Barnabas Piper, author of Help My Unbelief: Why Doubt isNot the Enemy of Faith, on "4 Differences Between Believing and Unbelieving Doubt":
The word “doubt” is an uncomfortable one in most Christian circles. It’s something that is frowned upon or even condemned in many church circles. But that doesn’t stop us from doubting; it just makes doubting shameful for many of us. We don’t know what to do with it, who to talk to about it, or how to talk about it. We just know that our questions feel like they are pulling us away from God.
But what if they aren’t? What if doubt isn’t inherently wrong? And what if doubt is something that doesn’t necessarily undermine our faith but can actually lead us deeper into faith? How we respond when we doubt determines whether it is “unbelieving doubt” (that which leads us away from faith) or “believing doubt” (that which leads us to deeper faith).
Here are four ways to distinguish unbelieving doubt from believing doubt.
You can read how Barnabas unpacks each of these four points by reading the whole thing HERE.
- Unbelieving doubt asks questions in order to challenge. Believing doubt asks questions in order to learn.
- Unbelieving doubt takes questions to anyone but Jesus. Believing doubt takes questions directly to Jesus.
- Unbelieving doubt questions God’s character because He is beyond our understanding. Believing doubt trusts in God’s character because He is beyond our understanding.
- Unbelieving doubt says, “not Your will, but mine be done.” Believing doubt says, “not my will, but Yours be done.”
Ray Ortlund, “Never give up. Someone else needs you. They
need your weakness, anguish, bewilderment. They need to see a buffeted
Christian go to Christ and hang on for dear life and make it through. They need
that from you today, and they will need the memory of it years from now. Hang
on!”
1) I am a child of God.
2) God is my Father.
3) Heaven is my home.
4) Every day is one day nearer.
5) My Savior is my brother.
6) Every Christian is my brother
too.
“Say it over and
over to yourself first thing in the morning, last thing at night, as your wait
for the bus, any time your mind is free, and ask that you may be enabled to
live as one who knows it is all utterly and completely true.”
And one last quote, from J.I. Packer, “The
Christian’s motto should not be ‘Let go and let God’ but ‘Trust God and get
going.’”
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