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Positive Faith in Scripture: A God Who Comforts
“He will wipe away every tear from their eyes. Death will be no more. There will be no mourning, crying, or pain anymore, for the former things have passed away.”
Revelation 21:4, CEB
God’s goal, his plan, in fact, is to move creation to a place where there will be no death, no pain. There will be no more need for sadness because creation itself will perfectly embody his compassion, patience, mercy, and love.
And, even so, he will wipe away the tears from the sadness that has come before. Because he is a comforter.
There will one day be a time where no future comfort is needed- but we all have pasts- and he is here for us, to heal us.
Positive Faith in Scripture: God’s Dominant Characteristics
“But you, my Lord,
are a God of compassion and mercy;
you are very patient and full of faithful love.”
Psalm 86:15, CEB
Thinking about faith in positive terms is not just about how we view ourselves- it also has quite a lot to do with how we view God.
Many struggle to believe in God as scripture presents him and as God speaks of himself in scripture. This is because preachers for the last 100 years or so have treated God’s “rare” qualities as if they are “dominant” qualities in order to motivate people into joining churches, or making decisions, or whatever the case may be. Regardless of the specifics, this has largely been done to make the preacher look good and has little to do with God or the person on the receiving end of the message.
Psalm 86 echoes the most-often repeated claim about God in the Bible- that he is compassionate and merciful, and patient and loving. These are his dominant traits. They are the ones most prominently on display “most” of the time (it generally takes hundreds of years to get God angry).
God spends more of his time lamenting the fact that his own people can’t seem to embody these same traits- compassion, mercy, patience, and love- than he does being angry at them over it.
Because of your past, it is likely quite hard to believe that God is the things Psalm 86 says. But, if you did believe them…what would that change for you?