Heb 12:1-2 (NLT) “Therefore, since we are surrounded by such a huge crowd of witnesses to the life of faith, let us strip off every weight that slows us down, especially the sin that so easily trips us up. And let us run with endurance the race God has set before us. We do this by keeping our eyes on Jesus, the champion who initiates and perfects our faith. Because of the joy awaiting him, he endured the cross, disregarding its shame. Now he is seated in the place of honor beside God's throne.”
Heb. 11:6 says “without faith it is impossible to please God.” So it is important for us to know what faith is and how to apply it. I believe faith has three essential elements, in the same way that fire must have three specific ingredients to burn: oxygen + combustible material +heat, without any one of these ingredients fire cannot burn. Likewise faith must have these three ingredients to activate it: hope + plausibility + questioning, without any one of these ingredients faith cannot work.
1st - Hope: Hope is the active ingredient of faith, as heat is the active ingredient of fire. There must be something you are hoping for; otherwise having faith in it would be irrelevant. We ultimately have hope in the promises of God. Therefore, God’s promises acts as the catalyst that motivates our faith (a catalyst causes a reaction.) “Faith comes by hearing, and hearing by the word of God,” Rom. 10:17.
2nd - Plausibility: The thing that you are hoping for must have at least the smallest degree of possibility. Something that is absolutely impossible or totally untrue is unworthy of faith. For example, one should not put any faith in the ability to become invisible or to jump off a building and fly. Plausibility is the fuel for our faith, the combustible material. “Faith is the substance of things hoped for,” (Heb. 11:1.) Substance means material. If it is plausible then it is the real or essential part of the element of that thing. A substance is the physical matter of which a thing consists. It is the REAL part of our lives. In the end, there must be substance in what we have faith in otherwise our faith in it will be impossible to maintain over a long period of time.
3rd - Questioning: A small degree of doubt must exist otherwise faith becomes a fact. “and (faith) is the evidence of things not seen” (Heb. 11:1.) However, there must be a balance because God never asks us to believe without giving sufficient evidence upon which to base our faith. But at the same time if something is a proven fact, faith in it becomes obsolete, for example, the fact that “the earth is round.” This fact needs no faith to accept it as truth because we already know it is 100% true. A hint of question will always exist in everything because God never removes the possibility of doubt. This is why our faith must rest upon evidence of things unseen, not things proven. Here is the dichotomy, on one hand; you can snuff out a fire by removing its source of oxygen, like you can snuff out faith by turning it into a fact. Likewise, on the other hand; if you have too much doubt, it will blow out the faith in the same way the wind blows out a match.
Hebrews Ch. 11 traced the history of some of the great men and women of the Bible leading up to Hebrews Ch. 12 (the huge crowd of witnesses to the life of faith spoken about.) Let’s look at a few of them and see how their faith consisted of hope + plausibility + questioning.
We are told in Heb 11:7 that Noah was “warned about things not yet seen, in holy fear built an ark to save his family.” Noah had hope because God promised to save him from the flood, it was plausible because God said it would happen, and was there room for doubt? Sure there was, the whole earth covered in water, that was an enormous question! Abraham in Heb 11:8 was “called to go to a place he would later receive as his inheritance, obeyed and went, even though he did not know where he was going.” There was hope, God promised him the inheritance of a “city whose architect and builder is God.” Was this plausible, yes, the New Jerusalem, in Heaven is the city he looked for. Was there the possibility of doubt? Yes, there was. He searched for that city, but never found it, but still claimed it as the inheritance of his children. Abraham and Sarah were promised descendants as “numerous as the stars in the sky,” they had hope. But they were past the age of having children and had none up to that point, they had doubt, nearly too much doubt. This is what made Abraham’s faith so great, to anyone else the promise was implausible, but to Abraham, because God said it He believed it even though Sara laughed at the idea. Moses and the children of Israel “crossed the Red Sea on dry land.” They had hope; God promised them that he would deliver them from out of Egypt. The Egyptian army was swarming down upon them to kill them and take revenge on them for the plagues. They were trapped between the mountains on two sides, the Egyptians behind them and the Red Sea in front of them. To Moses the escape was plausible, so he struck the Red Sea with his rod, and the sea divided. Was there the possibility of doubt that God could rescue them? You better believe it.
The Christian life involves hoping in circumstances where the plausibility seems to be an enormous question. Do we have faith to overcome the doubt or not? To be able to trust God without questioning Him requires that we are spiritually strong. To become strong we need to give up those things that weaken our relationship with God. Our faith needs to be able to run life's race with endurance. The scripture suggest that we cast off any sins because they slow down or faith. Surrender your load of sins at the foot of the cross and by the power of the Holy Spirit start running by faith. To not just walk by faith, but in order to run by faith effectively, we must keep our eyes on Jesus. If we keep our eyes on Him we will not stumble. Looking away from Him in order to to look at ourselves or at the circumstances surrounding us makes the doubts grow so large that they can snuff out our faith. Finally, we need to be running this race for Christ, not for ourselves, because when we win the race and people see our great acts of faith we will glory God, who is the author and finisher of our faith.
God's promise to us is that if we are faithful, and continue follow him, we will stand before His throne and sing for joy a new song about how he redeemed us. (Rev 14:3)
Have you ever had faith that God could really do something outrageously big, almost implausible? What was it? Describe any hint of doubt you had that He would actually do it?
Wednesday, August 26, 2009
Hebrews 12:1-2
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1 comment:
I haven had faith that God could destroy this world.Because Jesus is going to come back again.In that time, many people will die but other people will go to the heaven.I have faith on it.
I can't understand another question so that I don't know how to answer. I'm sorry.
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