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Found 12 articles matching "faith"
Fear of the future grows most readily in the soil of forgetting. Scripture's most repeated anti-fear instruction is not "be brave" but "remember." This guide examines the biblical discipline of structured remembrance — the stones at the Jordan, the feasts of Israel, the practice of zakar — as the specific, practical antidote to fear of the unknown.
God's timing is rarely aligned with human preference, and the gap between the promise and its fulfillment is one of the most consistently demanding dimensions of the life of faith. These seven biblical principles describe what trust in God's timing looks like when the waiting is extended and the reasons are not explained.
Stress is the experience of pressure exceeding available capacity — and Scripture addresses it not by denying the pressure but by introducing resources that exceed the capacity it is threatening. These seven principles describe the biblical framework for navigating stress without being consumed by it.
Faithfulness during trials is among the most consistently demanded and most practically difficult of all the Christian virtues — because it requires the sustained performance of what is right in conditions specifically designed to make the right thing harder to do. These seven principles provide the biblical architecture for faithfulness that holds.
Spiritual endurance is not the passive outlasting of difficulty — it is the active, sustained, forward movement through difficulty toward the destination that God has set before the person of faith. These seven principles from Scripture describe what genuine perseverance looks like and how it is sustained.
Spiritual doubt is not the terminal condition it often feels like during its most acute seasons — it is frequently the precondition of a deeper and more tested faith. These seven biblical principles address doubt with the same honesty and engagement that Scripture itself models.
Trusting God's plan is not primarily a conviction to be held — it is a pattern of action to be practiced. Scripture consistently shows trust in God's plan taking shape as the next faithful step taken without requiring visibility of what comes after. This guide examines the specific enacted form that trust takes in the biblical narrative.
Scripture does not treat uncertainty and adversity as obstacles to trust in God — it treats them as the specific conditions in which trust is most genuinely exercised and most deeply formed. These seven principles draw from across the whole Bible to show what that trust looks like in practice.
Spiritual struggle — the experience of doubt, dryness, disillusionment, or a prolonged sense of God's absence — is a more common feature of the life of faith than most Christians are prepared for. This article examines the biblical resources for rebuilding what the struggle has damaged.
The apparent silence of God in the face of sustained, earnest prayer is one of the most testing experiences of the Christian life. This article examines the biblical framework for understanding delayed answers and the faithfulness that holds through them.
Trials have a specific tendency to create distance from God — not because God withdraws, but because the trial produces conditions that make sustained engagement with Him genuinely difficult. This article examines the biblical practices for maintaining closeness to God in exactly those conditions.
Uncertainty about the future is not the opposite of trust — it is the specific condition in which genuine trust operates. This article examines the biblical practices and theological convictions that sustain trust when the path ahead cannot be seen.
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