Luke 17:5-10. What a BIG topic to try and boil down for us in this third sermon in the Fight the Good Fight sermon series! What is faith and how do we exercise it?
Click here to play the recording
Seems like I keep coming back around to faith but since it is a central topic for Jesus-followers, I guess we’ll keep re-visiting it! I’ve already received some good questions and thoughts regarding the topic. Here they are:
So now I have been thinking abt faith. Many of the passages I have been reading during Lent talk abt how the season and the message is always the same – it is a constant backdrop for us who are called to change. It is only the “constancy” of Christs story that we can notice how much our lives change. Which led me back to poor old Peter when he said —-In this you should rejoice though now for a little while you may suffer various trials, so that the genuineness of your faith, more precious than gold, which though perishable, is tested by fire. (1 Peter 1:7)
Does this mean we really have to experience trial by fire to have faith? I know it is in the toughest times that I feel the deepest faith – that in crisis I can feel Gods presence now quiet and calm and full of love but is that really necessary? Can we live, see and feel God absent the contrast of hardship? Or is just nitwits like me that need to be smacked a few times to really get it!?
As a topic, faith is filled with possibility and uncertainty. Where to go and what to say about this third topic? Faith is the underpinning of all we do in following Jesus. More than simply giving in to a set of thoughts, faith calls out a pattern of living. Still, how will we express this pattern? What does faith look like in everyday living? Is “true” faith borne only in the crucible of struggle and hardship as 1 Peter implies or is faith “true” no matter the context in which it is borne?
1. I wonder how we know we are really on the right path – doing no harm, doing good, and loving God can sometimes seem the means to an end – they feel right when you know your instincts and intent were to be mean or impatient etc, and you succeeded in over-riding that lack of judgment. That action takes us along the path, but what is the calling? The real purpose God wants us to serve. I think it’s especially hard to know because God isn’t always so obvious. It might be necessary for Him to remind us to pay attention to those with less by heaving an earthquake at Haiti every century or so (after all, they were destitute before now they are decimated. Where was all the help when they really could have used it? I am not maligning the effort; I just find it disappointing that it takes tragedy of epic proportion to get the globe’s attention. But that’s another sermon) the bible reminds us instead that God is not on the earthquake but a still small voice.
1 Kings 11-12 “And he said, Go forth, and stand upon the mount before the LORD. And, behold, the LORD passed by, and a great and strong wind rent the mountains, and brake in pieces the rocks before the LORD; but the LORD was not in the wind: and after the wind an earthquake; but the LORD was not in the earthquake: 12And after the earthquake a fire; but the LORD was not in the fire: and after the fire a still small voice.
So if that voice is so small, in this noisy busy world, how do we make sure we are listening? Can we hear it? I read a wonderful line yesterday quoting Suzan B Anthony “I distrust those people who know so well what God wants them to do because I notice it seems always to coincide with their own desires.”
When do you know that you are doing what God wants? How do you know you have answered the call of the still small voice?
2. I guess another related interest is the meaning of the passage that I can’t recall passage – but it has to do w faith without work is dead … or something like that. If we are loved by Gods grace, why do we have to do anything else?
3. And as long as I am thinking about work, Exodus tells us the seventh day is a Sabbath to the Lord your God; you shall not do any work…” uh oh. In this day and age how should we interpret that passage…for real? Maybe I am going to church to earn currency on the good will meter then spending it by cleaning the garage?
4. And finally, just because I am not confused enough…. “Shun all of his: aim at righteousness, godliness, faith, love, steadfastness and gentleness. Fight the good fight of faith, take hold of the eternal life to which you were called when you made the good confession…” 1 Timothy 6:14 Maybe you could explain over a couple of weeks what each of those goals really means for us every day? What’s the difference between righteousness and self-righteousness? How can we be godly…wow that sounds not possible? Faith I think I get but maybe a refresher on what I can refocus on. Love I get and you talk about a lot – and maybe I will try harder to love those people I don’t like. But what is steadfastness and gentleness about? How can you be gentle and fight? What’s the linkage to confession? (already in the works- being preached!!)
5. Work your way through the book of Acts- what do we learn from the early church about being the church today
6. Fear driven vs. love driven faith
7. Theology of suffering.
8. Non-violent atonement.
9. Understanding and recognizing call.
I’ve already shared my thoughts.
I like the “understanding and recognizing call” one. “Theology of suffering” would be unpleasant but necessary to counter current societal effects and trends.
Sermon series on the book Jesus of Suburbia… what responses and thoughts for its points?
For some time now, we have been unable to respond to the posts with comments which in turn made Pastor James less likely to post because no one could respond- UGH! That’s part of the fun of blogs- interactivity! So that has been corrected and more blogs are on their way…
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