Sunday, August 14, 2011

Eyes of Faith

"... faith is the gaze of a soul upon a saving God." - A.W. Tozer

          Many non-believers use the phrase "seeing is believing" to defend their beliefs. However, I am a believer, and therefore I prefer to twist this statement up a little. I like to say that believing is seeing, because in order to see God you must first believe that He exists. Seeing can be believing, but only if you're looking through the eyes of faith rather than worldly eyes. Look with your heart and then you will begin to see. Open your eyes to the invisible things of God. For as Hebrews 11:3 says, "Things which are seen were not made by things which do appear". In other words, the things of this earth are only made visible through the invisible things of God. So how can we see things that can't be seen? Faith makes it possible. Hebrews 11:1 says that faith is "the evidence of things not seen" so when you look through the eyes of faith you will begin to see things that did not seem visible before, and belief in those invisible things will naturally follow. 
          A.W. Tozer seeks to provide a definition for faith in chapter 7 of "The Pursuit of God". Tozer comes to the conclusion that "looking" and "believing" are synonyms. He says that looking is done through external eyes, but believing is done through the heart. He then says that faith is when you focus your eyes on the things of God and look to Him in all things. He used Psalm 34:5, 123:1-2, and Matthew 14:19 to support this definition. As I read through these verses and through Tozer's explanation, I was utterly amazed. I began to read Hebrews 11 (aka "The Hall of Faith") and God began to speak. As He spoke, my eyes were opened and I began to view faith in a different way than I had ever seen it before. 
          First of all, I think it is important to point out that in Biblical numerology the number 11 means "chaos" and the number 40 means "some sort of probation or trial period". Hebrews 11 is a book devoted to defining the word faith and it consists of 40 verses total. So before I even begin reading this chapter I have already determined that faith is defined (and refined) through a chaotic trial period.
          The chapter provides several examples of Old Testament figures who demonstrated true and genuine faith even in the midst of trial and chaos. For example, verse 7 says "By faith Noah, being warned of God of things not seen as yet, moved with fear, prepared an ark to the saving of his house; by the which he condemned the world and became heir of the righteousness which is by faith." And verse 17 says "By faith Abraham, when he was tried, offered up Isaac: and he that had received the promises offered up his only begotten son... Accounting that God was able to raise him up even from the dead." These men, along with the others listed in this chapter, endured and conquered great trials because they looked at their situation through the eyes of faith.  They knew the promises of God and they took Him for His word, never doubting or wavering. Although they had not yet received the promise, they embraced and clung to it because they knew that God was faithful and they believed wholeheartedly that He would not suffer them to be tempted beyond that which they could bear.
          Imagine if they had not looked through the eyes of faith. Imagine if Noah had said, "I have to see the first raindrop before I'll begin building the ark." He and his whole family would have been destroyed and life would have ceased to exist. But Noah never doubted God. Scripture says he "moved with fear" and began to prepare for what he could not see with external eyes. He hadn't yet received the promise, but He saw it in the distance because he was looking through the eyes of faith. He looked to the Heavens and believed in what could not be seen. In the end, God provided a rainbow in the sky as evidence of His promise.
          If you're having trouble seeing through the eyes of faith today, look to Christ for strength and place your trust in Him. Be assured that even if you can't see God's promise today, it's waiting patiently in your future. So embrace the journey, because God will prove Himself faithful in the end... and He may even provide a rainbow as evidence of His faithfulness. Then you will be able to use your rainbow to give a little hope to someone else and help them to also be able to see through the eyes of faith.

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