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We Need Unlimited Faith in the Unlimited God
By Rev. Oliver W. Price
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In times of moral breakdown and spiritual backsliding the church desperately
needs leaders whose life and ministry are controlled by the vision of the
absolute power, authority and holiness of God. The early church arose in a
world every bit as immoral as our own. However, the church was called to order
by Paul and others who had seen the glory of Christ. Christ is the absolute God
who became man. Peter, James and John saw His glory on the mount of
transfiguration. Paul saw His glory on the Damascus road. Their
message always reflected the absolute power and authority of God. This was
linked with the absolute holiness of God who dwells in light no man can
approach unto. In the light of God's glory they saw how sinful man is. Man's
sin is his failure to glorify God as God (Romans 1:18-21). Refusal to give God
the glory due His name is a crime worthy of everlasting fire. Furthermore, this
sin reduces life from the high plane of honor and commits man to live in
dishonor. This in turn leaves him unrestrained in his plunge toward utter
degradation (Romans 1:18-32).With Paul, sin was not a theological
technicality. It was a dreadful reality. He was as careful to avoid sinning as
we are to avoid eating poison. Paul strived to maintain a conscience void of
offence. He realized the glory of God establishes man's responsibility to honor
God through willing obedience. He saw this responsibility as of the utmost
importance. No other duty compares with this one.Absolute
responsibility to God rests on the truth that God made us and therefore owns
us. In fact, He owns and controls all things. As Paul explains,For of him,
and through him, and to him, are all things; to whom be glory forever. Amen.
(Romans 11:36) Now it is significant that Paul's exposition of
salvation by faith begins with man's responsibility to glorify God as God, and
give Him thanks (Romans 1:21). Faith sees the invisible realities that man must
simply learn to live with. You live in a world owned and controlled by the
absolute God. Faith opens our eyes to see and know this God.The
beginning of knowledge of god is like the look of recognition in a tiny tot's
eye as he says, "Da, Da" for the first time to his father. In due time, that
little child will discover his small world is owned and controlled by his
parents.Usually a little fellow three or four years old comes to
accept this power and authority structure. He may not always appreciate it, but
he accepts the fact that he has to live under it. He is not capable of escaping
and establishing an independent existence. Little people learn early what
life's boundaries are and what the penalties for violation are. They even know
whether you can get by with a few things or not.In a good home,
the child lives with a dependable authority and power structure. The more he
accepts this, the fewer collisions he has with the rest of the family. He soon
knows what his parents consider to be right or wrong. This dictates what is a
wise course for his activities.Wise parents help their children
develop toward maturity. They realize this is a necessity. The adult world
demands maturity. To reach the age of an adult without maturity is a disaster.
The immature adult is an easy prey for ruthless, heartless people. He is simply
not ready to cope with the world.Spiritual maturity is an
absolute necessity, too. The knowledge of God demands increasing maturity. We
must obey God in terms of each increasing insight into His nature and
character. Such knowledge always brings another level of responsibility to us
as members of the family of God. Let me illustrate this. A little tot may not
be ready to feed himself. The wise parent would not expect it. But as he grows
older his responsibilities increase for each age and stage. He cannot be
allowed the luxury of babyhood all through his childhood. The parent knows he
must prepare the child for the responsibilities of later life.God
knows He must prepare us to be spiritual adults in this world and advance us
toward perfection in the world to come. The perfect God cannot require less.
But that brings us to an important aspect of maturity. A little child may obey
his parents only because they are bigger that he is. They can make him behave.
Wise parents, however, want him to mature beyond that. They want him to learn
to appreciate their wisdom and goodness. Then he will obey from the heart. God
wants that kind of progress from His children, too.The
God-fearing person realizes God has both the right and the power to require
obedience. The worshipping believer is thankful for such a wise, holy and good
God to obey. Suppose absolute power were in weaker hands that are far less
noble? To glorify God as God we must not only humbly bow before His superior
power, we must also gratefully praise Him that power belongs to a person so
holy and good as He is.The man of faith lives as a grateful child
who belongs to the household of the Almighty Father. Faith operates within that
realm. Faith sees God and serves Him sacrificially.Faith usually
begins with some desperate need that drives us to God. A crushing load of guilt
and the fear of hell brought me to my knees before Him. My faith rejoiced in
the God who came down to deliver me. But faith cannot stop there. Such baby
faith sees only the fringes of God.Job lost his family, his
wealth and his health. But he cried out, "Though he slay me, yet will I trust
him." That is mature faith. It approaches unlimited faith in the unlimited God.
Such faith will be needed more than ever as the end of the age draws near.
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