Daily Devotional for Small Group Discussion: Faith


Host/Leader’s Instructions:

Before starting, the meeting host should print out enough copies of this page (click on green printer icon above) for everyone in the group. 

After general introductions, word of welcome and review of guidelines for small groups the meeting host will:

1. Invite someone to read the daily devotion printed below aloud.

2. Read the following introduction to the full text aloud:

In today’s reflection, Rev. Kaji Douŝa reflects on the nature of faith and how we experience it—or not. “When you cannot conjure a sense of assurance,” she writes, “that is not your fault.” Do you worry that your faith is not “big” enough? What do you think of Rev. Dousa’s closing statement: “You can try to orient yourself to a sense of possibility in the face of despair or uncertainty.God takes care of the rest, whether you believe this or not”?

3. Read the full text again (below):  Hebrews 11:1-2

11 Now faith is the assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen. Indeed, by faith[a] our ancestors received approval.

4. Take a minute or two for silent contemplation.

5. As a group, reflect on the following questions (remember to refrain from cross-talk):

What word, phrase or image jumps out at you from this reading? Everyone shares without commentary.

What’s God saying to you in this passage? (remember to refrain from cross talk)

What is the call to action for you and/or for our faith community? (feel free to engage in group conversation when discussing calls to action).

6. Close the meeting by praying the Lord’s Prayer together.


Faith

“Now faith is the assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen.” – Hebrews 11:1-2

Someone once interpreted the scriptures to teach me: “faith is (mostly) not about you.”

This was a curious proclamation to me, since I had heard so much, even from Jesus, about “ye of little faith.” The ones of “little faith” seemed to doubt the goodness of God, tried to stand in the way of God’s progress. I read Jesus’ words and wanted to be of “big faith” instead. So I willed myself to do faith bigly.

Until I found myself in places of doubt, wondering why God would let certain things happen. Until I sat in church and heard the call to confession and realized that I was doing the very things for which we asked forgiveness. There was much I had done that I should not have; there was a ton of stuff I left undone.

My bigly approach to faith was not working. Instead, the faith I needed might be as tiny as—in the words of Jesus—a mustard seed.

That was when it came to me (and later I would see that many theologians had come to the same conclusion): Faith belongs to God.

Faith is a gift. Faith is grace. It is this thing that connects us to the eternal in moments we could not have summoned on our own. Faith is not something that we will ourselves to have, it is given to us freely from the One who has everything to give. We do not will ourselves to faith bigly.

Meanwhile, the experience of faith is everything but passive. This is why I love this passage from Hebrews 11. My basic rubric for understanding a life of faith comes from this one line. “Faith” is God’s. “Hope” is ours. “Conviction” is God’s. The world of the unseen is ours. God does the hard parts. God gives us faith and conviction, assurance. Meanwhile, we do what we can to summon hope.

We live in the world with so many things that we cannot see, nor can we anticipate.

Hebrews 11 gives us a template for responding to this. Draw on the faith that God gives. If you cannot summon it, that is not your fault because faith comes from God, not from you. And since faith comes from God, when you cannot conjure a sense of assurance, then that is not your fault, either. All you can do is the other part: hope. You can try to orient yourself to a sense of possibility in the face of despair or uncertainty.

God takes care of the rest, whether you believe this or not.

Prayer

God, give me faith, assurance. Help me in the practice of hope. Show me your light when I cannot see it. Amen.