Friday, March 9, 2018

A Mature Faith


I keep telling my students to create for themselves a mature faith.  But what does a mature faith look like?

Martin Luther said:
“The Holy Spirit is no skeptic, and the thing He has written in our hearts are not doubts or opinions, but assertions-surer and more certain than sense and life itself.”
While Luther may be right, the Holy Spirit is also not naïve and does not condone lies about human and divine indifference. The nagging questions surrounding faith will not disappear just because we will and proclaim it.  We can sing all the hymns and recite all the creeds, ignore or decide not to think about the questions, but they will not ignore us.  
A mature faith trusts God with heart, soul and mind and is not fearful or distressed by the questions.  We welcome them!  I have said this again and again.  Faith is not opposed to questions.  Faith and questions are inter-related and inextricably connected. 

But why?  Because faith is a relationship based on honest thoughtful trust in the promises of God.  We trust in the mystery that is God without knowing exactly what that means, hoping against hope that our trust is not in vain and that God is working with us and for us, whatever that means. 

I wish for you a mature and honest faith, a faith which propels you to care for the neighbor in pain and is unwilling to lie about the questions.

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