Life
is full of times that we will be unable to accurately interpret the evidences around
us. There will be times when we are forced to make decisions about the future and
in that choice no proven outcome will be guaranteed. This is where the rubber
meets the road, and we can be either paralyzed by uncertainty, or we can adopt
an indomitable spirit of faith. Faith is possessing the will to reach higher than our circumstances said we could, to push further than the limits said we should, to climb over what was seemingly insurmountable, and to overcome what no one in their right mind thought was possible. When we see these kinds of things happen in our world, we call them great. They are the product of the highest order of thinking available to us – faith. Faith is indomitable.
Great
men and women have led the way for us. When the skeptics and the nay-sayers
said it couldn’t be done, some kept pushing with an indomitable faith and they
did it anyway. When the evidence indicated there was little chance for
survival, fireman James Drouin of Boston
swam 200ft. across a broken ice shelf to rescue a young boy and win the Medal
of Valor for his indomitable faith. When Dietrich Bonheoffer was told that
returning to Germany
to advocate for justice for the Jews would mean a death sentence for him, with
indomitable faith he walked straight into the hangman’s noose. When oil rig
driver David Morrison was told he’d never walk again after a massive head
injury in a car accident, he recovered and went on to win a 10K marathon within
five years.
When we hear a person try to convince us that faith is a belief in
something that has no evidence, we need to stand up and tell the truth: that
faith is the mechanism which proves itself worthy of our allegiance by creating
its own evidence. The wheels of progress and innovation are
greased by the indomitable faith of those who refuse to believe what their eyes
are telling them, refuse to follow what the system has laid out for them, and
refuse to abide by the futility of trusting what they think they know.
Evidence
and empiricism are important like iron is important to your blood, but
consume too much of it and you’ll have a poison running through your body and
your mind that will end up squeezing the very life out of you. And we are being
poisoned by a worldview that day in and day out tries to convince us that a
belief in God is no better than a belief in Bigfoot. It is poison to our system
and has led to a decay of our everyday decency.
Faith
is not a blind leap in the dark. It is a hopeful step into the light.
The
writer of Hebrews says, “Now faith is
the assurance of things hoped for, the evidence of things unseen.” That’s a
definition of faith we should all be able to agree with. First, that faith is the
product of hope. Lose all hope and we lose faith. Did you know that
suicide rates among American teenagers saw their largest single year increase
in fifteen years as reported by CDC last year? Did you know that 50% of
American boys report feelings of hopelessness? Is it any wonder that we’ve seen
such a massive increase in recreational drug use? There’s a vile poison
infecting our well. It’s a poison that seeks to shackle our highest hopes by
claiming that they are inherently misplaced because ideas are not real unless
we can prove them scientifically.
Faith is itself evidence. One day, I’m
going to finish my book entitled, “Invisible Pink Economies.” The premise of
the book stabs straight into the heart of this subject today: ideas are proven
in their utility. A primary argument from unbelievers with regards to faith is
that belief in God is akin to belief in invisible pink unicorns. It is an
utterly ridiculous argument, because Invisible Pink Unicorns lack utility. They
serve no function in our society or any other that we know of. Such refusal to
be even remotely useful to us enable us to successful categorize IPU’s as a
nonsensical idea.
But
some ideas are in fact quite rational to hold, because they have a function.
Our economy is one of these ideas. The concept of money isn’t real, but
believing makes it so. I carry around a five dollar bill because I believe that
I can get a gallon of gas a coke with it. I trust in its unreal value because
it serves a real world function. By participating in banking, investing, and
bartering I provide evidence that the economy is real. Our collective actions
are evidence that this immaterial thing called “value” is real. But suppose we
all decided that it wasn’t real, and we all took our money out of the markets
and out of the banks. Suppose we refused to barter at all, what would happen to
the economy? We’ve already seen what happens when you make loans with money that
you don’t really have. Banks collapse from the failure to deposit more than is
withdrawn. The sustainability of the markets depends on our faith in the
system. In a sense, we are the evidence of the unseen.
God
is more than just an idea, for sure, but faith works much the same way in our
own lives. Our faith is the evidence of the unseen. As we work together and
fellowship together, we stimulate each other to love and good deeds. The value
of these things increases our hope and our confidence in the system by making
faith deposits. Our greed, selfishness, and doubts make massive withdraws from
the system and our hope begins to fail sending the market of our spirits into a
tailspin, ready to crash and burn.
So
then, faith is the assurance of what we hope for, and the evidence of what we
can’t see. These two truths work together to grease the wheel of the world.
Without them, things come grinding to a halt.
I
love the movie Empire Strikes Back. My favorite character in all the Star Wars
movies is Han Solo. The reason Han Solo is so appealing to us is that he often acts courageously,
in spite of his chances for success. "Never tell me the odds," he
shouted out when C3PO told him the odds of successfully navigating an asteroid
field. He truly believed he could fly
through it and all C3PO was doing was sucking the life out of his attempt.
Those
are the kind of people with indomitable faith that I want in my locker room
before the big game. They're the kind of people I want at my bedside when I'm
given six months to live. the kinds of
people I want my children to grow into. Indomitable, regardless of how much the
“evidence” is leaning against them. Indomitable all the way to the end.
As for the "evidence" crowd out spreading their poison, please let the grown-ups innovate and overcome. Plug into the hyperdrive C-3PO and let us drive. I subscribe to the belief that a trustworthy idea is worthy of my time, energy, and devotion and I am not to be denied. Ideas are trustworthy to extent they have real and beneficial function. Faith in God meets all these criteria.
As for the "evidence" crowd out spreading their poison, please let the grown-ups innovate and overcome. Plug into the hyperdrive C-3PO and let us drive. I subscribe to the belief that a trustworthy idea is worthy of my time, energy, and devotion and I am not to be denied. Ideas are trustworthy to extent they have real and beneficial function. Faith in God meets all these criteria.
The value of science isn't lost on me, nor is the value of faith. I don't have to trade one for the other. I can act on evidence without being shackled by its traps. I can reach for the unproven and reach for my unrealized potential during my stay on this planet. I can do this precisely because I believe I can.
Also, I know who I want in my corner. When it comes to the many unquantifiable decisions I have to make in life, it's always going to be the people who have the creativity, the will, and the indomitable human spirit to reach higher and further than our collective expectations. In short, I want to surround myself with people who have great faith.
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