Faith and Folly: Should I Really Abandon All for the Sake of Faith?

 Pexels

"For the word of the cross is folly to those who are perishing, but to us who are being saved it is the power of God." — 1 Corinthians 1:18

I'm the kind of person who can risk it all for the sake of faith even if I would appear blind and unsure. At the same time I can be very logical and strategic in the things I do. You can probably see the problem here.

I once heard a story of a pastor who preferred to live day by day, believing in the provision of God instead of getting a salary or church support. And miraculously God would provide for him like He would for Elijah or the Israelites. I then thought to myself: "Why aren't we all living that way?

Do we have to live that way and abandon all for the "folly" of the cross? Where do we draw the line between faith and stupidity? Are we to truly follow and trust God blindly?

Faith Must Come From a Genuine Relationship

Unlike that day-to-day provision pastor, I work in the ministry and I sustained myself and my family through various sources of incomes. I've been asked many times why I do ministry work. I have also been challenged to let go of all my other sources of incomes to just trust God. To that I simply respond, "Thanks for your suggestion, but that's not what God wants me to do."

Faith is first and foremost the fruit of obedience to God, not to what's popular. If something works for someone, then there's no assurance that it's going to work for you if you we're just doing things because others are doing it. Matthew 6:33 reminds us, "But seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness, and all these things will be added unto you."

What we must first seek is not what we are to do or how we are to live but whom we live for insteaed. If you're a person who lives day by day trusting in God's provision, abandoning all forms of earning, great! But if you're a person who relies on a salary or business, that doesn't make you less faith-filled.

Faith and Wisdom Do Not Contradict

When Paul talks about the cross being folly to the world, He doesn't literally mean that Christians should be stupid. The same author Paul tells us, "Walk in wisdom toward outsiders, making the best use of the time." (Colossians 4:5).

Wisdom and faith are not two opposite sides of the coin. They both come from the same God and are of the same substance.

There's nothing wrong with abandoning all forms of natural hope for the sake of spiritual hope, but even as we do so, we must walk in wisdom. Wisdom urges us to seek God's leading first before moving in faith to do the things that may seem like foolishness to others.

News
Prayers after train knife attack
Prayers after train knife attack

Local church leaders have been praying after a knife attack on a train in England on Saturday evening left more than a dozen people injured, two of them critically. 

JD Vance hopes his wife Usha will one day convert
JD Vance hopes his wife Usha will one day convert

"Do I hope eventually that she is somehow moved by the same thing that I was moved by in church? Yeah, I honestly do wish that, because I believe in the Christian Gospel and I hope eventually my wife comes to see it the same way," said Vance.

Conor McGregor declares he’s living ‘by God’s Word’ after finding faith: 'I'm saved'
Conor McGregor declares he’s living ‘by God’s Word’ after finding faith: 'I'm saved'

UFC fighter Conor McGregor recently revealed he's been on a "spiritual journey" and credited God for "saving" him and compelling him to live a "life by God's Word."

Leprosy Mission welcomes COP30 focus on health and climate change
Leprosy Mission welcomes COP30 focus on health and climate change

Civil war, climate change, mismanagement, corruption and natural disasters have all taken their toll on Sri Lanka