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Faith
In
preceding chapters we have considered the subject of faith
so far as it relates to the receiving of God’s cleansing
work in the soul; it remains now to consider the general
subject as it relates to the Christian life. The word is
often applied to a system of belief or teaching, as
"the faith of the gospel." This use of the word
calls for no notice here. Faith in this work means the
faculty of the human soul by which we lay hold upon God
and are brought into intimate contact with him, and
through which we receive things from him. All have the
power to believe. Evangelical faith is believing
"that God is and he is a rewarder of them that
diligently seek him" (Hebrews 11:6). It is believing
that God is what the Bible says he is and that he will do
what the Bible says he will do. It is a confident and
implicit relying upon him. It is counting him true and his
word true, and putting that confidence into action in our
lives.
In Galatians 5:22 faith is said to be one of the fruits
of the Spirit. We have a natural faculty of faith, or the
power to believe, and the Spirit of God, working upon this
natural power, quickens our faith and turns it into
channels that lead Godward, and thus God becomes the
object of our faith. Faith being a fruit of the Spirit, it
naturally follows that the more spiritual we become the
stronger will be our faith and the more effective it will
be in its action. Like other natural qualities, it is more
highly developed in some persons than in others, but there
are none but can have faith in God sufficient for their
own salvation and sufficient to enable them to live a
godly and true life. Faith is also capable of great
development. As we advance from one experience to another
in the Christian life and see how God has blessed us and
led us on and helped us, that increases our faith, adding
to it from day to day. It is God’s will that every one
of his children have sufficient faith to make them
overcomers in this world, so that they may live a life to
please God in all things.
Qualities of Faith
Faith is not as blind Credulity. Faith has keen
eyes, and she looks forth with unfaltering gaze. She knows
full well that she need not close her eyes to any fact.
She knows that the whole realm of truth is hers. She gazes
at all the facts in the quiver of Reason and fears none of
them. She sees in and beyond these truths a mighty God,
the object of her confidence. Credulity fears truth, but
Faith rejoices in it, for in every truth she sees the
revelation of her Beloved. Her eyes are quickened by love,
so that she sees where other eyes cannot see. She sees the
unseen and beholds the invisible. Her vision pierces the
dark and threatening clouds of earthly circumstances and
beholds God still upon his throne and still her helper.
Faith is courageous. She does not triumph because her
enemies are weak, but because she is strong, and
difficulties only make her stronger. She faces her foes
with confidence, for she knows Him in whom she trusts. She
is bold with the boldness that comes from strength, for
she knows that she has access to all the strength of God.
Why should she be timid or shrinking? is not her God
greater than all? is he not with her? She is hopeful even
in the darkest hour. She can always see something in which
to rejoice. Dark skies do not appall her. The keen winds
of persecution and the beating waves of trouble cannot
silence her song of rejoicing. She knows in whom she
trusts. She knows that the end will be victory, and so she
goes upon her way confident, courageous, and hopeful.
The Foundation of Faith
Paul told the Corinthians that his preaching to
them was not with "enticing words of man’s wisdom,
but in the demonstration of the Spirit and of power; that
their faith should not stand in the wisdom of men but in
the power of God" (I Corinthians 2:4). Faith has a
more sure foundation than the wisdom of man. It is based
upon the character and promises of God. When we come to
know the character of God, through the revelation of
himself in the Bible and through what we learn of him by
our own experience, it affords us a certain foundation for
faith. We learn his truthfulness; therefore we know his
promises are true. We learn of his faithfulness; therefore
we know that his promises will be fulfilled. We learn of
his kindness, and we know that he will be kind to us. We
learn of his love, and we know that he will manifest that
love to us in helping us. God has spoken many gracious
promises to us. He cannot lie. These promises were made to
be fulfilled and not to be broken. They are "yea and
amen" to every one that believes. God never tries to
find a way to excuse himself in not fulfilling his
promises. He never desires not to fulfill them. He has
never made to us a single promise that it is not his
delight to carry out for us. He stands behind them all to
make them good, not simply because his faithfulness and
truthfulness are at stake, but because what he has
promised us is the natural fruitage of his love toward us.
In these things faith has a foundation that can never
fail her. Upon it she can confidently stand. This is the
only sure foundation that she can have. Any other will
give way beneath her feet. God’s character will never
change, and so his promises will never fail. If you would
have faith, look at the promises of God and then look
behind the promises at God himself. Look at his character.
Contemplate its beauty and strength until your heart
becomes enraptured. Behold his perfection until your heart
is warmed with adoration. Many are weak indeed because
they do not really know God. They have never really
studied his character. They are unaware of his perfection.
They are unaware of his interest in them. They do not know
the strength and richness of his love. They might know
these things if they would read of him in the Bible as
they ought and if they would spend proper time in
meditating over what they read. Reader, if you have never
given sufficient time to the study of the character of
God, you ought to take that time now. You can spend
profitably many days and months therein. Do not be afraid
that you will exhaust the subject, for God is infinite.
Too many Christians never become acquainted with God
further than to be on just common speaking terms with him.
They never attain to that intimate knowledge of him, that
intimate relation with him, that it is their privilege to
enjoy. The more perfectly we know him and the closer to
him, the more certain we shall feel that our faith stands
upon a solid foundation, one that will never yield under
any circumstances.
Based on anything else than the character and promises
of God, faith must ever be weak and wavering. Some base
their faith on their experience. As long as they have full
confidence in their experience, they think that they can
ask God for things and obtain them because of what they
are. It is very good to have confidence in our experience,
but to base our confidence and our faith on our experience
is a very unwise thing. If we do this, anything that makes
us doubt our experience in any degree will hinder our
faith just when an active vigorous faith is needful. Many
times people base their faith upon their emotions. If our
feelings are the foundation for our faith, we shall
apparently be very strong in faith when we are joyful; but
when emotions subside, our faith is gone. Faith must have
a substantial grounding, or it will fail just when most
needed. To stand, it must be based upon things that are
immutable. If we anchor our boat to a floating log, we
shall drift with its motions. Our emotions rise and fall
as the tide. If we make them the basis for faith, we shall
never be able to stand.
Emotion is often a false witness, while faith’s
witness is always true. Emotion says that we are strong
when we are joyful, and weak when we are in heaviness. Its
witness is not true. Our real strength is practically the
same in both instances, only we are more encouraged and
inclined to use our strength when emotions run high.
Joyful emotions stimulate faith, hope, and courage, and
render them active; while opposite emotions depress and
hinder them. The operation of faith is normal and
undisturbed only when emotion is neutral or when it is
fully separated in action from faith, and our faith in
nowise depends upon it. Just as long as we base our faith
upon our feelings, it will rise and fall as our feelings
do. We shall be now strong, now weak; now certain, now
uncertain; now confident, now fearful. Get your faith and
your feelings separated. It is only by so doing that your
faith will hold fast in the times when you need it.
When your emotions run high, you have need of little
faith, for the strength of your emotions will carry you
through; but when emotion subsides and you are left
without the stimulus that it gives, it is then that you
need faith, and it is then that you must have it in order
to keep from being tossed about. Right here is the
difficulty with a multitude of Christians. Their faith is
based upon their emotions, not upon the Word of God;
therefore so long as they feel all right, their faith is
steady, but as soon as their feelings subside or as soon
as bad feelings begin to come, their faith wavers and
shrinks, and they are ready to give up in despair. This is
child’s play, and you will never be more than a child in
faith so long as you base your faith upon your emotions.
God wants you to be man-sized and man-strong. He does not
want you to be the creature of your emotions. He wants you
to stand by faith, by a faith anchored to his immutable
promises. When faith is so anchored, waves of feeling may
rise and fall, the wind may blow this way or that, but the
man stands firm. He is saved whether he feels good or
feels bad, whether he is joyful or sorrowful, whether his
heart is overflowing with thankfulness or his emotions are
perfectly neutral. Faith must be based on something
outside ourselves if it shall ever have a healthy growth
and strong development.
Some people base their faith largely upon what other
people think of them. They can feel that they are saved so
long as certain ones seem to have confidence in them and
are manifesting that confidence at every opportunity. It
is all right to appreciate the confidence of our brethren
and the manifestation of that confidence, but we should
not base our hopes of heaven and our confidence in
ourselves on such manifestations of approval. We must
stand for ourselves. We must know ourselves and our own
relations with God; we must not depend upon others to know
for us. Get close enough to God so that nobody else can
know your state as well as you yourself. Let no one be
intermediate between you and God. He has promised that you
should know him for yourself and that you should know
yourself and your standing before him. Seek this close
relation with God. The door is wide open; you may enter
into it if you will. God will see that you find the way if
you really try. When once your faith is anchored on the
solid foundation that he furnishes for you, the accusation
of men and devils will not affright you nor make you give
up your confidence in God.
The Effect of Faith
Paul says, "Let us draw near with a true heart
in full assurance of faith" (Hebrews 10:22). There
are those who tell us that we can never know we are saved,
or in fact ever be very sure of anything in regard to our
relations with God. Nothing could be more contrary to the
teachings of the Scriptures. Faith brings knowledge. There
is never a completed action by faith but there is an
assurance that follows that action. It is the natural
fruit of that action. Faith works with assurance. He who
has faith draws nigh to God with expectation. He knows
that God is true and that His promise is for him. He lays
hold upon the promise because the promise belongs to him
and because God is pleased to have him claim his rights in
the promise. When he takes hold upon the promise, he is
sure of the result. Sometimes people speak of "taking
things by faith" when they rather mean claiming them
without faith, for it is evident that they do not have the
faith they are claiming. The only way to obtain a thing
from God is through faith, speaking of those things which
come to us through prayer. So whatever of this nature we
get from him, we must take by faith, but when we take it
by faith we have it. When faith once gets her hands on a
thing, it is hers, but it is not hers until she has hold
upon it, and when she has gotten hold of it, she has the
consciousness of having it in her grasp, the same as we
have the consciousness of having in our hands that which
we have grasped.
Doubts may come from various sources. One source is a
lack of knowledge of God’s will. As long as we hold in
question whether it is God’s will to do a thing for us,
our faith cannot be active and strong in its grasp. There
will be an uncertainty about it all. We need to get this
question of God’s will settled first. Sometimes this is
very hard for us to decide, but of one thing we may always
be sure – that it is God’s will to give us what we
need and what we must have in order to serve him
successfully. God is willing to give. He does not have to
be forced to give because he has promised. He does not
have to be coaxed to give it nor wheedled into granting
our request. He stands ready to fulfill his promises.
Ordinarily, therefore, when a need is presented to us, we
can take it for granted that it is God’s will to supply
that need, though he must choose the way in which he will
supply it.
Doubts often come because we feel unworthy. We need
something, and we desire it very much. We do not doubt
that God would give it if we were more worthy to receive
it. We could readily believe that he would give it to
somebody else, but will he give it to us? If what we
receive depended upon our worthiness to receive, we should
certainly never receive very much from God, but it does
not depend upon our worthiness. It depends upon his
graciousness and upon his mercy and upon his kindness and
upon his love. If we must wait until we are worthy of his
blessings, we shall never receive them. It is often true
that the most worthy Christians, or those who are most
godlike in their lives, are the very ones who feel most
unworthy. This is so because they understand better and
see more clearly the perfections of God. There are, of
course, those whose lives are unworthy before God and who
for that reason cannot have faith to receive, because
their consciences trouble them. These must needs get a
clear conscience before faith will take hold for other
things. But those true Christians who seek things of God
never have a strong feeling of their worthiness. It is
true that they can often say, like Hezekiah, that they
have lived perfect before the Lord up to all their
understanding; but notwithstanding that, there is a sense
of unworthiness before God, so that they do not base their
faith upon their worthiness but upon the great
loving-kindness of God.
In order for us to have the assurance of faith, the
promises must come to mean us and mean us now. In
approaching God for something, you ought to come to him as
though you were the only person in the world and that the
promise was especially made for you. You should treat the
promise just as though nobody else had a share in it. The
promises that cover your needs are to you. They are to you
and for you just as much as though God had spoken them
directly to you personally and had included no one else.
Look upon them in this way. Treat them this way, always
bearing in mind that he must choose his manner of
fulfilling them.
Assurance is not emotion. You may be sure that you own
a farm. You may have a deed for it, properly recorded.
There may be no claims of any sort against the farm. But
though you know all these facts, such knowledge may not
excite any emotion at all in you. You may be ever so sure
of it, not question it in the least, and at the same time
be perfectly unemotional about it. The same is true many
times with the Christian experience. We may be perfectly
sure about it and yet not be able to tell a thing from our
emotions. The promises of God are true whether they excite
in us any emotion or not. He has said, "I will never
leave thee nor forsake thee" (Hebrews 13:5). This is
true, no matter how lonely or deserted we feel, so long as
we trust. Your part is to trust and obey. The rest belongs
to God. Be concerned about doing your part, but throw all
the responsibility for his part upon him. Do not try to
bear one bit of it yourself. Never try to help God. He is
able to do his own part. Never worry and strain yourself
about trying to have faith. Just be easy and comfortable
about things. When the responsibility of anything is
thrown upon God, he will not shrink from that
responsibility, neither will he fail to bear it properly.
A little incident from my own experience may help the
reader to understand what I mean. I was once traveling in
the evangelistic work with two helpers. We had arranged to
go on Monday morning to a certain town some distance away
to begin a meeting. We did not have the money to pay our
railroad fare. On Saturday we made our arrangements to go
and prayed the Lord to furnish the means which we needed.
On Sunday morning we went to the meeting and had a
glorious service. I forgot all about money. On Saturday I
had taken it for granted that the Lord would supply our
needs at that meeting, but on the way home from the
meeting, something seemed to say to me, "Where is
your money?" and I suddenly remembered that I had
received nothing at all. I had asked the Lord for it and
had expected it to come, but it had not come as I had
expected. For a moment I did not know what to say. Then I
answered: "Well, Lord you will have to look after
that. We are going to do our part." We went on a
number of miles to stay all night and found that a meeting
had been arranged for at that place; so I took it for
granted that our needs would be supplied here. We had
another very precious meeting, but it closed and the
people went home. I was detained a little, but presently
started for my stopping place through the darkness. A
voice seemed to say to me, "Where is your
money?" Here it was late at night, and we were to
start early the next morning. But my confidence was in
God, and I threw the responsibility on him, saying:
"That is your business, Lord. We are doing our part,
and we expect you to do yours." I went on my way not
concerned about the matter, when shortly I heard a voice
calling after me. I answered, and a man came running and
put something into my hand. When I reached my
lodging-place, I found that it was a bill sufficient to
pay all the expenses of our trip.
Do your part, be sure you have done it, and then you
can throw the responsibility upon God. You need not worry,
you need not fear. He will not fail you. Cast all your
cares upon him, for he careth for you. Do not think that
God will not attend to his business. Does he let the
planets get out of their orbits? Does he let the sun cease
to shine? Does he fail to bring spring after the winter?
Does he fail to give seed-time and harvest? Be not
fearful, but believing. He has said that heaven and earth
should pass away, but that his word should never pass
away; that is, it is the most certain thing in existence.
Plant your feet firmly on the promise. Count it yours.
Rejoice in it.
The Relation of Works to Faith
All Catholics and most Protestants trust in their
good works more than in God for salvation. This may seem a
strong statement, but many years of experience in dealing
with souls have brought me to that conclusion. No matter
how much the efficacy of faith is preached, when it comes
to the matter of practical Christian living, most people
trust more or less in their works to make them acceptable
before God. They try to do something to merit salvation,
and after they are saved they try to do something to merit
God’s approval. The ineffectiveness of such efforts is
made very plain by Paul. He says, "For by grace are
ye saved through faith; and that not of yourselves: it is
the gift of God: not of works, lest any man should
boast" (Ephesians 2:8, 9). There is absolutely no
saving merit in works. Salvation is a gift from God.
Anything that is purchased is not a gift. Anything that is
ours by right cannot be a gift to us. Salvation is called
the "free gift." It can never, therefore, in any
degree rest on our good works. Evil works cut us off from
God and grace, and so God requires us to shut evil works
out of our lives, but simply shutting these evil works out
of our lives does not win for us salvation.
"I do right, therefore I am right," is the
usual formula. This makes works precede faith, and makes
faith dependent on works. Those who base their standing
before God on their good works instead of upon his grace,
must continually question themselves whether their good
works are sufficiently good to recommend them to God. If
we could be saved in that manner, we would be saved by
faith in ourselves, and not by faith in God. The true
formula is, "I am right, therefore I do right."
Acts get their quality from intent, and intent comes from
the state of the heart. There can be no evil intent in a
righteous heart, and hence no evil act in the life. If the
fountain is clean, so is the stream; but if the fountain
is unclean, nothing that we can do to the stream will
cleanse the fountain. In Galatians 5:6 we read of
"faith which worketh by love." Faith is
therefore a motive power; and if there is true faith
abiding in us, it will work out in deeds of love and
kindness, of mercy, holiness, and truth.
We should remember, however, that it is not these deeds
that make the faith nor preserve it, but it is the faith
that makes the deed. James makes works the evidence of
faith; that is, faith is the tree and works are the fruit.
It is quite true that the fruit is of the same character
as the tree, but the fruit upon a good tree is often
marred by insects or drouth or damaged by the weather. The
fact that damaged or imperfect fruit is taken from a tree
does not prove that the tree is not alright. It may only
prove that the circumstances prevented the proper
development of the fruit. So the fruit of our faith may
not always be perfect. We may now and then come short of
our expectations. There may be things in our lives that we
should like to see better. We may be prevented by
circumstances from reaching the full development of our
lives and fruits as we should like to have them developed.
But nevertheless if we are God’s, the true life-power is
working in us. Judging ourselves solely by the fruit that
we bear under unfavorable circumstances is no more fair
than judging the tree by the imperfect fruit that may grow
upon it. I am not arguing in favor of wrongdoing. By no
means. If God is in us, our lives will be pure and our
deeds will be pure. The point that I wish to emphasize
here is that our faith should be in God and not in our
works. He who trust in his works may have righteousness,
but it is wholly a self-righteousness; but he who trusts
in the righteousness of Christ imparted to him by the Holy
Spirit has the righteousness of God, which is the
"righteousness of faith." We are righteous
because God makes us righteous. We remain righteous
because he keeps us righteous. Oh, that me would trust him
to be their righteousness instead of going about to
establish their own righteousness!
Living by Faith
"The just shall live by faith" (Romans
1:17). The Christian graces flourish only in the soil of
faith. Under the influence of doubt they droop and die. As
already stated, we should never trust in works in order to
maintain our righteousness. "We walk by faith, not by
sight" (2 Corinthians 5:7). That inward, conscious,
satisfying knowledge of being right with God can come only
by faith. Some people are always questioning their
experiences. They remind me of a man hiring out to work
for another man through harvest. All goes well the first
day, but the second morning he rises he feels tired and
sore from the work and probably does not feel at all
inclined to begin another day’s labor. So he walks off
the field and sits down upon a stump while the rest of the
laborers go to work. Presently one comes up to him and
says, "What is the matter, John?" He looks
gloomy and says: "Oh, I don’t feel well this
morning. I think I’ve lost my job." He is finally
convinced that he has not lost his job, and is persuaded
to go to work, and he gets along pretty well during the
day. The next morning it is cloudy, and he walks out into
the field again and sits down. Again he is asked what is
the matter, and his reply is: "Oh, it’s so cloudy
and threatening this morning. I think I have lost my
job." What do you suppose his employer would say?
Would it be, "I am sorry for you; I think you had
better go home"? No, it would be, "Get busy
there. We need your help."

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