What does the Bible say about trusting in the Lord?
The Bible encourages believers to commit their way to the Lord and trust Him for guidance and provision (Psalm 37:5).
The metaphor of life as a winding river illustrates the inherent unpredictability we face. Just as believers may encounter shadows and uncertainties, they are to remember Jesus' promise to guide them faithfully. In this trust, believers place their confidence in God’s perfect love and purpose, understanding that He knows the future and provides what is needed at each step. Thus, trusting in the Lord becomes the foundation for facing life's challenges, knowing that He is both close and in control of every situation.
How do we know that Jesus provides what we need?
Jesus is revealed in scripture as the all-sufficient source of grace and provision for believers (Ephesians 1:3).
Moreover, recognizing our own impotence only serves to highlight the sufficiency of Christ. The text elaborates that without the grace and strength that flows from Christ, we are left with nothing. Therefore, as believers, it is essential to continually approach the Savior in prayer for divine wisdom, power, and grace. This constant reliance on Jesus assures us that He will provide everything we lack, facilitating our growth and endurance as we navigate life's challenges.
Why is faith important for Christians?
Faith is essential for overcoming the world and is the victory that assures believers of God's deliverance (1 John 5:4).
In spiritual warfare, where unseen forces attack and threaten, faith acts as a shield, allowing Christians to resist temptation and stand firm against moral evils. It is through faith that believers draw upon the strength and resources of Christ, who empowers them to live righteously amidst adversity. Hence, nurturing and cultivating faith is crucial for any believer aiming to persevere and flourish in their spiritual journey.
Commit your way unto the Lord; trust also in him; and he shall bring it to pass. Psalm 37:5.
WHEN we consider the convolutions of life's future, how varied and undulating the path! It resembles in its windings and its changes the serpentine course of a river, as it pursues its way—now suddenly disappearing behind jutting rocks or towering headlands, now bursting into view again and rushing on, foaming and sparkling, through smiling meadows and sunny slopes—then by some sudden course lost again to view—surely the believer will feel the need of confidence in an invisible Hand to guide him through the labyrinth of his intricately tortuous way. This cloud of mystery, enshrouding all the future from our view, bids us trust. Not a step can we take by sight. We cannot even conjecture, much less decide, what the morrow will unfold in our history—what sweet sunbeam, shall illumine, or what somber cloud shall shade our path. How veiled from sight the next bend of our path! But, just as the dark, uncertain vista stands open to our view, our hearts all quaking for fear of what may transpire, Jesus meets us and says, "Only believe—only trust my love, wisely, gently, safely to guide you through the wilderness, into the good land that lies beyond."
The number, invisibility, and insidiousness of our spiritual foes—their combined power, and the surprisal of their incessant assaults—demands our trust in Jesus. Nothing is more unseen than the principalities and powers through which we have to force our way to heaven. Satan is invisible—his agents unseen—moral evil veiled—our hearts a great deep—the world masked; truly we have need to cling to, and confide in, Jesus, the Captain of our salvation, seeing that "we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this world, against spiritual wickedness in high places," and that therefore we are to take to ourselves the whole armor of God, remembering that "this is the victory that overcomes the world, even our faith," or trust in Jesus.
The foreign source of all our supplies for the battle and the journey of life pleads for our trust in Jesus. In ourselves we have no resources. Grace is not natural to us, holiness is not innate, and our native strength is but another term for utter impotence. Where, then, are supplies? All in Jesus. "It has pleased the Father that in Him all fullness should dwell." "Who has blessed us with all spiritual blessings in heavenly places (things) in Christ." Christ is both the believer's armory and his granary. The weapons of our warfare, and the supplies of our necessities—all are in Christ. And the life we live as warriors and as pilgrims must be a life of continuous coming to, and trusting in, a full Christ, an all-sufficient Savior. If as each morning dawns, and before we gird ourselves for the conflict, the duties, and the trials of the day, we breathe from our hearts to our Heavenly Father the prayer, "Give me, my Father, this day my daily bread; I look to You for the wisdom that counsels me, for the power that keeps me, for the love that soothes me, for the grace that sanctifies me, and for the presence that cheers me, now supply my need, and do unto me as seems good unto You," we should experience the blessedness of living upon a Father's bounty, upon the Savior's grace, and upon the Spirit's love.
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