When I pray about God's direction for this year different people pop up in my mind, some whom I have not prayed for in a long time. Maybe this will be a year of faith and the breaking off of the chains that bind. That is my sincere hope.
The article below was a post on faith that I did several years ago called HE IS FAITHFUL. Enjoy this as you too look forward to what I'm sure will be interesting times in the year ahead.
"Now faith is the assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen." (Hebrews 11:1)
Thus
begins the great chapter on faith found in the Book of Hebrews. The
word "now" brings us back to the theme found in the previous chapter.
The people the author of Hebrews wrote to were enduring very difficult
times. Jewish by birth or as converts, they had come, by faith, to know
Jesus as their Lord and Savior. Now, instead of being led to the
knowledge of the truth by Jewish customs, laws and sacrifices, they had
something much better; "And the Holy Spirit also
bears witness to us . . . saying, 'This is the covenant that I will make
with them after those days says the Lord; I will put My laws upon their
hearts, and upon their mind I will write them'". (Hebrews 10: 15-16)
The
Jewish people had a temple which was patterned after the wilderness
tabernacle, which itself was patterned after a tabernacle in Heaven. In
the wilderness tabernacle there was a most holy place where the presence
of God resided, the entrance blocked by a veil. Every year the Jewish
high priest would enter through the veil into the most holy place to
sprinkle the blood of a sacrifice as an offering for the sins of the
nation. At the moment Jesus died on the cross the actual veil in the
temple in Jerusalem, said to be two inches thick, tore from top to
bottom. From then on all men, not just Jews, could come before the
presence of God through the blood of Jesus; "by a new and living way which He inaugurated for us through the veil, that is, His flesh". (v.20)
Jesus Christ offered His own blood in the original tabernacle in Heaven
as an offering for our sins, and He becomes, for all who come to Him by
faith, "a great high priest".
This high priest does not have to continually offer His blood as a sacrifice for our sins. It was offered, once for all; "But He, having offered one sacrifice for sins for all time, sat down at the right hand of God". (v.12)
When we come to Him by faith the Holy Spirit, because of the shed blood
of Jesus, can bring the Spirit of Christ into our hearts so that we can
become a new creation. The blood of Christ is not applied each time we
sin. Instead, at conversion, it has changed who we are. We now have relationship with Jesus brought about through our faith in His shed blood. Out of that relationship develops fellowship with
Him. Sin and rebellion affects the closeness of our fellowship. Yet the
Holy Spirit is able to cleanse our body and our heart to restore any
lost fellowship. The Spirit calls, revealing to us who Jesus is. We
answer by faith, receiving new life by having a changed spirit. Our
spirit, or heart, has now become a temple for the Holy Spirit, who will
guide us and enable us to have fellowship with the Father.
God
is now truly our Father, and Jesus, with the Father from the beginning but also called the first born of creation, is not
only our High Priest, our Lord and Savior, but in a real sense is also
our brother. Although Jesus became man, and lived among us in this
physical world, experiencing the good things that the physical world
has, He also was tempted as we are, and endured suffering and sorrow.
Jesus, with a resurrected physical body, resides in Heaven, and although
we still have an un-resurrected physical body our true citizenship is
no longer in this physical world. Jesus leads us by the gentle prodding
of the Spirit to a life that can overcome the world.
There
are different kinds of faith. One leads to our eternal salvation, a
salvation which we will know and experience in our lives now. It begins
with faith, changes who we are, and positions us to be a holy people
before the Lord for eternity. We are a holy people, not by what we do
but by what He has already done. Through the blood of Jesus we have
already overcome the world, but being in the world still affects both
our walk with Christ and the fellowship that He greatly desires with us
now.
A
second kind of faith gives us the ability to resist the compromises of
this world. We are confronted by attacks that are physical, mental,
emotional and spiritual, and each one is a type of persecution designed
by the enemy to take something away from us, and to rob us of our
fellowship with the Father. The enemy wants us to focus on the pain and
struggles at hand, or on the false promises of happiness and security
that the world seems to provide. But God has provided for us another
Comforter, the Spirit of Truth, who will help us through the struggles
of today and lead us toward the direction that God has planned for us.
The Hebrew Christians, being in a time of great stress, wanted the
comfort of familiar customs and ritual. They were looking at their
lives from the lens of where they were and not from the perspective of
where God was leading.
Thus
we see the context of the faith examples in Hebrews 11. Even though
these are Old Testament examples, they are testimonies that God will
reward those who have to make difficult choices because they saw by
faith a greater reality. Many did not see or experience the full
evidence of the promises during their physical lives, but their
obedience to the word that God gave them made possible the plan that God
desired for them and their offspring. Many had to wait until only a
miracle of God could make happen His promise, and although discouraged,
they still trusted, finally seeing in a physical sense what they through
faith already saw in their hearts.
We
live in a culture that does not trust that God knows what is best for
us. Instead of searching the scriptures with an open and humble heart
to hear the Spirit and discover the heart of God for us, instead of
confessing our sins before God and man and taking steps to change as the
Spirit leads, and instead of carving out of our lives the time needed
to fellowship with our Father, we would rather have the comfort of
religious laws and customs, with the option of disagreeing with the
particular tenants that make us uncomfortable.
By
faith we come to know God. By faith we begin to understand that His
promises are just and true, and that He can accomplish in and for us all
that He promised.
"Let
us draw near with a sincere heart in full assurance of faith, having
our hearts sprinkled clean from an evil conscience and our bodies washed
with pure water. Let us hold fast the confession of our hope without
wavering, for He who promised is faithful". (v.22-23)
No comments:
Post a Comment