Faith is talked about quite frequently but it is also often misunderstood. It is hard to put our arms around what faith truly is, how we experience it or acquire it. If what we believe is to make any difference, then it has to change the way we live. However, at times we don’t take faith seriously but take it for granted.
Just the thought of what must be believed for one to become a Christian is a tall order. We believe that we are created by God, but we sinned (offended Him). God is holy, and therefore sin must be punished. Jesus Christ came into this world to atone for our sin. His righteousness was imputed to us, and the condemnation of sin and guilt was swept away so now we are counted righteous in God’s sight. This results in the glorious truth that to be absent from this body is to be present with the Lord (2 Corinthians 5:5-8), and death is not an end to the believer but the beginning of a new reality of spending eternity with Christ. We cannot see any of this. None of our physical senses can apprehend or measure any of this. We simply have to believe it.
In Hebrews 11:3 we are told the universe bears evidence of God’s formation, that He commanded it into existence, and the current conclusions cannot explain the origins of the universe away. Without Christ, everyone is morally, spiritually, and scientifically blind to the truth of God the Creator. To put your faith in the power of reason is a dead end. Therefore, without faith, one cannot be accepted by God, nor can one know or please God (v 6). The story of Cain and Abel is mentioned in verse 4. There are many questions that are unanswered. For example, what are their ages? What was their upbringing like? Why did one become a shepherd and one a farmer? However, what we can surmise is that the difference between the two offerings was in the heart. Abel had faith (he believed God) and Cain did not. God is always first interested in the man or woman and then in the offering. God always looks at the heart first. When he looked at Abel’s heart, he found faith and rewarded it.
Pascal said there is a God-shaped vacuum inside every heart. That vacuum, when not filled with God, will fill itself with trash. It is the trash of the world that has made us unhappy, unfulfilled, unstable, divisive, and uncommitted. That is why Augustine said: “O Lord, you have made us for yourself. Our hearts are restless until they find rest in you.”
Faith
October 2, 2022 • Pastor Ben Hiwale • Hebrews 11
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