Faithful Pilgrimage: Trusting God's Promises Beyond Sight

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Hebrews 11:13 says, "These all died in faith, not having received the promises, but having seen them afar off were assured of them, embraced them, and confessed that they were strangers and pilgrims on the Earth." This verse highlights the enduring faith of the patriarchs, who trusted in God's promises despite not seeing their fulfillment. [00:00:30]

The problem we have is that when our faith is not answered, when things don't happen that we believe, we give up hope and we say, "Well, it's not going to happen," and we stop believing. Now, this is at two different levels. The first level obviously is concerning our Salvation. [00:02:27]

The modern teachings of faith say that if you believe, you will get what you believe for. And so we have a saying, "Blab it and grab it" or "Name it and claim it." If you believe, then God's going to do what you believe Him for. If you don't get what you believe for, it's because you didn't exercise enough faith. [00:05:03]

Faith is an end in itself. Too many of us see faith as a means to an end, so if I have faith, then I can get certain things. It's not about the faith; it's about the stuff I get, whether it's healing or financial stuff or spiritual stuff. No, faith is an end in itself. [00:07:14]

God is trustworthy. God is reliable. He is Dependable. He is faithful. And so when we lose trust or confidence in God, it's not because God has done or not done something that resulted in us not believing; it's because we have stopped believing. So it's on us. [00:08:32]

The problem we have today, and the problem it's been with the church from the beginning, is that we want to embrace things that we can see and handle and touch. We embrace material things. We embrace political power. We embrace influence and control, things that we can get now. [00:14:42]

You can't hold on to temporal things and eternal things at the same time. You have to let go of the temporal if you're going to hold on to the eternal. And these men didn't hold on to the temporal. Remember Abraham again; he leaves his city and goes and lives in a tent. [00:15:42]

Our citizenship is in heaven. Because that is true, it affects the way that we live. If you are invested in this world, you're going to live in a certain way. If you're invested in heaven, you're going to live differently. And so how do we know then that the majority of Christians are confessing that they are not strangers and pilgrims? [00:20:10]

Abraham didn't do that. He said, "I'm waiting for God's promise, and until that day, I'm going to live as a stranger and as a pilgrim. I don't belong." Now, unfortunately, the majority of Christians today belong in this world. They're comfortable here. They speak its language. They embrace its values. [00:22:00]

God is not ashamed to be called their God, for He has prepared a city for them. God is not ashamed to be called their God. Now notice He doesn't say that they were not ashamed to call God their God, but God was not ashamed to be called their God. [00:30:23]

We cannot afford to lose faith in God's promise. Unfortunately, many of us are being encouraged to be motivated by the promises of a false revival. There is no promise of a revival, but there is a promise of survival. And that's where we're at at the moment. The church is in survival mode. [00:35:39]

Can we fix our eyes on the Promises of God? Can we fix our eyes on Jesus's coming? Can we fix our eyes on the promise of a new Heaven and a new Earth in which righteousness dwells? And can we embrace those things and live as those who are indeed strangers and pilgrims in the earth? [00:36:15]

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