Faith and Doubt: Embracing the Journey Together

Devotional

Sermon Summary

Bible Study Guide

Sermon Clips

1) "But Jesus said, love the Lord your God with all your heart and soul and mind and strength. He's basically saying, I want you to commit everything that you are to me. In other words, you can't rely on the faith of grandma. You can't rely on the faith of a friend or a spouse. You have to determine for yourself what this records. Do I really believe this? Is this intellectually credible? And if it is, it demands my life and my allegiance, right?" [01:01:08]( | | )

2) "I started reading the Bible and it started to change me. I started to read the Bible and it started to change me. And today, she's a devotee. I'm a devoted follower of Jesus Christ. Friends, it can happen for any one of us. The most unlikely people. It's not just sometimes we go, well, people who need a crutch or their life has dealt them a bad hand and that's the only place they have to turn." [01:04:14]( | | )

3) "How do we deal with doubts that may come our way? More important than that, how does Jesus respond to our doubt? I want to do two things today. I want to show, first of all, that you can absolutely have a genuine faith, a vibrant, spiritual life, even if you have doubts. We're going to look at one of the most incredible and most doubted events in all of history." [32:54]( | | )

4) "Some doubted, which means this. When you doubt, you're in some pretty good company, right? Like the other 11 disciples, closest followers of Jesus, some doubted. So the question then remains, what do you do with the doubts? What do you do with the doubts? Well, for starters, from the example of how Jesus responded, Hans, to his first followers, we can say this, it's okay to have doubts." [40:06]( | | )

5) "The opposite of faith is not doubt. The opposite of faith is unbelief. Unbelief. That's two very different things. Unbelief refers to our will. It refers to, like, I choose not to believe the evidence, or I don't even want to look at the evidence, because even before you show me, I've already made a decision. I'm not going to believe that." [41:37]( | | )

6) "But we would say that if God is God, that he can do whatever he pleases in his universe, right? I like how Travis Dickinson puts it in his book, Wandering Toward God, Finding Faith Amid Doubts and Big Questions. He gives this example. Anybody who's flown in an airplane. I think you'll be able to relate to this. He says, Most of us are willing to get in an airplane, even though we may not be able to explain how the plane functions." [52:18]( | | )

7) "So, Plutarch wrote in his book about the assassination of Caesar, he wrote in the 2nd century AD, about 160 years after the assassination. So, couldn't have talked to an eyewitness, right? They were long gone. So, who was Plutarch's source? Well, as a sort of a member of the high society of, you know, Rome, he had access, no doubt, to documents, to, you know, oral traditions that are lost to us." [53:46]( | | )

8) "Why would they do that? Why would they do that? Why would they do that? Why would they do that? Only you would say if they were telling the truth, right? Bateman makes this comment in his article. He says, while many people might die for something they think is true, who dies for what they know to be false? If the early disciples knew in their hearts, like, well, we actually really never saw Jesus and whatever." [58:07]( | | )

9) "These are issues far too important, right, to just let go. But even when we have doubts, here's what we can know. Jesus himself is patient with our doubts, right? He's humble, and he's gentle. So acknowledge your doubts, pinpoint them, and do your research. But they're issues too important to ignore. Let's talk about one more step and then wrap up." [59:28]( | | )

Ask a question about this sermon