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Looking Unto Jesus And Not Your Faith
Contributed by Simeon Edigbe on Jul 13, 2016 (message contributor)
Summary: Faith is not rules concerning what we must do to receive from God. When we see Jesus as big as He really is then we relax in Him. This is where faith is born.
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I recently had a chat with a good friend and I opened up that there is a need to understand the difference between the faith of Jesus and our faith.
There are many Christians who always want to start off asking themselves “Do I have enough faith?”. They want to be sure that they are they in a good position before they have good results in their prayers. The problem is that if we start assess our faith level we have already put faith as a hindrance between us and Jesus’ finished work. This is where many people have missed it in the Word of faith movement. Some try to see if they can raise the bar in their “faithometer” by making serial confessions.
No doubt we need to understand faith in its purest form because it is essential in our prayer life. Without it is impossible to lay hold of our possessions in Christ. I want to define faith in a simple way for all to understand.
Faith is simply yielding to and resting in Jesus’ ability. Faith is a response and not a reaction or initiative. Grace is the initiative and faith is the response.
Faith has nothing to do with our achievement, qualification or our worthiness. Faith rests in Jesus and His ability. That’s why we see scores of Muslims, Buddhists, and Hindus who know very little about the Bible receive astounding miracles in crusade grounds. Though they have never heard of the Book of Genesis, the Pauline epistles to the Romans or Galatians, they grasp the simple truth of God’s love revealed in Jesus for them. Once a person connects with Jesus, everything is possible. That is where faith is born. That’s why the stories of the Canaanite woman and the Roman centurion are so important as they were the only ones that Jesus ascribed “great faith” to.
Sometimes preachers who want to minister healing to people in a crusade or church services tell them that before they can get it that they must first be right with God before He can answer them. There are loads of examples with Jesus just asking them "Do u want to be healed?"
When you ask yourself “Do I have the right kind of faith to be healed?” “What if I am lacking in faith?” You are focusing on yourself and your faith, instead of Christ and His finished work.
What you should be asking is “Did Jesus take away this sickness? If He did, then He must have done a perfect work.” In other words, fix your eyes on Jesus and His perfect work. Let Him be the author and the finisher (perfecter) of your faith.
The distinction between your faith and His faith.
“Knowing that a man is not justified by the works of the law, but by the faith of Jesus Christ, even we have believed in Jesus Christ, that we might be justified by the faith of Christ, and not by the works of the law: for by the works of the law shall no flesh be justified.” (Galatians 2:16)
Paul makes a distinction between the faith of Jesus Christ and faith in Jesus Christ. In Greek, which is the language that the New Testament was written in, there is no phrase for “of”, but there is a phrase for “in”. When you look at this text in Greek, there is a distinct Greek word “eis”, meaning “in or into”. It is the same phrase that Jesus used when He told the woman with the issue of blood to “go into peace” (Mark 5:34). Because the text shows where to place the English word “in”, the translators had to assume that in the other places it should be another word.
The translators have taken the authority away from this verse they changed the words to suit our modern vernacular. Paul states that we are justified by the faith “of” Jesus Christ and then furthers it by stating that we have placed our faith “in” Jesus Christ.
Jesus demonstrated faith if the highest form when he sacrificed His life on the cross and taking His own blood to the Father in heaven. He believed that His sacrifice would be sufficient and He also believed that His Father would be so pleased with this sacrifice that He would raise His Son from the dead, which He did. Christ’s faithfulness is what causes all of us to be justified.
That certainly cannot stand alone, for we need to meet His faith with our faith in His finished work. Paul makes it clear in this verse that our believing in Jesus Christ is what makes us justified “by the faith of Christ”. This is the place where salvation happens.
Paul expounds it this way in Romans, “Therefore being justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ” (Romans 5:1). It is our faith that brought the justification but it was Jesus’ faithfulness to the cross and its atoning work that brings us peace with God. In other words, without the faithfulness of Jesus, our faith means nothing. Our faith finds its life in His faith.