Faith is the Only Practical Decision
By
May 31, 2007We want to know the outcome before it comes. We tell ourselves it's so we can plan accordingly, but really we want to avoid the unknown. We don't want to live by faith. We prefer to talk about it, read about it, listen to the stories of others who live by it, but we are truly uncomfortable when it comes to our time to step out of the boat. We are, for the most part, the other disciples. Peter makes us uncomfortable. Being like him scares us. But we must. That is, if we are ever going to learn what it means to live by faith. We think faith is impractical, immeasurable, full of uncertainty and risk and therefore, only done when there are no other options. My friend Eric Beck says, "Faith is the only practical decision." All other choices are impractical. Consider Jericho: (Joshua 6) how practical was it to march around the city for seven days, blow a trumpet and see what happens? That seemed ludicrous. Consider the alternative, build a siege mound, build ladders and scale the high, thick city walls and hopefully have enough of your poorly equipped army survive to actually do battle. Marching around the city seven times (obedience by faith) was the most practical. The same is true of Gideon and Abraham and every hero of faith in the Bible. Want to be truly practical? Step out in faithful obedience to God's leading.

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Gerry