What does the Bible say about faith?
The Bible teaches that faith is a divine gift, authored and completed by Jesus Christ.
This perspective aligns with the Reformed understanding that faith is unmerited and is part of God's sovereign plan of salvation. Hebrews 10:22 encourages believers to approach God with a true heart in full assurance of faith, which brings security in Christ's promises. This passage not only highlights the need for faith but also the basis upon which it rests—God's unchanging truth and faithfulness, which assures us of His eternal promises.
Hebrews 10:22
How do we know God's promises are true?
We can trust God's promises because they are affirmed in Scripture and fulfilled in Christ.
Moreover, when we reflect on our own experiences, we may recognize moments in our lives where God exceeded our expectations and fulfilled His promises in ways we could not have imagined. This reinforces our confidence in His commitment to us as our Father. Believers can approach God's throne with boldness, knowing that He is not only willing but able to fulfill every promise, provided assurance through the Holy Spirit in our hearts, enabling us to trust amid uncertainty.
2 Corinthians 1:20, Hebrews 10:22
Why is prayer important for Christians?
Prayer is essential for Christians as it is the means by which we commune with God and present our needs.
Furthermore, prayer is a means through which our hearts are aligned with God's will, and it operates under the assurance that our requests are heard by a loving Father who desires fellowship with us. Through prayer, the believer engages in a continuous dialogue with God, supported by the Holy Spirit who guides our petitions. Thus, the act of praying is crucial for spiritual growth, encouraging Christians to 'draw near' to God with confidence, fostering a deeper understanding of His character and intentions for our lives.
Hebrews 10:22
“Let us draw near with a true heart in full assurance of faith.”
— Hebrews 10:22
THE principle of faith is altogether divine—created by no human power, commanded by no human authority, and sustained by no human resources. "Faith is the gift of God." Jesus is its author and its finisher. It is a free, unmerited, unpurchased bestowment. It is given to the poor because of their poverty, to the vile because they are unworthy, to the bankrupt because they have "nothing to pay." Such is the faith which the Bible enforces.
There can be no perfection of the Lord Jesus of more exalted glory in His eye than His faithfulness. If the truthfulness of Christ can be impeached, then no reliable confidence can be placed in anything that He is, that He does, or that He says. But because He is not only truthful, but truth, His word eternally fixed and unalterable—"righteousness the girdle of His loins, and faithfulness the girdle of His reins," veracity an essential perfection of His nature—He condescendingly appeals to our confidence, and says, "Only believe." And have we in any single instance ever had reason to doubt His word? Has He ever given us cause to distrust Him? No, never! He has often done more than He promised—never less. His word is truth. All the promises of God are yes and amen in Him. Has He promised to be a Father, a Husband, a Mother, and a Friend to those who put their trust in Him? Has He pledged to guide their steps, to supply their needs, to shield their souls, to do them good and not evil, to be with them down to old age, and even unto death? Then hear Him say, "Heaven and earth shall pass away, but my words shall not pass away."
As the Mediator and High Priest of His Church, it is one of Christ's especial prerogatives that He has to do with the prayers of His saints. Standing midway between God and the suppliant, He intercepts the petition, purifies it from all taint, divests it of all imperfections, supplies its deficiencies, and then blending it with His own merits, perfuming it with the much incense of His atoning sacrifice, He presents it to the Father endorsed with His name, and urged by His own suit. Thus the believer has an "Advocate with the Father," who ever "lives to make intercession." Oh, costly and precious privilege, that of prayer! Access to God—fellowship with the Most High—communion with the Invisible One—filial communion with our Heavenly Father—mighty privilege this, and yet, vast as it is, it is ours. Then, beloved, with the throne of grace accessible moment by moment—with the Holy Spirit disclosing each want, inditing each petition, and framing each request—with Christ at the right hand of God presenting the petition—and with a Father in heaven bowing down His ear, and hearkening but to answer, surely we may "trust and not be afraid." Why should we stand afar off? why doubt, and linger, and hesitate? "Having therefore, brethren, boldness (or liberty) to enter into the holiest by the blood of Jesus . . . . let us draw near . . . . in full assurance of faith."
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