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Vol. 9 No. 12 December 2007
Page
12 | |
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In
1 Corinthians 12:9, we find listed the spiritual gift of faith.
Although my
research is not extensive, every Gospel preacher of my knowledge who
has
written or spoken about it recognizes that is not the faith that is
prerequisite
to salvation of which he speaks. It does not take the wisdom of Solomon
to
realize that the spiritual gift of faith that some Christians were
given after
they became Christians is not the same thing all had to possess before
they
became Christians!
So,
it appears that the only logical conclusion to which anyone can come
is: “It is
a special kind of faith that the Spirit imparted directly to enable
them to
work miracles.” Some, in a more indefinite statement, simply
say, “It was a
miraculous faith.”
I
have not yet heard anyone discuss the question, “If it was
the kind of faith
that enabled one to work miracles, how did it differ from the gift of
verse 10¾the
working of miracles?” Did that person have two gifts, or was
he able to work
miracles without that kind of faith?
It
may be that since these spiritual gifts did not all depend on a
person’s
spirituality, or how closely he walked with Christ, the gift of faith
was an
impartation of a special trust in God to enable him to have the
strength and
ability to remove the “mountains” of difficulty
that might confront the early
church in the task of establishing a new religion.
Surely
there can be no serious question that the possession of these spiritual
gifts
did not depend on their possession of what we think of as
“true spirituality,”
for Paul says, “And I, brethren, could not speak unto you as
unto spiritual,
but as unto carnal, as unto babes in Christ” (1 Corinthians
3:1). The primary
thrust of 1 Corinthians 13 is that none of these gifts is of any value
to the
person who has them, if he has not love.
But
the question may still be raised, “How does the
‘faith’ given by the Spirit as
a gift differ from the faith that comes from hearing the Word of
God” (Romans
10:17)? It differs in at least the following ways: 1. In the manner in
which it
came. In the first case, it was a miraculous bestowal. In the second,
it came
by examination of testimony--evidence presented and received. 2. Its
function
or purpose was different. Whether or not it is true that the gift was a
supernatural bestowal of confidence or trust similar to
Paul’s statement in
Philippians 4:13, “I can do all things in him that
strengtheneth me,” it still
appears evident that its function or purpose was the same, in general,
as all
the other spiritual gifts mentioned¾to confirm the
reality of Christianity, to
fully establish the church on solid foundation, to build up the body of
Christ
until “we all attain unto the unity of the faith (Ephesians
6:13), or until
“that which was perfect was come” (1
Corinthians13:10; James 1:25; Jude 3). The
function of the other kind of faith that we must have in order to be
saved was
that one should have such a confident trust in Jesus as Lord that he
would
commit himself to Christ, and thus be saved from self, Satan and sin.
Note
carefully this truth: No matter how much personal faith in Christ one
had as a
result of hearing his Word, unless that Word gave him the power to
perform a
miracle, he could not do it! When Christ told Peter to walk on water,
Peter
could do it as a result of faith in Christ, without any miraculous
infusion of
faith by the Spirit! On the other hand, if a person had the
supernatural gift
of faith, he could do whatever that faith gave him the ability to do,
without
reference to any testimony from or about Christ, and therefore
unrelated to a
particular amount of his personal faith in Christ.
The
revealed Word does not give me any authority to perform a miracle that
it does
not give you or any other Christian¾and that is none at
all. Since miraculous
spiritual gifts have ceased (1 Corinthians 13:8-9), then we not have
the
supernatural infusion of faith to enable us to do those supernatural
things
that were necessary in the beginning to confirm the Word and strengthen
the
church.
But,
praise
God, we do still have access by faith to a far greater power, and far
more
blessings than most of us dare to dream, because of the promises made
to us in
God’s Word, not because of some supernaturally infused
confidence wrought by a
spiritual gift. Romans 8:28, 1 Corinthians 10:13 and Ephesians 3:16-20
are just
a few of the marvelous expressions of God’s willingness to
bless us exceedingly
abundantly above what we can ask or think, if we but exercise the
proper faith¾the kind of faith each one of us can
have if we but accept and depend on what Christ has told us! The
principle of
faith (not necessarily faith in Christ, but the principle of faith) has
enabled
man to go to the moon, raise millions of dollars in one
Sunday’s contribution
and do all sorts of other things beyond the ability of many of us to
ask or
think. Now, without the necessity of a miraculous spiritual gift, we
can do
anything God wants us to do if we have and exercise the faith that
comes from
hearing his Word. Is there a “mountain” God wants
moved? Why not get it done?
We can if we have faith.
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