Radical, Uncomfortable Faith // Having the Sort of Faith That Conquers the World, Part 2
Christianityworks Official Podcast
Release Date: 05/04/2025
Christianityworks Official Podcast
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info_outlineYou know, I wish I could tell you that God is primarily concerned about our comfort and convenience, but that’s just not true. He’s much more interested in our character and maturity and so He often calls us into radical, uncomfortable faith.
Radical faith
Have you ever felt God asking you to do something that is so radical so counter-intuitive that you felt that you were going mad? I have on more than one occasion, and as I speak with great men and women of God as I interview them as I meet them and get to know some of the giants of faith that I go to church with, that I work with, here’s what I’ve discovered listening to their stories. The more open we are to God the more we spend time in prayer, the more we take God’s word to heart as though it’s true and as though it's actually meant for us, the more God asks us to do crazy things.
I have a dear friend who against every personal desire and aspiration that he had for himself and his family, moved across the other side of the world to take on a job for years that God had called him to do.
Now most days were a struggle, most days he was homesick, most days he didn’t really understand why God had called him into that place. But four years on, as he was heading back home again, can I tell you the impact that his presences, his skills, his wisdom, his insight and energy and persona has had, not just on the organisation that he worked for but in the lives of tens of thousands of people that organisation ministers to, is just enormous.
And the more we listen to God, the more we find Him asking us to do crazy things. Radical things, things we wouldn’t consider doing if it was left up to us. And that’s exactly what happened to Noah.
We’re looking today again at faith in this series I’ve called simply, "Having the Sort of Faith that Conquers the World". It’s a phrase you find a lot throughout the bible and no where more so than in the New Testament book of Hebrews, chapter 11. It’s a chapter that talks a lot about faith, the sort of faith we need to make it through the trials and the temptations of life. The sort of faith we need to see the big picture, to get life into perspective. The sort of faith that we need to please God, because without faith, without the assurance of things we hope for and the rock solid of evidence of faith in our hearts of the things we can’t yet see. It’s completely impossible to please God.
Now, I want you to put yourself for a moment in Noah’s shoes. You’re living a happy life. Okay, the world around you is a bit corrupt but there is nothing new or surprising about that. You, your wife, your family, you're having a great little life there and God says to you, "Hey Noah, I know you live miles and miles and miles away from the nearest lake or ocean, but I want you to build a hulking great big boat. A big one! We’re going to call it an ark because I’m going to flood the world, kill everyone, and you and your family and two of every species of animal are going to be the only ones that survive. So get to it. Start building this boat."
Now you and I know what happened. We know how the story turns out. But, poor old Noah had none of the benefits of the 20/20 hindsight that you and I have. He didn’t even have the Bible that we have to believe in God through, he’d never even heard of Jesus. All he knew was that this God came along and told him to build a boat in the middle of nowhere. Talk about feeling stupid.
Imagine going home to the little misses that night and she asks, "How was work Noah?" "Well? I was chatting with God and we’ve come up with this great plan, we are going to build a boat. A big one! An ark!" She says, "A boat? Are you crazy?" And not just the little misses, imagine what the neighbours had to say? "Hey have you seen what Noah’s up to? He’s really flipped his lid this time. He’s building, wait for it … an ark!" "Nah, not even Noah’s that crazy!" "Yeah, really an ark, 300 cubits long!"
The laughter, the ridicule that must have gone on down at the local pub each night as Noah and his sons built that ark! What does God tell us in Hebrews chapter 11 about this? What’s God’s summation of Noah’s craziness? Look verse 7:
By faith, Noah warned by God about events yet unseen, respected the warning and built an ark to save his household. By this he condemned the world and became an air to the righteousness that is in accordance with faith.
What Noah needed to do this extreme thing was extreme faith, and he yielded extreme results. I’ve had some times in my life when God has called me to do the craziest things. "Berni … leave your secure high paying consulting career and become involved in this media ministry that’s stopped doing what is meant to be doing. That’s almost broke and ready to shut it’s doors! Berni, go and start broadcasting your Australia programs in Africa when there was only one guy I even knew in Africa! Berni going and hire a man in India to start broadcasting your programs over there, even though there isn’t a single door open to start doing what I’m calling you to do! Berni…."
Yeah ok, today it’s a thousand radio stations airing these programs, today its millions of listeners each week, today it seems like the obvious thing to have done. But each time God called me to do something crazy … it was just that dead set crazy. Maybe not as crazy as Noah’s gig, but that didn’t help me at the time.
So when was the last time God called you to do something crazy? Something happens in that place that I can’t quite explain. There are many times that I’ve listened to sage advice from mature men and women around me and that’s been the right thing to do. But at those major turning points, the truly crazy ones, there’s been a pull in my heart from God that was as scary as it was unmistakable. And at those turning points, the "Noah" points, I’ve pretty much had to ignore the sage advice that I was getting from the people that I trusted and just go with the call in my heart.
At those times it’s been scary and at those times I’ve made some mistakes. Not everything always worked out the way that I’d planned it in my head. We didn’t always get everything right the first time. Things didn’t always happen as quickly as I wanted them to happen. It was 8 years from when I felt the call to go and tell people about Jesus until I took on the role that I’m doing now. It was almost 3 years between when we hired that wonderful man in India and when God actually opened the doors to a weekly radio audience on a major secular network of 30 million people each week.
It never felt much like faith, it was uncertain, it was murky, it was unclear, but often when with this dream in our hearts, and with a certain reality that we’d rather look like idiots, that we’d rather fall flat on our faces and fail, rather than miss out on what God was doing. At times I’m prepared to admit to the people around me, that I looked like an idiot. But then, so did Noah. And the God that Noah served and the God that I serve and the God that you serve, never ever chastises us for having too much faith. Sometimes, not everyday, but sometimes faith is doing scary crazy, counter-intuitive things that God calls us to do:
By faith Noah, warned by God about events as yet unseen, respected that warning and built an ark to save his household. By this he condemned the world and became an heir to the righteousness that is in accordance with that faith.
So what are you waiting for?
Uncomfortable faith
We’ve been chatting over these past few weeks about faith, not in a theoretic sense but in a "rubber hits the road" sense. Because faith is that thing we need to get through the things that we can’t handle on our own. Faith is what we need to move that great big obstacle that’s blocking our way when its way to big for us to climb over, or crash through or walk around.
Faith is what we need to overcome that one nagging sin in our lives that keeps on coming back to rob us of the joy and peace that Jesus came to give us. And faith is what we need to go and do the difficult things that God sometimes calls us to do. The inconvenient things, the uncomfortable things, the things we rather not have to do thanks very much Lord.
So that’s the sort of faith we’re going to chat about right now – uncomfortable faith – because no one ever had an impact in this world by playing it safe right? When Jesus calls us into a place to make a difference in someone’s life, it's often because that persons life is, well, a bit of a mess and it's going to hurt us to have to be in that place with that person. When Jesus calls us out of our nice safe comfortable existence to go and do something for him, I can guarantee you it’s not going to be convenient and it’s not going to be comfortable. It requires faith.
People sometimes ask me, "Berni why is it that even though I believe in Jesus, I don’t know, somehow it doesn’t feel real. There’s no passion, there’s no fire. There’s no excitement." And my response is always the same. I ask them two questions.
Question 1: How much time do you spend quietly each day alone with Jesus, with the door closed and the bible open?
Question 2: What are you doing with your faith? How are you living it out?
Now Question 1 is really important because, unless we're spending that time alone with Jesus each day, growing in a dynamic relationship with Him, well, shazam shazam there’s not going to be much of a relationship. But today I want to focus on Question 2, What are you doing with your faith? And when I meet someone who has that vague unsettled feeling about their faith, the sense there should be something more, there should be power, there should be impact, I can almost guarantee you that in effect they’re a spiritual couch potato.
And by that I mean, they’re not living out their faith. They’re not getting out there and making a difference in this world, taking risks, putting it all on the line for Jesus. And just like someone who spends their life sitting on the sofa, channel surfing cable TV, drinking soft drinks, eating chips is going to end up feeling lethargic, the Christian who isn’t exercising their faith is going to feel precisely the same. Don’t believe me? Well, it’s exactly what the Bible tells us. In James chapter 2 verse 26 says:
For as just as the body without the spirit is dead, so faith without works is also dead.
So as we come to look at faith again today, we’re going to do so from the perspective of Abraham, a man who was called out of the comfort of his ancestral home in Ur, which is around about where modern day Bagdad is today, have a listen. Hebrews chapter 11, beginning at verse 8:
By faith Abraham obeyed when he was called to set out for a place that he was to receive as an inheritance. And he set out not knowing were he was going. By faith, he stayed for a time in the land which had been promised to him, as in a foreign land living in tents as did Isaac and Jacob who where the airs with him of that same promise. But he looked forward to the city which had foundations, who’s architect and builder is God.
By faith, he received the power of procreation. Even though he was too old and Sarah herself was baron. Because he considered him faithful who had promised, therefore from one person and this one as good as dead descendants were born. As many as the stars of heaven and innumerable as the grains of the sand by the sea shore.
Now, perhaps you remember that story. Abraham is the father of Israel the nation. He and his wife Sarah in their mid seventies were childless, a source of great anguish and shame that equated God’s blessing with having lots of children and having your own land to live in. And so what was God’s solution? To promise Abraham and Sarah many, many of descendants if only they’ll leave their safe and comfortable ancestral home behind and go out on a journal thought the wilderness, though all sorts of strange and weird and wonderful places only God knows where.
A familiar story to many I suppose. And yet what we often miss is the context, let me say it again the definition of God’s blessing in that time and in that culture – in fact you see it over and over again in the Old Testament – is firstly that you had lots of children. And secondly you own your own land to live in. If you had both of those things, then you were considered to be blessed of God. The more children, the more land you had, the more quiet openly God was in the business of blessing you. But if you didn’t have them, then you were considered to be cursed of God. Obviously you’d done something wrong. Obviously you must have been a bad person. That was the thinking.
Now Abraham, was a wealthy man. He had lots of flocks of animals which means he had a lot of land. So when God called him out of that and onto his journey with this promise of many children, do you see what God was asking him to do? God was asking Abraham to give up that one half of the blessing that he already did have, in order to get the other half, which was lots of descendants. And what made this so crazy was that he and his wife were in their seventies, way pass the age where Sarah could bare children. Abraham and Sarah had to let go of this blessing and step out in faith, God knows where, in order to get that blessing.
My friend that is so often how God works. So long as we think our lives are about being comfortable and safe, no risks, no need for faith, no need to rely on God for food and shelter and provision. So long as we make our comfort and our safety the priority, our faith is going to be dead.
God’s main aim isn’t to make you and me comfortable; His main aim is to grow our character, by making us part of his plan, to touch and reach a lost and hurting world with His love. God’s plan isn’t that we should have a huge superannuation or pension fund so that we can spend our retirement indulging our senses in food and travel and luxuries and relaxation. His plan is to use us to reach out to our neighbour with His mercy and grace and love.
And so the solution for the spiritual couch potato … the answer to getting rid of that lethargy and bringing a new vigour and anticipation to our faith? It’s always the same. The one who would live a vibrant exciting faith, a life where the power of God is manifest before their very eyes, is the one who goes to God and pleads:
Lord show me where you want me to go! Want to you want me to do? What sacrifices do you want me make? What risks do you want me to take so that the name of Jesus would be lifted up in this world. Oh Lord wherever you call me, and whatever it will cost me, I want to go! Give me the courage, fill me with your spirit. Show me where and how and when I can loose my life for you dear Jesus in order that I might find it.
Friends, start praying prayers like that one, and I guarantee you that God won’t take long to answer you. I guarantee you that before you know it you’ll be at a place where you see God’s power in action because frankly without it, you’d be in trouble!
Ditching comfort and convenience
God’s word stands in such contrast to our hopes and our desires and our ambitions for comfort and convenience doesn’t it? Yes God is a God of outrageous blessing, but it’s a blessing that follows along behind our obedience to Him. You and I want to put the cart before the horse, so often! Because we’ve been taught over and over again that it’s all about us. I come first. I’m the most important one.
You know my parents immigrated to Australia from Europe just after World War 2. They brought us into this world, in this great new land of opportunity that they made their home. This land of freedom and of plenty that embraced them as new migrants, and what they wanted for my sister and myself was a better life than the one that they’d had. They’d worked so hard, they’d sacrificed so much so that we could have a great education, so that we could learn and study and grow and have all the things that they missed out on during that terrible world war.
But the easiest thing for me as a recipient of their sacrifice, was to take all their serving of me, and misinterpret it to mean that it’s all about me. But that is not what they meant at all! I mean, they taught me a very strong work ethic. But because I had parents who loved me and sacrificed for me the natural selfishness that we all have, that selfishness that was in me, twisted that around and so I lived most of my early adulthood in this belief that it truly was, all about me!
In fact, the term "the me generation" was invented for my generation – The Baby Boomers. We were all pretty much like that. And that mistake is exactly the mistake that so many times we make as we misinterpret the love and the grace and the blessing of God in our lives.
Jesus talked about this very thing, our tendencies to put the cart before the horse; to put our comfort and convenience before the will of God in our lives. Have a listen to what he said. There’s every chance you’re quite familiar with this passage. He was talking about our natural desires for enough food to eat and clothes to wear and all those physical needs that we seem to worry so much about. He was saying, "Look, don’t worry about those things. Your father in heaven knows everything you need. And you’re worth so much to Him, of course He’s going to provide all your needs!" And the punch line, the executive summary of all that, went something like this. Mathew chapter 6, beginning at verse 33:
Jesus said, look don’t worry about these things, instead strive first for the kingdom of God and His righteousness and all other things will be given unto you as well.
In other words, put God first. Put God’s will first. But obedience to God first, sacrifice first, follow Him where He calls us first, and all those other things which by the way, aren’t the main things, they’ll follow along behind as surely as night follows day.
Friend, He’s not saying here that we shouldn’t have our needs met, He’s not saying we shouldn’t have clothing or food, or shelter, Jesus is simply saying, "people get your priorities right". And getting our priorities right, putting Him first, takes faith. It does! When our funds are limited, and running low, it takes faith to take the first fruits of our income and give them to God to support his work. When there’s been a global financial crisis, it takes faith to step out and use all our resources for the glory of God.
When people are being critical when their being obnoxious, you know something … it takes faith to love them with the love which Jesus loved us. It takes faith to forgive them; it takes faith to hold them. And when it’s hurting like hell, when the pain of our sacrifice for Jesus is more than we really want to take, it takes faith to say, "Father, not my will but let your will be done." Exactly what Jesus did for you and me in that garden called Gethsemane just before He was handed over to be nailed to that terrible, terrible Cross.
My friend, Jesus isn’t looking just for believers He’s looking for disciples. He’s looking for men, women and children who are prepared to lay down their lives and take up their cross each day to follow Him. He’s looking for men, women and children who aren’t in the business of saving their own skins for those who’ll surely loose it, but who are in the business of laying down their lives for Him by faith, knowing that that’s how they’ll discover real life. By faith.
Strive ye first for the kingdom of God and his righteousness, get your priorities right. Put God first and all these other things will be given to you as well. You know why it takes faith? Because at the very time it feels like we’re loosing something, at the time it feels like we’re in a dangerous place, at the time I feels unfair, at the time it hurts, but truly I tell you, when we take up our cross, when we follow after Jesus with our cross on our shoulder, prepared to lay down our lives, that’s when we discover true satisfaction.
I think sometimes we spend way too much effort standing up for our rights so that we forget that we should be laying down our lives for Jesus. May God bless you as you live out your faith.