All
of us want to be remembered after we die, but I'm sure most of us would not
like to be remembered like these people,
who had these supposed real epitaphs on their tombstones:
2.
Here lies
Butch. We planted him raw. He was quick on the trigger, but slow on the draw.
3.
The children
of Israel wanted bread, and the Lord sent them manna. Old clerk Wallace wanted
a wife, and the Devil sent him Anna.
4.
She always
said her feet were killing her, but nobody believed her.
5.
Looked up the
elevator shaft to see if the car was on the way down. It was.
6.
Here lies the
body of our Anna. Done to death by a banana. It wasn't the fruit that laid her
low, but the skin of the thing that made her go.
7.
Here lies one
Wood, enclosed in wood. One Wood within another. The outer wood is very good:
We cannot praise the other.
First,
we need to define exactly what faith is. According to the writer of the Letter
to the Hebrews, faith is the assurance that something we want is going to
happen even though we can't see it. When God makes a promise, he keeps
it-unlike people such as politicians. We have to trust God for more than what
our natural abilities can accomplish. We have to trust God with our future
because we can't see the future-only God can.
We
can determine if we are in or out of faith by asking these questions:
1.
Am I doing
what God told me to do?
2.
Am I
fulfilling the assignment God gave me for my life?
3.
Am I living
in obedience to His Word and to the revelation He has given to me?
4.
Am I sticking
with the plan Jesus asked me to execute?
Hebrews
11 is about men and women who lived in faith. They each received a word from
God for their lives or for their generation. They held on to their mandate from
God even though it was difficult to do. As a result, they changed their
generations and pleased God.
Faith
is conviction from evidence. It is simply believing in God's goodness and
believing that he rewards the people who seek after him. Faith makes the
invisible real. It makes something out of nothing. Faith allows us to be
everything that God wants us to be, but we will never be the blessing God wants
us to be unless we fulfill God's purpose for our lives. Faith is a gift from
God. We can accept it or reject it. If we accept it, we will see things through
the eyes of faith, especially when we read and study God's Word.
We
can choose to trust in ourselves and in our own efforts in order to earn God's
pleasure, or we can choose to trust in Christ and let him live his life through
us to enable us to live a life that is pleasing to God. Abraham obeyed God by
faith. He did not question God's orders. It was very difficult for him to leave
his homeland because of the patriarchical culture. He had to leave his extended
family. He had to let go of his "security blanket". I'm sure he felt
a sense of anxiety, but his faith in God helped him to overcome his fears. We
would be wise to remember that only faith in God can save us from our worries.
Abraham
was rewarded for his faith by being made the father of the Jewish nation. God
rewards faith. God blesses us and makes us a blessing, as the late Pastor Perry
F. Rockwood would say every time he ended his radio broadcasts. Abraham set the
gold standard for faithfulness, obedience and discipleship. Not everyone can
reach that standard, but Abraham reminds us of what is possible.
When
God speaks about blessing someone, it's a promise to intervene in that person's
life in a powerful way. That blessing could be financial, family, emotional or
spiritual in nature, but in order to receive that blessing, two conditions have
to be met--- obedience and faith.
Abraham
stepped out in faith to follow God, and he became identified with Christ.
Everyone who follows Christ in faith also becomes identified with Christ. God's
enemies become our enemies, and God's friends become our friends. When we trust
God, we can truly walk with him in faith. If we have faith in God, we will do
whatever he asks us to do. This can be hard to do. Most of us don't want to be
told what to do. We want to be in charge of our own lives, instead of following
the old advice to "let go and let God". In order for us to make it as
Christians, we have to live life by faith in Christ in every area of our lives.
God's dreams for us are worth giving up our lives for, but only if we believe
in him in faith. God calls us to a faith that sets us free to be guided by him
in our Christian walk of faith.
The
readings we heard earlier deal with living a life of faith, which is one of the
hardest things a Christian can do, even with God's help. Some of us are
reluctant to have faith in God because we don't know all of the facts. We can't
see the entire picture. God is like that. When we step out in faith, he doesn't
tell us the entire plan he has for us. He reveals the plan one step at a time.
We can be saved by faith without knowing all of the facts. We don't know
everything there is to know about Christ and the Scriptures.
Billy
Graham once said, "Most of us do not understand nuclear fission, but we
accept it. I don't understand television, but I accept it. I don't understand
radio, but every week my voice goes out around the world, and I accept it. Why
is it so easy to accept all these man-made miracles and so difficult to accept
the miracles of the Bible?"
The
road of faith is not easy. Real faith is more than receiving the things we want
from God. Real faith is accepting from God the things he gives us. Real faith
can change our lives. Faith allowed Noah to build the ark. Faith allowed
Abraham to leave his homeland. Faith allows us to persevere when we face life's
trials.
We
struggle with our faith for many reasons. For example, human reasoning tells us
that what God asks may seem unreasonable. We live by sight, but God does not
always give us visible evidence of his work. Faith involves surrendering to our
feelings. Faith means that we will receive negative advice or criticism from
non-believers. Satan and feelings of guilt may cause us to neglect the Word of
God. In fact, Satan often attacks our faith immediately after a triumph in
faith.
If
we are walking closely with the Lord and life deals us a blow that knocks us
down, that does not mean we need to abandon our faith. In fact, these are the
times when we need to turn to Him even more. It doesn't mean that we are doing
something wrong or that God is unhappy with us. Instead, we should approach
such times as a chance for God to do amazing things through our lives for his
glory.
Even
the greatest preachers in history did not know everything there is to know
about Christ and the Scriptures. Many of them also struggled with their faith. For
example, Billy Graham had a crisis of faith early in his ministry. It happened
just before his 1949 Los Angeles Crusade, which made him a household name. One
of his friends accused him of being out of date with his faith and the language
he used in his crusades. Even after considering Christ's attitude toward the
Scriptures, Billy still had doubts. He wondered if he could trust the Bible.
He
took a walk in the San Bernardino Mountains. He dropped to his knees, opened
the Bible on a tree stump, and prayed the following prayer: "O God! There
are many things in this book I do not understand. There are many problems with
it for which I have no solution. There are many seeming contradictions. There
are some areas in it that do not seem to correlate with modern science. I can't
answer some of the philosophical and psychological questions (people) are
raising".
Finally,
the Holy Spirit freed Billy to say the following: "Father, I am going to accept this as Thy Word---by faith. I'm going to allow faith to go
beyond my intellectual questions and doubts, and I will believe this to be Your
inspired Word".
Our
faith is only as great as our knowledge of the object of our faith. If we have
little knowledge of God and His Word, we will have little faith. No faith is
too small as long as it's faith. We can't please God unless we have faith. We
can't take our faith for granted. We have to keep working on our faith every
day. Faith is more than believing. It is acting on that belief. Faith allows
ordinary people to do extraordinary things.
God
has placed in us a hunger to know who we are and where we fit in the universe.
No earthly thing can satisfy that hunger-not drugs, not alcohol, not even sex.
Only faith in God can satisfy that spiritual hunger. St. Augustine once said,
"O Lord, you have made us for yourself. Our hearts are restless until they
find rest in you". That is oh so true today.
When
we insist on living by sight and determining the results of our actions before
we act, we short-circuit faith and cut God and His power out of our lives. When
living by sight overcomes faith, our spiritual lives begin to dry up, we live
at a lesser level of satisfaction, and our participation in influencing the
world for God decreases. Romans 1:17 states that faith is a foundational
principle for living the Christian life. When we choose to trust God enough to
walk by faith rather than by sight, we exercise our faith and its capacity
grows. Our spiritual lives are strengthened and we can live life to its
fullest.
Bibliography
1.
Graham, Billy:
Just As I AM: The Autobiography of Billy
Graham (Toronto, ON: HarperCollins Publishers Ltd.; 1997)
2.
Exegesis for
Genesis 12:1-4. Retrieved from www.sermonwriter.com
3.
Pastor Joe
McKeever, "The Hardest Part of the Christian Life". Retrieved from www.jowmckeever.com
4.
Dr. Ray
Pritchard, "It's the Faith, Brother". Retrieved from
www.keepbelieving.com
5.
Dr. Harold
Sala, "What You Believe Makes a Difference". Retrieved from
newsleter2@guidelines.org
6.
Os Hillman,
"Experiencing God in Your Business". Retrieved from
Today_God_Is_Frirst@crosswalkmail.com
7.
Rick Warren,
"Listen to God, Not Your Doubts". Retrieved from
conect@newsletter.purposedriven.com
8.
Daniel B.
Clendenin, PhD, "The Longest and Hardest Journey". Retrieved from
www.jhourneywithjesus.net
9.
Alan Smith,
"The Reason We Remember Great People". Retrieved from
thought-for-the-day@hub.xc.org
10. Mary Southerland, "Gideon Meets Indiana
Jones". Retrieved from Crosswalk@crosswalkmail.com
11. Joel Osteen, "Now Faith Is". Retrieved from
no-reply@joelosteen.com
12. Bayless Conley, "The Place of Blessing".
Retrieved from answersweekly@answersbc.org
13. Neil Anderson, Believing Truth is a Choice".
Retrieved from Crosswalk@crosswalkmail.com
14. Joel Osteen, "Believing is Seeing".
Retrieved from no-reply@joelosteen.com
15. Dr. Charles Stanley, "God Bless You".
Retrieved from In-Touch-with-Charles-Stanley@crosswalkmail.com
16. Jim Liebelt, "The Impala Syndrome".
Retrieved from Homeword@crosswalkmail.com
17. Jim Burns, "Great Acts of Faith". ".
Retrieved from Crosswalk@crosswalkmail.com
18. Michael Youssef, PhD, "Our Transformation".
Retrieved from mydevotional@leadingtheway.org
19. Evans, L.H. Jr. & Ogilvie, L.J.: The Preacher's Commentary Series: Vol. 33, Hebrews (Nashville, TN:
Thomas Nelson Inc.; 1985)
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