Forsaking
All
I
Trust
Him
Forsaking- our doubts. All-submitting our whole being to the Lord as a true servant. I-it's our own responsibility. Nobody else can make us have faith. Trust-believe in the reliability, truth, ability, and strength of our Master. Him-Focus on the Lord above EVERYTHING else. Proverbs 3: 5-6 "Trust in the Lord with all thine heart; and lean not unto thine own understanding. In all thy ways acknowledge Him, and He shall direct thy paths."
Below is an article I found very interesting. I think you will enjoy reading it.
Faith vs. Trust
Many believers today often confuse having faith in God with trusting
in God. Faith is a noun. It is something you have or possess, a
“substance” or “evidence” of things both hoped for and not seen (Hebrews 11:1).
Faith in God is the confident belief that He is the sovereign Creator
of all things and that He can and will do what He claims. Trust, on the
other hand, is a verb. It is something you do or act upon. Faith always
comes first, but trust is never guaranteed. It is a willful choice, a
deliberate action, and can only grow out of your faith.
There is a vast difference between faith and trust, and the story of Charles Blondin and Harry Colcord provides a great illustration. Blondin was the foremost tightrope walker of his time. He gained worldwide fame in 1859 as the first person to cross Niagara Falls. Colcord was his friend and manager. A cable made entirely of hemp, 1,300 feet long and two inches in diameter, was wound around an oak tree on the American side, while the other end was ferried across the Niagara River and secured to a Canadian rock. To limit swaying, Colcord had stabilizing guy ropes affixed at 20-foot intervals to anchors on both banks—except for 50 unreachable feet in the center, which sagged and swayed dangerously. Thanks to Colcord’s savvy marketing, tens of thousands of spectators gathered for the spectacle. Gamblers took bets on whether Blondin would fall and die, and vendors hawked everything from lemonade to liquor.
Shortly before 5:00 p.m. on June 30, 1859, Blondin started his slow walk from the American side. Once past the center section, he broke into a run! After a brief rest, he started back again, but this time toting a box camera on his back. Balancing precariously near the middle, Blondin carefully set up the camera and snapped a picture of the crowd. Then he repacked his burden and continued the rest of the way. The entire round trip took 23 minutes. Once safely back on American soil, Blondin immediately announced a series of encore performances, each more daring than the last. The press ate it up.
Over several weeks, Blondin walked backward, blindfolded, back-flipped, pushed a wheelbarrow, and even cooked an omelet during one of many trips across the rope. He had faith he could accomplish these feats, but he also trusted his abilities to complete them. The spectators, on the other hand, only had faith—a difference seen in Blondin’s daring walk in August 1859. After he had crossed to the Canadian side, the crowd was horrified as Blondin reappeared on the rope with his manager, Harry Colcord, clinging to his back. A few guy ropes snapped during their transit, but Blondin never wavered and safely made the crossing. It was later reported that Blondin told his manager, “Look up, Harry…you are no longer Colcord, you are Blondin. Until I clear this place be a part of me, mind, body, and soul. If I sway, sway with me. Do not attempt to do any balancing yourself.”1
This is the difference between faith and trust. The spectators had faith in Blondin and believed in his abilities. But only Colcord trusted him enough to climb on his back and allow him to carry him across. Is your trust in the Lord like that? Do you truly trust Him to provide and care for you and supply all your needs (Matthew 6:25; 1 Peter 5:7; Philippians 4:19)? Or do you place your trust in your personal resources and efforts, or in other people or things you think you control? Without the “trust in the LORD” of Proverbs 3:5, you will never know the joy and confidence of Proverbs 3:6: “In all your ways acknowledge Him, and He shall direct your paths.”
There is a vast difference between faith and trust, and the story of Charles Blondin and Harry Colcord provides a great illustration. Blondin was the foremost tightrope walker of his time. He gained worldwide fame in 1859 as the first person to cross Niagara Falls. Colcord was his friend and manager. A cable made entirely of hemp, 1,300 feet long and two inches in diameter, was wound around an oak tree on the American side, while the other end was ferried across the Niagara River and secured to a Canadian rock. To limit swaying, Colcord had stabilizing guy ropes affixed at 20-foot intervals to anchors on both banks—except for 50 unreachable feet in the center, which sagged and swayed dangerously. Thanks to Colcord’s savvy marketing, tens of thousands of spectators gathered for the spectacle. Gamblers took bets on whether Blondin would fall and die, and vendors hawked everything from lemonade to liquor.
Shortly before 5:00 p.m. on June 30, 1859, Blondin started his slow walk from the American side. Once past the center section, he broke into a run! After a brief rest, he started back again, but this time toting a box camera on his back. Balancing precariously near the middle, Blondin carefully set up the camera and snapped a picture of the crowd. Then he repacked his burden and continued the rest of the way. The entire round trip took 23 minutes. Once safely back on American soil, Blondin immediately announced a series of encore performances, each more daring than the last. The press ate it up.
Over several weeks, Blondin walked backward, blindfolded, back-flipped, pushed a wheelbarrow, and even cooked an omelet during one of many trips across the rope. He had faith he could accomplish these feats, but he also trusted his abilities to complete them. The spectators, on the other hand, only had faith—a difference seen in Blondin’s daring walk in August 1859. After he had crossed to the Canadian side, the crowd was horrified as Blondin reappeared on the rope with his manager, Harry Colcord, clinging to his back. A few guy ropes snapped during their transit, but Blondin never wavered and safely made the crossing. It was later reported that Blondin told his manager, “Look up, Harry…you are no longer Colcord, you are Blondin. Until I clear this place be a part of me, mind, body, and soul. If I sway, sway with me. Do not attempt to do any balancing yourself.”1
This is the difference between faith and trust. The spectators had faith in Blondin and believed in his abilities. But only Colcord trusted him enough to climb on his back and allow him to carry him across. Is your trust in the Lord like that? Do you truly trust Him to provide and care for you and supply all your needs (Matthew 6:25; 1 Peter 5:7; Philippians 4:19)? Or do you place your trust in your personal resources and efforts, or in other people or things you think you control? Without the “trust in the LORD” of Proverbs 3:5, you will never know the joy and confidence of Proverbs 3:6: “In all your ways acknowledge Him, and He shall direct your paths.”
Reference
- Abbott, K. The Daredevil of Niagara Falls. Smithsonian Magazine. Published on smithsonianmag.com October 18, 2011, accessed June 17, 2016.
* Mr. Morris is Director of Donor Relations at the Institute for Creation Research.
Cite this article: Henry M. Morris IV. 2016. Faith vs. Trust. Acts & Facts. 45 (8).
I know I'm going long, but I wanted to include this as well. A little while back Sharon and I saw a little trinket in a Mother's Day magazine that we instantly both loved. My mom doesn't really wear jewelry or use key chain things so we did something different for her on Mother's Day. But we liked the thing so well we each bought one. Here it is!
The front says, "If ye have faith as a grain of mustard seed..." and the back says "Nothing shall be impossible unto you." And yes, that's a real mustard seed in the middle of the tree trunk. I love the symbolism. I wanted to remind myself all the time of how small a bit of faith could "remove mountains" and that I needed to work on increasing mine. When is the last time you moved a mountain? We took the key chain off and converted it to a necklace. We wore them to work the next day, not for comments, but as reminders to ourselves. What happened was amazing. The Lord graciously gave me several opportunities to talk about spiritual things with customers, who otherwise, would probably not have brought the subject up themselves. Some asked if it was supposed to be a tree of Life and others just asked what it was. It was so neat! Here is another reason it was even more neat to me: one of our co-workers is an atheist and wears a demon symbol necklace everyday. It made me glad just to have something pointing people to the True Way. Not that I have to have a symbol to have faith, but the contrast was stark. Atheism has never brought anyone true happiness or changed their life for the better; no Light has ever come from darkness, no Hope from despair. This person has been witnessed to and prayed for often. I have a heavy burden for them. Lord willing, I'll never give up praying for them as long as I can, because Satan will never give up on them either until they are in hell, or in the secure grasp of our Lord and Savior. Who knows, Adoniram Judson was an atheist before the Lord used the death of a friend to reach him and send him to Burma.
Here is a poem to go with Matthew 17:20.
"And Jesus said unto them, Because of your unbelief: for verily I say unto you, If ye have faith as a grain of mustard seed, ye shall say unto this mountain, Remove hence to yonder place; and it shall remove; and nothing shall be impossible unto you."
Simple Faith
With
simple childlike faith could I
Fully
trust my Lord on high?
Always
waiting for Him to lead
Asking Him
to meet my need?
Were my
faith but a mustard grain,
Life’s
mountains would stand in vain;
The
roughest sea I would not fear,
For my
Lord is always near
The spirit
of fear was not giv"n,
For we
serve a Lord that’s ris’n,
But a
spirit after this kind --
Of love,
power, and sound mind.
Knowing
also in any plight
We walk by
faith, not by sight;
His grace
is sufficient to bear
Every
trial, test, and care.
Heather
Rausch
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