Monday, February 29, 2016

WHAT FAITH KNOWS

When I look at some of the men and women in the Bible, at a quick glance they seem
to be so confident, so certain of everything. Next to such seemingly unwavering faith,
we can start to feel a little unsure of our own faith.
Perhaps that’s because we’re seeing the miracles they experienced through the
perspective of hindsight. But try to put yourself in their shoes. Consider how
impossible the situation must have seemed for them at the time when they couldn’t
see the outcome.
For example, look at the three Hebrew men who were about to be thrown into the
fiery furnace for not bowing down and worshipping the golden image that
Nebuchadnezzar had set up. It might look like they were glowing with confidence in
front of the head of the largest empire of their day, certain that nothing could happen
to them in that fiery furnace. But could it be that they also battled fear and the
uncertainty of what would happen?
It’s true that their friend Daniel held a great deal of power and influence, and he might
have been able to stand up for them and rescue them from their fate, but he is not
mentioned in regard to this event and may have been away on a trip to another part
of the empire. Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego were on their own, standing up for
what they knew was right; and there they were before a king who saw himself as
God, surrounded by the king’s jealous counselors who may have seen these
Hebrews as a threat to their power. Those angry counselors had probably been
instrumental in whipping up the king’s fury against the three Hebrew men.
Despite the bold declaration of Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego that they would
trust in God no matter what happened, they were human and prone to the same fears
that any one of us facing such a horrifying fate would experience.
Faith isn’t the absence of fear; faith is what overcomes fear. My guess is that they
dreaded what was about to happen with everything in them, but they still knew what
they had to do. Their faith didn’t seem to be based on any assumption that their
bodies would miraculously be impervious to the heat and fire. At least, that’s not what
their words in the Bible indicate.
They said, “If we are thrown into the blazing furnace, the God we serve is able to
deliver us from it, and he will deliver us from Your Majesty’s hand. But even if he does
not, we want you to know, Your Majesty, that we will not serve your gods or worship
the image of gold you have set up.”
They didn’t know what would happen, but they had faith that God was in control.
Their faith was in the fact that no matter what, they knew God had a plan, and they
trusted Him to take care of them as He saw fit. They weren’t setting conditions
according to what seemed best to them. They didn’t tell the king that their bodies
couldn’t be burned. Of course they knew that God could do anything, but they weren’t
basing their faith on God keeping them from burning up in the furnace. Their faith was
in God’s love and power, not in the results they thought would be best.
We know that God will ultimately make things right in the next life, but that knowledge
doesn’t lessen the struggles of possibly facing very painful experiences or death. At
this moment in time, it’s not the next life that we have to deal with, it’s the present.
You may feel afraid of what you’re facing. You may not see anything you can do to fix
the situation you’re in. But God’s intervention in your life isn’t based on your self-
confidence. It’s based on your belief in Him and your trust in His unlimited power,
goodness, and love. You don’t have to believe that what you want to happen will
always happen. You just have to believe that God can bring about what is best in His
time and His way, because you trust Him.
Faith knows what is most important to know: God will never leave you nor forsake
you.
None of us knows what lies ahead. We often can’t know if that setback we’re facing
or the things we’re suffering will be gone in a minute or a month, or if they will last a
lifetime. Our faith can’t be built on expected results that make sense to us. What faith
knows is that Jesus will not leave us comfortless; He’ll be there walking with us
through the fire, as He was with Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego.

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