What does it mean that God calls into being things that were not (Romans 4:17)?

TL;DR

God doesn’t just see the future—He brings into existence what is not yet and declares His promises as certain before they are fulfilled. This means we can trust God to accomplish His plans.

WHAT DOES THE BIBLE SAY?

There are two major interpretations of Romans 4:17 where it says that God calls into being things that were not. The first is a reference to God creating ex nihilo (out of nothing). Scripture as a whole teaches that God created out of nothing (Hebrews 11:3), and thus, such an interpretation is biblically sound. However, it is difficult to connect that interpretation with the immediate context of God’s promise to Abraham (Romans 4:16–18). Still, it is possible that Paul was proving his point by reminding the reader that God can create life from nothing, for example, by giving an elderly couple a child (Romans 4:19).

The other interpretation understands it to mean: “the things that do not yet exist as though they already do” (NET). In this view, Paul is saying that God speaks of future realities as if they already exist because He will bring them about. That appears to fit the context better. He could say that Abraham was the father of many nations despite his wife being barren because God was speaking about what He would do (Romans 4:19).

In either case, the contextual point is that God’s promises will be accomplished. It is by believing them that faith is credited as righteousness (Romans 4:20–21). Our salvation also hangs on a promise. When we believe in Jesus by faith, we trust that He who brings into being what is not will surely fulfill His promise of eternal life through Christ.

FROM THE OLD TESTAMENT

FROM THE NEW TESTAMENT

IMPLICATIONS FOR TODAY

We often measure what’s possible by what we can see—but Romans 4:17 calls us to anchor our lives in what God has said. When a diagnosis comes back uncertain, when finances feel stretched beyond what we can manage, or when a relationship seems beyond repair, we are tempted to believe that the outcome is already decided. Yet God speaks into those very places—not ignoring reality but redefining it—reminding us that what does not yet exist is not beyond His power to bring about.

Once we are saved, which is the greatest promise God fulfills, the truth of His calling into being things that were not, changes how we live day to day. We pray when situations feel hopeless because we know God is powerful. We obey when the path is unclear, trusting that God is already working ahead of us. We hold onto promises like forgiveness, transformation, and eternal life—even when we don’t yet see their full reality—because God has already declared them as certain in Christ.

This truth steadies us in both the ordinary and the overwhelming. When we feel stuck in patterns of sin, we trust that God can create new life in us. When we feel unseen or insignificant, we remember that God is writing a story bigger than what we can currently perceive. And when we face uncertainty about the future, we rest in this: the God who calls into being is at work, and He will faithfully bring every promise to completion.

UNDERSTAND

REFLECT

ENGAGE