there is quite a gap between His promise/word and his life – “I am childless…you have given me no offspring.” In this first recorded prayer of Abram, we have in his story, he speaks an honest complaint we would probably all feel very uncomfortable praying, especially after a vision of God!
How does God reply? God receives Abram’s prayer, acknowledges his complaint, and answers it. God gives him a visual sign and shows him the sky and the countless stars, and promises that his offspring will be that numerous. God responds to Abram by graciously meeting him where he is and by giving him a visual reminder that He will keep His word. As one author commented on this passage, “God is never shocked when you tell him the truth about your feelings” When we are feeling the gap, God gives us permission to honestly name our struggles to have faith in Him.
2. Declaration | In verse 6, we have a declaration of God for those who believe despite the struggle, doubts, and gaps. “Abram believed the Lord, and he (the Lord) credited it to him (Abram) as righteousness.” This is one of the most important verses in all of the Bible. It is a declaration in which the narrator speaks to us, declaring what is happening.
In Romans chapter 4:22, the apostle Paul says, “Therefore, it was credited to him for (as) righteousness.” To be “righteous” is to be fully right with God, to have nothing standing between you and his favor, no sin, no unbelief. It is to have his full approval, acceptance, and vindication of your life. All who are right with God, (who are accepted by Him, declared not guilty, who are in good standing as a part of His people) have a claim and right to all his promises. God would be unjust and unrighteous if he does not fulfill his promises to a person who is right with him.
What is being declared here is incredible! Unbelievable! God credits this to Abram as righteousness. Credit has two meanings. On one hand, it is an accounting word; in Abram’s account with God, he has righteousness. On the other hand, credit is a legal word; in the holy courtroom of God’s judgment, he is declared righteous!
In Romans 4:22, Paul says this is a declaration for us! How is this possible?
22 Therefore, it was credited to him for (as) righteousness. 23 Now it was credited to him was not written for Abraham alone, 24 but also for us. It will be credited to us who believe in him who raised Jesus our Lord from the dead. 25 He was delivered up for our trespasses and raised for our justification.
What are we credited when we believe? The perfect faith and obedience of Jesus. All that Jesus deserves, earned, and is his by right - is ours! Simply by faith - this is the gospel. In our “account” with God, we have the righteousness of Jesus Christ. Because of His complete and full obedience and his death for our trespasses and sins, we do not have to die for our failures. He already did it on our account. We don’t have to live a perfect life of faithfulness and trust. He already did on our account.
How does his righteousness get into our account with God? By faith alone. That’s how we receive the gift and that is how we get the credit! If we are justified by faith in Christ, we never have to wonder IF the promises of God are true for us personally.
This means that even in trials, pain, and seasons of darkness, we can know with certainty that God will make good on his promise. He has to! We can have assurance that God is not mad at us. He is not punishing us. He has not abandoned us and He has not forgotten about us. We can trust and wait in faith “in the gap” knowing that when we are right with God he WILL set all things right for us.
3. Guarantee | On top of this amazing declaration, we have a guarantee. In verse 8, we know that Abram believes, and has faith, and God himself counted him as righteous. But, he still has doubts and needs assurance, and asks “how can I know?”
God’s response seems bizarre to us. He shows Abram a bunch of animals and slices them in half and in verse 18 (key to understanding what is happening), “The Lord made a covenant with Abram.” A covenant is a super promise. It is a vow, a solemn obligation where you are binding yourself and your life to your promise. God guarantees his promise by way of a covenant.
This was a common Ancient Near East practice, where they would take animals, cut them in two (“cut a covenant”), and walk through them. It was a physical picture of what they were covenanting to each other - that if I don’t keep my part of the covenant – I forfeit my life.
What is most remarkable here is that only God passes through the pieces. It’s a one-way covenant. God is invoking a curse on himself (!) if he does not keep his covenant.
This is God saying to Abram that if he does not keep his covenant promise, he forfeits his life. But this isn’t possible for God the creator of the stars to die!
But yes, it is. The gospel tells us that God did walk through the pieces. “Christ became a curse for us”; Jesus said of the bread and wine, “this is the new (renewed) covenant in my blood”; “my body broken”. God – who became man – did forfeit his life. His body was torn and his blood was shed. He shuddered in the darkness under the curse.
Here is the power of the one-way covenant guarantee - when God walked alone through the pieces. He was saying, “If I don’t keep my end of the covenant, I take the curse” AND “Abram, if you don’t keep your end, I take the curse”. No matter what, God alone guarantees his promise will come to pass. There is no stronger guarantee we can have. Every other religion says “You do your part, and I will do my part.” Only the gospel says – I’ll do my part. You just trust me, even when we waver, struggle, suffer, or wonder where God is. Even if we falter in our faith, the cross is our guarantee - for all who trust in Jesus the promises cannot fail. The God who passed through “the pieces” will see it through.
QUESTIONS:
What about the sermon most impacted you or left you with questions?
Think of the Grand Canyon. Do you ever feel like you are on one side of the canyon and everything you know about God and His promises are on the other side, and there is a huge GAP that separates the two? What is this gap for you right now? How big is this gap?
Abram honestly and transparently admits to God that there is a huge gap between His promise and his life (verse 6). Is Abram’s posture surprising to you? How do you feel about praying to God with such raw honesty?
“God is never shocked when you tell him the truth about your feelings” and God gives us permission to honestly name our struggles to believe and have faith in Him. Do you believe that you have this permission to go to God? Have you ever told God how it feels to be in the gap? Do you struggle with telling Him that you doubt His promises?
Application of question #4 to our church community: At any moment in time in the church, there will be those feeling the gap and struggling to have faith. How can we be honest with each other about our struggles? What are some barriers to being open and vulnerable with each other? Practically as a member of God’s family, how can we be a friend (rather than an obstacle) to those who need support and encouragement?
Martin Luther famously said, “Because if this article [of justification] stands, the church stands; if this article collapses, the church collapses.” He claims that Romans 4:22 is the very heart of the gospel. Why would Luther make such a strong claim? Do you agree with him? Why or why not?
Imagine checking your bank balance and doing a double-take because you see $3 billion in your account. You did not earn it. Then you get a text from Jeff Bezos, “A little something from me.” He earned it but it was credited to your account. How would you feel? How does righteousness get into your account with God? Do you struggle with unbelief in this regard, and if so, how can we be certain that God will make good on His promises?
God makes a covenant with Abram by passing through the pieces of the animals cut in two. It is a one-way covenant where God says, “I’ll do my part, you just trust me.” How is this good news to you? How might the Lord be calling you today to trust him more? What would it look like for you to believe the guarantee of God - that his promise to set all things right cannot fail? What difference would this make?