skip to main |
skip to sidebar
FOR AUDIO VERSION CLICK
HERE.
As we make our way through this Hall of Faith
I want to offer to you a faith-lift by
illustrating how several ordinary people were
able to live extraordinary lives. We saw the
work of faith was in Abel-work that emerged
from the heart! Now we come to the walk of
faith! "Walk" is a very common word in the
Bible. We are urged to walk wisely,
uprightly, with integrity, according to His
commandments, humbly, worthy, in the light,
in the truth, and in Him! To walk is a
continuous journey with a destination in
mind. Paul used the term "walk" and John used
the term "abide" to describe the very same
action.
There are only two characters who are said to
have walked with God-Enoch and Noah. Enoch
was transferred out of this earth to be with
the Lord, because he was "pleasing to God."
Noah was transported out of the flood,
because he "found favor with God."
First check out Enoch: By faith Enoch was taken from this
life, so that he did not experience death: "He could not be found,
because God had taken him away." For before he was taken, he was
commended as one who pleased God. And without faith it is
impossible to please God, because anyone who comes to him must believe
that he exists and that he rewards those who earnestly seek him.
The story of Enoch is a brief one. In Genesis
6 it says: Altogether, Enoch lived a total
of 365 years. Enoch walked faithfully with
God; then he was no more, because God took
him away. Even though the biographical
sketch is brief, it is powerful. To be only
one of two biblical characters that was ever
recorded, as one who walked with God is quite
remarkable. And then to have the result be to
not face death at all, but to be
supernaturally taken to be with God is amazing!
Then Noah is the other man that is noted to
have walked with God: By faith Noah, when
warned about things not yet seen, in holy
fear built an ark to save his family. By his
faith he condemned the world and became heir
of the righteousness that is in keeping with
faith.
In the historical record of Noah's life it
says: Noah was a righteous man, blameless
among the people of his time, and he walked
faithfully with God.
There are two primary choices you have with
respect to your walk. You can't serve God and
the material world at the same time. It must
be one or the other. It's either walk with
God or walk out of step with God. Two choices!
There are two challenges as you reflect upon
how to walk with God!
1. See Him-Consider Him. God is there! He is
the same yesterday, today, and forever. He is
faithful. See Him through Jesus. It's in
Jesus that you find all the fullness of God.
2. Seek Him out-Count on Him. Draw close to
Him through personal faith in Him and
practical fellowship with other followers.
Remember, there are only two kinds of
pain-discipline or regret. Walking with God
does require the pain of discipline, so do
what you can do to start walking. Walking
with God is simply watching what Jesus says
and does and say and do the same.
You walk with God; He'll work with you in the
midst of your troubles. Or, you don't walk
with God; you're totally on your own and
going nowhere. You choose!
One more thing here: A faith-walk doesn't require that you
have it all together. In fact, you may be experiencing great pain and
brokenness right now and wonder how a life of faith might make a
difference. Faith is taking all that you know that you are (including
your brokenness) and placing it into all that you know that Jesus is.
And as you do this, you must leave the results to Him.
FOR AUDIO VERSION CLICK
HERE.
We began this series with this sentence: When your life is out
of control and your back's against the wall, you need a faith-lift. Well
as we continue working on giving you a personal faith-lift, we come to
what many
have called the Hall of Faith. It's found in one of the earliest
writings in the New Testament in the book of Hebrews. In the eleventh
chapter the writer of this book
illustrates extraordinary faith exercised by simple, ordinary people
with unusual results. Each of these illustrations is helpful in lifting
your faith. It's ordinary people living extraordinary lives!
Hebrews 11 begins with a definition of faith:
Now faith is being sure of what we hope
for and certain of what we do not see. This
is what the ancients were commended for. By
faith we understand that the universe was
formed at God's command, so that what is seen
was not made out of what was visible.
So, what is faith? Faith is the promise of
God! Faith gives confidence of "things hoped
for." Faith gives "conviction of things not
seen." It makes things concrete and gives
substance to the invisible! Faith gives us a
connection with God, because by it we gain
approval from God and by it we understand the
miracle of creation-"that the universe was
formed at God's command." Faith makes the
promises of God a reality!
I like how The Message expresses it: 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. By faith, we see the world called
into existence by God's word, what we see
created by what we don't see.
In essence you can say that faith is taking
God at His word!
Faith is not only the promise of God; faith is personal! The
writer of the Hebrews goes on to speak about Adam and Eve's two sons,
Cain and Abel:
By faith Abel brought God a better offering than Cain did. By faith
he was commended as righteous, when God spoke well of his offerings. And
by faith Abel still speaks, even though he is dead.
Again, The Message renders it this way: By an act of
faith, Abel brought a better sacrifice to God than Cain. It was what he
believed, not what he brought, that made the difference. That's what God
noticed and approved as righteous. After all these centuries, that
belief continues to catch our notice.
These two brothers lived their lives before
God differently. Cain was a gardener and Abel
was a herdsman. Cain offered sacrifice to God
as a ritual-something he was supposed to do.
Abel offered sacrifice to God by faith with
his first-fruits-something he wanted to do.
So, Cain did what he did to get by while
Abel's heart priority was for God. Therefore,
Cain's offering to God was disapproved and
Cain became mad at God and the world, ending
in being silenced. Abel's offering was
approved and still speaks today. Cain,
because of his anger, killed his brother,
Abel. And, even though Abel was put to death,
he continues to speak today with this
principle of heart-generated faith.
There is something else about faith. Faith is
powerful! What makes ordinary people live
extraordinary lives? I have found three
basic ingredients: FIRST-People of faith
keep changing their perspective; they see the
God who is there! This is a decision of the
will-your choice!
SECOND-They keep committing to personal
programming-to hear what God says. This is a
discipline of the mind.
THIRD-They keep centering the priority of
their hearts on God-to know what God wants!
This is a desire of the heart! With this
decision of your will, the discipline of your
mind, and the desire of your heart, your
ordinary faith becomes powerful!
You've got two choices and the first one
doesn't count! Either, like Cain, you lose
God as priority of your heart and leave the
presence of God. Then you've got a real problem!
Or, like Abel, you center on God as the
priority of your heart and gain God's
approval. Then you've got the real power to
go through anything. Abel is a supreme
illustration of the work of faith. No matter
what you offer to God, you must bring it to
Him with all of your heart.
So, it's not a ritualistic, religious act of
the mind and body, but totally and wholly a
relational matter of the heart. Remember, God
looks on the heart and man looks on the
outward appearance. So, how's your heart?