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In connection with our consideration
of Lord's Day 25, we turn in scripture to read from Acts chapter
8. Acts chapter 8, and we'll read
verses 26 and following. Acts chapter 8, beginning at
verse 26. The angel of the Lord spake unto
Philip, saying, Arise and go toward the south unto the way
that goeth down from Jerusalem unto Gaza, which is desert. And he arose and went. And behold,
a man of Ethiopia and eunuch of great authority under Candace,
queen of the Ethiopians, who had the charge of all her treasure
and had come to Jerusalem for to worship was returning and
sitting in his chariot read Isaiah the prophet. Then the spirit
said unto Philip, go near and join thyself to this chariot.
And Philip ran thither to him and heard him read the prophet
Isaiah and said, understandest thou what thou readest? And he
said, how can I, except some man should guide me? And he desired
Philip that he would come up and sit with him. The place of
the scripture which he read was this. He was led as a sheep to
the slaughter. And like a lamb dumb before his
shearer, so opened he not his mouth. In his humiliation, his
judgment was taken away. And who shall declare his generation? For his life is taken from the
earth. And the eunuch answered Philip
and said, I pray thee, of whom speaketh the prophet this? Of
himself or of some other man? Then Philip opened his mouth
and began at the same scripture and preached unto him, Jesus. And as they went on their way,
they came unto a certain water. And the eunuch said, see, here
is water. What doth hinder me to be baptized? Philip said, if thou believest
with all thine heart, thou mayest. And he answered and said, I believe
that Jesus Christ is the Son of God. And he commanded the
chariot to stand still, and they went down both into the water,
both Philip and the eunuch, and he baptized him. And when they
would come up out of the water, the spirit of the Lord caught
away Philip, and the eunuch saw him no more, and he went on his
way rejoicing. But Philip was found at Azotus,
and passing through, he preached in all the cities, till he came
to Caesarea. Read God's word thus far, and
it's on the basis of that passage, and of all of God's word, that
we have instruction in Lord's Day 25 of the Heidelberg Catechism,
concerning the important matter of faith. Lord's Day 25, questions
65 through 68. Since then we are made partakers
of Christ and all his benefits by faith only, whence doth this
faith proceed? Answer from the Holy Ghost who
works faith in our hearts by the preaching of the gospel,
and confirms it by the use of the sacraments. What are the
sacraments? Answer, the sacraments are holy,
visible signs and seals appointed of God for this end, that by
the use thereof, he may the more fully declare and seal to us
the promise of the gospel, namely, that he grants us freely the
remission of sin and life eternal for the sake of that one sacrifice
of Christ accomplished on the cross. Are both word and sacraments
then ordained and appointed for this end, that they may direct
our faith to the sacrifice of Jesus Christ on the cross as
the only ground of our salvation? Yes, indeed, for the Holy Ghost
teaches us in the gospel and assures us by the sacraments
that the whole of our salvation depends upon that one sacrifice
of Christ which he offered for us on the cross. How many sacraments
has Christ instituted in the New Covenant or Testament? Two,
namely, holy baptism and the holy supper. Question 65 of this Lord's Day
Beloved asks this, Since then we are made partakers of Christ
and all his benefits by faith only, whence doth this faith
proceed? And that's a very significant
question because of how precious faith is to us. Faith is extremely
valuable. It is valuable because of what
faith is. Faith is a bond to Christ. By it, we receive Christ and
all its benefits. Faith is valuable because of
what faith does. Faith believes all the truths
of the gospel. Faith believes everything in
scripture. all of the truth concerning our
Lord Jesus Christ, and faith believes that for oneself personally. Faith is valuable also because
of the assurance it gives, the assurance that we are justified,
that we are forgiven all our sins, the assurance that we have
Salvation from the wrath of God and from the eternal punishment
of sin in hell. The assurance that we have eternal
life in Christ. And faith is valuable also because
of the fruit that faith produces. The thankful life of good works
that characterizes a believer. The fruit of a life in which
we live according to the victory over sin that is ours in Christ. A life of obedience, a life of
a thankfulness, a life of walking in the commandments of God. And
faith is valuable, therefore, also because of the comfort that
it provides us. Comfort in all circumstances
of life, the comfort that we belong to our faithful Savior,
Jesus Christ. And belonging to Him, all things
work for our spiritual and eternal good. Faith is valuable. And so you
can understand the question that we ask, where does faith come
from? How do we get this most essential
spiritual blessing and ability? And that is answered here in
Lord's Day 25. It tells us how faith is worked
or produced in us. And it tells us also how faith
is strengthened in us. The emphasis must fall upon the
former, the first, how faith is produced in us. Namely, as this Lord's Day points
out, that faith is produced in us by means of the preaching
of the gospel. That's what the Spirit uses to
work or to produce faith in us. The Spirit does also use the
sacraments, and he uses the sacraments to confirm faith, to strengthen
faith, but the critical thing is preaching, even as we saw
in the passage that we read in Acts chapter eight. That was
what the Ethiopian eunuch needed, the preaching of the gospel. Therefore, as precious as our
faith is, and it is very precious, very valuable, so precious to
us also must be the faithful preaching of the Word of God. Consider then the divine origin
of saving faith. We'll notice first where faith
comes from, secondly the means that God uses, and finally what
this implies. Where does faith come from? How did we get faith? How did we become
believers? Well, faith is not something
that you obtain for yourself. It is not the case that God offers
the gift of faith and you accept the gift of faith, and then because
you accept that gift from God, you are now able to believe. Nor is it the case that God gives
to his people the ability to believe and we exercise that
ability and so we are the ones who produce the actual believing. Not that either. Faith is not
our one contribution to salvation so that it can be said we are
saved without works except for believing. No, faith is not something
that we obtain for ourselves, nor is faith something that we
get from others. Faith is not something that a
pastor or a preacher of the gospel can give to anyone. He may be
a very zealous and passionate preacher, and he may in his preaching
try to move lifeless souls to believe in the Lord Jesus Christ,
but he cannot make a single person believe in Jesus Christ, and
he cannot make a single person confess faith in Christ. Nor in that connection is faith
something that you can get from your parents. Faith is not inherited. Faith is not something that parents
pass on to their children. It is true that God saves his
people in the generations of believers, and God promises to
save believers and their seed, but parents are not the ones
who can give faith to their children. They bring up their children
in the fear of God. They train their children in
the ways of God. They teach their children about
God, about Christ, about their sins, about their need of Christ
and salvation in Him. They bring their children to
church. They provide for their children many, many things that
are important for the spiritual welfare of those children, and
they can give to their children many, many things. but they cannot
give faith into the souls of their children. Faith is not something that we
get from someone else. And that leads us to confess,
as we must, that faith is from God alone. God is the source and God is
the origin of faith. The faith that we have is divine
in its origin. Faith is a sovereign gift of
God. If you have faith, if you believe,
if your children have faith and they believe, and that's simply
because God, and only because God has given the gift of faith. By grace are ye saved through
faith, and that not of yourselves, it is, that is, faith is a gift
of God. And as the canons of Dort state,
In Canons 3, 4, Article 14, faith is the gift of God, and it is
the gift of God in this sense of it being a gift, not that
it is simply offered and it's up to us to receive this gift
from God, not that God gives us the ability to believe and
now it's up to us to exercise that ability, but faith is the
gift of God in this sense, the Canons point out, that faith
is conferred breathed and infused into us by God. Faith comes exclusively from
God. And in saying that, we understand
that every aspect of faith comes from God. Every aspect of faith is God's
gift and God's work. in us. It is God who puts the
bond of faith in place so that we are united to Christ and there
is that spiritual connection between us and our Savior. It is God who produces the activity
of faith, the activity of a certain knowledge and assured confidence
in God through Christ. It is God who makes our faith
fruitful so that we live a life of faith and we do the works
of faith in our lives. And it is God who strengthens
faith, who removes any doubts that we may have, and who makes
faith stronger and stronger by means of his word and spirit. And it is God who preserves us
in the faith so that you believe in Christ until you die. And you live and die as a believer. And you confess, for me to live
is Christ and to die is gain. That's all the work of God. And
the canons of Dort make that very explicit when the canons
in Head 3, 4, Article 14 point out that God, quote, produces
both the will to believe and the act of believing also. God produces the act of believing
in us. We don't. Why do you believe the Bible?
Why do you believe what the Bible teaches? Why do you believe what
the Bible teaches about creation and about the miracles that God
has performed? Why do you believe what Scripture
teaches you about sin and about the sovereignty of God? Why do
you believe what the Bible teaches about hell and about heaven? And why do you believe all these
things even though there are many around us who deny all these
things? Because God produces in you and
me the act of believing also. And that's why you believe in
the Lord Jesus Christ. That's why you believe and trust
in him for everything that you need for your souls and for your
earthly life. That's why you believe that you
are a sinner and that all of your sins are forgiven, and that's
why you believe that God is your heavenly Father and you are in
His hands, and He is directing you along your earthly pilgrimage
to bring you to eternal life in heaven with Him. You believe
that. because God produces in us not only the will to believe,
but the act of believing also. And that's why you believe too
that all is well, and all things work for your good. You may not understand how that
is so, You may not understand how sickness
or accidents or troubles in home and family or in the church or
at work or even death works for your good, but you have faith. You believe what God says concerning
this. You live by faith and not by
sight. because God produces in you the
act of believing. Faith is a gift and a work of
God, and something for us to be very thankful for, too. Of
course, if faith were not the gift of God, and it was in fact
our work, We produce faith, as some say, then we must not thank
God only and would not thank God only. Then we would have
reason instead to boast a little bit about our part in this. But if faith is the gift of God,
as we have described it, and as it certainly is, then we are
bound to give thanks to God for the gift of faith. And we will
do so all the more if we realize that it is a gracious gift of
God, a gift of God that is given to and worked in undeserving
sinners. Thanks be to God for the gift
of faith. Faith is worked in us by the
Holy Spirit of God, as the catechism points out. And the Spirit in
working faith in us uses means to do it, because God is a God who uses
means. God uses means to give us life,
namely food and shelter. God uses means to give us our
daily bread, namely our work. Our daily bread doesn't fall
from the sky. God uses means to give it to us. God uses means
to cause something to grow. You put a seed in the ground
and God uses the rain and the sunshine and the fertilizer to
make it grow. So God also uses means to give
us faith. The spirit of God is of course
almighty and the spirit of God could certainly work faith in
us without using means. The spirit could powerfully and
mysteriously put faith inside us and then suddenly one day
you wake up and you discover Now I have faith, now I believe. But it's not a question, beloved,
of what the Spirit can do, but of what He wills to do. It's not a question of the Spirit's
power to do it in that way, but it's a question of what God has
decided and of what God has revealed to us as the way in which He
works faith in our hearts. And God has decided that the
means that He will use to work to produce faith in His elect
people is the preaching of the gospel. Notice how the catechism
spells that out for us in answer 65. Where does this faith come
from? From where does it proceed? from
the Holy Ghost who works faith in our hearts by the preaching
of the gospel?" Answer 67, the Holy Ghost teaches us in the
gospel, that is in the preaching of the gospel. In Romans 10, 17, so then faith
cometh by hearing and hearing by the Word of God, the preaching
of the Word. is the means that God uses to
produce faith in us. Preaching is the chief means
of grace. Or we could even say preaching
is the chief means of faith. That's the same thing. Preaching is not the only means
of grace, not the only means of faith. God uses other things,
too, to strengthen our faith. God uses the sacraments, as this
Lord's Day points out, and as we'll see in more detail in the
Lord's Days to come. And He specifically uses the
sacraments to strengthen the assurance of faith. And so the
sacraments are a means of grace, a means of faith. God also uses
spiritual activities in our lives to strengthen our faith. Our
reading of His Word and our meditation upon His Word for the strengthening
of faith. Prayer for the strengthening
of faith. and even conversations with our
fellow believers concerning spiritual things for the strengthening
of our faith, and our study of the Word of God together for
the strengthening of our faith. And God even uses afflictions
for the strengthening of our faith. So that we say with the psalmist
in Psalm 119, before I was afflicted, I strayed, and then also confess
with the psalmist, affliction has been for my profit, for the
profit of our faith. is the chief means of grace,
the chief and most important and primary means that God uses
to work faith in us, and that is made clear in this Lord's
Day by the comparison that is made between the preaching and
the sacraments. You'll notice how The Lord's
Day points out that God works faith in our hearts by the preaching
and then confirms it by the use of the sacraments. The sacraments
serve only to confirm faith, not to work it, not to produce
it. Faith must already be in existence
in us in order for the sacraments to benefit us. works faith. The preaching is
the means that God uses by the Spirit to produce faith in us,
that is, to produce in us, as we noted earlier, the act of
believing, the act of believing. The Holy Spirit uses the preaching
to bring your faith to life. Without the preaching of the
gospel, a person would not believe and could not believe. Without
the preaching of the gospel, a person would remain in unbelief
and spiritual darkness. As Romans 10 verse 14 points
out, how can they call upon the name of the Lord, and how can
they believe in the Lord Jesus Christ, and how can they hear
Jesus Christ without a preacher. Through preaching, our faith
is brought to life. Through preaching, our faith
is brought to life because we hear the voice of Christ in preaching,
and we are brought to conscious faith in Him, and we believe
in Him, and we become aware of and conscious of and enriched
in the enjoyment of all the blessings of Christ that He has earned for us and
that are freely given. Preaching is the means God uses
for that. The sacraments confirm faith.
Preaching works. faith in our hearts. But then
in addition to that, the preaching also confirms faith. The preaching
accomplishes two things. It does the same thing as the
sacraments do. It does it by means of The words
that are spoken, the sacraments confirm faith by means especially
of the picture that God gives to us and the Spirit's use of
that. But the point is, whereas the
sacraments only confirm faith, the preaching not only works
and produces faith in us, but also confirms it, also strengthens
it. From Lord's Day to Lord's Day,
from sermon to sermon. We hear the gospel, that increases
our knowledge, the knowledge of faith. We hear the gospel
and that increases the confidence of faith. We hear the preaching
of the Word as those who already have had faith worked in us by
the preaching of the Word previously, and we say, that Word spoke to
me. I heard Christ speak to me through
the preaching of the gospel today. I was humbled. I was admonished. I was brought to repentance by
that Word of Christ today. I was comforted in my heart by
that Word of Christ today. I was truly fed in my soul by
the Word of Christ today, and now faith is strengthened. We're
built up from Lord's Day to Lord's Day in our faith by the preaching
of the Word, strengthened in the joy of salvation, strengthened
in the thanksgiving that we show to God, strengthened in this
aspect of faith, namely the fruits of faith, the life of good works
that flow out of faith as expression of our gratitude to God. strengthened
in the peace that we have in our souls. And we go home being strengthened
by the preaching, changed. And in the words of verse 39
of Acts 8, as was true of the eunuch, we go home rejoicing. Speaking of that Ethiopian eunuch,
the importance of preaching is certainly seen in his conversion,
as that's recorded in Acts chapter eight. This man was returning
from Jerusalem, where he had worshiped. He was reading the
Bible. He was reading a passage from
the Old Testament, recognize where it comes from, Isaiah chapter
53. He was reading a word of God from
the Old Testament that you would say set forth or sets forth more
clearly than any other Old Testament passage, Christ and Him crucified. And this man had just been to
the temple. where he had seen at the temple
the things concerning Christ and him crucified. But seeing all that and now reading
the scriptures concerning Christ and him crucified, that wasn't
enough. It didn't make sense to him.
When Philip asked him this, understandest thou what thou readest, the man
had to say, No, I don't. And he said this too. He said in verse 34, of whom
speaketh the prophet this? Of himself or of some other man? And then earlier, how can I understand
except some man should guide me? What is Isaiah talking about
here? I don't get it. I don't get it. I don't understand. It doesn't make any sense to
me. The eunuch needed preaching. He needed someone to explain
that scripture to him, and God provided Philip, Philip who was
an evangelist. who was called and ordained to
be a preacher, and he opened up the scriptures to him. Verse
35 says, Philip opened his mouth, and it began at the same scripture,
and preached unto him Jesus. He preached Christ and him crucified. He preached the gospel to this
man, and the Spirit used that preaching to make a believer
out of the unit. And he believed, and he confessed,
I believe that Jesus Christ is the Son of God. He believed that Christ was his
Savior. And then the Spirit also used
the sacrament. In this instance, the sacrament
of baptism. So that what the Lord's Day mentions,
namely that God works faith in us by the preaching and then
confirms it by the sacrament, is true and is spelled forth
here also in Acts chapter 8, the eunuch was baptized. And
that showed him visibly what he had heard from Philip in the
preaching of the gospel. And that sacrament, therefore,
by the Spirit's work through that sacrament, sealed to the
soul of that man, just as baptism and the Lord's Supper do to us,
sealed to his soul the washing away of his sins by Jesus Christ. That leads to the words at the
end of verse 39. He went on his way rejoicing. The word to work faith and the
sacrament to confirm it. What does all this imply for
us? Well, first of all, this, beloved,
if preaching is the chief means of grace, the chief means of
faith, as it certainly is, then we will sincerely desire and
seek after the preaching of the gospel, and not just any preaching,
but true and faithful preaching of the gospel. That will determine where we
are members. We don't decide on church membership
on the basis of where the people are the most friendly. We don't
decide on our church membership on the basis of where we feel
most welcome, where we fit in best. We don't decide on our
church membership as far as the denomination of churches is concerned
on the basis of, well, where's my boyfriend, where's my girlfriend
from? Where do they attend? But we
decide on the basis of where the gospel is faithfully preached,
where the truth of Christ is faithfully expounded, and where
Christ Himself is proclaimed to us in the preaching. The believer who values his faith
And the believer who values his salvation for himself personally
not only, but also if a parent for his family, for the children
that God gives, says, I don't want a watered-down gospel that
won't comfort my soul, that will be ineffective with regard to
the working and strengthening of my faith. In fact, that sort
of gospel will be detrimental to my faith. My faith will get
weaker and weaker under the preaching that is not faithful to the Word
of God, and my soul could very well fill up with more doubt
and more fear instead of more comfort and more hope. The believer says, I need the
truth, the faithful preaching of the Word of God for the welfare
of my soul. Secondly, this implies this,
that preaching is and that we will see to it that it is prominent
in worship, not diminishing the preaching
and not replacing the preaching, and not thinking, as many do,
that there are other things that we could introduce into our worship
that would be more effective more music or choirs or bands
or even movies and testimonials. Let's introduce some of them
into our worship because, as is argued by those who do, these
work better. These are more effective. These are a means to bring people
more regularly to church. These are good for producing
more activity in the life of Christians. The believer says, who treasures
his faith and his salvation says, I'm not interested in those things
in the worship service. And I'm not interested in them
simply because they are not the means that God has revealed in
His Word that the Spirit uses for the working and the strengthening
of my faith. And if they are not the God-appointed
means, they are simply gimmicks. They will not reach or feed the
soul. They will not turn one to an
urgent and sincere desire after the Lord Jesus Christ. Those
kinds of things might stir the emotions of a person for a short
while, but they do not strengthen faith. The believer says, I need the
faithful preaching of the Word of God. And I need that to be
central in worship, and I will, by God's grace, make
sure that it remains central. This is implied, namely, that
we receive and we enjoy the treasured and most desirable blessing of
assurance. The question often is, can I
be sure? Can I be absolutely certain that
I am saved by the Lord Jesus Christ? Can I be sure that the
Lord Jesus Christ died for me, for me? Can I be sure that all
the benefits of salvation that Christ has earned, as those have
been explained now in Lords Days 7 through 24, detailed, and comprehensive explanation
of what all those blessings are for us, can I be sure that those
benefits are mine, that I am righteous in God before Christ,
that I am an heir of eternal life, that I will go to heaven
when I die? Can I be sure, can I be confident
that I am one of the chosen that I'm one of the elect of God in
Christ. Can I be confident that I belong
to the Lord Jesus Christ now and I will belong to Him forever
and forever? The treasured and most desirable
and very important blessing of assurance. And the answer is yes. Yes, every believer can have
and ought to have that assurance, that certainty. And every believer
can have and ought to have it, and God will see to it that it
is given and worked in every believer by means of the preaching
of the gospel to strengthen faith. A true faith is a faith that
consists of an assured confidence. And a true faith trusts in Jesus
Christ alone and trusts in him alone from the heart, from the
heart. If our assurance depended on
our good works, we could never be sure. Because our good works are only
that, good. They're never perfect. And even our best works are painted
with sin. And if our assurance depended
on faith because faith were our work, or even a part of faith was our
work, then we could never be sure. Because we would never
be sure if we've done our part, have we done it well enough?
Can I really be sure that I'm saved, that I belong to Christ?
And we would be forever in doubt. But faith is the work of God.
And God gives us that gift of faith, and the faith that God
gives to us is an infallible gift of faith. And that faith
looks away from ourselves to Christ, and believes the gospel
concerning our Savior, and believes it for oneself personally. That's the gift of faith that
God gives, and that God works in His children. The fact that God works and strengthens
us in our faith by the preaching of the gospel means that assurance
is ours. How thankful and very thankful,
therefore, beloved, we must be for the gift of faith. that we can be certain that we
have been saved in Jesus Christ. Thankful that the righteousness
of Christ is our righteousness. Thankful that we have eternal
life in Him. And thankful, therefore, that
we will not die in unbelief, but in faith, believing in Christ,
and forever the heirs of life eternal. Thanks be to God for
the gift of faith. Amen. God and Father in heaven, we
thank thee for thy word to us and for thy work in us, the work,
mighty work by thy spirit to produce faith in us and then
also to strengthen that faith, to strengthen it by means of
the preaching of the gospel from Lord's Day to Lord's Day, and
then also from time to time to strengthen it by means of the
sacraments. We are thankful that it is thy
purpose and desire for us to have this gift, and having this
gift to have a certain knowledge as well as an assured confidence
So continue to strengthen our faith from day to day and from
week to week throughout our pilgrimage on this earth. Bless this word
to our hearts, in Jesus' name we pray, amen.
The Divine Origin of Saving Faith
I. Where Faith Comes From
II. The Means God Uses
III. What This Implies
| Sermon ID | 1124241359253766 |
| Duration | 48:52 |
| Date | |
| Category | Sunday - AM |
| Bible Text | Acts 8:26-40 |
| Language | English |
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