Based on the scope of
his analysis of what has been and is being wrought in and for the world through
God’s faithful action, which will continue to be made manifest by His covenant
people, we can surmise that the “grace in which we stand” is a way that Paul
uses to refer to covenant standing. This could be taken to refer to the
gracious extension of the covenant to those previously excluded, which would
fit nicely with what appears to be Paul’s identification of himself with
Gentiles, but it can also just as easily be applicable to members of Israel,
who are to be cognizant of the fact that, beginning with Abraham, they were
also specially chosen by God through no effort or causation of their own (with
this made explicit based on the words of God delivered to Israel through
Moses).
Regardless of
applicability, the recognition of God’s grace rightly leads one to “rejoice in
the hope of God’s glory” (5:2b). This rejoicing in hope points us forward
to the hope that is so profoundly expressed in the eighth chapter of Romans
(which will fall outside of the scope of this study), while mention of God’s
glory should call to mind the words of the third chapter and Paul’s insistence
that “all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God” (3:23). We
cannot overlook the importance of the “all” there, along with the continued use
of “all,” as the statement is provided its context by the context of Gentile
justification (gaining of covenant standing) through belief in Jesus.
Jesus, having
revealed the glory of God by being the first to rightly bear the divine image,
not only reminds us of where and how we fall short of living up to what was
intended by God for humanity, He also points the way and displays the means by
which we too can be truly human and so reflect the glory of God into the
world. At the same time, as Paul draws conclusions from which he can
build as he moves on to the next period of thoughtful reflection, these words
from the beginning of chapter five draw on the fourth chapter, as Paul
continues to root his talk of righteousness, peace, faith, and grace in
Abrahamic sensibilities.
It is Abraham’s
loyalty to God that serves as the model, along with that of Jesus (which first
mimics that of Abraham) of the believer’s loyalty to God, which we are able to
demonstrate through loyalty to the words and ways of Jesus, as He has taken up
His throne of all power and all authority. More specific to Abraham and
the fourth chapter, talk of “hope” and “God’s glory” remind us that Abraham
believed with hope, against hope (4:18). Can we not say that belief in a
crucified and resurrected Lord, through which one enters into covenant with
God, is also a hopeful belief against hope? Abraham’s hope concerning the
promise that had been spoken to him, which runs parallel with our belief in the
Resurrection and the hope of resurrection in the same manner as that which was
experienced by Jesus, redounds to God’s glory, just as was the case for
Abraham, who “did not waver in unbelief about the promise of God but was
strengthened in faith, giving glory to God” (4:20).
While we can
certainly imagine Abraham glorifying God, we can just as easily make the case
that it was Abraham’s lack of wavering, continuing in belief, that gave glory
to God. Regardless of what he saw, regardless of his age, regardless of
his wife’s age, and regardless of all those things that could militate against
his trusting in the promises of God concerning descendants, Abraham
believed. How can we make this application in the here and now? As
we believe in the Resurrection, so believing in Jesus (standing in covenant
with God in the process and so standing in the line of descendants of Abraham
and being positioned to share in the blessings promised to him), we believe
that He was the first of those to be raised from the dead. We believe
that this portends another Resurrection.
Regardless of that
which we see around us, as evil seems to make its way in the world without
fetters or restraints (though this is patently false), we believe that the
kingdom of God has come, that Jesus is ruling, and that we participate in that
kingdom, in its peace, and in its life. We stand by faith and “rejoice in
the hope of God’s glory,” trusting that, working through His loyal servants, He
is bringing and going to bring His kingdom to full consummation and restore His
creation as was promised and for which was hoped and expected by the prophets
of old (with Jesus and the earliest believers operating with the same hope),
such that “we also rejoice in sufferings, knowing that suffering produces
endurance, and endurance, character, and character, hope” (5:3-4). By
this, we are allowed to imitate our Lord, so learning how to represent Him in
the world.
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