Tag Archives: believing in god’s faithfulness

Training Your Faith

In 2019 I was offered a voluntary severance package from the company I had been at for nearly 15 years. After a lot of prayer and answers from God, I accepted the package and started my own business. After a few months, things were going well. I was getting steady customers and starting to grow. Just as things were looking up, Covid hit and pretty much shut me down. In that moment I had a choice to make. I could look at my friends from my previous company who were getting a steady check, and I could be upset at God, or I could remember that I heard from Him and trust that He’d always taken care of me in the past. When crisis hits, our natural inclination is to think God has abandoned us. However, I’ve learned that spiritual maturity is built on remembering the faithfulness of God.

In Exodus 17, the Israelites were in the middle of the wilderness and there wasn’t any water. One version says they were tormented by thirst and they began to complain and argue with Moses asking why he brought them out of Egypt if they were just going to die of thirst. These people had just witnessed the plagues God brought on Egypt, the parting of the Red Sea and were receiving daily manna from heaven. Their current crisis had them thinking God had abandoned them and their mind said they would have been better off living in slavery. Moses went to the Lord and God told him to strike the rock and water would come out of it. Moses named the place “Arguing” because they had argued whether God was with them or not.

In Psalm 77 Asaph was going through a tough time and starting to think that God had forgotten him. Then he penned verses 11-12, “But then I recall all you have done, O Lord; I remember your wonderful deeds of long ago. They are constantly in my thoughts. I cannot stop thinking about your mighty works” (NLT). He chose to remember God’s faithfulness in a wilderness season when God was silent. He chose to lift his hands toward heaven anyway. Faith is having a well trained memory that looks at God’s faithfulness over time instead of our current thirst. A good habit is to write down times God has been faithful to you in the past, to share them with others and to read them when times get tough. Doing this will help train your faith to trust in the wilderness.

Photo by Mariam G on Unsplash

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Reawakening Hope

About twenty years ago I did some things and went through some that changed my life. I made poor decisions and suffered consequences for them. At one point I was beating myself up over it. I began to get worked up and defeated over one thing in particular. Because of the things I had gone through, the denomination I was a part of at the time had a rule that people in my circumstance could never be in any ministry role. It was devastating. My whole life I had dreamed of one day being in ministry, and now that dream was dead. A friend came over and asked why I was upset. When I told him, he responded, “What makes you think that you, or this denomination, can rescind God’s calling? You don’t have that kind of power!” It was the slap in the face I needed, and I began to hope and believe again that one day that would happen.

In Romans 4, Paul is writing about Abraham, God’s promise to him and how it relates to our faith. Verse 14 says, “If God’s promise is only for those who obey the law, then faith is not necessary and the promise is pointless” (NLT). He explains none of us are capable of keeping God’s Law without messing up and God’s promises are received through faith. Then verse 17-18 says, ”This (Abraham receiving the promise) happened because Abraham believed in the God who brings the dead back to life and who creates new things out of nothing. Even when there was no reason for hope, Abraham kept hoping.” That’s powerful. Even when there was no reason to hope, he kept hoping. That’s truly was faith is.

If you feel like a dream or calling is dead, it’s time to hope and believe again. Your past actions, or your current circumstances, do not have the power to change God’s promises or His calling. We serve a God who brings dead dreams, dead hopes, dead callings, dead you name it back to life. There is nothing that is impossible for Him. We have to push past the lies and what our eyes tell us in order to believe what God promised. We must awaken faith and hope in our heart again and trust that God, who brings dead things to life and creates new things out of nothing, will respond and move on our behalf. It’s not easy, but that’s what faith is. Abraham did it and was rewarded for his faith. I believe God will reward us too when we stand with that kind of faith and begin moving in the direction He called us to.

Photo by Dmitry Ratushny on Unsplash

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