Tuesday, July 2, 2013

Gutsy Faith

As promised, here is a copy of a blog post from Kevin DeYoung that I read in my sermon last Sunday.  I hope it will inspire you as it did me.

 
FAITH (Kevin DeYoung)  http://thegospelcoalition.org/blogs/kevindeyoung/2012/05/29/faith-enough-to-ask/

Faith is a humble confidence that Christ can do whatever he wills and will do whatever he
promises. Which means that if we are people of faith we will ask Christ to do more than we
dare to think possible.

Real faith is not self-righteous, arrogant, or presumptuous. But neither is it feeble and mealy-
mouthed. We are never instructed to pray saying, “Dear Jesus, I’m sorry to bother you. You’re
busy. You may not even be able to help. I’m not sure I have the right guy. You probably have
more important people to attend to. But if you can, and if you don’t mind, and if you have a
few moments, could you consider my problems?” Jesus loves gutsy faith much more than he
loves safe faith. In fact, there is nothing Jesus likes more in the gospels than desperate
people expressing their humble confidence that he can take care of anything. Just look at the
woman with twelve year’s of bleeding, the Centurion with an ill servant, or the Canaanite lady
with the sick girl. They all asked for much and Jesus praised them for it.

Obviously, there is a danger that we take these examples, isolate them from the rest of
Scripture, and come away with a theology that says God will give us whatever we want, no
matter what and no matter when. Such a theology flies in the face of Jesus’ experience in the
garden, Paul’s experience with the thorn, and real life for everyone else.  We should not think
that faith guarantees all our dreams coming true here on earth.

But if presumptive faith is a danger, so is puny faith. Some of us, when it comes to prayer, are
all humility and no confidence. We’ve stopped asking Jesus for anything, because we’ve
stopped believing that he really can and really cares. We get cautious. And unrelenting
caution often masks over cynicism, and cynicism is a close cousin to unbelief. The hows and
why of prayer can be a mystery at times, but if there is one thing we know about prayer for
sure it’s that Christ wants us to pray. There is nothing he teaches more repetitively about
prayer than simply “ask.” Jesus wants us to pray and not give up. He wants us to ask and
keep asking. Christ loves to see bold, gutsy faith, what Ben Patterson calls “holy chutzpah.”


Have we lost all confidence in Christ? Do we only ask him for sure bets and safe things? Has
our faith gotten so meek that it’s hardly even faith anymore? The men and women in the
gospels most pleasing to Jesus are those who completely distrust their own piety and
worthiness, but at the same time trust him to the uttermost.

Too often we ask for only small things. We except an even smaller response. True, God
wants us to be a plodding people who do not neglect the days and years of small things. But
God does not want us to be a people of small faith. We worship a Christ who can do miracles
upon miracles. He healed the sick, cast out demons, walked on water, raised the dead. He
can do whatever he pleases. And it pleases him when we demonstrate our confidence in that
ability by asking him to work on our behalf. For his glory, of course. In keeping with his will,
always. Understanding that his ways are not our ways, absolutely. But asking often and with
confidence. We do not have true faith unless we have true prayer. And we do not truly pray
unless we ask for that which only God can do.
O Lord, we believe, help our unbelief.

No comments:

Post a Comment