Are you ready for the unexpected?

May 27, 2017

Father Abraham



“Father Abraham had many sons, many sons had Father Abraham. I am one of them and so are you. So let’s just praise the Lord.” The kids at camp love singing that fun little ditty, without even a clue of what it means to be a son of Abraham. Abraham is considered the Father of Faith. It is said of him that “he believed God and it was counted to him for righteousness.” With Abraham, the seed of grace was planted – God clearly revealed that justification was based on belief, not on merit. What is the mark, or the distinguishing characteristic, of Abraham’s belief?

After taking a long contemplative look at Abraham’s story with a group of men I came to this conclusion: The measure of faith is belief, not compliance. And the heart of belief is surrender, first, not obedience.

The measure of faith is belief. Belief that is much deeper than mere head-knowledge or token acknowledgment. (For even Satan believes God, but he is not a “righteous one”.) Abraham-type belief is marked by surrender. We cannot measure faith by compliance. The religious leaders, in Jesus’ day, did a pretty good job of that. And many church-goers today fit that mold, and don’t know otherwise.

Abraham was counted righteous for believing. Stop and realize that he lived a long time before God gave the law to obey. So, what did Abraham believe? He believed God when He told him to move his entire entourage from his homeland of Ur and go to Canaan, a place that God mysteriously called a “promised land”. And he believed God when He told him that He wanted to make a great nation of him, even though he did not have a son. So much so that he bore Ishmael, and twice lied about Sarah being his sister, not his wife, intending to keep God’s promise alive. If you were to ask Abraham about his faith he might say, “God got my attention such that I totally believed him. From then on I lived in total surrender to his directives. Yes, I suppose you could call it obedience, but for me, I never even had a sense of compliance, it was just surrender – totally, and always.  And what an adventure we had together, God and me.”

One man I know even called Abraham a “wimp”. But however presumptuous he may have been, one thing is sure, God counted him as righteous. Don’t forget, at the pinnacle of his life of faith, he believed God beyond reason, as he hiked up Mount Moriah to sacrifice his only son, Isaac, the promised heir.

Belief requires constant relationship with the person whom you trust, whereas compliance and obedience focus on a code, a code which is usually self-manipulated and self-managed. We think it is pleasing to God to focus on avoiding sin. But if we are so focused on sin-management, self-righteousness, and hiding our failures, then we will never totally surrender and trust God.

Here is how we bring God glory, by presenting our life to him as a living sacrifice, surrendering to him in so many more ways than just avoiding sin. This is our act of worship – surrender, not compliance. We glorify God by stepping out of our comfort zone, by surrendering to the Spirit of God as he leads us to do unsettling acts of love and service, much more than by keeping a checklist of spiritual disciplines that I must observe. Belief inspires us to greatness, greatness that glorifies God.  Compliance reduces us to minions -- self-righteous, holy wanabees.

What would happen if we viewed our relationship with Jesus through the lens of surrender, rather than obedience?  Not the “lift your hands, close your eyes, sway to the music” type of showy surrender, but “hard core, all in, here’s my heart on the altar” type of surrender. What would it look like – in your life, in my life?

God wants us to love him with everything that is a part of our being – our heart, soul, mind, and actions (Mark 12:30). We can sit at the table and count our cards or we can put it all on the altar –“all in”.

All to Jesus I surrender, all to Him I freely give. I will ever love and trust him, in his presence daily live.

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