Dr. Jack L. Arnold Equipping Pastors International Hebrews
Lesson 33
The Awakening of Faith
Hebrews 11:11-12
A very thought-provoking question is, ÒHow long is time with God?Ó Or another way of stating it is, ÒCan God ever wait too long?Ó This becomes a very practical question when we have asked God for something in our prayer life or we are claiming some promise, expecting God to work. Often we think God is too slow and that He ought to act at our whims. We may think that when God does not do something we want Him to do immediately that He has lost track of time. Perhaps when we first make a prayer request to God, our confidence is great. We wait a day, a week, a month and still there is no answer. Has God forgotten? Our spirit of anticipation begins to cool off to a spirit of frustration. Finally we conclude that if He doesnÕt do something soon it will be too late. Out of pure frustration, we take the matter into our own hand and try to do something that only God Himself can do. Perhaps when we have acted in this fleshy manner, instead of letting God work out the details, we find ourselves doing some pretty stupid things.
Has God forgotten?
Has He let us down? No,
often we must learn that GodÕs time schedule and ours are different. We can only see one side of the
situation. Our perspective is
limited and we only see the part and not the whole. Because we are finite and limited, we often do not
understand what God is doing. When
this limited perspective is combined with impatience, the only thing that can
result is havoc.
Questioning GodÕs faithfulness, sovereignty and power goes
back as far as Adam and Eve, but it is clearly seen in the life of Sarah. Sarah was a super-saint for she made
GodÕs ÒHall of Fame,Ó but she gained the reputation of being a woman of faith
later in her life through one particular incident. Hebrews 11 is pointing
out the highlights of faith in these various Old Testament believers, and the
record purposely neglects their failures and shortcomings because it is
stressing the positive aspects of their faith. However, unless we see the failures, we often have little
appreciation for the great acts of faith.
The account of SarahÕs life begins in Genesis 11 and runs through Genesis 23.
Little, if anything, would lead us to believe in the intervening
chapters in Genesis that Sarah was distinguished for her faith. She had saving faith and she was
undoubtedly saved around the same time that God called Abraham out of Ur of the
Chaldees.
Sarah was submissive to her husband and the Apostle Peter uses her as an
example of holy womanhood.
ÒFor in this way in former times
the holy women also, who hoped in God, used to adorn themselves, being
submissive to their own husbands. Thus Sarah obeyed Abraham, calling him lord,
and you have become her children if you do what is right without being
frightened by any fearÓ (1
Peter 3:5-6).
It is my opinion that Sarah did believe
in GodÕs promise to Abraham but much of her faith was due to AbrahamÕs strong
faith which led her along. I would
suggest to you that she left the land of Chaldea believing the promise, but her
faith was weak and she was motivated more by her husbandÕs belief than by her
own.
Yet, we are going to see how this womanÕs faith was awakened
by God in such a spectacular way that she was given a place in the annals of
the heroes and heroines of faith in the Old Testament.
THE WILLINGNESS OF SARAHÕS FAITH - Hebrews 11:11
ÒBy faith even Sarah herself received ability to conceive,
even beyond the proper time of life ...Ó -- The very first words we read about Sarah are, ÒAnd Sarai was barren; she had no childÓ (Gen. 11:30). This was a blow to Sarah because she knew that God had
promised to Abraham, her husband, a great nation from his loins.
ÒNow the LORD said to Abram, ÒGo forth
from your country, and from your relatives and from your fatherÕs house, to the
land which I will show you; and I will make you a great nation, and I will
bless you, and make your name great; and so you shall be a blessing; and I will
bless those who bless you, and the one who curses you I will curse. And in you all the families of the
earth shall be blessedÕÓ (Gen. 12:1-3)
Sarah was barren, and this great nation could never come
into existence unless Abraham had a son.
God gave the promise to Abraham and Sarah undoubtedly knew about the
promise because Abraham told her, but God never spoke to Sarah directly. The words Òand will make you a great
nation,Ó must have rung in SarahÕs ears.
Sarah probably became initially excited about the promise
made to Abraham, and she saw that she had a definite part in the bringing forth
of a great nation. Sarah had a
desire. It was a normal, God-given
desire, and one that most women have--she wanted to give her husband an heir, a
son, to carry on the family name.
Sarah wanted to please her husband by giving him a son that would be the
fulfillment of GodÕs covenant with Abraham. Yet she was barren.
When she left Ur of the Chaldees to go to the Promised
Land, she was about 65 years old and she
thought that it was still humanly possible for her to have a child at that
age. She knew that God had
promised to make a great nation out of Abraham, and God could not do it without
her being the mother of the child.
She undoubtedly thought that God would fulfill the seed aspect of the
covenant immediately because she was getting old fast.
Sarah probably thought she would get pregnant right away,
but nothing happened even in their long delay in Haran before they ever got to
the land. When they arrived in
Canaan, the Promised Land, she probably said, ÒNow, surely, God will begin to
keep His promise. Surely God will
act - surely I will have a son for Abraham.Ó But there was no child. After Abraham had a great military victory in Canaan, God
again appeared to him to promise him a son.
ÒAnd Abraham said, ÔO Lord God, what wilt Thou give me, since I
am childless, and the heir of my house is Eliezer of
Damascus?Õ And Abram said, ÔSince
Thou hast given no offspring to me, one born in my house is my heir.Õ Then behold, the word of the LORD came
to him, saying, ÔThis man will not be your heir; but one who shall come forth
from your own body, he shall be your heir.Õ And He took him outside and said, ÔNow look toward the
heavens, and count the stars, if you are able to count them.Õ And He said to
him, ÔSo shall your descendants beÕÓ (Gen. 15:2-5).
Again Sarah got her hopes up, when Abraham told her that God
was going to keep His promise. But
weeks passed by, eventually the weeks became months, the months became years
and the years became unbearable.
She became frustrated, distressed and depressed because she was getting
old and past the age of bearing a child.
Perhaps she reasoned like this, ÒIÕm getting older by the day. DoesnÕt God know that? DoesnÕt God know that every day that
passes by cuts down the chances of giving Abraham an heir? Why doesnÕt He act? He promised. Has God forgotten?
If He doesnÕt do something soon, it will be too late!Ó
Finally, Sarah could bear it no longer and she pushed the
panic button, when Abraham was in Egypt, they picked up an Egyptian woman who
was SarahÕs servant. It was the
custom in that day that if a woman could not have a child herself, her maid or
servant would have one in her place and the child would be adopted into the
family. All such children were regarded as true
sons and full heirs. Sarah
panicked, stopped trusting in God, turned to her own reasoning, and took things
into her own hands. She was
determined to give Abraham a son, and so she sent Hagar, her slave, to Abraham
to bear him a son.
ÒNow Sarai,
AbramÕs wife had borne him no children, and she had an Egyptian maid whose name
was Hagar. So Sarai
said to Abram, ÒNow behold, the LORD has prevented me from bearing
children. Please go in to my maid;
perhaps I shall obtain children through her.Ó And Abraham listened to the voice of SaraiÓ (Gen.
16:1-2).
This was a tragic mistake, for Hagar conceived and brought forth Ishmael. Ishmael was a son of the flesh and not of the promise. God disciplined Abraham and Sarah for their unbelief by making Ishmael and his offspring fierce enemies of Isaac, the promised son of Abraham and Sarah. Ishmael, the father of the Arabs, has been against the Jews from that time until now.
Fleshy acts of unbelief always get Christians into trouble,
for we become objects of GodÕs loving discipline.
Four years later, God appeared to Abraham again to give him
a message concerning Sarah.
ÒThen God said to Abraham, ÒAs for Sarai your wife, you shall not call her Sarai,
but Sarah shall be her name. And I
will bless her, and indeed I will give you a son by her. Then I will bless her, and she shall be
a mother of nations; kings of peoples shall come from herÓ (Gen.
17:15-16).
This must have shocked poor old Abraham, for he thought that
it was impossible for Sarah and him to have a child. Furthermore, he thought that they had solved the problem
humanly. But Sarah was to have a
son. Abraham was filled with
amazement, and he laughed. ÒThen Abraham fell on his face and laughed,
and said in his heart, ÔWill a child be born to a man one hundred years old?
And will Sarah, who is ninety years old, bear a child?ÕÓ (Gen. 17:17)
Abraham did not have a laugh of unbelief, but the laughter of
excitement. It was the same kind
of laugh any of us might have when we realize that God has done some
supernatural work for us.
Sometime later God assured Abraham that he would have a son
and sent him in to Sarah. ÒThen
they said to him, ÔWhere is Sarah your wife?Õ And he said, ÔBehold, in the tent.Õ And he said, ÔI will surely return to
you at this time next year; and behold, Sarah your wife shall have a son.Õ And
Sarah was listening at the tent door, which was behind himÓ (Gen 18:9-10). Sarah and Abraham were old. She was 90 and he was 100.
They had waited 25 years and now
they concluded it was impossible for them to have a child. Sarah heard the conversation between
God and Abraham because she was secretly listening in the tent. When she heard these words, she
laughed. But SarahÕs laugh was
different from AbrahamÕs. Her
laugh was the laugh of unbelief.
She doubted. She did not
believe that God could do it. It
had been too long. It was a
biological impossibility. She just
thought that she could never get pregnant, and had a big laugh over the whole
matter. ÒAnd Sarah laughed
to herself, saying, ÔAfter I have become old, shall I have pleasure, my lord
being old also?ÕÓ (Gen 18:12)
God then spoke to Abraham about SarahÕs laugh of unbelief,
and Abraham confronted Sarah and she denied that she did it.
ÒAnd the LORD said to Abraham. ÔWhy did
Sarah laugh, saying, ÒShall I indeed bear a child when I am so old?Ó Is anything too difficult for the LORD?
At the appointed time I will return to you, at this time next year and Sarah
shall have a son.Õ Sarah denied it
however, saying, ÒI did not laughÓ; for she was afraid. And He said, ÔNo, but
you did laughÕÓ
(Gen 18:13-15).
She lied because she was afraid of God and Abraham.
It never pays to lie.
We might lie to men but we cannot lie without God knowing about it and
taking definite action against us.
From this point on Sarah believed God. Her faith was awakened and she brought
forth a son.
Finally, the child of promise came and they named him Isaac,
which means laughter, and then Sarah laughed again
with the laugh of amazement and belief.
ÒAnd Sarah said, ÔGod has made laughter for me; everyone who hears
will laugh with meÕÓ (Gen.21:6).
Ò... since she
considered Him faithful who had promised ...Ó -- God waited 25 years before He gave the fulfillment of the promise to
Sarah. Why? Because God had many
lessons to teach Sarah.
What were these lessons?
First, she learned patience and something about the faithfulness of
God. She understood and grasped
for the first time that God is faithful to fulfill His promises. ÒYet those who wait for the LORD
will gain new strength; they will mount up with wings like eagles, they will
run and not get tired, they will walk and not become wearyÓ (Isa. 40:31).
Second, she learned something about faith. Her initial doubt gave way to faith. This faith came after God repeatedly revealed
Himself to Abraham, and Sarah learned by repeated declarations of GodÕs
promise. Third, GodÕs overall
purpose for this waiting was to teach Sarah and Abraham about the power of God. The purpose is expressed in the rebuke
of Sarah by Abraham. ÒIs anything
too difficult (hard) for the LORDÓ (Gen. 18:14a)? Absolutely nothing is too hard for the
Lord. God can and does do the
impossible when He promises to do so.
Faith is crucial if we are going to see God work in our
experience. God promised a son to
Sarah for Abraham, but the conception and the birth of that son would have
never come about apart from SarahÕs faith. Faith is the means whereby we believe God and see Him work
in our experience. Without faith
it is impossible to please God!
Barclay, a Christian scholar puts the concept of faith into
good words. He says,
Men spend the greater part of their lives putting limitations on the power of God. Faith is the ability to lay hold on that strength which is made perfect in our weakness, that grace which is sufficient for all things, in such a way that the things which are humanly impossible become divinely possible. With God all things are possible and, therefore, the word impossible is a word which should have no place in the vocabulary of the Christian and of the Christian Church.
THE FRUIT OF SARAHÕS FAITH -
Hebrews 11:12
Ò... therefore,
also, there was born of one man, and him as good as dead at that ...Ó -- Abraham was also unable to procreate,
but God did the impossible. He
worked a miracle.
ÒFor this reason it is by faith, that
it might be in accordance with grace, in order that the promise may be certain
to all the descendants, not only to those who are of the Law, but also to those
who are of the faith of Abraham, who is the father of us all, (as it is
written, ÔA FATHER OF MANY NATIONS HAVE I MADE YOUÕ) in the sight of Him who he
believed, even God, who gives life to the dead and calls into being that which
does not exist. In hope against
hope he believed, in order that he might become a father of many nations,
according to that which had been spoken, ÔSO SHALL YOUR DESCENDANTS BE.Õ And without becoming weak in faith he
contemplated his own body, now as good as dead since he was about a hundred
years old, and the deadness of SarahÕs womb; yet with respect to the promise of
God, he did not waver in unbelief, but grew strong in faith, giving glory to
God, and being fully assured that what He had promised, He was able also to
performÓ (Rom. 4:16-21).
Both Abraham and Sarah had faith in GodÕs promise and
without that faith they would have never had a son.
Both Abraham and Sarah had faith. It is important that both the husband and wife have faith in
God. The woman must have her own
faith and not lean on her husband.
Husband and wife should work together, pray together and make their
decisions together. Even Sarah had
to believe, and a Christian marriage is not healthy if there is not a believing
wife.
Ò...as many descendants AS THE STARS OF
HEAVEN IN NUMBER, AND INNUMERABLE AS THE SAND WHICH IS BY THE SEASHORE.Ó --ÕAbrahamÕs and SarahÕs belief in the
promise of God brought great fruit, for from them has come all physical Jews
and all true believers, whether Jew or Gentile, who have believed in Jesus
Christ, the Lord and Savior.
Who knows what God might do with any of us if we begin to
take His promises in the Bible seriously!
By faith, we can do wonders, and without faith we can do nothing!
CONCLUSION
Saved
Christian, will you believe God for what seems to be humanly
impossible? Is there anything too
hard for God? DonÕt panic, but
wait patiently for God to work. Do
you have unsaved loved ones? DonÕt
stop praying, for time is relative with God! Do you need Christian friends? DonÕt give up, for in time God will bring you true Christian
friends! Do you have some crushing
crisis? DonÕt despair, but wait on
God who will do all of His good pleasure!
Remember, Christian, God loves you and has a wonderful plan for your
life. Each time you take your life
out of GodÕs hands and put it into your own hands, you are in for havoc.
You who are without Christ, do you know the Bible says you
are a sinner, separated from God and under GodÕs wrath? You are in a hopeless and helpless
condition, but God can do the impossible.
Nothing is too hard for God.
God alone can save you and grant you the forgiveness of sins and eternal
life. What must you do? You must trust in Jesus Christ as your
personal Lord and Savior. By
faith, you must trust Jesus Christ as your deliverer from sin and turn to Him
as King of your life.