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Vol. 1,
No. 3
July-September 2009
Living By Faith
by Richard A.
Seymour
Founder/Director of
Clarity Ministries
International
Professor, Frontier
School of the Bible
LaGrange, WY
The entire Christian
life from beginning
to end, when
properly lived, is a
faith life. At least
four
times the Bible
makes the statement,
“The just shall live
by faith” (Habbakuk
2:4; Romans 1:17;
Galatians 3:11;
and Hebrews 10:38).
Of particular
interest is the
statement found in
Romans. Verse
sixteen contains
that
classic testimony of
Paul where he
declares, “I am not
ashamed of the
Gospel of Christ,
for it is the power
of God to salvation
for everyone who
believes, for the
Jew first and also
for the Greek.”
Many have memorized
this prized verse,
but have you ever
carefully
scrutinized verse
seventeen? It says,
“For in it [the
Gospel] is the
righteousness of God
revealed from faith
to faith; as it is
written, ‘The just
shall live by
faith.’” Notice
especially the
phrase from faith to
faith. It is telling
us that the good
news of how to be
righteous with God
begins with faith,
continues in faith,
and ends upon faith.
Similarly,
Colossians 2:6,7
admonishes: “As you
have therefore
received Christ
Jesus the Lord, so
walk in Him, rooted
and built up in Him
and established in
the faith, as you
have been taught,
abounding in it with
thanksgiving.” How
did you receive
Christ? By faith.
How are you to walk
in Him? By faith. In
fact, Paul, in
discussing
questionable areas
of life, affirmed,
“Happy is the man
who does not condemn
himself in what he
approves. But he who
doubts is condemned
if he eat
[questionable
foods], because he
does not eat from
faith; for whatever
is not from faith is
sin” (Romans 14:22b,
23).
Add Hebrews 11:6 to
the above verses and
you get this
undeniable mandate
from God: “But
without faith it is
impossible to please
Him, for he who
comes to God must
believe that He is,
and that He is a
rewarder of those
who diligently seek
Him.” Let the phrase
sink deeply into
your soul: Without
faith it is
impossible to please
Him! If we must have
faith to please the
Lord, if
it is absolutely
impossible to please
Him without it, it
is imperative that
we know what faith
is and how to
appropriate it to
our personal lives,
to our families, our
ministries, our
businesses, to our
needs, our wishes,
our dreams, to all
of life.
What Faith is Not
Emotions or
emotionalism. We all
have emotions. If we
didn’t we would be
inanimate like a
rock. We feel. We
long for things. We
have emotional highs
and lows. But faith
is not the same as
emotions, nor is it
based upon how we
feel at any certain
time or about any
given situation.
Neither is faith
emotionalism. How
does emotionalism
differ from having
emotions?
Emotionalism is a
state of being; it
is how some people
operate, how they
cope, how they
function in life. We
all have emotions,
but emotionalism is
when we base our
every move upon how
we feel.
I may feel
emotionally
down—drained, in
fact, but I can
still believe God
and trust Him to see
me through my down
times. In my
emotional lows I may
be in fellowship
with the Lord but
may not feel close
to Him, or in my
emotional highs I
may feel extremely
close to Him but not
be. It is when I
allow my emotions to
dictate my
perceptions,
decisions, and
actions that I have
adopted emotionalism
as a way of life.
Operating in this
way is not living by
faith; it is walking
by feeling.
Closely related to
the above is the
fact that faith is
not a hunch, a gut
feeling, or just
knowing something is
or is not going to
be. Have you ever
said, “I just know
this is going to
work.” It may have
been a business
venture, a
relationship, a
machine you’ve been
tinkering with, or
an investment. You
just knew it would
turn out all right;
your gut feeling
told you so.
So many believers
approach their walk
with the Lord in
this same way. They
decide where they
will live, whom they
marry, what career
to pursue, what
schools to
attend—all based on
this somewhat
intuitive gut
reaction to life’s
many twists and
turns. This may be
just another
substitute for a
genuine faith walk.
Faith may be the
exact opposite of
our best hunches.
Thirdly, living by
faith is not
necessarily a walk
of logic. Though God
is the most logical
Person in all the
universe, His logic
is often quite
contrary to human
powers of deduction.
How logical was it
for Israel to march
around Jericho once
a day for a week and
then to march around
it seven times
blowing trumpets and
shouting on the
seventh day? Is this
great military
strategy, or what?
Or how about God
promising Abraham
that the world would
be blessed through
the offspring of his
son, Isaac, and
later telling
Abraham to sacrifice
that same son on an
altar? Logical?
Certainly not by our
standards.
You may be thinking,
“I don’t confuse
logic with faith. I
know the
difference.” Well,
how about this
scenario. You are
praying about
something and all
the pieces seem to
be coming together;
and you say to
yourself, “It must
be God’s will
because. . . .” You
then reason it all
out in your mind
logically and
conclude “God is in
this thing because
after all look how
everything is
working out.” Of
course, it may be
true when God is
doing something in
our lives the pieces
do fit, but not
always. If you were
Joseph being sold
into slavery and
rotting away in jail
for something you
didn’t do, or Job
with your flesh full
of putrefying sores,
or the
mighty Moses tending
sheep for forty
years in the desert,
you may not observe
any pattern at
all—at least while
you were going
through the trial.
Faith looks beyond
the present
situation or
problem, to the God
who knows what He is
doing and does it in
His time.
What Is Faith?
True Biblical faith
is founded upon
God’s character and
His character is
revealed in His
Word. So, faith is
taking God at His
Word, which is
another way of
saying that faith is
totally dependent
upon what God’s Word
reveals about what
God is. He is
faithful. He is
truthful. He is
merciful, righteous,
holy, infinite,
all-knowing,
all-powerful. He can
be trusted. I can
safely put my faith
in Him knowing He
will stand true and
be there for me. “So
then faith comes by
hearing, and hearing
by the Word of Go
(Romans 10:17).
Kinds of Faith
Scripture reveals
two kinds of faith
and we need to
recognize the
presence and
validity of them
both. There is
active faith,
usually connected in
some way with the
commands of God. God
commands his child
or children to do
something and
because they believe
He has commanded
them, they do that
something—they obey.
For instance, “By
faith Noah, being
divinely warned of
things not yet seen,
moved with godly
fear, prepared an
ark. . . . By faith
Abraham obeyed when
he was called. . . .
By faith Moses
refused to be called
the son of Pharaoh’s
daughter. . . .
forsook Egypt. . . .
kept the Passover”
(Hebrews 11:7, 8,
24, 27 28).
Active faith is the
kind of faith we
normally think of
when we hear or read
about someone’s
faith. How often
have you heard some
well meaning person
say, “If you really
believe something
you’ll act upon it.”
Well, that’s true of
active faith where
there is something
God expects you to
do, whether it’s to
abhor what is evil
(Romans 12:9), or to
be thankful in
everything (I
Thessalonians 5:18),
or whatever God has
commanded.
Active faith does
the thing commanded
for no other reason
than God has stated
His desire or will
concerning a matter.
But then there is
also passive faith.
This kind of faith
is evident where God
has given a promise
and there is nothing
the recipient of the
promise can do but
to trust the One who
has promised. To be
sure the faith or
trust is obedience
but there is no
activity required or
possible to bring
about the promised
result.
The obvious example
of this kind of
faith is in
salvation.
“Believe on the Lord
Jesus Christ and you
will be saved” (Acts
16:31). Not only is
believing in Christ
all we must do in
order to be saved,
it is all we can do.
Another good example
of passive faith is
Sarah. Hebrews 11:11
gives this
description of her
faith: “By faith
Sarah herself also
received strength to
conceive seed. . . because she
judged Him faithful
who had promised.”
What could Sarah do
at her age to
conceive? Absolutely
nothing. There were
no fertility pills,
no magic potions.
All she could do was
to “receive”
strength from God.
And how did she do
that? By faith,
“counting Him
faithful.” Her’s was
a beautiful example
of what I emphasized
earlier, that living
by faith is based
upon God’s
character. Can He be
trusted? If He can,
then the faith walk
is a walk in which
we rely upon this
altogether
trustworthy One, our
heavenly Father.
Three Phases of the
Faith Walk
First, where God has
spoken in His Word,
commanding us to do
something, obey
because of the fact
that He is the One giving the command.
“Forgiving one
another, just as God
in Christ forgave
you” (Ephesians
4:32) demands action
on our part.
Disobedience to a
clear Bible command
shuts the door to
further development
in the School of
Faith Living.
Secondly, where
there may be no
direct command but
there are clear
promises to believe
or principles to
apply, respond in
faith to those
promises and
principles. Example:
“In My Fathers’s
house are many
mansions. . .I go to
prepare a place for
you. And.. . I will
come again and
receive you to
myself” (John 14:2,
3). An acceptable
attitude of faith
brings deep peace
within because faith
knows He is telling
the truth.
Thirdly, where there
is no direct
command, no clear
promise and you are
not aware of a Bible
principle to apply,
trust in the
revealed character
of your God and
Father, knowing He
will not and cannot
fail you. When you
search and grope for
meaning in the
darkness of your
life, He is still
the same and can be
trusted through all
times and in every
situation.
Used by permission.
"Living by Faith"
originally appeared
in the Clarity
Trumpet, the
publication ministry
of Richard A.
Seymour. |