The seventh fruit of the Holy Spirit is faithfulness.
Faith is a vital and indispensable characteristic of the
Christian life. We cannot be a Christian if we do not have faith. It is the one
condition God places upon our salvation. “For
it is by grace through faith we are saved” Ephesians 2:8.
God’s requirement of faith can be a stumbling block to many
believers. Some Christians worry about how much faith they need to have to
please God. They worry that they may not have “enough” faith to receive salvation
or an answer to prayer. If you have any faith at all, Jesus says that you can
move mountains. But Jesus says in Matthew 17: 20,
“If you have faith like a grain of mustard seed, you will say to this
mountain, 'Move from here to there,' and it will move, and nothing will be
impossible for you."
A mustard seed was the smallest seed they knew at the time. If
you have the tiniest grain of faith, it is enough. A mountain of doubt will not
prevent God’s grace from finding you, but the tiniest particle of faith is
enough to seal you to Him.
Don’t worry that your faith is weak—act on the faith that
you have, and that will be enough.
Faith is a unique quality in the Bible, since it is both a
gift and a fruit of the Holy Spirit. He gives us faith (some people receive a
great amount of faith) but faith is also something that grows in us the longer
we walk with God. Faith is both a gift and a fruit of the Holy Spirit. God
gives us faith, some people he gives a great deal of faith, but it is also
something that develops within us. Faith develops in us as we walk with God.
When I first became a Christian, my faith was very weak. I
surrendered to Christ over the protests of my very doubtful self. But I
discovered that my capacity for faith was a lot like congress—I hardly ever get
an unanimous vote on anything being true or false, but it is usually only by a
majority vote of my brain cells that I do anything! Somewhere there is always a
doubtful minority.
Nevertheless, as I have grown older, that vocal minority has
gotten smaller, and the voices of faith have grown stronger. I believe in Jesus
more than I did as a child, and continue to grow stronger in my faith with
every passing year. Jesus has become increasingly real to me, and my faith in
Him has proven right a thousand times over.
But if we think faith is just about what we believe, then we
have it wrong. Faith is not just belief, but it is a whole live experience,
involving the head, heart, and habits.
In our heads,
faith is the basis for all our reasoning and thinking. We cannot reason without
belief. Even skeptics believe in the power of skepticism! Their faith in
questioning is unquestioned in their minds. If a skeptic can have faith in
doubt, then why can we not have the same kind of faith in God’s Word? The
scientist believes without question in the scientific method, yet there is no
real absolute proof that the scientific method is the only way to be certain
about anything. In fact, we all believe in many things that we never question,
that we simply suppose (another word for faith) to be true. The lawyer accepts
without question that laws must be followed. The Christian accepts the Bible as
his basis for reason, the same way a lawyer accepts obedience to the law. It is
the only way we can rationally make decisions.
We believe that some things are right and wrong because we
have faith in the Bible. We may argue whether or not the Bible meant to say
what we think it says, but we do not question whether or not the Bible is
wrong, only whether our interpretation of it is wrong. We may question what
Jesus looked like, and exactly what He said, but we do not question whether or
not He lived, or whether or not He is God. It is part of what it means to be a
Christian to believe in something. The certainty of Christ’s divinity grows in
us every day.
Intellectual faith begins with a decision. We decide what we
are going to do base on our thought, opinions, and lives. That decision is based
on a lot more than logic. It’s based on what we deeply, and sincerely know to
be true, before we ever start looking for answers. As Augustine once said, we do
not know in order to believe, but we believe in order that we may know. But
once we know and are convinced then we must stake our lives upon it.
In our hearts, faith
governs our feelings. Faith is the reason we feel what we feel. Faith comforts
us when we are down, and lift us up when we are rejoicing. Without our
emotions, faith would be pretty weak, but we react emotionally to the things we
really, truly believe.
If you want to know which parent a little child trusts the
most, then there is an easy test. Just scare them. They will instinctively run
to either their mother or father, depending on which gives them the greatest
sense of security.
The same thing works with adults, too. If you want to know
where your real faith lies, see where you run when you are scared. Do we run to
God, or to food, the bottle, drugs, to the company of a friend, or do we just
try to forget it by binging on video games or mindless television?
If you don’t like to be scared, get happy. Where do you want
to go to celebrate? Do you offer thanks to God, or do you just go out and have
a party? Our emotions reveal our true faith.
Faith also restrains our emotions. If you are scared, why
don’t you run away? If you are angry, why don’t you hurt somebody? It is because something restrains you. That “something”
is your true faith. Our faith in God keeps us going when everything else says
to quit.
The classic movie Chariots
of Fire portrays a true example of this. Eric Liddell won the 400 meter
dash in the 1924 Olympics, earning the title of the fastest runner alive. Liddell
did it, he says, because of his faith in God. Separated from God, he had no
power. But when he saw his running as part of his glorification of God, then he
was able to outrun everyone in the world. It was his faith that gave him the
power to run to God’s glory.
What motivates you to do great things? Nothing but our faith
can give us the emotional power to overcome everything else.
In our habits, faith
is called “faithfulness.” This is the
particular aspect in which faith is the fruit of the Holy Spirit. This is faith
put into practice over a long period of time. Eugene Peterson calls it “a long
obedience in the same direction.” Day after day, moment by moment, we make a
habit worshiping, thanking, and obeying God.
Imagine a person who sets out on a ten mile hike. He doesn’t
think that he will be able to walk ten miles. Everything he knows about himself
so far tells him that he can never walk ten miles. Emotionally, he is afraid to
walk ten miles. But he does know how to take one step in that direction. He
takes that step, then another. He walks to the end of the street, then to the
edge of town. Still, he doesn’t think he will finish, but by this time he has
got in the habit of putting one foot in front of another. He may not believe
it, but he is doing it. He has developed the habit of walking. All he has to do
is to keep putting one foot in front of another. Eventually, he will walk ten
miles. His mind and heart may not agree, but his body is doing it because he is
being faithful to the habit.
Faithfulness is a habit. We are faithful to our husbands and
wives because we are in the habit of not cheating. We are faithful to our
countries, because we are in the habit of obeying laws and saluting the flag.
We are faithful to God because we have developed the habit of praise and
worship.
Don’t ever belittle the power of simple habits in our lives.
Our faithless minds and emotions may tell us that habits of faithfulness are
not important, but they are all important.
What’s the most important decision you make in your life? Many
people will say it is where you go to college, what you do for a living, or who
you may marry. I would suggest that your most important decisions are the
little ones not the big ones like when you wake up, what you have for
breakfast, what you wear, and how you spend your money. These decisions become habits, which have
long range consequences. They can change your life forever.
Christian decisions fail for a lot of reasons, but the main
one is this—we fail to recognize that making a decision for Christ is not a one-time
decision. It’s something we do every moment of every day. It’s not just what we
decide to do on Sunday that determines the outcome of our lives, but what we
choose to do every day of the week. It is our faithfulness to Christ which has
the ultimate power to change our lives. Once we have committed ourselves to
Jesus once, then we continue to commit ourselves to Him daily.
Hebrews 11 is called the “hall of fame of faith” It is a
long list of people who were successful in faith in God. But when you read the
list, you discover few people who did miracles. Instead, we read of people who
waited a long time, and overcame, people who endured suffering, withstood
demonic attack and were patient for reward. Their faith was not just head
knowledge, or even heart feelings, but habits they followed every day.
If we are to be followers of Jesus, then faith must be a
habit to us. We must be faithful every day.
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