Monday, June 04, 2007

faith

I was at church yesterday and the pastor talked about faith. Is faith a noun or a verb? Is it something that we can grasp or it is something that we must put into action? I pondered this and other points of the sermon throughout the day and as I lay in bed. I have come up with a few thoughts of my own on this topic. To have faith is to live. Everyone has faith in something. It may not be in a diety or higher power. It may not be in God. Faith gives us reason to do what we do. Without faith, say in God, we would not have the ability to trust, to surrender control or to walk blindly beside Him, knowing that He ultimately knows where He is taking us. So this comes back to the question of whether faith is a thing or an action. I don't know that faith is tangible on its own. I think that faith becomes tangible through the things that we do. People can see our faith in the way that we live, in the trust we have in God, in the ability we have to surrender control, and in our willingness to walk blindly. As I said before, without faith in something or someone, we would have no trust in that person. When we trust God, even a little bit, it is proving that we have faith, it is puitting our faith into action. This is the same with surrender. Most of us struggle with handing over control of our lives to anyone, including God. When we are in the passenger seat of a car, we are not in control, but we are making a statement that we have faith in the person driving. We trust that they know what they are doing and that they are going to get us where we are going safely. When we surrender control to God and take a "leap of faith", we are trusting that God has our best in mind and that He will not let us fall. To have faith gives us that freedom to live the life that God intended for us to live. The verse in Jeremiah, 29:11, states that God knows the plans He has for us. He wants for us to prosper and not to be harmed, to live a full and exciting life filled with hope and a future. This verse means nothing if we have no faith in God. We can not experience this life that He has for us if we do not trust that what He says is true. For us to believe that statement as true, we are demonstrating our faith. Therefore I have really come t the conclusion that faith is freedom. Freedom to live. Freedom to have a full and amazing life. It is giving God freedom to give us a full and amazing life. These are just my thoughts. Feel free to question, to discuss, or to completely disagree. This is just something that I have been thinking about lately, brought back to mind by a sermon, and now written out to try and grasp slightly what God is teaching me. Is fainth a noun or a verb?... I don't really know. Maybe it is both.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Faith is freedom...

Sounds like a verb, in the definition of 'state of being'.

But then again...people choose what they keep faith in, what they keep trust in.

So maybe faith is a noun, in the sense of an option?

...Of course if faith is an option, than we had the freedom to choose it or deny it outright. Meaning we had freedom without faith...

Meaning faith is ultimately...choice?

travelling hobo said...

OK, faith is choice, I can see that. I think I was ultimately getting at the point that faith gives you a freedom in your life, to trust or follow something that you would not have followed before. Faith can bring purpose, meaning... and in that there is a freedom..?

Anonymous said...

I think I get what you mean: Romans 5:4 denotes that feeling; that sense of divine approval filling the soul with hope.

And hope, though sometimes bitter to swallow, is a step towards feeling freedom; that innate sense of 'right'...of 'all is well'.

So, we're all free to choose faith, but when we allow ourselves faith, we feel...better? Freer? Happier?

And in that...faith (a sense of a sacred trust) sets the stage for a brighter future?