Why Do I Need Faith To Know God? Hebrews 11:6 October 4, 2009

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Why Do I Need Faith To Know God? Hebrews 11:6 October 4, 2009 In this message, Pastor Kurt explained why faith is the only way we can connect with God to please Him, and what faith that draws us close to God looks like. Facebook is the way many people connect. Do you have a facebook account? What is your experience with it? Faith - The Only Way Questions on the sermon 1. What are some ways people try to connect with God (think not only in terms of other Christians but other religions)? 2. Where do many people place their faith when it comes to connecting with God? Why is that flawed (Think of the Deepok Chopra example, where is his faith?) 3. The problem with our ability to relate with a holy God is the pervasive nature of our sinfulness. Pastor Kurt discussed three areas of sinfulness, what were they? How does this change your understanding of your own sinfulness before God? 4. Pastor Kurt reviewed proofs for Godʼs existence. Here are the proofs plus an additional one. Which one makes the most sense to you? Why can none of these proofs make an atheist believe? Causal Argument - Everything in the universe has a cause. What caused the universe, it must be God. Beauty and Complexity Argument - The complexity and beauty of the universe argues for a designer, creator and sustainer which can only be God.

Moral Argument - There is a universal sense of right and wrong in humanity. Where does a standard of rightness come from unless it is outside ourselves? Intuition Proof - David Livingston traveled extensively in Africa and later announced he knew of no people on earth, no matter how primitive, who did not have a concept of God. 5. Did you know God will reward us for how we live our life in Christ? What are some ways we are rewarded now, in this life? How will we be rewarded in eternity? 6. 1 Corinthians 3:13-15 says what we build with our life will be tested by fire. How does this make you feel? What can we build with our life that will last for eternity? 7. 2 Corinthians 5:10 - Reminds us that while Christians will receive rewards, others will suffer loss. What do you think is the loss we will suffer? How does this change your understanding of the consequences for sin in the life of Christian? 8. Why is knowing truth about God not enough for saving faith and intimacy with God? What is the heart felt component of faith (John 17)? BONUS DISCUSSION Have your small group work together to create a concise definition of faith. It is harder than you think! Teacher helps are below. What Does Faith Mean In The Book of Hebrews? At its root, the term faith means trust. To trust God is not an act of unreasonable belief. God demonstrates Himself to be eminently trustworthy. He gives ample reason for us to trust Him. He proves that He Himself is faithful and worthy of our trust. The book of Hebrews gives us a definition of faith: Now faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen (Hebrews 11:1). Faith comprises the essence of our hope for the future. In simple terms this means that we trust God for the future based on our faith in what He has accomplished in the past. There is every reason to believe that God will be as faithful to His promises in the future as He has been in the past. There is a reason, a substantive reason, for the hope that is within us. The faith that is the evidence of things unseen has primary but not exclusive reference to the future. Nobody has a crystal ball that works. We all walk into the future by faith and not by sight. We may plan

and make projections, but even the best foresight we have is based upon our educated guesses. The only solid evidence we have for our own future is drawn from the promises of God. Here faith offers evidence for things unseen. We trust God for tomorrow. We also trust or believe that God exists. And although God Himself is unseen, the Scriptures make it clear that the invisible God is made manifest through the things that are visible (Romans 1:20). Though God is not visible to us, we believe that He is there because He has manifested Himself so clearly in creation and in history. Faith includes believing in God. Yet that kind of faith is not particularly praiseworthy. James writes, You believe that there is one God. You do well. Even the demons believe and tremble! (James 2:19). Here sarcasm drips from Jamesʼs pen. To believe in the existence of God merely qualifies us to be demons. It is one thing to believe in God; it is another thing to believe God. To believe God, to trust in Him for our very life, is the essence of the Christian faith. What Does Faith Mean In All of Scripture? (A discussion from Baker Encyclopedia of the Bible) Faith - State wholly and steadfastly in God. Faith lies at the very heart of Christianity, and its importance for todayʼs Christian is clear from the fact that Protestantism was born through the rediscovery of the great words The just shall live by faith (Rom 1:17 kjv). Definition - Faith in the OT and NT carries several meanings. It may mean simple trust in God or in the Word of God, and at other times faith almost becomes equivalent to active obedience. It may also find expression in the affirmation of a creedal statement. Thus it also comes to mean the entire body of received Christian teaching or truth. So in Colossians 2:7, the term suggests something to be accepted as a whole and embodied in personal life. In 2 Timothy 4:7 Paul witnesses to having kept the faith. The OT. In the OT, faith first involved God as the Creator, Sustainer of life, and the Controller of history. Psalms such as 19 and 24 are evidence of the trust in God as the Creator, whose sovereign power continues to operate in the creation. The OT also strongly emphasizes faith as confidence in Godʼs covenant or in the covenant God has made with Abraham and his descendants. The call of Abraham and the promise that his descendants would be used in the history of redemption became the basis of the narratives of the OT, being seen as the working out of that covenant. Once the nation Israel is brought into being, God sustains and protects it. The land which was promised to Abraham and his descendants remains theirs. The exodus from Egypt is a prominent indication that God is at work restoring his people to the Promised Land. The obedience of the people of God as the proper expression of faith is seen clearly in the OT. Without seeing God, his people believe and obey him. Abraham leaves his native land to go into unknown territory. The people of Israel leave Egypt following the leadership of God to a land they cannot see. The promise of God gives them courage to possess the land that has been promised to them. After the exodus the covenant of Abraham was confirmed with the people of Israel by the sprinkling of blood (Ex 24:6, 7). There was to be strict obedience to Godʼs commands as an expression of faith. This response of human faith to Jehovahʼs faithfulness was national and collective. There also were, however, commands to and instances of personal faith. Not only the narrative and legal portions of the OT, but also the poetic and prophetic writings emphasize faith. The Psalms abound in expressions of personal confidence in Jehovah even in dark times. Habbakuk points out that the righteous shall live by his faith (2:4). From such instances it is clear that as Jehovahʼs education of Israel proceeded, the matter of faith in Godʼs faithfulness became more and more

a matter of individual and personal response, and it is in the prophets that several ingredients such as trust, obedience, fear, and certainty blend into the understanding of such personal faith. The NT. As over against the OT, where the accent is on the faithfulness of God, in the NT the emphasis is placed on the active, responding faith of the hearer to the promised, final revelation in the Messiah, Jesus Christ. Both verb and noun regularly describe the adequate response of man to Jesusʼ word and deed and to the gospel of the primitive church. The Synoptic Gospels. The most striking feature of the synoptic Gospels is the use of faith without identifying its object. If you have faith as a grain of mustard seed (Mt 17:20). Your faith has saved you (Lk 7:50). When Jesus saw their faith (Mk 2:5). Jesus is portrayed as one who by his work and word opens the door to faith and makes faith possible. The question is not whether the faith is in Jesus or in the Father; the implication is undoubtedly both, but as with every true bearer of the Word of God the eye of faith is turned to the One who sends. The restored portion of the synagogue at Capernaum, the city where Jesus saw the faith of the men who lowered the paralytic through the roof of a house (Mk 2:5). On more than one occasion Jesus denies the request for a miracle to substantiate his words (Mt 12:38, 39; 16:1 4). Faith is response to the Word alone without any supporting props. No sign is to be given but the sign of Jonah. In the story of the rich lean and Lazarus (Lk 16:19 31) Jesus denies the request for the spectacular and insists that the hearer must respond to the word given to him (cf. Jn 20:29). The Word demands self-surrender and commitment. Hence, the very nature of the Word and of faith becomes an obstacle to the proud and the powerful. Faith is the medium by which the power of God is made visible. It moves mountains, heals the sick, and is the means of entrance into the kingdom. It may be mingled with doubt, as with the father who sought healing for his son ( I believe; help my unbelief! [Mk 9:24]), or as with John the Baptist in prison, who, even with his doubts, was confirmed by Jesus as the greatest of the offspring of woman (Mt 11:2 15). Peterʼs (and the other disciplesʼ) perception was very faulty, but Jesus affirms Peterʼs confession as the foundation stone of the church. The synoptic Gospels portray the early faith of the disciples in all its limitations and weaknesses, yet it is still faith in that it is their positive response to Jesusʼ word and work. The Fourth Gospel. Faith is an especially significant concept in the Gospel of John, though the word (in the Greek) occurs only as a verb. Quite often the reference has to do with the acceptance that something is true, that is, simple credence, or belief: Believe me that I am in the Father and the Father in me (Jn 14:11); If you had believed Moses, you would believe me (Jn 5:46). This is consistent with the importance of truth in the fourth Gospel. (cf. also Jn 8:24; 11:27, 42; 16:27, 30; 17:8.) Even more significant is the special expression to believe into in the sense of putting oneʼs trust into another. The particular form of the expression is without parallel before the fourth Gospel and may well express the strong sense of personal trust in the eternal Word made flesh. In John 3:16 whoever puts trust in him has eternal life. Those who put their trust in him are given power to become sons of God to be born of God (Jn 1:12). They will never thirst (6:35); they will live, even though they die (11:25). In other places John speaks of trust or faith in an absolute sense, that is, without referring to the one in whom trust is placed. In John 11:15 Jesus arrives after the death of Lazarus and is glad in order that you might believe. The outcome is going to be faith. Similarly in the prologue (Jn 1:7), John the Baptist bears witness in order that through him all might believe. As Jesus satisfies the doubt of Thomas concerning the resurrection, he says, Have you believed because you have seen me? Blessed are those who have not

seen and yet believe (20:29). In these and other passages the fundamental outcome of Jesusʼ witness to himself is trust. Faith and knowledge are closely related. In John 6:69 Peter says, We have believed, and have come to know that you are the Holy One of God. In his priestly prayer Jesus says that eternal life is to know thee, the only true God, and Jesus Christ whom thou hast sent (Jn 17:3). Also, God is seen through the eyes of faith. No one has ever seen God, but the Only Begotten has revealed him (1:18). He who has seen Jesus has seen the Father (14:9). To believe is also expressed in the verb receive. Those who receive Christ are given power to become the sons of God (Jn 1:12). Trust is that form of knowing or seeing by which the glory of God (1:14; 17:4) is made present. Paul. In his letters Paul writes about faith from a number of angles. He sets faith over against works of the Law as the only and true basis for righteousness (Rom 1 4; Gal 1 4) and appeals to Abraham to prove his point: Abraham believed God and it was reckoned to him for righteousness (Gn 15:6; Rom 4:5; Gal 3:6). This is entirely apart from the Law (Rom 3:21); righteousness is the gift of God through faith in Christ, specifically in his atoning work. Behind Paulʼs conviction lies his awareness of the radical and pervasive sinfulness of humans which renders each one helpless. Humanity is dead in sin, but is made alive by faith in the word and work of Jesus mediated through the gospel. Faith, then, is faith in Jesus Christ. The number of metaphors Paul employs to describe the consequences of faith is staggering. It is by faith that believers are justified (Rom 5:1), reconciled (2 Cor 5:18), redeemed (Eph 1:7), made alive (Eph 2:5), adopted into the family of God (Rom 8:15, 16), recreated (2 Cor 5:17), transported into a new kingdom (Col 1:13), and set free (Gal 5:1). Faith is, for Paul, the sine qua non of every aspect of salvation, from the grace that convicts to the receiving of the full inheritance at the coming of the Lord. In Paulʼs letters faith is bound up with love so that the great exponent of justification by faith becomes also the articulate exponent of distinctive Christian love. To say that faith is indispensable to salvation is only part of the truth, for faith expresses itself through love: For in Christ Jesus neither circumcision nor uncircumcision is of any avail, but faith working through love (Gal 5:6); If I have all faith, so as to remove mountains, but have not love, I am nothing (1 Cor 13:2). Love is both the genesis and the ultimate expression of faith. Hence, even for Paul there can be no total separation between faith and works. This love of which Paul speaks is the essential fruit of the Spirit through whom the life of faith is lived. Only by virtue of the indwelling Spirit does faith find expression in love. Rest of the NT. James speaks of faith as being completed by works (Jas 2:22). He is opposing that concept of faith which thinks primarily of creedal assent, of believing that something is true without acting upon it. James assumes, like Paul, the primacy of faith but is warning against those who would draw wrong conclusions. Faith apart from works is not faith; it is barren (v 20). The practical dimension of faith is the burden of much of this epistle. The writer of Hebrews recognizes that faith has always been characteristic of the people of God and their specially called leaders. Faith makes substantial what is otherwise nebulous and uncertain; it makes evidential what is not visible. By faith the people of God have a more certain ground for their lives and their action than the world is able to discern (Heb 11:1). The great cloud of witnesses (12:1) bear testimony by their faith to the faithfulness of God. Faith is opened up by the Word of God, finds expression through the Holy Spirit who is given, and bears witness to the lordship of Jesus Christ.

Answer Key 4. It takes a new birth experience (John 3:3), in which God gives us spiritual life and ability to see and believe in Jesus (John 1:12-13), without which we could not believe (Eph. 2:1)