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Octavius Winslow

Psalm 57:1, 2

Psalm 57:1, 2
Octavius Winslow September, 27 2016 4 min read
709 Articles 90 Sermons 35 Books
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September, 27 2016
Octavius Winslow
Octavius Winslow 4 min read
709 articles 90 sermons 35 books
What does the Bible say about the importance of faith?

The Bible emphasizes that faith is crucial for a believer's strength and relationship with God.

The Scriptures teach that the exercise of faith is essential for the believer. In moments of trial and adversity, faith acts as the believer's strength, much like an arm that must be exercised to maintain its power. As seen in Psalm 57:1-2, the call to trust in God during difficulties reinforces the notion that faith is not just a passive attribute but an active engagement with God's promises, rooted in His faithfulness. A neglected faith will weaken over time, while active engagement will solidify a believer's reliance on the Lord.

Furthermore, faith is often tested, revealing its true nature and depth. Trials serve a purpose: they call believers to exercise their faith, leading to spiritual growth and deeper reliance on God. When faced with severe trials, believers should expect that God is preparing to bestow blessings that may not have been previously experienced. Thus, trials can cultivate a richer, more intimate relationship with the Lord, resulting in increased spirituality and the assurance of His unwavering support throughout our struggles.

Psalm 57:1-2

How do we know that faith is tested in our lives?

Faith is tested through trials, which reveal its strength and depth.

The testing of faith is a recurrent theme throughout Scripture, demonstrating that it often requires challenge to reveal its true character. As believers navigate life’s storms, God may allow trials to test the robustness of their faith. For instance, when Peter walked on water, he experienced both the power of faith and the reality of human limitation when he began to sink. These moments illustrate that our understanding of faith might be misleading until faced with adversity. The experience prompts an honest evaluation of our trust in God and reveals areas where we may need to grow.

In trials, believers find their faith called into action, leading them not only to confront their limitations but also to rely more fully on God's promises. The assurance that faith is rewarded can be seen in the comforting words from Psalms: 'weeping may endure for a night, but joy comes in the morning.' This showcases the truth that while trials are challenging, they ultimately serve to deepen one’s faith and confirm God’s faithfulness, resulting in joy following the struggle.

Matthew 14:29-30, Psalm 30:5

Why is trusting in God important during difficult times?

Trusting God during hardships is vital, as it strengthens faith and assures us of His mercies.

In the face of calamities and struggles, trusting in God becomes imperative for believers, as detailed in Psalm 57:1-2. In these verses, the psalmist expresses his dependence on God's mercy, indicating that during dire situations, God is a refuge. This reliance is not just about seeking escape from trials; rather, it is about recognizing God as the source of strength and comfort. Trusting God allows believers to experience His grace more profoundly, as trials often serve as a backdrop for His greater works.

Moreover, as faith is exercised during difficult times, it grows stronger. God uses trials not only to test faith but also to reveal His own faithfulness in the midst of our struggles. The promise is that through these experiences, believers often receive mercies that they might not have known otherwise. Encouragement can be found in the understanding that God hears the faintest cry of His children, leading to not just spiritual sustenance but also tangible deliverance from their troubles. This dynamic relationship emphasizes that reliance on God manifests the ongoing work of grace in a believer's life.

Psalm 57:1-2

“Be merciful unto me, O God, be merciful unto me: for my soul trusts in you: yes, in the shadow of your wings will I make my refuge, until these calamities be overpast. I will cry unto God most high; unto God that performs all things for me.”

— Psalm 57:1, 2

The exercise of faith strengthens, as the neglect to exercise, weakens it. It is the constant play of the arm that brings out its muscular power in all its fullness; were that arm allowed to hang by its own side, still and motionless, how soon would its sinews contract, and its energy waste away! So it is with faith, the right arm of a believer's strength; the more it is exercised, the mightier it becomes; neglect to use it, allow it to remain inert and inoperative, and the effect will be a withering up of its power. Now when gloomy providences, and sharp trials and temptations, thicken around a poor believing soul, then is it the time for faith to put on its strength, and come forth to the battle. God never places His child in any difficulties, or throws upon him any cross, but it is a call to exercise faith; and if the opportunity of its exercise passes away without improvement, the effect will be a weakening of the principle, and a feeble putting forth of its power in the succeeding trial. Do not forget, that the more faith is brought into play, the more it increases; the more it is exercised, the stronger it becomes.

Some of the choicest mercies of the covenant brought into the experience of the believer, come by a travail of faith: it maybe a tedious and a painful process; faith may be long and sharply tried, yet the blessings it will bring forth will more than repay for all the weeping, and suffering, and crying, it has occasioned. Do not be surprised, then, at any severe trial of faith; be sure that when it is thus tried, God is about to bring your soul into the possession of some great and perhaps hitherto unexperienced mercy. It may be a travail of faith for spiritual blessing; and the result may be a deepening of the work in your heart, increase of spirituality, more weanedness from creature-trust, and more child-like leaning upon the Lord; more simple, close, and sanctifying knowledge of the Lord Jesus. Or, it may be a travail of faith for temporal mercy, for the supply of some need, the rescue from some embarrassment, the deliverance out of some peculiar and trying difficulty; but whatever the character of the trial of faith be, the issue is always certain and glorious. The Lord may bring His child into difficult and strait paths, He may hedge him about with thorns so that he cannot get out, but it is only to draw the soul more simply to repose in Himself; that, in the extremity, when no creature would or could help, when refuge failed, and no man cared for his soul, that then faith should go out and rest itself in Him who never disowns His own work, but always honors the feeblest exhibition, and turns His ear to the faintest cry. "Out of the depths have I cried unto You, O Lord. Lord, hear my voice; let Your ears be attentive to the voice of my supplication." "In my distress I called upon the Lord, and cried unto my God: He heard my voice out of His temple, and my cry came before Him, even into His ears." "O magnify the Lord with me, and let us exalt His name together. I sought the Lord, and He heard me, and delivered me from all my fears." "This poor man cried, and the Lord heard him; and saved him out of all his troubles." Here was the severe travail of faith, and here we see the blessed result. Thus true is God's word, which declares that "weeping may endure for a night, but joy comes in the morning."

The trial of faith is a test of its degree. We know not what faith we possess, until the Lord calls it into exercise; we may be greatly deceived as to its nature and degree; to walk upon the stormy water may be thought by us an easy thing; to witness for Christ, no hard matter: but the Lord brings our faith to the test. He bids us come to Him upon the water, and then we begin to sink; He suffers us to be assailed by our enemies, and we shrink from the cross; He puts our faith to the trial, and then we learn how little we possess.

From Evening Thoughts by Octavius Winslow.
Octavius Winslow
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