Matthew 21:21
Truly, I say to you, if you have faith and do not doubt, you will not only do what has been done to the fig tree, but even if you say to this mountain, ‘Be taken up and thrown into the sea,’ it will happen.
Oh Me of Little Faith
I must admit that sometimes my faith is
very small. It shows that I don’t really trust God. The opposite of
faith is mistrust. I tend to trust what I see with my eyes and not what I
believe in my heart to be true. When Jesus said “O you of little faith,
why did you doubt” (Matt. 14:31), He could have been talking to me
because, like Peter, I start to look at the water and begin to sink. The
problem with Peter is the same problem that I have: I take my eyes off
Jesus and look at the circumstances. How about you? How strong is your
faith? Does your faith in God look like craziness to others, and do you
care what others think? I have to ask myself that same question. One
woman in Jesus’ day had great faith, which is why Jesus told her in
Matthew 15:28, “’O woman, great is your faith! Be it done for you as you
desire.’ And her daughter was healed instantly.”
Increasing Your Faith
When I read the Bible, it seems to
increase my faith because I can look back at the pages of history and
see just how faithful God was. Since we know that God never changes
(Mal. 3:6), and since our faith is in Jesus Christ, we should realize
that He “is the same yesterday and today and forever” (Heb. 13:8). What
He’s done in the past He can do today. I believe if we are in the Bible
on a daily basis, our faith will grow because “faith comes from hearing,
and hearing through the word of Christ” (Rom. 10:17). So I can promise
you that if you are reading the Bible every single day, you will grow
your faith because faith comes by hearing, and I believe we can say by
reading–reading “through the Word of Christ” and knowing that Jesus is
the Word (John 1:1, 14), and that means we should be abiding in His
Word.
A Radical Faith
We can never receive great rewards
without taking great risks because great risks bring great rewards.
Jesus said, “If you had faith like a grain of mustard seed, you could
say to this mulberry tree, ‘Be uprooted and planted in the sea,’ and it
would obey you” (Luke 17:6). Stepping out in faith is scary business. I
am a bi-vocational pastor, and one day I decided to quit my job and step
out on faith because I knew that to pastor the church and write for
some Christian websites while also working at a secular job was not
going to work. Something was going to give, and it was probably going to
be me, so I turned in my notice and gave them three weeks to find a
replacement at the foster care agency I worked for. Just at the end of
the three-week period, I received an offer to write for several other
websites for a ministry, including the one that includes this daily
devotional. God was faithful and supplied all of my needs. I’m not
telling you I wasn’t worried and that my lack of faith didn’t cause me
some sleeplessness, but taking that risk turned out to be the best
decision of my life. It did look crazy to some of my family and friends
and even my former co-workers, but I didn’t care. I knew I was meant to
do this. What about you? Having a strong faith could make you look crazy
to others, too, but do you care?
A Closing Prayer
Great Father, I know that faith is
stepping out into an uncertain future, but since You created the
universe, I know I can trust You. I can’t trust my own resources. But
You, God, Who has everything at Your disposal, can give me the assurance
to believe the things I don’t see by trusting in You, Whom I’ve never
seen, and that’s because I have faith in You. In Jesus’ precious name I
pray.
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