| Untitled Document Do I Really Believe, or Believe What I Am Supposed to Believe?There   are the great beliefs, beliefs that people have devoted their lives to   studying, beliefs that they have argued about and exulted in and   sacrificed over and died for:
 
 I believe in God, the Father Almighty,
 the Creator of heaven and earth,
 and in Jesus Christ, his only Son, our Lord:
 Who was conceived of the Holy Spirit,
 born of the Virgin Mary,
 suffered under Pontius Pilate,
 was crucified, died, and was buried. . . .
 
 Sometimes people can rattle off words like that without ever asking themselves if they really believe them.
 
 Faith is not simply holding beliefs. Many people, when they consider faith, think I believe that God exists, or Scripture is accurate, or Love is the greatest virtue. But at its core, faith is not simply the belief in a statement; it puts trust in a person.   We all think we want certainty. But we don’t. What we really want is   trust, wisely placed. Trust is better than certainty because it honors   the freedom of persons and makes possible growth and intimacy that   certainty alone could never produce. There can be no intimacy without   trust.
 
 The disciples looked at Jesus, and they thought, I like his life. I wish I could live like that.   When they tried doing the things that Jesus instructed, they found that   his teachings actually made sense when they acted on them. Forgiving   worked better than vengeance. Generosity worked better than hoarding.   They began to believe these truths for themselves. The growth of the   disciples looked something like this: First they had faith in Jesus; then they began to have the faith of Jesus.   Their mental maps began to look like Jesus’ mental map. Finally, after   his crucifixion and resurrection and the coming of the Holy Spirit, his   disciples realized that Jesus is the Savior of the world — that he   really is the revelation of God himself — and therefore they trusted him   with their eternal destinies as well.
 
 We often try to get people   to trust Jesus for eternity — to get them into heaven — without their   first learning to trust him for their daily lives. As a matter of   psychological reality, this just does not work. It produces people who say they trust Jesus and who might even think they trust Jesus, but what they do shows   that they do not share his ideas about the way things really are and   the way life really works. Therefore they are not able to live the way   that Jesus would live in their place. It is hard to live as Jesus would   live if we do not share at the core level his convictions about the way   things really are.
 
 Elton Trueblood wrote these words, and I think   they are profoundly true: “The deepest conviction of the Christian is   that Christ was not wrong.” Faith involves certain beliefs. Faith   involves an attitude of hope and confidence. But at its core, faith is   trusting a person.
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