“Now
faith is being sure of what we hope for and certain of what we do not see.”
– Hebrews
11:1
There are three things that surrounds having faith.Check out these three things below.
1.There’s Assurance
The biblical definition of hope is found in Hebrews
11:1, where it talks about three things: assurance, hope, and conviction.
The first of these is assurance, or some translate it “being sure,” which in
the Greek means a “substructure” or “foundation.” If you were building a home,
you’d want the assurance of having a substructure and a firm foundation upon
which to build it. So the first part of faith is having the assurance that the
foundation is there to build upon. The confidence is not in the foundation but
the builder of that foundation, and Jesus is the chief cornerstone of it (Eph.
2:20).
2.There’s Hope
Biblical hope is unlike the hope of the world where
they hope their team will win the Super Bowl or they hope they’ll get a raise.
Hope in God is not a “hope-so” feeling but a “know-so” confidence. Our hope is
not in ourselves, of course. Rather, our hope is in Christ (1 Cor. 15:19) since
God has “delivered us from such a deadly peril, and he will deliver us. On
him we have set our hope that he will deliver us again” (2 Cor. 1:10). Paul
wrote that it is “in this hope we were saved. Now hope that is seen is not
hope. For who hopes for what he sees” (Rom. 8:24), and “we have this as
a sure and steadfast anchor of the soul, a hope that enters into the inner
place behind the curtain” (Heb. 6:19).
3.There’s Conviction
If you sat through an entire trial where
the defendant was guilty, the next to the last thing you’d see is the
conviction. The Greek word used for conviction is “elegchos,” which means
“a proof” or “that by which a thing is proved or tested.” It was a legal term
or word customarily used in trials. This “elegchos” is a real, tested, proven
conviction “of things not seen.” Think of it as convicting evidence before
a judge or jury. Just because you can’t see it doesn’t mean it doesn’t exist.
You can’t see dreams, thoughts, or feelings, but these most certainly exist.
Conclusion
Faith for the believer is a foundational assurance;
a confident know-so and not a hope-so; and a concrete, proven conviction that
has been tested and proven true. Faith is all these things, but our faith is in the God-man, Jesus Christ. In Him we can have assurance, hope, and conviction.Amen.
Credit:Christian Quotes
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