Sunday, May 07, 2006

Faith: Something You Have or Something You Do?

Answer: Both, actually. But since we usually focus on "having" faith, I want to look at the active, action-oriented faith that the Bible promotes. Hebrews 11:1 says:

"Now faith is the assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen."

Let's pick this apart, using the Strong's Concordance as a starting point for Greek definitions.

Faith = pistis (4102) - Being convinced of and relying on something.

Assurance = hupostatis (5287) - Substance, title-deed, guarantee, reality.

Hope = elpizo (1679) - Being fully confident in something, though not yet in grasp.

Conviction = elegchos (1650) - Evidence, proof (that by which a thing is tested and proven).

Things = pragma (4229) - Accomplished fact, that which exists, a "done deal".

Seen = blepo (991) - Perceived by the eye.

In other words, rather than having some nebulous feeling, you might rather say that:

Faith - the Godly, Bible kind - substantiates - or gives substance to - things which are fully assured. It evidences - proves by testing - things which are very real, even though they may not be seen by the eye. One translation says "unseen realities". That puts it rather well.

To use an analogy, I think of the character "the Invisible Man" in the old movie. Putting on a hat, coat, gloves, face wrapping - these things verified what was otherwise invisible. So by relying on and acting on what God says is reality, we prove what is unseen.

John and Cindy

John and Cindy
Kings Cross, London UK 2007