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Live It!
Today's best advice for practical Christian living 

Acting on Your Faith
By Eva Marie Everson
Crosswalk.com Contributing Writer

The point of faith is believing. Moses chose to believe. Those who
followed him out of Egypt choose to believe-though for some the belief
was short-lived. Many who heard Jesus speaking that day in the temple
choose to continue to follow Him...while others turned away and may have
been among those in the crowd whipped to a frenzy as they shouted,
"Crucify him!"

There will always be those who choose not to believe, but for whatever
reason, you have chosen to believe. You have locked arms with faith and
determined to hold on tight...no matter what. You have reached a unique
point in the call: a call to action.
 
A Short Bible Lesson & A Call To Action
 
In the book, Faith and Reason, the following lines come early on: The
man of faith is the man who acts on or lives by the assumption that
there is a God...1[1] (emphasis mine)

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So, I guess my next question for you is this: what do your actions say
about what you believe, even in the worst of times?
 
Let's take a deeper look at what Hebrews 11 said about specific men and
women of our faith's history. Before we do, however, let's look at the
verses found at the beginning, in the center, and at the end of the
"hall of faith," paying close attention to the last lines.
 
Now faith is being sure of what we hope for and certain of what we do
not see. This is what the ancients were commended for. By faith we
understand that the universe was formed at God's command, so that what
is seen was not made out of what was visible. (Vs. 1-3)
 
All these people were still living by faith when they died. They did not
receive the things promised; they only saw them and welcomed them from a
distance. And they admitted that they were aliens and strangers on
earth. People who say such things show that they are looking for a
country of their own. If they had been thinking of the country they had
left, they would have had opportunity to return. Instead, they were
longing for a better country--a heavenly one. Therefore God is not
ashamed to be called their God, for he has prepared a city for them.
(Vs. 13b-16)

These were all commended for their faith, yet none of them received what
had been promised. God had planned something better for us so that only
together with us would they be made perfect. (Vs. 39,40)
 
The Hall of Faith
 
Who Were They: Abel and Enoch
 
What Did They Do: Abel gave an offering that pleased God. Such an
offering was his, that in the day of the writing of Hebrews, it was
still being spoken of. While his sacrifice put a smile on God's face, it
caused his brother, Cain, to become jealous...to the point of murder.
Abel's faith resulted in his death.
 
Enoch "pleased God." In Genesis 5:22, we read the following: And after
he became the father of Methuselah, Enoch walked with God 300 years and
had other sons and daughters. Enoch walked with God so much so that God
took him home in such a way other than by death.
 
Can you imagine this for a moment? One minute he's there, walking with
God in a spiritual sense and then, in the next second, literally walking
with God. Having sought His face, he then beheld it.
 
We don't know about bad times for Enoch, but we do know that he lived in
the pre-flood era, a time when men were becoming "corrupt and wicked."
(Genesis 6) For a man of God to live in a time of wickedness is
difficult. We today who walk in the Light should know this situation
well.
 
We also know that Enoch was born in the 7th generation after Adam and
three before Noah, whose family alone survived the great flood of
Genesis 6. According to the records of the family from Adam to Enoch
(through the lineage of Seth), Adam alone had died a natural death. All
the rest were still very much alive.
 
But the important thing to note about Enoch is that he walked with God
before God took him up and that he did so for three hundred years. He
didn't wait until the sweet "by and by" to have constant fellowship with
God, but grabbed hold of the minutes in the every day to deepen their
relationship.
 
John Darby, in his Exposition of the Bible, said it like this:
 
This is very important and very precious. If we walk with God, we have
the testimony that we please Him; we have the sweetness of communion
with God, the testimony of His Spirit, His intercourse with us in the
sense of His presence, the consciousness of walking according to His
word, which we know to be approved by Him -in a word, a life which,
spent with Him and before Him by faith, is spent in the light of His
countenance and in the enjoyment of the communications of His grace and
of a sure testimony, coming from Himself that we are pleasing to Him. A
child who walks with a kind father and converses with him, his
conscience reproaching him with nothing-does he not enjoy the sense of
his parent's favour?2[2]
 
Who Were They: Noah and Abraham
 
What Did They Do: You could not have gone to Sunday school and church as
a small child and not know the stories of Noah and Abraham. They are the
men our youthful songs are made up of.
 
"The Lord said to Noah, 'There's gonna be a floody-floody...'" and
"Father Abraham, had many sons; many sons had Father Abraham...."
 
Noah, Genesis 6 tells us, found favor in the eyes of God while the rest
of the world lived in corruption. This was a very bad time in the
history of man. We know, based on God's words to Noah, from the time
Noah got the word to build a boat until the actual flood, was 120 years.
That's a long time to work on a God-project with no proof that what you
are doing is even necessary. But, look at what these lines of Scripture
tell us:

Genesis 6: 9:  Noah was a righteous man, blameless among the people of
his time, and he walked with God.

Genesis 6:22: Noah did everything just as God commanded him.

Genesis 7:5    And Noah did all that the LORD commanded him
Noah's faith preceded the warnings about the flood, held true during the
instructions from God, and stayed on course just before the floodgates
opened.
 
Abraham's story is fascinating. Nearly everything (though not all) about
it shouts: MAN OF FAITH! He is not noted for one single act of faith,
but by many acts of faith. Even within the verses of Hebrews 11 we learn
that:
 
1)      Abraham was willing to leave his home for a place God had
prepared for him, even though he didn't know where it was.
2)      He lived as a nomad in a place that was foreign to him, and
raised his children there.
3)      He looked forward to a city with foundations, whose architect
and builder is God.
4)      He believed and was enabled to become a father, not only as an
old man but also by a barren woman. From his seed would come not just
one, but also billions.
5)      When tested, Abraham was willing to lay his son Isaac on the
altar and sacrifice him if need be. But by his words found in the
Genesis story, we can ascertain that not once did Abraham lose the
belief that from Isaac would not die and by him would come many nations.
 
Who Were They: Isaac and Jacob
 
What Did They Do: Isaac, the son of Abraham, was the father of twin
boys, Esau and Jacob. Esau was the older and the one closest to his
father's heart because of their common interests. When Isaac blessed his
sons, he thought he was giving the "good blessing" to his older boy, but
rather had been conned by the younger, Jacob.
 
This was, however, how God had intended it. Isaac was a man who trusted
God and God did not falter from His ultimate plan for His people, in
spite of Isaac's devotion to Esau.
 
Jacob...well, Jacob was a bit of a con artist. No...not a bit of
one...he was one! Yet, God loved him dearly and placed on him a
patriarchal calling. From Jacob's sons would come the twelve tribes of
Israel.
 
Though Jacob had twelve sons, only ten would become the heads of the
tribes. Levi's offspring would serve as priests over the people while
Joseph's two sons took the place of himself and Levi. 
 
When Jacob was dying, Joseph brought his sons, Manasseh and Ephraim, to
be blessed by his father. Because Manasseh was the older, Jacob's right
hand was to rest upon his head with the left hand upon Ephraim. But
Jacob, this man who had conned his older brother out of a blessing by
their father Isaac and who had preferred marriage to the younger sister
Rachel over the older Leah, switched his hands, giving the greater
blessing to the younger son.
 
Why? It was God-ordained. Jacob, no longer the young con artist, was
guided by the Spirit of God in all he did as he blessed his sons and
grandsons.
 
Who Were They: Joseph and Moses
 
What Did They Do: The stories of Joseph and Moses read like a great soap
opera. In fact, epic movies have been made about them.
 
Joseph, despised by his brothers and sold into slavery, became the
governor of Egypt after a long period of imprisonment due to a false
testimony against him. Because of his faithfulness to God, when the
Hebrews were in the midst of a famine and near starvation, they were
received by the prosperous Joseph. In spite of the fact that his nation
of people now lived on foreign soil, Joseph believed with his dying
breath that they would return to the land God had promised them and that
his very bones would be buried in his homeland.
 
Four hundred years later, with the man named Moses, this came to be.
 
Not only was Moses a man of faith, his parents were people of faith.
They believed that he was no ordinary child and when the king declared
that all the male Hebrew babies were to be slaughtered, they hid him.
Though he grew up in the home of Pharaoh's daughter and could rightfully
be heralded as a prince, he protected his own people, who were now
slaves, to the point of murder. He fled into the land of Midian where,
forty years later, he heard the voice of God directing him back to Egypt
to set the Hebrew prisoners free. By faith he returned and-if you
haven't ever seen The Ten Commandments and just don't know the story-he
displayed the power of God, trusted God in the first Passover, and led
the people out of Israel, even across the waters of the Red Sea.
 
Who Were They: The Army of Israel and Rahab
 
What Did They Do: Once the Hebrews had crossed into the Promised Land,
God instructed their new leader, Joshua, to take it by force. They came
upon the city of Jericho, a fortified city. The walls that surrounded it
could have very possibly been double-walled. It was at the heart of the
land and may have been the center of worship for the "moon god." How is
it that a ragtag bunch of nomads who have wandered the desert for forty
years are to come in and conquer this, their very first enemy?
 
By faith. In the story that children's hymns are made of, the walls
literally crumbled to the earth after the army marched around the city
walls once a day for six days and seven times on the seventh day.
Ludicrous? Yes! But, by faith they believed God and by faith they
obeyed!
 
Everyone within the city died with the exception of one: a prostitute
named Rahab who had given the Hebrew spies shelter and peace, something
she could have easily been killed for. In time she adapted the Hebrew
culture, then married and gave birth to a son named Boaz, who grew to be
a man, the husband of Ruth...and the grandfather of a king named David.
 
What About You?

Remarkable. If you have the time, go to Hebrews 11 and study in detail
those mentioned there. Con artists, murderers, slaves, adulterers, and
prostitutes manage to find their names among those who are icons of the
faith because of their belief. There's nothing perfect about a single
one...and yet they are united by two words: they believed.
 
According to Merriam-Webster's online dictionary, one of the definitions
of "believe" is "to have a firm conviction." The men and women mentioned
in Hebrews 11 were people of "firm conviction." If you go back to the
list, check out what each of them did specifically that proved them to
be believers. Now, ask yourself: in the same circumstances, could you
have done the same? Could you make the same sacrifices and choices?
 
Could you, like Enoch, walked with God though everyone else lived within
the sensual pleasures? Could you, like Noah, have stayed with the boat
plans...for 120 years? Could you, like Abraham, have laid your son on an
altar or left your home without a map or a direction? Could you, like
Moses, returned to a land where you were considered a criminal, only to
lead several million people to their freedom?
 
Allow me to encourage you a bit further. Grab a piece of paper and right
now write down all the things you believe about God. Now...why do you
believe it?


For more great articles and resources to help you grow in your faith,
visit: http://link.crosswalk.com/UM/T.asp?A1.11.26457.1.1698058

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