Saturday, March 21, 2026
What Faith Says
...(as it is written, “I have made you a father of many nations”) before God whom he believed, and who raises the dead, and calls those things that do not exist as though they did.
- Romans 4:17
The text here is speaking about Abraham, who is known as the father of our
faith. Abraham believed God, although he did not come from a family of
believers, nor did he have any cultural clues to help him understand who God
was or what He wanted to do. But when God appeared to him and told him to move
away from home, Abraham did not hesitate. He followed God’s leading, although
he didn’t know exactly where God wanted him to go.
In the process of time, as God continued to reveal Himself to Abraham, a pattern
began to emerge. When God said something, it came to pass exactly as God said
it would. Perhaps the most dramatic of these occasions was when God said
Abraham and Sarah would have a child. Sarah laughed at the thought, but by now
Abraham knew that if God said it, He would do it. And a year later, Isaac was
born, exactly as God promised. And from Isaac and all his descendants, both in
the natural and spiritual sense, Abraham has truly become a father of many
nations.
Abraham began to adopt this characteristic that God modeled to him—saying
something that seemed to have no basis in reality, but was more real than what
could be seen or felt. When God told Abraham to offer Isaac as a sacrifice,
Abraham told the men who accompanied them, “You stay here. We will come back
shortly.” He didn’t say, “I will come back,” he said, “We will come back.” He
recognized that God was going to make him a father of nations through Isaac.
Since that was the case, there was no way that God would leave Isaac on that
altar of sacrifice. Abraham was certain that even if Isaac died, God would
raise him up from the dead to fulfill His promise.
This is the kind of faith that was in demonstration when God spoke the world
into existence. He “…calls those things that do not exist as though they did.”
God operates that way. Abraham learned to do that, too. And those of us who
are of the household of faith can have the same testimony.
What is that promise God made to you? Even though you can’t see it, and can’t
touch it, and it seems unreal to you, you can imitate your heavenly Father’s
faith, and Abraham’s faith. You can “…[call] those things that do not exist as
though they did.”
Faith is not silent. Faith speaks, but it speaks the language of heaven, and not
of earth. I encourage you to become fluent in the language of faith, and “…
call those things that do not exist as though they did.”
Further Reading
- Romans 4:17
- Psalm 46:10
- Hebrews 11:1