Introduction - three reasons for today's sermon (Matt 6:30; 8:10; 2Thes. 1:3; 2Cor. 8:7; Rom. 4:20)
I'm going to take a two-Sunday-break from the Joshua series to address two topics that I believe will hopefully be helpful to our church. Today's topic is Growing in Faith. And there are three reasons why I have decided to preach on this topic today.
First, I am convinced that God is going to give huge challenges to faith in the next couple of years. Where America is headed could be a scary place if we do not learn to walk by faith.
Second, (whether that is true or not), Hebrews is quite clear that without faith it is impossible to please God. It’s a day-by-day imperative that the just shall live by faith. It’s not a topic to only preach on once a year. It is a topic that needs constant reminding.
Third, faith is like every other area of life in this respect – it is either growing or it is diminishing. This past Thursday my health coach told me that I need to get back into physical exercise (which I have stopped because of my torn rotator cuff - but I need to start exercising again) because it is obvious that my body is getting weaker. Well, in much the same way, Hebrews 11 speaks of the weakening of faith when it is not exercised. And it also speaks of faith growing strong through exercise.
Did you know that the Scripture speaks of degrees of faith? Faith is not just an on-off switch. There are degrees of faith. Matthew 6:30 speaks of “little faith.” Peter had little faith, and yet with that little faith he walked on the water. It’s amazing what a small degree of faith can accomplish. But Peter's faith was said to be little compared to where his faith could have been. 2 Thessalonians 1:3 says, “your faith is growing more and more.” And that should be true of all of us. There should be a constant growth in the level of faith that we can exercise. Matthew 8:10 speaks of “great faith,” and 2 Corinthians 8:7 says, “you abound in… faith.” Romans 4:20 says of Abraham, that he “was strengthened in faith.” Even he, the giant of faith, needed to be strengthened in faith. So there are levels of faith that all of us either grow in or weaken in. Today's sermon will be challenging all of us to keep growing in faith. And I want to look at some of those essential steps.
Sensing Our Need (v. 47)
The first thing we see in this nobleman is that he had a sense of his need. That may not seem very profound, but in a moment you will see that this is a critical step that is often lacking in a believer's life. The nobleman's need was a sickness that God had sovereignly brought into his son’s life. Before we even get into the text, let me admonish you to never think of needs as being bad things. We are scared of needs, aren’t we? We do everything that we can to avoid the discomfort of being in a situation of need. But I hope I can convince you this morning that needs are absolutely foundational to living a life of faith. Some of you might conclude – “Well, I don’t want to be a person of faith then.” But others will be thrilled that you are right now the perfect candidate for this life of faith since you are so weak and needy. Apart from a sense of weakness and need there is no room for faith. This is an absolutely critical first step.
Hebrews 11 gives as part of its definition of faith that it is a title deed to things that we hope for; in other words, things that we don’t have right now. If the need were already fulfilled, there would be no call to exercise faith. And if we sense little need for God in our lives, there will be little call for faith. If you are satisfied with the way things are, then God will have to place needs in your life that you cannot escape from in order to stretch your faith. God wants your faith stretched, so you have two options: 1) realize your need and walk by faith or 2) have God give you an obvious need that will force you to walk by faith. That was the situation with this nobleman. He was wealthy and had very few needs from a human perspective. But God was going to bring him to a point where he would have to exercise faith - and He did it by bringing his son almost to the point of death.
Look at verses 46-47.
So Jesus came again to Cana of Galilee where He had made the water wine. And there was a certain nobleman whose son was sick at Capernaum. When he heard that Jesus had come out of Judea into Galilee, he went to Him and implored Him to come down and heal his son, for he was at the point of death.
It was sickness that made him come to Jesus. And God often has to bring calamity into our lives to stir up faith to seek the Lord. Don’t look at those in a negative light. Look at those as opportunities for your faith to grow. It seems that the better off we are the less we sense the need for Christ. Now it doesn’t have to be that way. Abraham was a man of tremendous riches who grew in faith because he sensed his need in other ways and he recognized that God could take away those riches at any time – that (all appearances to the contrary), he was absolutely dependent upon the Lord. But Abraham was also constantly stepping beyond his comfort zone into things that God alone could do. God called him to move without knowing where he was going. Would you be able to do that? He was stepping beyond his comfort zone by not knowing the future. That's a kind of need, isn't it? Some people refuse to do their responsibility because they are desperately trying to figure out every contingency in the future and have everything in a neat box and under their control. And we are frustrated because God won’t give us the information we want to remain in control. But I am convinced that God sometimes lets us be in the dark because He wants us to grow in faith.
For some of you, needs don’t energize excitement and faith in what God is doing. Instead, they take the wind out of your sails because the needs are beyond your current abilities. Perhaps your need is that your husband isn’t what he should be, and God is not calling you to change him. God is calling you to be a woman of prayer; a woman of faith. Too many times we short-circuit the walk of faith through grumbling, anger, or other sinful responses to the need that God has allowed us to experience.
Did you realize that Christ said that wealth is frequently antithetical to a walk of faith? He said that it is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to believe. In other words, it’s impossible. But praise God, He didn't stop there. He went on to say, “But, with God, all things are possible.” He’s made many rich men strong in faith. He can do the impossible. But His point was that riches are usually a huge hindrance to faith. And by Scriptural definitions, most of us are pretty wealthy. That means that we have a hindrance to faith that needs to be guarded against.
And in case you think that you are poor, let me explain why I believe that the poorest of us is vastly richer than the average citizen in Christ’s day; vastly richer than the Ethiopians I grew up with. In Christ’s day only a nobleman could afford to be carried around by servants in a riding chair or on a chariot, but you have cars to take you places faster than kings could have dreamed of. You have a whole retinue of servants who do your work for you. Your car replaces servants. Your washing machine and dryer are equivalent to servants who save you time by doing your clothes. So is automatic fuel. Piped gas and electricity save you several hours of chopping wood, lighting and maintaining fires. Your telephones replace the couriers to run messages for you at your whim. And we have many other conveniences that are equivalent to servants. And next time you complain about the small size of your house, compare it to the tiny one-room mud houses in Africa and in the Middle East. We are wealthy and we should thank God for these gifts. They are blessings and I wouldn’t feel guilty for a moment about having them. That’s not the point. The point is that we are in the category of this nobleman - one of the ones that according to Mark 10 would find it hard to have faith because there were so few physical needs. You’ve got something that you need to guard against.
But here’s the exciting part: once you have learned to walk by faith, God doesn’t have to resort to physical challenges and financial challenges to make sure that you are a person of faith. For example, the Lord may be using a difficult child, a difficult spouse, or some emotional pressure. There are thousands of needs that exist around us that can be vehicles to make us realize that we cannot do it on our own; that we must trust the Lord to work through us. It may be witnessing to your neighbor. The very thought of that may terrify you. That is a subjective neediness that is fertile soil for you to exercise faith and grow in faith. Reaching your children’s hearts, or reaching the heart of a hardened loved one with the Gospel, or receiving guidance from the Lord for what God wants you to do for this week; there are so many things that can stretch our faith and cause us to walk in the realm of the supernatural. Hebrews 10:38 says, “the just shall live by faith.” That isn’t a call to faith at conversion only, but to live the rest of our lives by faith.
And on this first point, the thing that I want to challenge you in is to seek God’s face for a greater vision of what you are supposed to do. There should never be a time in the Christian life when we are not stretched beyond our comfort zones into the realm of neediness; the realm of faith. I think the problem frequently is that we are satisfied with the status quo and consequently never experience a need to trust. So the first pre-requisite to growing in faith is to sense a huge need for His presence, grace, guidance, compassion, love, power and whatever else is needed. Do you have a constant sense of your needs? Praise God! You have the first pre-requisite to faith!
Seeking Christ’s Face (v. 47)
The second step is to seek Christ’s face in prayer. You will never grow in faith if you do not grow in prayer. We can see that in verse 47, which says, “When he heard that Jesus had come out of Judea into Galilee, he went to Him and implored Him to come down and heal his son...” It took some time out of his schedule and it took some energy and it took a degree of inconvenience for this man to implore Jesus, just as it takes time, energy and a degree of inconvenience for us to pray.
Now here’s the problem: it is very easy to receive a great burden from the Lord and have a sense of need in point I, but then to turn around and desperately be trying to fulfill that need by your own strength, and adding grueling hours to your schedule, or scheming or begging others to get involved. But while faith is active (and we’ll get to that in a bit), it’s core is dependence upon Christ. If we can do it ourselves, where’s the need for faith!?
So let the need and the burden of point # I drive you to prayer. If your burden is truly a burden from God, you will never be successful in carrying it out on your own anyway. God’s callings upon our lives are way beyond our own strength. God’s burdens drive us to seek His face for Him to work. Hebrews 11:6 says, “But without faith it is impossible to please Him, for he who comes to God must believe that He is, and that He is the rewarder of those who diligently seek Him.” There is diligence involved, but it is diligently seeking God. My diligence has sometimes been in another direction. It has been diligence in working. I love to work and I work hard. But God says that what we can do in our own strength does not please Him. Kathy can wash the dishes in her own strength, but a dependence upon Christ can enable her to wash those dishes as an act of service to Him that gives her joy. She can write music parts for the violin in her own strength, but every moment that she is writing, she does so with hands literally or metaphorically lifted to heaven asking God to anoint the music, transform it, and make it pleasing to him. Do you see the difference? We may be doing the same thing by faith or without faith. It is only a life of faith that lays hold of God working through us that is pleasing to Him. That’s what Hebrews says, “But without faith it is impossible to please Him, for he who comes to God must believe that He is, and that He is the rewarder of those who [do what? “those who”] diligently seek Him.” Are you seeking the face of God? or is your burden something that can be fulfilled without God’s supernatural intervention? I am praying that God would give us a burden; a vision that is so huge and so awesome that none of us think we can do it on our own (point I). I am praying that God would give us such an awesome burden that we would be driven to depend upon Him (point II).
A Confidence in His Word in the Specifics of Our Lives (vv. 47-49) Faith is "he mysterious surge of confidence which arises within a person as he claims God’s Word for a specific situation or need and becomes certain of God’s answer."
But point III is a confidence in His Word in the specifics of our lives. When Jesus said to him, “Go your way; your son lives”, he was able to go with a confidence that Jesus would do as He said He would. Now that is God-given. We can’t work up that confidence like the name-it-and-claim-it types sometimes do. It is totally God-given. Let me define faith so that you can see what we are talking about. Faith is said to be, “the mysterious surge of confidence which arises within a person as he claims God’s Word for a specific situation or need and becomes certain of God’s answer.” The need has not yet been fulfilled, but in the heavenlies, God has given his decree, and we feel that assurance.
Let’s look at this aspect of faith in the nobleman. He starts off with a lower level of faith. He starts off believing that Christ is able to do it. That's what makes him come in the first place. And this leads Him to prayer. He asks Christ to come. But Christ changes the plans and stretches the nobleman’s faith in the process. Instead of coming, Christ gives him opportunity to believe His assurance that a miracle would happen before he even saw the miracle. Christ knew the other Jews weren’t there yet. They had such weak faith that in verse 48 it says, “Then Jesus said to him, ‘Unless you people [this is the plural - he’s including other Jews "unless you people"] see signs and wonders, you will by no means believe.’” It’s easy to believe in miracles when a miracle has just happened, but what is hard is to be confident that God will come through before our need is met. When you look at men of faith like George Mueller, you find assurance given to them by the Lord that enables them to stop praying and to know that God has answered in the heavenlies, and to begin praising God for His answer. Verse 50 says “Jesus said to him, ‘Go your way; your son lives.’” He hasn’t seen the miracle yet, but once the assurance is given, there is no more need for prayer. You can go your way. That subjective assurance is an aspect of faith.
Let me give my favorite illustration from George Mueller’s life. I know all of you have heard it, but it illustrates this God-given faith or assurance that God had already answered. Sometimes Mueller had to pray and pray and pray before God gave that assurance that this was His will. This time it came almost immediately. So he didn’t always have this level of faith and assurance this quickly. But the story I am going to read is being told by the captain of a ship on which George Mueller was traveling. He said,
We had George Muller of Bristol on board. I had been on the bridge for twenty-four hours and never left it and George Muller came to me and said, “Captain, I have come to tell you I must be in Quebec on Saturday afternoon.” “It is impossible,” I said. “Then very well, if your ship cannot take me, God will find some other way. I have never broken an engagement in fifty-seven years; let us go down into the chart room and pray.”
I looked at that man of God and thought to myself, “What lunatic asylum can that man have come from, for I never heard of such a thing as this.” “Mr. Muller,” I said, “do you know how dense this fog is?” “No,” he replied, “my eye is not on the density of the fog, but on the living God who controls every circumstance of my life.” He knelt down and he prayed one of the most simple prayers. When he had finished I was going to pray, but he put his hand on my shoulder and told me not to pray. “As you do not believe He will answer, and as I believe He has, there is no need whatever for you to pray about it.”
“I looked at him and George Muller said, “Captain, I have known my Lord for fifty-seven years and there has never been a single day when I have failed to get an audience with the King. Get up, Captain and open the door and you will find the fog has gone.” I got up and the fog indeed was gone and on that Saturday afternoon George Muller kept his promised engagement.
Now remember that we said there are levels of faith that we are taken into by the Lord, and some like Muller are given a special anointing or what we call a special gift of faith. Not everyone has that. But all faith operates in this way to some degree. Once the assurance was given to this nobleman, it would have been foolish to keep praying and praying and begging the Lord. “Lord, O Lord, please heal my son.” And Jesus would have said, “I’ve already told you, your son will be healed.” I’ve had times - especially in the early ministry of this church where our family had started a fast, and we had planned to have it more extended, but in the middle of the fast, God gave me such an assurance that He had answered, that I felt He wanted me to end the fast and to start feasting with the children - which we did. And God had indeed answered miraculously. This is quite different from presumption where people try to believe something they want, not something God has clearly led on. The Bible guides all, but John Calvin points out that faith also has a deep-seated, God-given assurance that goes beyond mere intellectual deduction. Calvin said that assurance is of the essence of faith.
So let me give the definition again: Faith is “the mysterious surge of confidence which arises within a person as he claims God’s Word for a specific situation or need and becomes certain of God’s answer.” It's based on the Bible, but it is still a God-given assurance.
Acting On God’s Assurances (vv. 50-51a)
But the next step is critical as well. We are to act upon God’s assurance. Verse 50: “Jesus said to him, ‘Go your way; your son lives.’ So the man believed the word that Jesus spoke to him, and he went his way.” He went his way. There was action he needed to take. Joshua had faith to cross the Jordan, but when did the Jordan part? It didn’t part because he had the principle of faith. It parted because he took the action of faith. It was when they put their feet into the water that the waters parted. Some of you have short-circuited faith by failing to take the action of faith with regard to your internal struggles or external struggles. You were so close – but no cigar. Your faith was stillborn. James says that faith without action is a dead faith. It’s useless. So this really is an essential step of faith.
Some years ago I gave an illustration and applied it to the initial faith that receives salvation. But I think the same story applies to ongoing faith as well. It is the story of the tight rope artist Blondin who is pictured in your outlines.
Years ago this Frenchman put on a huge exhibition of his art at Niagara Falls. He had stretched a line across the river and did his act right over the falls. He did a backward somersault at the middle of the Falls, went across on specially made stilts, balanced a chair on two legs and sat on it, took a small stove to the half-way point, sat down, cooked himself an omelet and ate it. And you can see sketches of these performances in your outline. As a climax to a great performance, he placed the balancing rod in his mouth and pushed a specially made wheelbarrow to the audience. He asked them if they thought that he could take a person across in the wheelbarrow. Everyone gave their assent. One boy was cheering especially loudly. Pausing for a few moments he said, “Sonny, do you think I could push the wheelbarrow back again?”
“Yes Sir!”
“And, my boy, if you sat in it, do you think I could take you to the other side?”
“Yes Sir!”
“Good! Jump in and I will take you.”
His eyes got big and he said “No Sir!” There was no way he was going to climb in. He possessed faith in Blondin, but was not willing to act on the faith. He believed Blondin could take someone else across, but did not have a faith that made any difference to his own life; it was not the kind of faith that would enable him to get into the wheelbarrow and entrust his life into Blondin’s hands. And you can see from a picture in your outlines that there was an older lady who had that faith.
Whenever God leads Christians, they must act upon that guidance or there will be no more guidance without repentance. Faith must always have action. Turn with me to Hebrews 11, the faith chapter, and I want you to notice all of the action verbs in this chapter. It’s true that it starts off with faith in intellectual terms.
Verse 3: by faith we understand. But you know, even this is not walking by sight because it is believing and understanding something that happened six thousand years ago; something we did not see. It is believing something that pagans scoff at. It says, “By faith we understand that the worlds were framed by the word of God, so that the things which are seen were not made of things which are visible.” It takes faith to believe that, and when you teach your kids six-day creationism and disagree with evolutionism, you are taking the action of faith. But notice how clearly the action of faith is described in the following verses.
Verse 4: by faith Abel offered
In verse 6 faith is illustrated by coming and diligence
Verse 8: by faith Abraham obeyed
Verse 9: by faith he sojourned
Verse 11: by faith Sarah herself also received strength
Verse 17: by faith Abraham offered up Isaac
Verse 20: by faith Isaac blessed Jacob
Verse 21: by faith Jacob, when he was dying, blessed each of the sons of Joseph, and worshiped.
Verse 24: by faith Moses refused to be called something
Verse 25 choosing
Verse 27: by faith he forsook Egypt; later “he endured”
Verse 28: kept
Verse 29: passed through
Verses 33-34: “who through faith subdued kingdoms, worked righteousness, obtained promises, stopped the mouths of lions, quenched the violence of the fire, escaped the edge of the sword, out of weakness were made strong, became valiant in battle, turned to flight the armies of aliens...”
Can you see how faith is never passive? It is always active.
Giving God Glory (vv. 52-53)
But let’s move on to point 5. Faith grows as it gives God glory. When we are God-centered, God honors that by growing our faith. Unfortunately, what many people substitute for faith only gives them glory. One person said, “To believe only possibilities is not Faith, but mere Philosophy.” I believe that the vision of this church gives God the glory, because when it is achieved, man sure won’t get the glory.
The same is true of the abolitionist movement. When God calls for abolition of abortion, which He does, that’s what we aim for by faith. Contrast that with the incrementalist movement. They don’t think God’s goals are achievable. Well, my response is, which of God’s goals for us is ever achievable in our own strength? None of them. But they reason that since abolition of abortion is not achievable, they will substitute an achievable goal that requires no faith. Their supposedly achievable goal is to save as many babies as possible. So they ask you to vote for a constitutional amendment that will enshrine first trimester abortion in the constitution as being legal - but hey, they say, at least it rules out abortion in the second and third trimesters, and this way it will get more votes. But one compromise leads to another. Because they are pragmatically (and I would say desperately) trying to get as many votes as possible, they also allow exceptions for rape, incest, and the health of the mother. That opens the door to any abortions, given the deception of abortionists. Can they get any of that language from the Bible? No. Would God write the language of the pro-life ammendment? No. Would He give a checkmark that this meets His standards? No. That means incrementalism (including smashmouth incrementalism) is inconsistent with faith. Faith is not stymied by impossibility. It looks to God’s commands and promises, works to promote those, and leaves the results in God’s hands. So I would urge you to vote “No” on both amendments in November. It really is a faith issue. And the two approaches starkly contrast a God-centered versus a man-centered approach.
In any case, back to the text - the nobleman did not want to attribute this to fluke chance, to natural healing or anything else. He checked the times so that it would be clear that it was at the very moment that Christ uttered his words of assurance. Look at verses 52-53:
And as he was now going down, his servants met him and told him, saying, ‘Your son lives!’ Then he inquired of them the hour when he got better. And they said to him, ‘Yesterday at the seventh hour the fever left him.’ So the father knew that it was at the same hour in which Jesus said to him, ‘Your son lives.’
There are many different ways in which we can rob God of the glory. I have read large books whose sole aim is to discount miraculous things that have happened and explain them by non-supernatural means, and when that is not possible, saying, "Well, many strange things happen in this universe and we don’t need to say that it is miraculous just because it can’t be explained." They are skeptics who don’t believe miracles still happen. But this stubborn presupposition that the miraculous cannot happen guarantees an absence of faith.
Another way of robbing God of His glory is to forget to thank God when He answers, or to forget to speak to others of His glory. Another way to rob God of His glory is to act from then on as if this was a one-time fluke, and fail to continue to trust God. Or to take credit to ourselves. If you want faith to grow, you must always give God the glory for any miracles of faith that He has granted.
Entering Into New Levels Of Trust (v. 53c)
And I want to end with the whole concept of entering into new levels of trust in God’s working. Point VI relates to and flows from point V. Look at the last phrase of verse 53: “And he himself believed, and his whole household.” What is this verse saying about him here? Was this the first time this man had believed? No. Verse 50 says, “So the man believed the word that Jesus spoke to him, and he went his way.” So he already had faith to come to Jesus. And he had faith to go his way in verse 50. But then in verse 53 he enters into an even stronger faith in Jesus. “And he himself believed, and his whole household.” He was now trusting God not just for this past need, but for something new in his life. And the next day no doubt he believed God again. He was beginning to enter into a life of faith.
As we take baby steps of faith and we see God’s answers, we are led to take more steps, and it is a strengthening process over life. We must be careful that we do not rest on our past accomplishments. Faith always presses forward; it makes us ready to step out into new ventures that the Lord may lead us into. It’s like Caleb who said in his 80’s, “Give me this mountain.” If we cling to the past and are unwilling to embark on change, we will weaken the faith that we have. Romans 4:19 says of Abraham, “Without weakening in his faith, [So that’s indicating that a weakening of our faith is a real danger. But it says, “Without weakening in his faith”] he faced the fact that his body was as good as dead — since he was about a hundred years old — and that Sarah’s womb was also dead.” Your faith is either going forward or backward. It is either being strengthened or it is being weakened by inaction.
Conclusion - “Faith will beget in us three things: Vision, Venture, Victory.”
And it is my prayer that as our congregation reaches out in evangelism, takes different actions to abolish abortion, prays for serious needs within the congregation, prays for the salvation of our loved ones, and in other ways seeks to walk with God, that the whole congregation would grow in faith. Or as Romans 1:17 words it, would grow “from faith to faith.” May God receive all the glory, and may we be willing to do the impossible by faith. Amen.