The Greatest Threat to our Life

We just heard a rousing sermon Sunday from Pastor Jacob titled, “The Cry of Faith: Help my Unbelief” from Mark 9:14-29. One of the early takeaways from the sermon was this, “Unbelief is the greatest threat of your life!”

Do you believe that?

In our heart of hearts, I suspect many of us think of that statement with the same sort of perplexity the crowd likely had hearing Jesus’ first words to the paralyzed man, “My son, your sins are forgiven,” (Mark 2:5).

Perhaps they thought, “Forgiven sins? Jesus, this man needs miraculous healing – a rescue from paralysis.” In this case, the obvious rescue came quickly. As we know, Jesus said a few moments later, “I say to you, rise, pick up your bed, and go home,” (Mark 2:11). We see the instantaneous results, “And he rose and immediately picked up his bed and went out before them all, so that they were amazed and glorified God, saying, ‘We never saw anything like this!” (Mark 2:12). Don’t miss though the purpose statement of why Jesus said, “your sins are forgiven” and then spoke the healing. Just a verse before Jesus uttered those powerful words of healing, He stated the purpose behind it all, “…that you may know that the Son of Man has authority on earth to forgive sins”.

That was the crux of everything at that moment. The paralyzed man, his friends, the questioning scribes, and the larger crowd needed to know and believe in Jesus’ identity and purpose. They needed to know and believe Jesus was the Son of Man who had authority to forgive sins. This was more crucial than the physical need for rescue from paralysis. There was ignorance and unbelief in Jesus at work, and therefore an eternal need for rescue.

We may admittedly think, “Yeah, I have issues with unbelief in my life, but it pales in comparison to the life-altering trials I’m currently enduring.” However, unbelief is a root buried under all of our sins, it robs us of our joy in Christ, it can quench the Spirit’s power and work in our lives, and it blunts our maturity in the faith. For those who are not born-again believers, unbelief in Jesus is the urgent and eternal barrier that must be overcome by the grace of God. Whether we’ve believed in Christ or not, unbelief is the crucial, foundational point from which we all need rescue. We must come to the point of knowing that God through Christ and by His Spirit is both powerful enough and that it’s His gracious will to ultimately rescue us.

Fighting Against Unbelief as we Wait on His Rescue

But how do we fight against unbelief and seasons of doubt in our lives as we endure trials, especially when His rescue seems to delay?

Again, Pastor Jacob gave some great points of application I want to highlight and expand on a bit.

1) Realize we’re in a spiritual battle, so we desperately need God. When we realize that for non-believers there is a war going on for their souls, then we realize how much we need Jesus to intervene. As believers, when we recognize that a war’s being waged to distract and tempt us to mar the name of Christ and His bride, and to divide and neutralize our effectiveness through depression, demoralization, moral failure, and false teaching- then we understand we desperately need God.

2) Recognize that as we’re needy for Jesus’ help we can be His instrument to help others. God works mightily through those who know they need Him and rely on Him. This makes sense since we’re made to glorify Him and help others find their greatest joy is found in Him. Sometimes our moment of realizing our greatest need for God can be a moment of fruitful work. That’s because in that moment, we’ll be less likely to bring any credit or glory to ourselves. As believers, we all have an opportunity to point others to the ways we’ve seen God’s faithfulness in our own difficult seasons and to comfort them with His comfort we’ve received directly and through others. This stepping out in faith to bless others is a way to fight against doubts and despair when our own trials are raging and our rescue is delayed.

3) Recognize God is working in our waiting. Sometimes with delays, it’s easy to feel God has forgotten us, or isn’t willing or able to rescue us. Biblically though, this we see lots of delays in God’s timing.

  • The Israelites were in Egypt for 430 years before God redeemed them through Moses (Exodus 12:40).
  • The exiles remained in Babylon 70 years before the first of them were able to return to Israel.
  • The man born blind was an adult before he was healed and believed (John 9).
  • Lazarus got sick and was dead 4 days before Jesus came and resurrected Him (John 11).
  • The woman suffered with an issue of blood for 12 years before receiving Jesus’ healing (Mark 5:25).
  • Jesus’ arrival on earth came after 400 years of silence from prophets and thousands of years after He was foretold. But when the fullness of time had come, God sent forth His Son…” (Galatians 4:4)

God’s timing and His ways are higher than ours (Isaiah 55:8-9). In His love, sovereign power, and omniscience He delays His rescue for the most opportune moment. While He delays, He works in His children to reveal unbelief, grow our faith, and make us more like Christ.

4) Recognize God has guaranteed an eternal rescue in Christ. Scripture does promise trials and hardships as we follow Jesus and does not promise a clean rescue from every one on this side of heaven. But, Christ Jesus does act as the Chief and Good Shepherd (1 Peter 5:4; John 10:11, 27-29) to carry us throughout our lives and ensure that our faith He’s gifted us will endure to the end. Paul toward the end of his life beautifully articulates this kind of confident attitude during crisis. In 2 Timothy, as he is nearing his execution, he says these words,

The Lord will rescue me from every evil deed and bring me safely into His heavenly kingdom. To Him be the glory forever and ever. Amen.” (2 Timothy 4:16-18)

This didn’t mean he’d be spared from being martyred for Christ. It did mean, not even death could stop God’s loving plans for rescue into His heavenly kingdom.

5) Recognize we must pray. In each of previous points, I hope you’ve sensed the necessity of Pastor Jacob’s final imperative Sunday to pray. If we’re dealing with cosmic forces of darkness, we need to pray for Christ’s protection and deliverance. If we’re to get beyond ourselves and see the opportunity to bless others, we need the Lord’s strength and wisdom. When our patience and faith and hope is running dry as we wait, we need to pray for God’s perspective and help to trust His perfect timing. We need to pray to keep our eyes focused on Christ and the eternal joy and rescue set before us in His presence.

This weekend, as we’re waiting for God’s rescue in circumstantial and spiritual ways both individually and as DGCC, we’ve got a chance to put our faith into action through prayer. We’ll have an opportunity for a corporate prayer of confession in our worship service. We’ll also have a joint time of prayer after lunch. Then we’ll send a group off to prayer walk around our church neighborhood. We’re even planning for a handful of people to stay back to pray that God’s Spirit would lead those walking to God-glorifying interactions.

As we pray together and seek His face, by His grace we’ll grow in our faith and will see the cry to rescue positively answered, “I believe, help my unbelief!”

 

 

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