Not
long ago, I heard a song on Christian radio, and the chorus says this about faith:
It’s gotta be
More like falling in love
Than something to believe in
More like losing my heart
Than giving my allegiance
My kids were in the room when the song
came on, and my knee-jerk reaction was to tell them that this is not true. Faith in God - living the Christian life - is
not a feeling. It is most definitely not like falling in love. I thought about Paul being knocked off
his horse and blinded for three days when he encountered Christ. I thought about the disciples – most of them
were martyred for their devotion to Jesus.
And I’m thinking about the situation in North Korea where Kim Jong-un has
ordered the execution of thirty-three Christians. Faith is most definitely something - Someone - to believe
in, and it is absolutely about giving your allegiance.
I think it is misguided and even
dangerous to compare or equate our faith to falling in love, and it tells me
that our Hollywood culture (which is obsessed with falling in love) has shaped
our faith life in profound ways. I am
not saying that we cannot or should not feel intense love for Christ, or that
we will not have amazing experiences where we feel God’s presence and feel
intimately connected with Him. But real
faith is not based on those feelings or experiences.
Here is what the bible says about faith:
Hebrews 11:1
Now faith is the substance of things
hoped for,
the evidence of things not seen.
the evidence of things not seen.
(King James Version)
My husband, Bernie, and I attended a funeral on December 30th that
truly broke our hearts. A couple that we
have known for several years lost their adult son – he took his life on
Christmas morning.
This couple is now attending the same grief support workshop that
I am, and Bernie and I walked into church with them not long ago. I asked them if the workshop was helping them
at all, and the man, who was walking in front of me, threw his arms up in the
air and just kept walking. His wife, who
was walking beside me, said, “You know, maybe it helps some to talk to other
parents whose children have taken their lives - we are just here because it is
the next step we know how to take.”
We walked together into the worship service; they went to sit
with their group, and Bernie and I grabbed a couple of seats near an
aisle. From where we were, I had a
straight line of vision to where they were seated in the auditorium. The music started, and as we sang about our
God being a God who saves, I couldn't take my eyes off of them. They were on their feet, singing in full
voice, and I could see the intensity of both their pain and their conviction in
their bodies as they worshiped their God.
In their unspeakable grief they were singing to the God who saves. The God who saves them, the God who saves
their son. And I thought, this is what faith looks like.
Now faith is assurance of things
hoped for, a conviction of things not seen.
(American Standard Version)
And
yet when I read about Job scratching his sores with broken pottery, listening
to his friends go on and on about how there must be some unconfessed sin in his
life, listening to his wife tell him to curse God and die already, I am moved
beyond words to hear Job say, “Shall we accept good from
God, and not trouble? The Lord gave and the Lord has taken away; may the name
of the Lord be
praised.” In his humanity, Job questioned and struggled. And I can’t help but think, this
is what faith looks like.
Faith makes us sure of what we hope
for
and gives us proof of what we cannot see.
(Contemporary English Version)
and gives us proof of what we cannot see.
(Contemporary English Version)
When my mom was
diagnosed with terminal cancer, she was believing God for a miracle. But she told us early on, “Either way,
though, I’m in a win-win situation. If I
live through this I win more time with my family. If I die, I know I am going to be with the
Lord.” She put her faith and trust in God,
not in an outcome. This is what deep, abiding faith looks like.
The fundamental fact of existence is
that this trust in God, this faith,
is the firm foundation under everything
that makes life worth living.
It’s our handle on what we can’t see. The act of
faith is what
distinguished our ancestors, set them above the crowd.
(The
Message)
All of these people are examples to me of what it looks like
to walk by faith, not by sight:
- Taking one step forward even when you can’t see where you are going
- Believing in God’s unfailing love and goodness even through life’s darkest trials
- Worshiping God in the midst of crushing grief and loss
- Holding on to the promise that He will see us through, and that heaven waits for us
Ahora bien, la fe es la certeza de
lo que se espera,
la convicción de
lo que no se ve.
(La Biblia de las Américas)
Let us walk by faith, not by sight,
and may our children see in us examples of real, abiding faith.
2 comments:
Beautifully said!
Amen!! Thank you for that reminder...
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