Using the Faith Rest Drill; James 1:6
In review, there are three
stages to the faith-rest drill. The first stage is mixing promises with faith;
stage two is using doctrinal rationales; stage three is coming to doctrinal
conclusions.
Stage one: mixing promises
with faith. How do we claim a promise? It is a simple procedure. A promise in
the Word of God encapsulates doctrine at a very basic level. By claiming a
promise, what you are doing is taking your faith and mixing it with a promise
to apply it to a particular situation. 1) You cannot apply what you do not
know. You must know the promises of God accurately before you can claim them.
Example: Numbers 13:2 NASB
“Num 13:2 “Send out for yourself men so that they may spy out the land of
Canaan, which I am going to give to the sons of Israel; you shall send a man
from each of their fathers’ tribes, every one a leader among them.” There is a
promise here. That is, the Lord was going to give the land to
Numbers
1) The principle that needs to be pointed out is that to
start off in the faith-rest drill you have to first know the promise before you
can apply it and you have to accurately understand the promise. If you don’t,
God is not going to fulfil the promise and you are going to think doctrine
doesn’t work and God doesn’t answer prayer and faith is irrelevant. So you have
to properly understand the context. There are many promises in the Word of God.
The faithfulness of God:
Psalm 119:89 NASB
“Forever, O LORD, Your word is settled in heaven.” This gives us
confidence in the Word of God. There is no change, no variance; God will always
be faithful to His Word.
Psalm 119:90 NASB
“Your faithfulness {continues} throughout all generations; You
established the earth, and it stands.”
Numbers
Regarding personal enemies:
Psalm 60:12 NASB
“Through God we shall do valiantly, And it is He who
will tread down our adversaries.” Too often when we get in situations where
somebody might be gossiping about us or maligning us, or there is some kind of
personal hostility, we want to get vengeance. Our first reaction is to get back
at that person. Vindictiveness is never the answer, the answer is to rely upon
the Supreme Court of heaven, put it in God’s hands, forget about it and move
on. Let God deal with the people, it is
not our job, it is God’s responsibility.
Hebrews 13:6 NASB
“so that we confidently say, “THE LORD IS
MY HELPER, I WILL NOT BE AFRAID. WHAT WILL MAN DO TO ME?” Man does not have ultimate power over the believer;
God is the one who protects us.
Promises we can claim when we feel down or
discouraged:
Psalm 37:28 NASB
“For the LORD loves justice And does not
forsake His godly ones; They are preserved forever, But the descendants of the
wicked will be cut off.” We can rely upon the Lord.
Isaiah 40:29 NASB
“He gives strength to the weary, And to {him who} lacks might He increases
power.”
Promises regarding strength:
Psalm 18:2 NASB
“The LORD is my rock and my fortress and my deliverer, My God, my rock, in whom
I take refuge; My shield and the horn of my salvation,
my stronghold.” It is when we learn doctrine and store it in our souls, and
when we extrapolate the principles of doctrine from what we learn, and we begin
to apply them in terms of the stress-busters, that builds
this fortress around our souls. He does this through doctrine.
Promises that relate to the comfort of God:
Psalm
Safety:
Proverbs
Psalm 4:8 NASB
“In peace I will both lie down and sleep, For You alone, O LORD, make me
to dwell in safety.
Proverbs
God’s help; His sustenance for us:
Psalm 42:11 NASB
“Why are you in despair, O my soul? And why have you become disturbed within
me? Hope in God, for I shall yet praise Him, The help of my countenance and my
God.”
Guilt:
Isaiah 43:25 NASB
“I, even I, am the one who wipes out your transgressions for My
own sake, And I will not remember your sins.”
Psalm 103:12 NASB
“As far as the east is from the west, So far has He removed our transgressions
from us.”
Fear:
Isaiah 41:10 NASB
“Do not fear, for I am with you; Do not anxiously look
about you, for I am your God. I will strengthen you, surely I will help you, Surely I will uphold you with My righteous right hand.”
Isaiah 41:13 NASB
“For I am the LORD your God, who upholds your right hand, Who says to you, ‘Do not fear, I will help you.’”
Philippians 4:6, 7 NASB
“Be anxious for nothing, but in everything by prayer and supplication with
thanksgiving let your requests be made known to God.
2) Once we learn promises, then
comes the next stage, and that is thinking about their meaning. That is what
the Bible means by meditation. What does this promise say about the character
of God? What does it say about His actions? What kind of actions will He take
on your behalf in this situation? What does it say about your responsibilities
in the situation, and what you are to do and not to do? Think about the
situation and what is involved there.
3) Review the promise several times in your mind.
4) Use the promise as the basis for prayer. That is where
we are moving into the realm of claiming the promise.
5) Turn the situation over to the Lord. “Lord, here is
this situation and here is what you have promised, so I’m
trusting you to fulfil your promise.” Turn it over to the Lord and leave
it there. Remember, the battle is the Lord’s—1 Samuel 17:4; 1 Peter 5:7 NASB
“casting all your anxiety on Him, because He cares for you.”
6) Faith-rest must be consistent and persistent.
Continuous confidence and tenacious trust are the basis for stability in the
faith-rest drill. The opposite, as we see in James 1:6, is when we doubt and
are like shifting sand or like the waves tossed to and fro, and that man is DIPSUCHOS [diyuxoj], a two-souled believer, and he is unstable in all of his ways.
7) Faith means the absence of reliance on human
works—effort, human viewpoint systems of thought. Faith means the absence of
reliance on human works, effort, human viewpoint systems of thought. It does
not mean that you don’t do anything, but you let God fight the battle while you
focus on your responsibilities. Do your job as unto the Lord as a believer and
let God sort out everything else. God is righteous; the Supreme Court of heaven
is still active. Romans 4:21 NASB “and being fully assured that what
God had promised, He was able also to perform.”
8) When the faith-rest drill characterizes and dominates
your thinking your panic, fear, anxiety, worry, anger subsides and is replaced
with peace, tranquillity and contentment; the basis for inner happiness. When
the focus is on doctrine the result is peace, calm, stability; when the focus
is on the problem, the difficulty, or whatever it is, then the result is
instability.
9) Some Old Testament illustrations of mixing promises
with faith. God appears to Abraham, Genesis 22, and tells him to sacrifice
Isaac. Abraham obeys. How many people would sacrifice their one and only pride
and joy to the Lord? Abraham knew that God had promised him a seed and that
seed was going to come through Isaac. So even if Abraham sacrificed Isaac he
knew that God would bring him back alive. So Abraham trusts God in the
situation, moves out and never looks back. Another example came later in
10) Faith-rest mechanics of stage one are three. a) faith claims the promise; b) faith applies the promise; c)
faith takes control and stabilizes the situation.
The second stage of the
faith-rest drill is a doctrinal rationale.
1) A rationale is just the underlying reason,
justification or explanation for something; it is marshalling certain
principles together.
2) The use of doctrinal rationales depends on having a
certain amount of EPIGNOSIS doctrine in your soul so that your faith is maturing.
You have to start applying some doctrine that is there.
3) Example: The essence of God rationale. This focuses on
the nature and the character of God which under girds His promises. It is the
character of God that is the basis for stability for His promise. His character
includes perfect justice and righteousness, unlimited power, veracity so that
we know that His Word is true, immutability so that we know he has not changed
His mind. So as we come to learn and understand the essence of God we can unite
that with our faith as we face any …. [Gap in tape]… In Psalm 86:15, 16 we see
a little bit of an essence of God rationale. NASB “But You, O Lord,
are a God merciful and gracious, Slow to anger and abundant in lovingkindness and truth.
God’s
sovereignty: as the absolute ruler of the universe He is in complete control of
every circumstance in life. Jesus Christ controls history. God’s righteousness:
He is perfect goodness; He is sinless in His character and person. Therefore
His solutions are always correct and accurate. He always has a lesson for us to
learn and it is designed for our particular circumstances. In terms of God’s
justice He is absolute fairness, therefore we have no right to become angry or
bitter in our circumstances. God is absolutely fair in everything He does. Love:
God consistently loves His own perfect righteousness. That is in you, the
believer, at the moment of salvation. You possess the righteousness of Christ
so God will always love you with a perfect, infinite love. Since you have this
imputation of His perfect righteousness God will always stand by you in the
midst of the most devastating of circumstances. Eternal life: God is eternal,
He has always existed. He has no beginning and no end and in eternity past in
His omniscience he knew of our problems and provided for them. In God’s
omniscience God knows all things. He has always known the best solution to our
problem and has provided that solution from eternity past. In His omnipresence
God exists in all places at one time. He observes all things and is the
eyewitness to every circumstance is our lives and he will always act in our behalf
from a foundation of complete knowledge and perfect righteousness. In His
omnipotence God is all-powerful, unlimited in His ability and His authority,
and He is able to accomplish anything necessary to solve our problem. In His
immutability God cannot change. His Word cannot change. He will always keep His
promises and be faithful to them, and He honors His
doctrines without question. Veracity: God is absolute truth, so when he says
something is true then we can rely upon it more than we can rely upon anything
else in life.
The plan
of God rationale.
In the plan of God
rationale we know that God has had a plan for us from eternity past. Since God
foreknew us He expressed His will and purpose for us in eternity past under the
doctrine of election. In that He has provided a plan for our lives that
provides a solution for everything. So we know from the plan of God that if we
are alive and breathing that God has a plan for our lives and that plan is for
our good and not for our evil. Romans