How fuzzy is your faith?
by Chet Gladkowski
Published on January 4, 2025
Categories: Inspiration

How Fuzzy Is Your Faith?

By faith we understand that the universe was formed at God’s command, so that what is seen was not made out of what was visible.

Hebrews 11:3

 

In our modern world, the idea of faith just seems too hard to believe. If we can’t touch it, then it can’t exist. If we can’t figure it out, then there’s no possibility of it. If we can’t measure it, then it’s just dust in the wind and to be ignored.

 

The other thing we do is to look down our nose at the people from times past. They were so cute and dressed in funny clothes, but they certainly didn’t understand things the way we do. Maybe they could make great works of art, but when it came to science, technology, and understanding the universe, they were way behind the times. They were out to lunch.

 

We think that the people who lived in olden times were so inferior to us. The reason for this arrogance is because the march of science, mathematics, education, and technology gives us a giant advantage to these poor people who were trapped back in time. And that anything that didn’t come up in the last 100 years is so utterly out of date and old fashioned. And for all our knowledge and wisdom, we can’t seem to figure stuff out.

 

  • We “know” that the universe suddenly, and for no particular reason, exploded on the scene about 13.8 billion years ago. But where did all the protons, neutrons, and electrons come from? And why did they just choose that moment to explode when they hadn’t done anything for eternity past?

  • We “know” that life suddenly appeared here on Earth, but where did it come from? How did it get started? Did it appear out of a soup of chemicals or where hot water comes up after being heated inside the earth? Or did passing meteorites and comets drop off the stuff that made life possible?

 

The writer to the Hebrews is using creation as a simple yet powerful example of faith. We see the results all around us, but how did it get here? We can touch, smell, and taste so many things, but where did they come from? This requires us to have faith for them more than we need understanding.

 

Understanding is a whole lot more than just seeing and touching. It’s where our mind takes stuff in from our senses and then makes sense out of it. And while they may have had less details about the physical universe, they still understood it. They figured out ways to live in harmony with it.

 

Think about it this way. Faith has the power to see the unseen. To believe what hasn’t been proven in a test tube. What hasn’t been verified in a laboratory. Faith takes what can be seen and then fills in the blanks. Faith never denies what we see but tries to put the pieces of the puzzle together so we can complete the puzzle.

 

When I consider your heavens, the work of your fingers, the moon and the stars, which you have set in place, what is mankind that you are mindful of them, human beings that you care for them?

Psalm 8:3,4

 

When King David wrote these beautiful words and put them to music about three-thousand years ago, he didn’t need a telescope. He didn’t need a degree from a college or university. What happened with David can happen with you and me too through these three steps.

 

  • Observations. We take the time to look at what’s all around us. But this takes time. It’s more than just a quick drive by. We have to stay with the thing being observed for a while as we keep looking and looking for more and more observations. This is where we use all our senses to bring in information. Sights. Sounds. Tastes. Touch. Over and over, we’re making observation after observation.

  • Thoughts. This is where we take our observations and start to organize them. We’ll put some things together and see if they make some kind of pattern. If one observation always seems to happen after something else happened. It’s like separating puzzle pieces because they have something in common. You put all the pieces with a straight side into one pile. You then put all the blue pieces next to one another.

  • Conclusions. Sometimes these three almost come right after one another. Sometimes there’s long periods of time until we’re ready to start doing something with our observations and thoughts. Conclusions are sort of like faith where we take what we know and fill in some of the pieces. A conclusion is to take all the straight pieces and make the border. Or we’ll take all the blue pieces and make the sky.

 

The Hebrews are reminded that the visible universe was created by God. He’s unseen and took unseen stuff to make the seen universe. No one can absolutely prove anything about the creation of the universe. It always takes fuzzy faith. Either a faith that protons, neutrons, and electrons alone could come up with this beautiful and complex universe. Of that there’s an intelligent, loving creator God that spoke the universe into existence. Both choices require fuzzy faith. But wouldn’t you want the loving God to be the answer because then he can love on us. Give our lives meaning and hope.

 

Noodling Questions

 

  • Does faith sound like a fuzzy or firm idea? Explain.

  • Describe your reactions when you stop and look at creation.

  • How is faith in a living, loving God attractive to you? To our society?

People who positively respond to Chet Gladkowski, deeply love their grandchildren, and great grandchildren. He writes from a very practical, daily living standpoint. Everything he writes points us to Jesus, the one who died for us. Each calls us to please the one who first loved us. He serves through www.ChetGlad.org where his blogs and Bible teachings can be found in text and audio. His new book, “HOPE is the Key – Living Through God’s Superpower” is available on his websiteAmazon, and other distributors.

Image Created by Andy Oldham using DeepAI

3 Comments

  1. Luke Frey

    Centuries from now, our knowledge will be replaced and maybe even thought “cute.” Wisdom from faith comes from God. I fall on the notion that God is the same yesterday, today, and tomorrow; He isn’t bound by time or space. That awesome concept is too great for any understanding because God, in His infinite wisdom, created time and space in which His creation exists.

    The hope of man recreating time travel makes me smile.

    Thank you for your thoughtful writing, Chet.

    Reply
  2. ISAAC OTIENO

    Your comment is awaiting moderation.
    When I was in high school, I liked science subjects very much. I believed the word substance had almost the same meaning as matter. In fact, I thought everything was physical, and I had almost no faith in God. Several years later, I came to realize that what can be seen, heard, and felt materially cannot actually tell us anything about God, whom we cannot see materially but can only know spiritually. Moreover, I realized that what cannot be seen with the eyes is actually what is permanent, dependable, and the only real substance.

    I came to realize that “Substance is that which is eternal and incapable of discord and decay”. Truth, Life, and Love are substance .The real substance of each of us is not a physical combination of flesh and bones but the expression of Soul, Spirit, or God. I’ve been learning how important it is to understand and value Spirit and spiritual ideas and qualities rather than matter as true substance.

    A growing understanding of God as Spirit lifts thought above a limited, material view of the universe to a spiritual one, to the kingdom of God within – within our hearts, within our consciousness, here and now

    Reply
    • Chet Gladkowski

      With respect, creation doesn’t tell us everything, but it does tell us some things about who God is and His nature.

      Romans 1:20 – For since the creation of the world God’s invisible qualities—his eternal power and divine nature—have been clearly seen, being understood from what has been made, so that people are without excuse.

      Philippians 2:5,6 – And while it’s totally true that God is Spirit (John 4:24), God sent His Son as fully God and fully man.
      Who, being in very nature God, did not consider equality with God something to be used to His own advantage; rather, He made Himself nothing by taking the very nature of a servant, being made in human likeness.

      There’s no room for debate, Jesus was equal with God for all eternity past. He was more beautiful, powerful, and glorious beyond anything we can imagine. He was full like we can’t understand, and He emptied Himself.

      Reply

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