Summary: Active faith: what it requires and the results of its implementation in the church

SERIES: “GOD-GIVEN GUIDELINES FOR GROWING A GREAT CHURCH”

TEXT: HEBREWS 11:1-6

TITLE: Guideline #5: “STEP OUT WITH A BOLD FAITH”

(Material basically from Bob Russel’s When God Builds A Church)

INTRODUCTION: A. A little old lady was given a much desired mission assignment to the Apache

Indians out west. She packed her meager belongings and drove out in the desert to her

post. She was so excited that she drove past the last gas station for a hundred miles

without noticing that she needed fuel. She ran out of gas about a mile down the road and had to walk back to the station.

The attendant came out of the office to see what he could do to help. She

explained her plight – she’d run out of gas about a mile down the road and didn’t have

anything to transport it back. The attendant was sympathetic and went around back to

an old shed to see if he could find anything in which she could carry the gasoline.

The only container he could find that would hold the gasoline was an old metal

bedpan. She told him that it would work just fine. That should give her enough to get

back to the station. The attendant filled the bedpan as full as possible and the lady

carried it back down the road being careful to avoid spilling any of the precious fuel.

When she got to her car, she carefully poured the contents of the bedpan into the

tank. A truck driver pulled alongside the car just as the lady was emptying the

contents into her gas tank. The trucker rolled down his window and shouted to her,

“Lady, I wish I had your faith!”

B. Habakkuk 2:4 – “…the righteous will live by his faith.”

1. Listen to Heb. 11:1 in the NLT – “What is faith? It is the confident assurance that

what we hope for is going to happen. It is the evidence of things we cannot yet

see.”

2. Faith is building your life on the fact that God is in control, and that God will fulfill

His promises, even when you don’t see those promises materializing.

3. Faith is asking the question, “What is possible if God is involved?”

a. Mk. 9:23 – “Everything is possible for him who believes.”

b. Lk. 1:37 – “For nothing is impossible with God.”

c. Eph. 3:20 – says that God “is able to do immeasurably more than all we ask or

imagine, according to his power that is at work within us.”

C. As the church, we are called to “walk by faith and not by sight.”

--so says 2 Cor. 5:7

1. What can be accomplished by First Christian Church in Washington, IN when we

walk by faith?

2. I want to talk this morning about what stepping out with a bold faith requires and

then the results of stepping out with a bold faith.

I. STEPPING OUT WITH A BOLD FAITH REQUIRES VISION

A. Hockey great Wayne Gretzky was once asked why he was so successful on the ice. His answer: “I skate

to where the puck is going to be.”

1. We need people in our church that are always looking to the future.

a. One step ahead

b. Skating to where the church is going to be

c. The problem with most congregations is that there are too many people who spend their time

mooning over the congregation’s past instead of envisioning it’s future.

2. Prov. 29:18 (KJV) – “Where there is no vision, the people perish.”

a. That verse is speaking specifically about prophetic vision

--God is speaking but no one is listening

b. We need vision-casters (people who are listening for God’s vision) and people who will follow that

vision

c. Without vision-casters and people willing to follow the vision, the church will stagnate and

eventually die.

B. Jesus was a vision-caster

--Listen to some of His visionary statements:

1. “Lift up your eyes! The fields are white unto harvest.”

2. “If you have faith the size of a mustard seed, you can move this mountain.”

3. “Go into all the world and make disciples.”

4. All big jobs dependent on following the vision

C. You can experience one man’s vision in Florida. Many years ago Walt Disney took a group of people

out to a piece of land in Florida that had no usefulness at all. The land was marshy and muddy and there

wasn’t anyone who believed that it could be useful for the city of Orlando until Walt Disney shared his

vision of what we know today as Walt Disney World. Before one shovel of land was ever turned, Walt

walked through the acreage and described in vivid detail, as if it was already before his eyes, the various

structures, themes, rides, and the excitement that the park would bring.

While Walt Disney World was under construction, the visionary leader died and therefore missed the

grand opening of the greatest theme park in the world. At the dedication of the park, someone said, “Isn’t

it too bad that Walt Disney didn’t live to see this?” Mike Vance, creative director of Disney Studios,

replied, “He did see it – that’s why it’s here.”

D. There’s an old Three Stooges routine. Curly cries out, “I can’t see! I can’t see!” Moe says with concern,

“What’s the matter?” And Curly says mischievously, “I got my eyes closed.”

1. Are we walking around with our eyes closed to what God wants to accomplish through us?

2. Are we willing to open our eyes and do what He wants us to do?

E. Some practical things we can do to develop our vision:

1. We need to pray

a. There’s an old poem that says:

Thou art coming to a king!

Large petitions with thee bring,

For His strength and power are such

Thou canst never ask too much.

b. Jn. 14:13-14 – “I will do whatever you ask in my name, so that the Son may bring glory to the

Father. You may ask for anything in my name, and I will do it.”

2. We need to listen to visionary people

a. Instead of scoffing at what you think are crazy ideas by the visionaries around you, seek their

advice and listen wisely.

--God may just be trying to lead you

b. Prov. 20:18 – “Make plans by seeking advice.”

3. Visit churches where people walk by faith.

a. You might just be impressed.

--God is blessing them for a reason

b. It’s important to experience people who are excited about what God is doing in their church and in

their lives.

c. Just seeing the possibilities is a big help in envisioning what God can do through us.

4. Go to conferences and meetings that lift your vision

a. There is an abundance of such conferences and meetings

b. Find out where they are and go there.

(FAITH REQUIRES VISION)

II. FAITH REQUIRES COURAGE

A. Just catching the vision is not enough

--We have to be courageous in implementing our faith

1. Tom Peters and Robert Waterman, In Search of Excellence, list the number one principle of

excellence as being a “bias for action.”

a. They contend that for an organization to perform with excellence, there must be a preference for

doing something.

2. The Bible puts it this way in James 2:26 – “As the body without the spirit is dead, so faith without

deeds is dead.”

B. Let me assure of this fact: Faith always involves a risk

1. Some people want a guarantee of success before they obey God

a. They say, “Okay, God, once you guarantee it’s going to work, then I’ll do it.”

b. God says, “That doesn’t require any faith.”

2. Len Sweet points out that in the country of Scotland there is a phrase: “he has a brass neck.”

a. People with brass necks are capable of sticking their necks into places where they could get their

heads chopped off.

b. Brass-necked people are risk takers.

(1). First Christian Church needs be a congregation made up of people with brass necks.

(2). We have to be risk takers who are willing to stick our necks out on the line for God.

c. John Ortberg has a book entitled, If You Want to Walk on Water, You’ve Got to Get out of the

Boat.

--Our faith is not biblical, authentic faith until we’re ready and willing to put it to the test.

C. Let me also make an observation: You cannot have a courageous congregation without courageous

leaders.

1. Leaders have to be thermostats and not thermometers.

--Thermostats set the temperature of the room. Thermometers only reflect the temperature of the

room.

2. A four-year-old boy was trying to convince his mother to sleep with him one stormy night. His

mother told him, “No.” The young fellow was upset and asked why she wouldn’t sleep with him.

She said, “Because you need to sleep by yourself and I need to sleep with Daddy.”

The little boy said, “The big sissy!”

a. We don’t need sissies for leaders.

--We need leaders with courage.

b. Eddie Rickenbacker: “Courage is doing what you’re afraid to do. There can be no courage

unless you’re scared.”

FAITH REQUIRES VISION and FAITH REQUIRES COURAGE)

III. FAITH RESULTS IN FRUIT

--What happens when a church walks by faith?

A. Churches that walk by faith experience four important benefits:

1. Benefit #1: Walking by faith generates enthusiasm

a. Big goals create excitement

b. Our hearts beat faster.

c. We begin to wonder aloud: “Can we do this?”

--Even more so, “Can God do this?”

d. We want to try something big – something huge and audacious – so that we can show the world

that we serve a big God.

e. In reality, it’s our job to attempt something so big that if God isn’t in it, we’re going to fail!

--And because of that…

2. Benefit #2: Walking by faith stimulates prayer

a. Mt. 17:20 – “I tell you the truth, if you have faith as small as a mustard seed, you can say to this

mountain, ‘Move from here to there’ and t will move. Nothing will be impossible for you.”

b. If your goal is to move a molehill, you don’t have much incentive to pray

--You can do that quite easily with human effort.

c. But if your goals are mountainous in size, it will motivate you to get on your knees and seek an

outpouring of God’s grace.

3. Benefit #3: Walking by faith motivates sacrifice

a. If you’re asking God to do something great, you’re going to do your best to see that it comes to

pass.

b. When you walk by faith, you will give what is necessary and give up what is necessary to meet

the goal.

4. Benefit #4: Walking by faith produces harmony

a. Soldiers in the barracks will bicker and fight with one another.

--But soldiers on the battlefield will stand united because they need each other.

b. One of the reasons Christians often bicker among themselves is that there is no challenging goal

that binds them together.

(1). A church that is arguing over tradition and fighting over things that are not essential has

forgotten its vision.

(2). But a challenging purpose can help people put differences aside and join forces for the

advancement of Christ’s kingdom.

B. Southeast Christian Church in Louisville is a congregation that definitely models walking by faith.

1. Bob Russell tells about one of the tremendous events that took place when they trusted God and

walked by their faith in his book When God Builds A Church

2. Listen to the story in Bob’s own words:

In 1983, a relocation committee reported that a twenty-acre tract of land just down the street had

become available and that we could purchase it if we acted immediately. The committee said, “in

order to purchase those twenty acres, we need $215,000.00 in two months.”

After the board voted to purchase the land, we had to decide how to finance it. One of our elders

said, “Let’s come to next month’s board meeting with a cash offering an pay for it ourselves out of

this leadership body. Then we’ll use that offering as an incentive to encourage the congregation to

give one million dollars in the fall toward the new building. That boils down to thirty-five hundred

dollars per family next month. Are there any questions?” There were a few timid questions. Then

we voted – and the idea passed! We walked out of the meeting saying to one another, “What did

we just do?”

That month we had to ask ourselves whether the church was first in our lives or [were we] just

“playing church.” The chairman of the board got a few calls of concern. “I’m just a schoolteacher

and don’t make that kind of money,” one would say. “I’m retired and living on a fixed income,”

another would say. But then we began to hear reports of people canceling vacations, selling second

cars, dipping into their savings accounts. At least three families borrowed ten thousand dollars each

from the bank to contribute to the project.

When we came to the meeting the next month, the tension was thick. No one really knew what

the others had done – how much they had sacrificed. One elder, Jack Coffee, came to the meeting

wearing dark sunglasses, carrying a tin cup, and walking with a cane! He wanted people to know

he’d really sacrificed.

We collected the offering, and the tally committee went off to count it. When they returned with

the news, we hadn’t raised $215,000.00 – we’d raised $255,000.00! The room exploded with joyous

celebration. Everyone exchanged high-fives and embraces. We knelt together and thanked God for

his blessing.

When the “Amen” was said, someone said, “I’ll be outside polishing shoes.”

Bob Carpenter asked, “What shoes? You obviously didn’t sacrifice enough if you still have

shoes!”

CONCLUSION: A. Dwight L. Moody: “The world is yet to see what God can do through a few people who

are totally sold out to him.”

1. My prayer for First Christian Church is that we can be faith-walking people who are

totally sold out to what God can accomplish in our midst.

a. Rom. 1423b – “…whatever is not of faith is sin.”

b. 1 Jn. 5:4b says that our faith “is the victory that overcomes the world!”

2. Are we willing to place our complete trust in the God who loved us enough to send

His Son so that we could see faithfulness in action and love beyond degree?

B. Soren Kierkegaard tells a great story in a little piece entitled Duckland:

It was Sunday morning, and all the ducks dutifully came to church, waddling through

the doors and down the aisle into their pews where they comfortably squatted. When all

were well-settled, and the hymns were sung, the duck minister waddled to his pulpit,

opened the Duck Bible and read: “Ducks! You have wings, and with wings you can fly

like eagles. You can soar into the sky! Use your wings!” It was marvelous, elevating

duck scripture, and thus all the ducks quacked their assent with a hearty “Amen!” – and

then they plopped down from their pews and waddled home.

1. Is your faith a sham?

a. Do you profess to have faith in Jesus Christ and in the power of His Spirit but your

life is like those waddling, quacking ducks whose Amen meant nothing more than

that they were ready to go home?

b. Are you walking by faith in obedience to the One who called you from death into

life?

2. Gal. 2:20 – “I have been crucified with Christ and I no longer live, but Christ lives in

me. The life I live in the body, I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and

gave himself for me.”

--Can you honestly claim that statement for you life?