One beautiful and thought provoking expression of God is found in Romans 4:17.
By context, Romans 4 talks about salvation by faith and in this scripture,
Apostle Paul uses the example of the patriarch Abraham to show how our
relationship with God is based on faith and not the works of the Law. Romans
4:17 aptly reads, “As it is written: ‘I have made you a father of many
nations.’ [Abraham] is our father in the sight of God, in whom he believed—the
God who gives life to the dead and calls into being things that were not.”
The truth that God “calls into being things that were not” is expressed various
ways in various translations: God “calleth those things which be not as though
they were” (KJV), “calls into existence the things that do not exist” (ESV),
“calls into being that which does not exist” (NASB), and “summons the things
that do not yet exist as though they already do” (NET).
It is possible to understand the last part of Romans 4:17 as meaning that God
has the ability to create something out of nothing (ex nihilo). This idea is
brought out in translations that say that God “creates new things out of
nothing” (NLT) or simply “creates new things” (CEV). The “nothing” in this
context would be the deadness of Sarah’s womb (verse 19), and the “new things”
that God creates would be Abraham’s offspring mentioned in verse 18. God gives
life to the dead and creates something from nothing.
The other translations emphasize the decree of God—the fact that He “calls” or
“summons.” When God speaks, it’s as good as done. He changed Abram’s name to
Abraham (“father of a multitude”) while Sarah was still childless. God spoke of
Abraham’s descendants when as yet there were none. God truly has the ability to
speak of impossible things and, in the speaking, make them possible.
Abraham heard God’s promise and believed it. That faith was credited to Abraham
as righteousness (Genesis 15:6) and provides the example of all who would later
exercise faith in God (Romans 4:11). Looking into the future, God can speak of
things that do not exist as if they do exist. God has power over death and the
ability to create life. Abraham believed this, and so do we as spiritual
descendants of Abraham (Galatians 3:29).
Romans 4:17 shows that we can speak God’s Word over our finances, our bodies, our expectations, etc., and see miraculous results to our benefit. All we need is to confess and have faith, and these things will be. We can “speak those things that are not as though they are,” sit back, and see them happen. It is also worthy to note that Romans 4:17 is not remotely about the power of our words; it is about the power of God’s promises and His faithfulness to keep those promises. Isaac, the son of promise, was not born because Abraham “confessed” or “declared” certain words but because God promised he would be.
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