Faith in practice
In teaching the fourth through sixth grade girls Sunday school class at my church, I use the Desiring God curriculum, How Majestic Is Your Name, which details the many names of God. Last Sunday we studied Jehovah-Jireh: “The Lord Will Provide.”
As the girls and I were going through the lesson, I had the opportunity to share with them how I was planning to trust God with our future transportation needs. Our van was having some issues, but at that point on Sunday it was still running. I told the girls that I knew I would have to eventually trust God with the van, but what I didn’t know is that the next day our van would break down for good.
Hebrews 11:1, of course, reminds us, “Faith is being sure of what we hope for and certain of what do not see.” Well, we’re living in the tension between faith and certainty right now. Do we sit tight and see how God provides? Do we crunch numbers and see what kind of monthly payment we can afford? If we do the latter, does it negate the former? Is it possible to really trust at the same time you are scrambling to find the solution yourself?
In the past, my mistake is usually that when I trust God to provide, I place parameters on his provision. For instance, in this scenario, I think God’s provision should look like a brand new car in the driveway tomorrow. I realize, however, He has provided for us already by allowing us to test-drive a car from Chevy for the past month and having our pastor offer us his family’s second minivan for the weekend. In addition, when we go to my husband’s family’s farm next week for Thanksgiving, we’ll bring home his parents’ van as a loaner for a few weeks.
At the same time, we will begin looking for replacement options. We’ll sweat a little over it, but we won’t worry. Because the God who can give us a new Chevy for a month, a loaned van for the weekend, and another one for as long as we need it will continue to provide for our needs.
I have faith in that certainty.














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back to top9 Comments to “Faith in practice”
Another example of the favorite type of argument at this web site:
Heads we win.
Tails we win.
Other people win when coins stand on edge. Nope. Scratch that. Then we call it a “miracle.” Thereby proving some point or other.
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Perhaps you should heed the small voice of God re: your vehicular dilemma:
“That Bible you have? Its the owner’s maintenance manual for your life. And if you look in the van’s glove box you’ll find an owner’s manual listing all the needed routine maintenance checks and services as well.”
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We in the states routinely bewail our car problems. Yet all those folks in Cuba still seem to tool around in Packards and Studebakers.
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Thanks Megan for sharing your present situation to remind me of our Jehovah-Jireh: “The Lord Will Provide.”
Each time I find myself anxious or fearful about the practical needs in my life, I am amazed at how our great God will bring someone or something along that meets the need. He usually does it a completely different way than I expect, but I can remember His faithfulness in past situations and trust Him for His provision today and in the future.
Good word.
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What DebWelch said. This has happened to me over and over and over again. Never ceases to amaze me. Just what I need when I need it, never fancy or expensive, just enough, just right.
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What NJLawyer said – “Just what I need when I need it…”
This post reminds me of what my former pastor often said, “God provides until He provides.”
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Random (1), you may be disappointed to learn that you have percieved an important theological point regarding God’s people: we win. We don’t always know what that’s going to look like in a particular circumstance, and we don’t always even know how to interpret it in hindsight, but we are assured that “all things work together for good…” (Romans 8:28) This is not just vague positive thinking. That statement comes after considerable discussion of what God has already done for us in Jesus Christ, which leaves no question that His intentions toward us are good. That ultimate good sometimes calls for experiences we might prefer to avoid–look at what it required of Christ–but we can still be assured that God is at work conforming us to the image of His Son. And then we get to live with Him forever. I tell my kids that sometimes it feels like cheating, we can’t lose.
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#7
I am glad you have convinced yourself that you “win.”
Nevertheless, if it sometimes “feels like cheating,” you might consider being a little uneasy. Unless, you have paid the referee under the table.
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Nope, Random Name, the Referee Himself has paid the tab.
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