Heb. 11:1-6
Theme: We please God when we live by faith
instead of by fears.
Introduction:
As we have stated in previous articles, living by Faith is one of the highest guidelines for Christian
experience. By doing so, we please God, sustain a distinctively Christian
confession of faith, secure eternal rewards in Heaven, and effectively face the
challenges and hazards of a righteous lifestyle. Though we sometimes face staggering
challenges, our faith in Christ gives us the ability to respond to them with confidence
instead of fear. True faith enables us
to triumph in all of our challenges. But, we must focus more on the Lord than
on the challenge. Too often we forget God and focus more on our difficulties. This leads to anxiety and worry.
Doubts, fears,
anxieties, and unbelief seem to characterize the average person anymore. Mental breakdowns, anxiety
attacks, heart attacks, suicide attempts, and a general hopelessness
characterize the western world. The sobering truth is we live in an age of
terrorism, radical Islam, multiple wars, Geo-political unrest, potential
nuclear holocaust, a stagnant US economy, home
foreclosures, and high unemployment. All of these
problems give people many reasons to be concern about their future. Times really are tough….
Now faith is the substance of things
hoped for, the evidence of things not seen. 2 For by it the elders obtained a good report. 3 Through faith we understand that the worlds were framed by the
word of God, so that things which are seen were not made of things which do
appear. 4 By faith Abel offered unto
God a more excellent sacrifice than Cain, by which he obtained witness that he
was righteous, God testifying of his gifts: and by it he being dead yet
speaketh. 5 By faith Enoch was
translated that he should not see death; and was not found, because God had
translated him: for before his translation he had this testimony, that he pleased
God. 6 But without faith it is
impossible to please him: for he that cometh to God must believe that he is,
and that he is a rewarder of them that diligently seek him. (Hebrews
11:1-6, KJV)
This incredible passage offers us practical insight into
what faith is and how it operates in the Christian experience. Throughout
Hebrews 11, we discover excellent illustrations of believers who trusted God
deeply and pleased Him greatly because they lived acknowledging His will and
presence. Through faith we can know, see, understand, and experience daily
relationship with God. By the exercise of confidence in His statements in the
Scriptures, we have occasion to interact with Him. In doing so, we experience
life with Him day by day. Beloved, life was not designed for merely surviving endless
series of fearful epics, but in trusting communion and fellowship with the
Almighty. Once again the Scriptures prescribe a life of faith for the children of God as the strategy for handling the tough times!
Thesis Statement: Live by faith to be sure
your life is pleasing to God. God wants
us to become people who are full of faith instead of fear!
Message:
I. Are We Living in Fear and Doubt?
Some of us already know that we live more by fear than by
faith. The obvious evidence from our lives and perhaps recent events have
punctuated this fact for us. Others may be convinced they truly do live by
faith in God. How can we know from God’s perspective whether we are pleasing to
Him because we are indeed living with confidence in His biblical statements? Really
the best way to answer this question is to subject ourselves to an examination.
Yes, a test of sorts can help us understand where we are on this matter of
faith versus fears.
A. Do our apprehensions and worry please God?
Will our Lord be pleased with a believer too paralyzed by their
cares that they are unresponsive to Him? The Bible says, “But, without faith it
is impossible to please Him.” It is not that it is extremely difficult to
please God, much like winning a marathon. No, it is utterly and emphatically
impossible to satisfy God’s will outside of a life of faith—a trusting
interaction with Him. It is as impossible as it is for us to grow wings and
fly! God has not changed. He is still the one absolute constant! He expects us
to believe Him always. The more consistently we live with Him in trusting
interaction—in responsive belief in His Word—the more pleasing we are to Him.
B. Have you ever wondered how God feels about our living in fears and worry instead of by faith?
How does the Lord Jesus feel about this? What would He say to us? Christ’s interactions with believers on the subject of faith are quite revealing.
1.
Mark 4:40 …Why are ye so fearful? how is it that ye
have no faith?
2. Luke 8:25 …Where is your faith? And they being afraid wondered, saying one to another, What manner of man is this! for he commandeth even the winds and water, and they obey him.
3. Matthew 8:26 …Why are ye fearful, O ye of little faith? Then he arose, and rebuked the winds and the sea; and there was a great calm.
4.
Matthew 14:31, And immediately Jesus stretched forth
his hand, and caught him, and said unto him, O thou of little faith,
wherefore didst thou doubt?
5.
Matthew 17:17, Then Jesus answered and said, O faithless
and perverse generation, how long shall I be with you? how long shall I suffer
you? bring him hither to me.
2. Luke 8:25 …Where is your faith? And they being afraid wondered, saying one to another, What manner of man is this! for he commandeth even the winds and water, and they obey him.
3. Matthew 8:26 …Why are ye fearful, O ye of little faith? Then he arose, and rebuked the winds and the sea; and there was a great calm.
Our Lord’s interactions with real believers inform us that
He is not pleased when we are more attuned to the challenges than to His promises
in the Word. The Lord Jesus consistently expects His people to trust Him even
in life-threatening storms; He expects us to face those storms by faith. When we
believers cannot impact our communities and culture for Christ, it raises
serious questions about the legitimacy and veracity of our claims of faith in
God. Beloved, with these scandalous developments…how can the Lord be pleased
with Christians who believe their fears more than they believe Him?
C. The Lord is Not Pleased When we Live in Doubt.
It is quite obvious that there are different levels of faith and that the Lord wants us to be people of faith. It is also plain to see that He is not pleased with Christians who are filled with doubt, anxiety, worry, fears, and unbelief. There should be a holy desire in every believer to please the Lord whom we love! Beloved, with every facet of my being I want to please the Lord--I want to obtain a good report like Abel, Enoch, Noah, Abraham, and the others (Hebrews 11). Obviously, they according to God's testimony on their behalf "obtained a good report" (Heb. 11:2, 5, 6, 39). What can we do?
II.
What Does
Living by Faith Involve? (Heb. 11:6)
Faith is knowing God is honest and all He says is true.
Therefore, whatever He communicates we accept as fact, whatever He promises we
anticipate, and whatever He commands we follow obediently. What are the major characteristics of living by faith? What does trusting interaction with the Lord look like?
A. Living by Faith Involves Believing God and Acting on It.
1. Faith is
Confidence in The Trustworthiness of God
i.
Hebrews 11:1, Now
faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen.
a.
Faith knows the things hoped for are already ours, and it
provides unshakable evidence that the unseen, spiritual blessings of
Christianity are absolutely certain and real. Faith enables us to understand what God does.
Faith enables us to see what others cannot see (note Heb. 11:7, 13, 27). As a
result, faith enables us to do what others cannot do!
b. People laughed at these great men and women (Heb. 11) when they stepped out by faith, but God was with them and enabled them to succeed to His glory.
b. People laughed at these great men and women (Heb. 11) when they stepped out by faith, but God was with them and enabled them to succeed to His glory.
ii.
Faith is the conviction that what God says is true and that what He
promises will come to pass (11:1). God is totally worthy of our most
profound trust!
a.
Heb 6:17-18, Wherein God, willing more abundantly to
shew unto the heirs of promise the immutability of his counsel, confirmed it by
an oath: 18 That by two immutable things, in which it was impossible for God to lie, we might have a
strong consolation, who have fled for refuge to lay hold upon the hope set
before us:
b.
Titus 1:2, In hope of eternal life, which God, that cannot lie, promised before the world began;
c.
Num 23:19, God is not
a man, that he should lie; neither the son of man, that he should repent: hath
he said, and shall he not do it? or hath he spoken, and shall he not make it
good?
iii.
Faith is not limited to possibilities but invades the realm of the
impossible. Someone has said, “Faith
begins where possibilities end. If it’s possible, then there’s no glory for God
in it.”
2. Faith
Is Always Based On Some Communication From God (Rom.
10:14, 17; Luke 16:29-31).
i.
It is
never a mere whelm, an inner hunch, or a nebulous feeling. Faith is not positive thinking; that
is something quite different. Faith is not a hunch that is followed. Faith is
not hoping for the best, hoping that everything will turn out alright. Faith
is not a feeling of optimism. Faith is none of these things though all of them
have been identified as faith.
ii.
Faith
always demands the most reliable foundation—“Thus saith the Lord.” It is
only faith if it takes something God said or promised to heart.
a.
Why did
Enoch walk with God? God told him to.
b.
Why did
Noah build an Ark? God told him to.
c.
Why did
Abraham leave his family and idolatry? God told him to.
d.
Why did
Moses lead Israel out of Egypt? God told him to.
3. Faith
Believes God and Controls the Believer. It is a confident attitude
toward Him; a persuasion that His statements are true (Heb. 11:13). We are so convinced by what God says in the Word that we are moved, motivated, and controlled by it.
i.
The primary idea is trust and there are many
degrees of faith all the way up to full assurance
of faith –being fully persuaded and absolutely free of doubt
(Heb. 10:22).
ii.
Jesus commended the Gentile women for her great
faith—“O woman, great is thy faith: be it unto
thee even as thou wilt” (Matt. 15:28).
4.
Faith Is A Trust In God That Generates Commitment
and Action (Heb. 11:13; Js.
2:17, 20)! Faith involves commitment to God’s will and plans for our
life. The believers listed in Hebrews 11 were people of active commitment and
faith.
i.
Consider
Abel who offered a blood sacrifice to God (11:4),
ii.
Enoch who walked with God in righteousness while his contemporaries wallowed
in wickedness (11:5),
iii.
Noah building the Ark to save his family from the Flood (11:7), and then
iv.
Abraham followed the call of God and left his homeland unsure of his actual
destination (11:8).
These believers were not perfect, but they did act on God's commands, promises, and prescriptions for life. They actually did something based on God's guidance. They faced incredible odds, total impossibilities, new challenges, un-pioneered territories, deep perplexities, physical limitations, popular opinions/perspectives, serious oppositions, and on the list goes. In every single instance, a life of faith triumphed! Faith in the trustworthy character of God and the specific statements of God enabled these ordinary believers to experience extraordinary things as they interacted with the Lord God by faith! Perhaps our lives are so boring because we do not live interacting with God daily!
B. Living by Faith Involves Giving God His Proper Place, And Putting Man In His Place Also (Heb. 11:6: 10:22).
Someone has said that faith is not "believing in spite of evidence, but obeying in spite of consequence." When you read Heb 11, you meet men and women who acted on God’s Word, no matter what price they had to pay. Faith is not some kind of nebulous feeling that we work up; faith is confidence that God’s Word is true, and conviction that acting on that Word will bring His blessing.—Warren Wiersbe
Faith, mighty faith the promise sees,
And looks to God alone;
Laughs at impossibilities
And cries, “It shall be done.” —Author unknown.
He Expects us to Become a diligent seeker He can reward (Heb 11:6). Faith not only believes that God exists, but it also trusts Him to reward those who “diligently seek Him.” Believe God will reward our faith in Him with forgiveness and righteousness, because He has promised to do so (Heb. 10:35; Deut. 4:29; 1 Chr. 28:9).
He wants us to Attempt great things for His glory by faith! (Heb. 11:32–40; Matt. 21:21; John 14:12). Note the wonderful things done by the men of faith as recorded in the eleventh chapter of Hebrews. Jesus attributes a kind of omnipotence to faith (John 14:12). The disciple, by faith, will be able to do greater things than his Master. Faith is a mighty Niagara of power for the believer. The great question for the Christian to answer is not, “What can I do?” but “How much can I believe?” for “all things are possible to him that believeth.” (Mark 9:23)
Faith is the belief that God is real and that
God is good. Faith is not a mystical experience or a midnight vision or a voice
in the forest.… It is a choice to believe that the one who made it all hasn’t
left it all and that he still sends light into the shadows and responds to
gestures of faith.
Faith
is not the belief that God will do what you want. Faith is the belief that God
will do what is right. –Max Lucado
Conclusion:
How does
your life reflect faith on a daily bases? When it comes to real faith, is yours
a question mark or an exclamation point? What Does God Expect
Of Us In Relation To Faith?
He Expects us to
Become a diligent seeker He can reward (Heb 11:6). He wants us to Attempt
great things for His glory by faith! (Heb. 11:32–40; Matt. 21:21; John 14:12). He wants us to face our future with confidence in Him.
Ask God to make you a vivid demonstration to your
associates and friends of a triumphant faith in Christ—an exclamation of faith,
not a question mark.
These believers were not perfect, but they did act on God's commands, promises, and prescriptions for life. They actually did something based on God's guidance. They faced incredible odds, total impossibilities, new challenges, un-pioneered territories, deep perplexities, physical limitations, popular opinions/perspectives, serious oppositions, and on the list goes. In every single instance, a life of faith triumphed!
ReplyDeletehttps://maxevangel.blogspot.com/2015/10/faith-pleases-god.html
#Fear #God #Insecurity #Revelation #Trustworthy #Word #Bible #Faith #MaxEvangel
Our Lord expects us to become a diligent seeker He can reward (Heb 11:6). Faith not only believes that God exists, but it also trusts Him to reward those who “diligently seek Him.” We can believe God will reward our faith in Him with forgiveness and righteousness, because He has promised to do so (Heb. 10:35; Deut. 4:29; 1 Chr. 28:9). Living by Faith always please the Lord!
ReplyDeletehttps://maxevangel.blogspot.com/2015/10/faith-pleases-god.html
#Fear #God #Insecurity #Revelation #Trustworthy #Word #Bible #Faith #MaxEvangel
These believers were not perfect, but they did act on God's commands, promises, and prescriptions for life. They actually did something based on God's guidance. They faced incredible odds, total impossibilities, new challenges, un-pioneered territories, deep perplexities, physical limitations, popular opinions/perspectives, serious oppositions, and on the list goes. In every single instance, a life of faith triumphed!
ReplyDeletehttps://maxevangel.blogspot.com/2015/10/faith-pleases-god.html
#Fear #God #Insecurity #Revelation #Trustworthy #Word #Bible #Faith #MaxEvangel