3). Abraham Illustrates The Fact That God's Greatest Gifts Do Not Come To Us Because We ‘Obey The Law', But Because We ‘Believe In The Lord' (4:13-25).

The importance of faith in the life of Abraham is now brought out. For Paul here stresses that he lived a life of faith from the moment he began to believe, and continued to do so throughout his life, and he stresses that the promise to Abraham that he would be the heir of the world was made on that basis. Note that God's promises are mentioned five times in the passage. It is clearly part of Paul's thesis that Abraham was blessed because he believed God's promises.

This is in contrast with the Jewish tradition which saw Abraham as being blessed because he had kept the whole Law even before it was given, and considered that in order to be a child of Abraham a Jew must take on himself the yoke of the Torah. "At that time, the unwritten law was named among them, and the works of the commandment were then fulfilled," (Apocalypse of Baruch 57:2), "He kept the law of the Most High, and was taken into covenant with God.... Therefore God assured him by an oath that the nations should be blessed in his seed," (Sir 44:20-21). Thus to the Jew the keeping of the Law was basic to Abraham's life, and basic to salvation, and to entry into eternal life. But, as Paul is bringing out, it was not so in God's eyes, nor was it true to the Scriptures.

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