M
mikeburris
Guest
The Way of Faith, by Mike Burris 3/29/2014
Paul says in Rom 1:5 his ministry team “received grace . . . to bring about the obedience of faith for the sake of Christ’s name among all the nations” and he ends in Rom 16:26 with “my gospel and the preaching of Jesus Christ has now been made know to all nations . . . to bring about the obedience of faith.” There is no definite article attached to “faith” so Paul is going far beyond “the faith” we are to “examine ourselves to see if we are in, to test ourselves to see if Jesus Christ is in us” that Paul speaks of in 2 Cor 13:5, “the faith we are to stand firm in” according to 1 Cor 16:13. In context, Paul speaks of a much broader aspect of faith. In Rom 1:16-17 Paul lays out his purpose: “For I am not ashamed of the gospel, for it is the dynamite-like power of God for salvation to everyone who has faith . . . For in it the righteousness of God is revealed from faith to faith, as it is written, ‘The righteous shall live by the means of faith.’” Salvation (soteria) doesn’t refer only to that sliver of time you “accepted the Lord and were saved.” It refers to the entire process of predestination, calling/election, justification (made right with God), sanctification/holiness/godliness (living rightly before God), and finally our glorification when our bodies are changed into an incorruptible body like Christ’s. Righteousness (dikaiosune) also doesn’t refer only to that sliver of time when we are justified, made right with God through the blood of Christ when his righteousness is transferred to us as our sin was transferred to him – this process called propitiation. It also refers to living rightly before God (sanctification, holiness, godliness), which is also the work of the Holy Spirit “working in us both to will/desire and to do God’s good pleasure (Phil 2:13). God is in control of the entire process of healing us and restoring us back to wholeness, back to God’s original design! The phrase “faith to faith” is an idiom meaning “from the beginning to the end of your faith.” In other words, gospel “righteousness” is a step-by-step process of faith. This the “obedience” that God is interested in now! This means we no longer have to keep track of 613 commandments of the Old Testament, but simply have faith that Jesus has fully done this once and for all and finished the job, so that there is no “obedience of works” left for us to do. How do we work for “food” that endures unto eternal life? What are the works of God that we must do? Jesus answered in John 6:29: “This is the work of God: that you have faith in him whom God has sent.” But “obedience of faith” is also how we are going to live rightly before God by the power of the Holy Spirit. So faith is the key to not only starting your walk in Christ, but also how to continue walking in Christ’s holiness. This will not happen through any “obedience of works” but only through “obedience of faith.” That’s what Paul meant in Gal 3:3 “Are you so foolish? Did you receive the Spirit by works of the Law or by hearing with faith? Having begun by the Spirit, are you now being perfected by the flesh?” The whole book of Romans explains the walk of faith!
Faith comes from the Greek words pistis (noun) or pisteuo (verb), but the word “believe” is quite misleading, because “faith” means far more than mental understanding and agreement. It means to so recognize, understand, and agree with what you’ve been promised that you take action to trust, rely in, and depend on that promise, especially when all your senses and emotions are telling you otherwise. This is the true test of whether you trust that person! Faith is like a normal light switch – it’s either on or off! When it’s on, faith connects you to the power of God. When it is off there is no flow of power – period! The word “doubt” in the bible is the “off” position, equal to having “no faith” and thus no power. James 1:6 says “but let him ask in faith, with no doubting, for the one who doubts . . . that person must not suppose that he will receive anything from the Lord.” Also, you can’t get more or less faith regarding a particular promise of God. It’s like filling a glass with water – you can get more knowledge, understanding, and wisdom, but only when it is full can you say the glass is “full” and only then can you say for that particular promise, you then have faith, the switch is “on,” and you receive the power of God for that promise! What about Christ’s “O you of little faith” comments regarding his disciples? The single Greek word oligopistos simply means “puny faith” and the KJV correctly translates this often as “unbelief” (no faith). Jesus isn’t telling the disciples that in those particular occasions they had a “little faith but not enough to fill the glass up,” but that their faith was as “good as none!” It only takes the faith the size of a mustard seed to move a mountain, so size or amount is irrelevant. You either have it or you don’t – the switch is either on or not. No work of the flesh (“might or power”) can “grow faith” for faith (like grace and salvation) is a gift of God, not of your own doing, so that nobody can boast (Ephesians 2:8). Our cry should be like that father to the Lord for the healing of his child, “help my unbelief!”
We all have faith – it’s just that most of the time it is misplaced! We all receive from where we place our trust and dependence on. If upon our “might and power” we get “in the flesh” results of this earth. If instead, we put our faith in “by my Spirit, says the Lord” in Zech 4:6, then we get supernatural “in the Spirit” results.
Paul says in Rom 1:5 his ministry team “received grace . . . to bring about the obedience of faith for the sake of Christ’s name among all the nations” and he ends in Rom 16:26 with “my gospel and the preaching of Jesus Christ has now been made know to all nations . . . to bring about the obedience of faith.” There is no definite article attached to “faith” so Paul is going far beyond “the faith” we are to “examine ourselves to see if we are in, to test ourselves to see if Jesus Christ is in us” that Paul speaks of in 2 Cor 13:5, “the faith we are to stand firm in” according to 1 Cor 16:13. In context, Paul speaks of a much broader aspect of faith. In Rom 1:16-17 Paul lays out his purpose: “For I am not ashamed of the gospel, for it is the dynamite-like power of God for salvation to everyone who has faith . . . For in it the righteousness of God is revealed from faith to faith, as it is written, ‘The righteous shall live by the means of faith.’” Salvation (soteria) doesn’t refer only to that sliver of time you “accepted the Lord and were saved.” It refers to the entire process of predestination, calling/election, justification (made right with God), sanctification/holiness/godliness (living rightly before God), and finally our glorification when our bodies are changed into an incorruptible body like Christ’s. Righteousness (dikaiosune) also doesn’t refer only to that sliver of time when we are justified, made right with God through the blood of Christ when his righteousness is transferred to us as our sin was transferred to him – this process called propitiation. It also refers to living rightly before God (sanctification, holiness, godliness), which is also the work of the Holy Spirit “working in us both to will/desire and to do God’s good pleasure (Phil 2:13). God is in control of the entire process of healing us and restoring us back to wholeness, back to God’s original design! The phrase “faith to faith” is an idiom meaning “from the beginning to the end of your faith.” In other words, gospel “righteousness” is a step-by-step process of faith. This the “obedience” that God is interested in now! This means we no longer have to keep track of 613 commandments of the Old Testament, but simply have faith that Jesus has fully done this once and for all and finished the job, so that there is no “obedience of works” left for us to do. How do we work for “food” that endures unto eternal life? What are the works of God that we must do? Jesus answered in John 6:29: “This is the work of God: that you have faith in him whom God has sent.” But “obedience of faith” is also how we are going to live rightly before God by the power of the Holy Spirit. So faith is the key to not only starting your walk in Christ, but also how to continue walking in Christ’s holiness. This will not happen through any “obedience of works” but only through “obedience of faith.” That’s what Paul meant in Gal 3:3 “Are you so foolish? Did you receive the Spirit by works of the Law or by hearing with faith? Having begun by the Spirit, are you now being perfected by the flesh?” The whole book of Romans explains the walk of faith!
Faith comes from the Greek words pistis (noun) or pisteuo (verb), but the word “believe” is quite misleading, because “faith” means far more than mental understanding and agreement. It means to so recognize, understand, and agree with what you’ve been promised that you take action to trust, rely in, and depend on that promise, especially when all your senses and emotions are telling you otherwise. This is the true test of whether you trust that person! Faith is like a normal light switch – it’s either on or off! When it’s on, faith connects you to the power of God. When it is off there is no flow of power – period! The word “doubt” in the bible is the “off” position, equal to having “no faith” and thus no power. James 1:6 says “but let him ask in faith, with no doubting, for the one who doubts . . . that person must not suppose that he will receive anything from the Lord.” Also, you can’t get more or less faith regarding a particular promise of God. It’s like filling a glass with water – you can get more knowledge, understanding, and wisdom, but only when it is full can you say the glass is “full” and only then can you say for that particular promise, you then have faith, the switch is “on,” and you receive the power of God for that promise! What about Christ’s “O you of little faith” comments regarding his disciples? The single Greek word oligopistos simply means “puny faith” and the KJV correctly translates this often as “unbelief” (no faith). Jesus isn’t telling the disciples that in those particular occasions they had a “little faith but not enough to fill the glass up,” but that their faith was as “good as none!” It only takes the faith the size of a mustard seed to move a mountain, so size or amount is irrelevant. You either have it or you don’t – the switch is either on or not. No work of the flesh (“might or power”) can “grow faith” for faith (like grace and salvation) is a gift of God, not of your own doing, so that nobody can boast (Ephesians 2:8). Our cry should be like that father to the Lord for the healing of his child, “help my unbelief!”
We all have faith – it’s just that most of the time it is misplaced! We all receive from where we place our trust and dependence on. If upon our “might and power” we get “in the flesh” results of this earth. If instead, we put our faith in “by my Spirit, says the Lord” in Zech 4:6, then we get supernatural “in the Spirit” results.