A Measure of Faith

sprout
What is a measure of faith? Paul tells us that every person has been given a measure of faith.

Rom 12:3
3 For I say, through the grace given unto me, to every man that is among you, not to think of himself more highly than he ought to think; but to think soberly, according as God has dealt to every man the measure of faith.
MKJV

What is faith? Faith is an abstract English word that didn’t exist until the 1200’s. The Hebrew word for faith is emunah (אמונה) and aman (אמן). It is a verb that means ‘trust in a firm foundation of truth as a child trusts in a nursing father’. In Hebrew words have gender. Grammatically verbs take on the gender of the noun it is referring to. Aman (אמן) is the masculine form and emunah (אמונה) is the famine form. In English this word is translated into ‘trust, faith, faithful, believe, steady, establish, nurse and truth’.

Alef (א) is an ox and strength. It can also represent God (אל) pictographically meaning ‘strong leader’. This is why Israel made a golden calf at Mt. Sinai; it was logical though contrary to the Word of God which He spoke which they heard in Ex 20. Its English equivalent is Aa.

Mem (מ,ם) is a womb, water, chaos, and produce. One picture is of an open womb meaning ‘give birth’ and the other is a closed womb meaning ‘pregnant’. Its English equivalent is Mm.

Nun (נ,ן) is a seed, life, and continuance. Its English equivalent is Nn.

Vav (ו) is a tent stake, nail and secure. Its English equivalent is Vv, Ww, o, and oo.

Hay (ה) is a man looking at a great sight. It can mean behold, provide, worship, astonishment, and breath. Its English equivalent is Hh.

Aman (אמן) pictographically means ‘a strong womb produces life’. Emunah (אמונה) pictographically means ‘worshiping God produces a secure life’ or eternal life. The action is to ‘trust’, the concrete is ‘foundation’ and ‘nurse’, and the abstract is ‘believe’ and ‘truth’.

Faith requires actions. The apostle James, the brother of Jesus, writes a whole book about this. Faith without works is not faith; it is dead.

We are the bride of Messiah. How are we saved? By grace through faith; it is a gift from God. Paul tells us that God has given to every person a measure of faith; that is the gift. How does this work?

God embedded His word into His creation. When a man and a woman come together, how do they produce life? In modern English terms, they have sex. But what does the woman have that the man doesn’t have and what does the man have that the woman doesn’t have? The woman has an egg and a man has a seed. In order to produce life, the seed of the man must join itself with the egg of the woman. We, the Bride of Messiah, are given a measure of emunah (אמונח), faith, an egg. That should then beg the question, what is the seed?

Luke 8:11
11 Now the parable is this: The seed is the word of God.
KJV

The seed is the Word of God; it is from the beginning and it is eternal. The Hebrew word often used for sex in the Bible is ‘yada’ (ידע) and it means ‘to know by experience’. However, yada means much more than sex; it is a term of intimacy that requires relationship. In other words, without a relationship with God, His seed, His Word cannot join itself with your egg, your faith. When His Word joins itself with your faith it produces life but not just life, life eternal. And what does Jesus say eternal life is?

John 17:3
3 And this is life eternal, that they might know thee the only true God, and Jesus Christ, whom thou hast sent.
KJV

Eternal life is an intimate relationship with our Creator, our Husband. How does that relationship begin? In horticulture, what is required to pollinate most plants? A bee. And how does a bee tell his fellow bees where the food is at? It does the bee waggle dance. Now you’ll probably find this pretty interesting; the Hebrew word for bee is ‘deborah’ (דבורה). It is a feminine noun form of dabar (דבר) which concretely means ‘word’ or ‘thing’ with the action being ‘to speak’ or ‘to put in order’. The Hebrew word for this bee waggle dance is ‘basar’ (בשר) meaning ‘report’. The concrete word for basar is ‘flesh’ like on your arm and the abstract is ‘gospel’ or ‘good news’.

Do we understand what this is telling us? A bee goes out and looks for a flower. When it finds one it goes back the hive and tells the other bees where it is. The other bees go out to collect pollen and in the process pollinate plants so they can produce life. In other words it requires the good news of the Word of God for the Word of God to come into contact with a person’s faith to produce life. As Isaiah says:

Isa 52:7
7 How beautiful upon the mountains are the feet of him that brings good tidings, that publishes peace; that brings good tidings of good, that publishes salvation; that says unto Zion, Your God reigns!
MKJV

The Hebrew word for salvation here is ‘y’shua’ (ישועה) which is Jesus’s Hebrew name. Let me read it again with this in mind:

7 How beautiful upon the mountains are the feet of him that brings good tidings, that publishes peace; that brings good tidings of good, that publishes Jesus; that says unto Zion, Your God reigns!

Now that we understand how life is produced, what is the next step? I must grow! After the Word of God joins itself with our faith, how does our faith grow? What does Paul tell us?

Rom 10:17
17 So then faith comes by hearing, and obeying the word of God.
MKJV

The Hebrew word for hear is ‘shama’ (שמע) which is a verb meaning ‘hear and do’. The above should read . . . This is the concept that James is elaborating on in his letter because the Greek concept of ‘hear’ doesn’t include action. If a person does not obey the Word of God, they haven’t heard it. If a person doesn’t hear the Word of God, they can’t possibly obey it. This is what it means by, “Hearing they did not do and seeing they did not percieve,” and we are guilty of this very same thing today.

Turning our attention back to agriculture: if we have a tomato garden, what must we do to help it grow successfully?

  • weed it
  • water it
  • guide it
  • prune it

Even so we must weed temptation out of our life. If allowed to grow it will stunt our faith choking it out and at the very extreme kill it. Living water, God’s Spirit must be working in and flowing out of our life. Our faith must be guided by the Word of God or we will be all over the place and unable to stand when burdened. At times we need to remove the things in our life that at one time appeared born of faith but are not. They are typically things we’ve inherited; no plant starts out full grown.

After a plant grows, what is the next step? It must produce fruit. What is this fruit? Again, I will refer to James:

James 2:21-22
21 Was not Abraham our father justified by works, when he had offered Isaac his son upon the altar?
22 Do you see how faith is accompanied by works, and by works was faith made perfect?
MKJV

If there is an area in our life that does not produce good works, it is not born of faith and needs to be removed. Is the process complete after a plant produces fruit? No; what good is it if it rots on the vine? It must be harvested and it must be consumed. This cannot be done by us; we can only produce the fruit. We cannot force-feed the Word of God to anybody. They must take hold of it themselves and eat it.

Like I said before: our life is our ministry. As Jesus says:

Matt 5:16
16 Let your light so shine before men, that they may see your good works, and glorify your Father which is in heaven.
KJV

We are responsible to produce fruit. It is the responsibility of those around us to come up to us and pluck that fruit, inquire of us about the light that is inside of us and consume it. If they don’t, they are either not ready to receive the Word of God or they are not interested. Inquiry starts when you have their attention. When you have their attention, they have bitten into your fruit. After they have taken a bite, share the seed, the Word of God with them as the Spirit leads you.

This is still not the end or fulfillment of faith. Everything in life is cyclical. A plant goes through seasons of death, dormancy, and growth so it can produce fruit. There are times in our life when we may not feel as though we are producing fruit. Often it makes us wonder if we are out of relationship with God. But this is a season of death, dormancy and growth.

A couple more things I’d like to talk about if you’re still interested. Jesus said:

Matt 13:23
23 But he that received seed into the good ground is he that hears the word, and understands it; which also bears fruit, and brings forth, some a hundredfold, some sixty, some thirty.
MKJV

What does this mean? Who is the father of our faith? Abraham. How old was Abraham when Isaac was born? One hundred. How old was Isaac when Jacob and Esau were born? Sixty. How old was Joseph when he stood before Pharaoh? Thirty.

What is the faith of Abraham? Abraham left Babylon and his family to follow God. He was a first-generation believer. To him were given the covenants and promises and he gave birth to a nation.

What is the faith of Isaac? Isaac was a second generation believer, the son of promise. He remained faithful to the faith of his father Abraham. In the womb of Rebecca good and evil were separated. Both were born into the same family and grew up together. The evil seed continues to cause grief for the seed of promise today. It isn’t until the harvest that the tares are removed. Isaac continued the building of a nation.

What is the faith of Joseph? He was sold into captivity, was stripped of his identity and was tempted with greatest temptation a man can have yet he remained faithful and remembered who he was. His faith saved a nation and by extension the world.

What this is also saying is that Isaac, at sixty, had the faith of Abraham at a hundred. Joseph, at thirty, had the faith of Isaac at sixty. The reason Jesus presents in this order in Matthew is because this is the order that His Bride will follow through time. The apostles and first-generation believers after Jesus’s resurrection gave birth to a nation. Throughout history the Bride has continued building that nation and struggles with the evil seed in the physical Body of Messiah. In the last days we, the Bride must have the faith of Joseph to stand before Pharaoh, a picture of the antimessiah. We will be tempted with the greatest temptation yet must remain faithful, remember who we are and save a nation.

Jesus told Nicodemus, “If you don’t understand natural things when I talk to you about them, how will you ever understand spiritual things?” We’ve only really talked about earthy things thus far. I’d like to summarize all this from a more spiritual perspective.

We all have a measure of faith. God’s Word must join itself to our faith through the Good News and be planted in our heart. Our heart is where our faith grows. We must nourish our faith with the Word of God by reading it, hearing it, studying it, thinking about it all the time, and obeying it. The Spirit of God must be active in our life to cause our faith to grow. We must also weed out the seeds of temptation that plant themselves in our heart. Temptation is all around us sowed by our adversary; the less we can expose ourselves to this temptation the better. We will go through seasons when our faith is dying, dormant, growing and producing fruit. Throughout our life we’ll need to prune the dead things of our faith removing things we’ve inherited and learned that are not faith. Our faith should never stop growing. The life that we have is eternal because both the Word of God and our faith come from God who is eternal. Faith is all about relationship with our Beloved.

Faith, Hope and Love

FieldWhat is faith, hope and love? We live in a society today that generally thinks faith is what religious organization a person is part of; that hope is wishing something will happen to fulfill a personal desire; that love equates to sexual attraction. Most Christians don’t even have a concept of these three words hence why the Church isn’t much different than the world anymore. What does Paul tell us?

1 Cor 13:13
13 And now three remain: remain faith, hope, love; but the greatest of these is love.
MKJV

In other words, at the end of the day when the dead are judged according to their deeds, the only deeds that will mean anything are those that are those that are done in faith, hope, and/ or love (Rev 20:11-13). Note: though our deeds are judged, the factor that determines where we spend the rest of our existence hinges on the relationship we have with our Creator.

Faith

What is faith, emunah (אמונה)? Faith is ‘trusting in a firm foundation of truth as a child trusts his nursing father’. What is truth? God’s word is truth. Who is the word of God? Jesus. Ultimately faith is trusting in the Messiah.

Faith is also fruit; it is substance and evidence (Heb 1:1, James 1 & 2). Where does faith come from?

Rom 10:17
17 So then faith comes by hearing, and obeying through the word of God.
MKJV

Paul gets this concept from Abraham and others who have faith like the writer of Hebrews describes in chapter 11. God told Abraham to leave his country and what did he do? He left and went to Canaan and built an altar.

God told Abraham that his seed would be as the stars of Abraham; he believed God and it was accredited to him for righteousness. The evidence of Abraham’s belief (faith) is that he made the preparations for and entered into an eternal covenant with the Creator that day.

God told Abraham to offer up his son as a test of his faith. Abraham offered his son trusting in the promise of God believing that should his son die that God would raise him up to fulfill his promise. On the cusp of Abraham about to kill his son, God stopped him and provided a ram or himself as the Passover sacrifice.

We can see that faith requires action and rightly so; Hebrew is an action-based language. Faith results in action, or more properly faith is the result of an action; Hebrew is also cyclical. It is the fruit of our belief. The process works the same as kernel of wheat. The seed, the Word of God, is planted in the field, our heart. We water it, weed it and nourish it; think about it, remove the things from our life that would choke it out and let the Spirit of God work to make it grow. When it is full grown it produces fruit or a head of grain which we harvest to feed ourselves and others. That head of grain is faith; some 100 fold, 60 fold or 30 fold: the faith of Abraham, Isaac or Joseph. With that we nourish our soul and the souls of others. We speak the word of God into their life, heal them, and cast out devils.

By extension, faith also comes from experience. Jesus said:

John 14:29
29 And now I have told you before it come to pass, that, when it does come to pass, you will believe.
MKJV

When we experience the Word of God in our life, it strengthens our faith. A child whose father makes promises but never fulfills them will grow up to not trust his father. However, a child whose father is true to his promises will grow up to trust his father. And what is the evidence that his father is true to his word? The child went on a camping trip or has a bike. Nobody can take that experience away from him no matter how knowledgeable they may be and intellectual their argument.

Even so it is with God. The world is full of knowledge. Heck that is the religion of the Serpent; knowledge is power. But no matter how knowledgeable they may be or how much they make you doubt, the experiences you’ve had with God will be there to reassure you that He is real and that His Word is true.

The more you’ve experienced the promises of God in your life, the stronger your faith will be. But you can’t experience those promises if you don’t have the faith of Abraham, Isaac or Joseph to begin with. The children of Israel experienced the promises of God when they were delivered form Egypt and were lead through the wilderness yet many constantly rebelled against God, why? God tells us in his first word/ commandment:

Ex 20:2
2 I am the LORD your God, which have brought you out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of bondage.
MKJV

If a person doesn’t believe in God, trust in him as a child trusts his nursing father, it doesn’t matter how much they experience God; all they will hear is thunder.

Hope

What is hope, tiqvah (תקוה)? Hope is ‘the sign of the woman that makes her secure at the end of the day’. Concretely, this sign is a cord, string or rope. This is apparent from the first place hope appears in scripture.

Josh 2:17-21
17 And the men said unto her, We will be blameless of this oath of yours which you have made us swear.
18 Behold, when we come into the land, you will bind this line (hope – tiqvah) of scarlet thread in the window which you let us down by: and you will bring your father, and your mother, and your brothers, and all your father’s household, home unto you.
19 And it will be, that whosoever will go out of the doors of your house into the street, his blood will be upon his head, and we will be guiltless: and whosoever will be with you in the house, his blood will be on our head, if any hand be upon him.
20 And if you utter this business of ours, then we will be released of oath of yours which you have made us to swear.
21 And she said, According unto your words, so be it. And she sent them away, and they departed: and she bound the scarlet line (hope – tiqvah) in the window.
MKJV

Most of us know the story. Two Israeli spies were checking out Jericho. The guards caught wind of it and perused after them. They came upon Rahab and she hid them on the roof of her house. Then she helped them escape upon the condition that they would save her and her family. Rahab and her family were saved and she went on to become the grandmother of David and later of Jesus.

This is the story of our hope. God says:

Jer 29:10-11
10 For thus says the LORD, That after seventy years are accomplished at Babylon I will visit you, and I will raise you up with my good word, to cause you to return to this place.
11 For I know the thoughts that I think toward you, says the LORD, thoughts of peace, and not of evil, to give you an expected (hope – tiqvah) end.
MKJV

Most people readily know the second verse but not its context. Seventy years is a generation. Jesus said that the last generation wouldn’t pass away until everything was accomplished. One of the things that will be accomplished is that Babylon will be utterly destroyed. Like Rahab, our hope is that we will not be destroyed with her in the day of God’s vengeance. The only way we will not be destroyed with her is if we come out of her. The reason we come out of her is because God is returning us to the land of Promise just as he swore to our fathers Abraham, Isaac and Jacob.

What is the sign that we have or are ready to come out of Babylon? (Read Ex 12 and 13 for context.)

Ex 13:15-16
15 And it came to pass, when Pharaoh would hardly let us go, that the LORD slew all the firstborn in the land of Egypt, both the firstborn of man, and the firstborn of beast: therefore I sacrifice to the LORD all that opens the matrix, being males; but all the firstborn of my children I redeem.
16 And it shall be for a sign upon your hand, and for frontlets between your eyes: for by strength of hand the LORD brought us forth out of Egypt.
MKJV

Exodus 12 and 13 recounts the tenth plague on Egypt. We are commanded to retell and relive that even every year. The sign, oth (אות), the scarlet thread that is the evidence of our hope, that we are ready to leave Babylon is if we celebrate Passover every year. If we do not hang this thread from our window, if we do not paint our doorposts with blood, then our destruction and that of our family and loved ones will be upon our own head and we will be destroyed with the rest of Jericho.

So what is hope? Hope is living life expecting God to save us at the end of the day when Babylon is destroyed.

Love

What is love, ahavah (אהבה)? Love is ‘behold what is provided to make the house strong’. The action of this word is ‘give’. Concretely it is gift but when used in a negative way it is a burden.

Most people know what a white elephant gift is. What most people don’t know is where it originated from. Back in the day in Thailand, white elephants were considered gods. If the emperor wanted to lavishly reward a person, he would give him a white elephant and provide everything necessary to take care of that elephant. I.e. the guy won the lottery and was set for left. But if the emperor wanted to curse somebody, he would bestow upon them a white elephant and not provide what was needed to take care of it. Because that elephant was a god, that person was required to take care of it at all costs. If he didn’t and the elephant died before him, he would then be executed. This is an example of how a gift can be either a blessing or a burden.

Who does Paul tell us our provider is?

Phil 4:20
19 But my God will supply all your need according to his riches in glory by Christ Jesus.
MKJV

What is it he provides?

James 2:2
17 Every good gift and every perfect gift is from above, and comes down from the Father of lights, with whom is no variableness, neither shadow of turning.
MKJV

What is this gift? Is it not God’s Word? Didn’t Jesus, who is the Word of God made flesh come from above? Didn’t the Torah, the instruction of God also come from above?

Why is it that love is the greatest of the three afore mentioned?

Matt 22:37-40
37 Jesus said unto him, You will love the LORD your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind.
38 This is the first and great commandment.
39 And the second is like it, You will love your neighbor as yourself.
40 On these two commandments hang all the law and the prophets.
MKJV

 Mark 12:29-31
29 And Jesus answered him, The first of all the commandments is, Hear, O Israel; The LORD our God is one Lord:
30 And you will love the LORD your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind, and with all your strength: this is the first commandment.
31 And the second is like, namely this, You will love your neighbor as yourself. There is none other commandment greater than these.
MKJV

The greatest commandment is to love. Every commandment of God is to love. If we love God, we will obey his commandments; this is how we know we love God. Jesus tells his disciples in garden before he was crucified that if they love him, they will keep his commandments. When the rich man comes to Jesus and asks him what he must do to inherit eternal life or know God, Jesus admonishes him to obey the Torah. When the young man says he had done so since his childhood, Mark records that Jesus beheld him and loved him.

The commandments of God were provided to us so that we would know how to love God and our fellow believer. They were only given to his house though the physical application extends to all mankind. God revealed the secrets of life to his people long ago and science is just now beginning to understand them thirty-five hundred years later.

Synopses

So, what is faith? ‘Trusting in a firm foundation of truth as a child trusts in his nursing father.’ If a person’s faith is not in the Messiah, it is not true faith and he will not stand.

What is hope? ‘The sign of the woman that makes her secure at the end of the day.’ If a person’s hope is not in the Messiah, his hope is not eternal and it will fail.

What is love? ‘Behold what is provided to make the family strong.’ If a person does not love as admonished by the Messiah, he will be grievously burdened and made weak.

Notice that these three words are feminine nouns. In other words, they are attributes of the bride or Body of Messiah. They all require us to depend upon our husband, Jesus.

Faith – Will He be true to his promises, the covenant.

Hope- Will He deliver us from Babylon on the day of destruction, salvation.

Love – Will He provide for our needs, blessing.

At the end of day hope, faith, and love will be the difference between those who escape, survive and endure to the End and those who don’t.