What Happens When Faith Is Hard to Come By?

Matthew 14:22-33

22 Immediately Jesus made the disciples get into the boat and go on ahead of him to the other side, while he dismissed the crowd. 23 After he had dismissed them, he went up on a mountainside by himself to pray. Later that night, he was there alone, 24 and the boat was already a considerable distance from land, buffeted by the waves because the wind was against it.

25 Shortly before dawn Jesus went out to them, walking on the lake. 26 When the disciples saw him walking on the lake, they were terrified. “It’s a ghost,” they said, and cried out in fear.

27 But Jesus immediately said to them: “Take courage! It is I. Don’t be afraid.”

28 “Lord, if it’s you,” Peter replied, “tell me to come to you on the water.”

29 “Come,” he said.

Then Peter got down out of the boat, walked on the water and came toward Jesus. 30 But when he saw the wind, he was afraid and, beginning to sink, cried out, “Lord, save me!”

31 Immediately Jesus reached out his hand and caught him. “You of little faith,” he said, “why did you doubt?”

32 And when they climbed into the boat, the wind died down. 33 Then those who were in the boat worshiped him, saying, “Truly you are the Son of God.”

What Happens When Faith Is Hard to Come By?

I won’t ask for a show of hands, but how many of you trust me? Maybe what I should do instead is ask for a volunteer. Would one of you be willing to come up here, get blindfolded, climb onto the altar and then jump into my waiting arms?

If you don’t like the “trust fall,” would you trust me to file your taxes or replace the exhaust manifold on your car or cut your hair?

It’s one thing to say that you trust someone. It’s another thing entirely to do it. We saw a little bit of both in the words we just read from Matthew’s Gospel. At one time or another, every one of Jesus’ disciples lined up to profess their faith in him, but when it came down to it, only Peter stepped out of that boat, and he was only able to stay above water for a few seconds.

The reality is that life is hard and faith – real, trusting confidence in God – is hard to come by.

You’ve been in situations like that before, haven’t you – situations in which it’s easy to say that you trust in God, i.e. that you believe he is working all things for your good, but it’s hard to actually do it? Maybe you just lost your husband after years of poor health. Maybe your health isn’t doing so well. Maybe you lost your job or your relationships have broken down since COVID began. What happens when life is hard and faith is hard to come by?

Well, I want you to consider again the words of our Gospel, and, especially in those first three verses, the stark contrast between what Jesus was doing on the mountaintop while his disciples were out on the sea.

It’s worth mentioning that the events of our Gospel took place immediately after Jesus fed the 5,000. While Jesus volunteers to do some crowd control, he sends his disciples on their way across the Sea of Galilee.

At this point in the day it’s probably getting dark and quickly. Normally, a trip across the sea would have only taken a couple hours – 3 if they’re being leisurely – but Matthew tells us that by his reckoning it took them nearly six hours only to make it about halfway across the lake because they were fighting a “contrary wind,” i.e. a bad storm that was battering them with wild and uncontrollable waves.

No doubt, by the “fourth watch of the night,” i.e. about 3 in the morning, the disciples were frantic with effort, frazzled by stress, and exhausted. The scene on the sea couldn’t have been much more different than the sight on the summit.

While the disciples were struggling, stressed and drained, Jesus was quietly meditating by himself in peace. There were no people to bother him. There was no threat to his life. There was no demand on his schedule or urgency to his task. He was simply consumed by prayer; he was immersed in conversation with his Heavenly Father.

Now, Matthew doesn’t record for us what Jesus was praying about, but from where he was perched, he would have been well aware of the danger his disciples were in. You might suspect that Jesus would add a petition or two asking his Heavenly Father to keep those disciples safe, but the storm never stopped. Did Jesus not care, or was his prayer not heard or answered?

Those are the thoughts that usually run through our minds at moment like that, but this story serves to illustrate a point we heard last week – the presence of problems does not mean the absence of God’s love. Jesus’ care doesn’t always mean the removal of a threat. So, even with Jesus’ loving eye trained on them, those disciples weren’t out of the woods just yet.

What does that mean for you? What happens when you find faith hard to come by?

I think the first thing that you should know is that Jesus is praying for you right now the same way he prayed for his disciples. Paul tells us as much in none other than the book we’ve been reading all Summer long – Romans Chapter 8: Christ Jesus… is at the right hand of God and is also interceding for us.

From where he is perched in Heaven, Jesus can see your every need, and he promises that he is bending his Father’s ear for your benefit. Now, that doesn’t mean that you will never experience hardship. The disciples still struggled through that storm while Jesus was praying, but the fact that you might still face hardship in this life doesn’t mean that God doesn’t love you. The presence of problems does not mean the absence of God’s love. And sometimes, God even uses that danger to demonstrate his almighty power and abiding love.

Think about those disciples again. Jesus didn’t only intercede for his disciples in prayer, he also intervened for them with power.

Matthew tells us that “shortly before dawn, Jesus went out to them, walking on the lake” ! Talk about a demonstration of power! Jesus was literally putting under his feet the single greatest threat to his disciples’ lives. If they had reason to fear capsizing because of the power of those waves, they had every reason to be relieved at the sight of their friend Jesus owning the power of those waves and making it his slave.

As if that weren’t enough, when impetuous Peter realized that it was Jesus on the water and not a ghost, he asked to walk on water too. And Jesus let him! Not only does Jesus have power over the raw and unbridled forces of this world, but he even occasionally subjects them to the service of his followers; he takes a threat and he makes it a footstool.

Jesus has the power to bend the forces of nature to his will, but we don’t always have the strength of faith to trust that he does. Matthew doesn’t tell us how many steps Peter managed to take on the surface of the water before he began to sink, but what Matthew tells us next puts Jesus’ love on full display.

When Peter saw the wind (that had never gone away, even while Jesus was walking over the waves) and when Peter grew afraid, Jesus sprung to action to save him. He reached out his hand and physically pulled Peter out of the water. Think about that for a second. The man who was standing on water, the man who could wordlessly control with wind and the waves, reached out a hand and pulled Peter up physically. Jesus could have just snapped his fingers or issued a command, but in that moment Jesus wanted Peter to feel his love as much as, if not more than, his power.

At first, the disciples were afraid of Jesus because their feeble human brains couldn’t comprehend the good that God was accomplishing for them; their terror and doubt clouded their faith. But by the end, they worshipped him for who he was – the Son of God.

Of course, Jesus doesn’t always work in exactly the same way with us. When was the last time you saw him in your bedroom late at night when you were afraid of the dark? No one that I know. And even if you had, you probably would have freaked out like the disciples did.

Jesus doesn’t come to us that way, but he does still come to you in your hour of need to demonstrate his almighty power and his personal love. He comes to you in his Word, where he fills page after page with examples and explanations of the ways that he has always loved you, of the ways that he has spared you from trouble – and not the relatively minor troubles of storms and conflict, but from the greatest threat of all, i.e. your sin.

Jesus came to this world, he fed those 5,000 people, he rescued his disciples from a terrible storm, not so that they could live another single day on earth, but so that they could know that he is God who gives them an eternity in heaven because of his self-sacrificing love for them. He did not come to make our lives easy; he came to have a hard life himself, with a bitter end on a cross, all so that he could remove your greatest threat and turn one of your greatest fears, i.e. death, into the doorway to eternal life with him and all who believe.

Jesus still comes to you in his Word to repeatedly demonstrate his faithfulness to you and his power over this world, just like he did for Peter and his disciples on the Sea of Galilee.

Jesus has the power to intervene for you. Better yet, he loves you and intercedes for you. When life is hard and faith is hard to come by, look to Jesus. Put your problems in his capable hands and trust in his loving attention. He has never stopped looking out for you – not when you needed salvation from your sins, not now or ever. He is watching over you and praying for you. Even when you face problems, he has the power to keep you safe until the day he takes you out of this world and into his home in heaven.

When life is hard and faith is hard to come by, answer doubt with trust – not because you’re so strong, but because Jesus always has been and always will be faithful to you. Amen.



How Do You Know that God Loves You?

Romans 8:35-39

35 Who shall separate us from the love of Christ? Shall trouble or hardship or persecution or famine or nakedness or danger or sword? 36 As it is written:

“For your sake we face death all day long;

we are considered as sheep to be slaughtered.”

37 No, in all these things we are more than conquerors through him who loved us. 38 For I am convinced that neither death nor life, neither angels nor demons, neither the present nor the future, nor any powers, 39 neither height nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God that is in Christ Jesus our Lord.

How Do You Know that God Loves You?

How do you know that somebody loves you?

I feel loved when I come home, and my wife gives me a hug and a kiss. I feel loved when my parents call me out of the blue just to chat. I feel loved when my uncle sends me a quirky birthday card, or when my friends want to spend time with me.

For being something that you can’t see with your eyes or hold in your hands, there are so many different ways to show someone that you love them.

How do you know that God loves you?

That’s an entirely different question, isn’t it? He’s not there to give you a hug or a kiss when you come home. You can’t talk to him over the phone or grab a cup of coffee with him after brunch. How can you know that God loves you?

Unfortunately, all too often we can end up confusing God’s love for us with his sovereignty. What I mean is this – God is sovereign, i.e. he is all-powerful and has complete control over everything. So, the line of thought can go something like this, “If God controls everything, then the way that he shows his love for me is by controlling the events of my life for my benefit. So, if I get a promotion, if the girl I like likes me back, if I don’t have to worry about money, health, work or whatever, then that must mean that God loves me. If I face all kinds of problems – if I lose my job, if I lose my wife or kids, if my health fails, if I’m sad, depressed, lonely or anxious – then that must mean that God doesn’t love me.” We can confuse God’s love and his sovereignty (or, his power).

But the point that Paul makes in Romans 8 is that the presence of problems does not mean the absence of God’s love. In fact, there is a long-standing tradition of God’s people facing all kinds of problems.

You might not have caught it in the first read-through, but Paul quoted a Psalm in this passage. It’s Psalm 44. It was written by the sons of Korah, likely early in the reign of King David about 3,000 years ago. Now, that’s all encyclopedic, biographical information. You don’t need to know all of that. What would be good for you to know, though, is that King David was highly favoured by God. This psalm was written as the “Golden Age” of the Kingdom of Israel was getting off the ground. If there was ever a time to be alive as an Israelite, i.e. one of God’s “Chosen People,” it was at the time that this Psalm was written.

And yet, even with all the favour and love of God, the sons of Korah still wrote: “Yet for your sake we face death all day long; we are considered as sheep to be slaughtered.” The Israelites were losing battles. Their soldiers were dying. Their kingdom was in danger. They felt as if God had forgotten them. But when they were struggling and discouraged, they appealed not to God’s power but to God’s love. The very last sentence of this Psalm reads, “Rescue us because of your unfailing love.”

3,000 years ago the “sons of Korah” understood what Paul was trying to tell the Romans 2,000 years ago and what I’d like you to know today – the presence of problems does not mean the absence of God’s love.

We can face death all day long; we can be considered as sheep to be slaughtered; we can endure trouble, hardship, persecution, famine, nakedness, danger and sword, and still be loved by God. The Israelites experienced all those things repeatedly throughout their history. Paul writes an epic list of his personal tragedies including being shipwrecked and robbed, imprisoned and flogged, stoned nearly to death and set adrift in the open sea for a night and day. We could come up with our own catalogue of misfortune and pain and heartache (and title it “The Year 2020), but Paul wants you to know that not a single one of those tragedies or trials can separate you from the love of God in Christ.

Think about Jesus’ life. Did Jesus endure trouble and hardship? He did, in body and soul. He didn’t have any earthly advantage. He wasn’t rich or powerful; he was a homeless, vagabond preacher. He faced off with the devil himself who was constantly tempting him and trying to trip him up. He was persecuted by his own people, pursued by his own religious leaders as they plotted his murder. They coerced the Roman government to sentence him to death. They deprived him of food and water. They stripped him naked and nailed him to a tree.

Jesus felt abandoned by God in that moment too. He cried out from the cross, “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?” In a way, you could say that Jesus went through everything that you have. He can sympathize with you when you feel in danger and hard-pressed, when you feel alone and unloved. But with Jesus, there’s one notable difference – he actually was separated from God’s love.

When Jesus was on the cross, he knew what it felt like to have God turn his back on him. In that moment, Jesus felt what it was like to be separated from God’s love, and it was no accident; it was by design.

Paul lists all kinds of external threats in these verses, e.g. famine, nakedness, danger, sword, but the real danger lives within. The real threat of separation from God is our own sin, i.e. our disobedience. We are the ones who are guilty of not always loving God above all things. We love our families more than him. We love our careers more than him. We love our free time, recreation, entertainment more than him. We value security and health and personal freedom more than him.

We are our own greatest threat of being separated from God, but God had a plan. He sent his Son Jesus to suffer true separation from him on the cross – to be forsaken, to be condemned, to die – so that you and I might never be separated from him. God sent Jesus to be the Lamb of sacrifice to be slaughtered for our sin, so that we could know that nothing in all creation could ever separate us from his love.

That’s how you can know that God loves you – because he sacrificed his one and only Son to save you. There may be – and will be – things that happen in this world that are far from pleasant. You may suffer in body or soul. But no external event in your life can ever undo what God has done for you in Christ.

No, Paul says that “in all these things we are more than conquerors through him who loved us… neither death nor life, neither angels nor demons, neither the present nor the future, nor any powers, neither height nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God that is Christ Jesus our Lord .”

Because of Jesus, we are more than conquerors. Sometimes it may feel like we are just eking out our existence here on earth. But that’s not the way that God sees it. To him, we are more than conquerors. What does that even mean?

In war I suppose it’s possible to win the victory but to suffer so many losses that it was hardly worth it, e.g. your army is decimated, the land destroyed, your resources depleted. You still came out on top, but it doesn’t feel that way. That is not the way Paul describes our victory.

There was only one casualty in the war for your soul, and not only did he die for you willingly, he didn’t stay dead. Jesus rose from the grave 3 days after he was crucified to let you know that not even death can separate you from God’s love. Death, that separates you from everything else – from your loved ones, from your possessions, from your body – death can’t even keep you from God’s love, because now in Christ, death is your gateway to eternal life with your God in heaven.

This is no shallow victory. We are not bankrupt champions. We are super-victorious, hyper-triumphant; we are more than conquerors because Jesus loved us enough to die for us.

As Christians we will face trouble and experience problems in this world, but the presence of problems does not mean the absence of God’s love. God’s love for you shines through the cross of Christ who conquered sin, death and hell for you. No earthly circumstance can take that away from you. Your future in Christ is certain.

And although God does not fold his arms around you after a difficult day, he does give you his body and blood in the sacrament of Holy Communion; he is really present with you today to feel and touch and taste his love for you. Although you cannot pick up the phone and bear your soul to him or hear his voice on the other end of the line, you can bear your soul to God in prayer at any time, and then pick up your Bible and hear God speak to you with his own words every day.

Your God loves you and you can be sure of it, not because your life is problem free, but because of the victory that is yours in Christ Jesus our Lord. He gave his life to show you his love, and promises that nothing in all creation can ever come between you and his love for you. No, in all these things we are more than conquerors through him who loved us. Amen.