Measure: μέτρον Metron. “determined extent, portion
measured off, measure or limit.” This is
the same word that describes our “sphere of influence,” also a limited extent.
We learn several things here:
• Our faith is “dealt” or distributed to us from God. We
are not the source of our faith. Ephesians 2:8 affirms this.
• God has dealt faith to each one of us. Nobody is left
out.
• We’re given a measure of faith, a certain amount. No
one among us has infinite faith. It’s possible to increase our capacity for
faith, of course, but I’m thinking in other directions right now.
If we reference the mustard seed in Matthew 17:20, we
know that a little bit of faith goes a long ways. But if we have a measured
amount, it is possible to spend it all, whether a little bit at a time, or in
great big battles. This suggests that it’s possible to run out of faith.
○ Is this the reason we feel depleted after a great
fight: we’ve spent a lot of our faith?
○ I wonder if this is why some folks wander away from the
faith? Maybe they’ve just run out of faith. Perhaps they’ve squandered it?
○ Does this suggest that maybe we want to be frugal in
our spending of faith? (For example: sure we can believe God for every dollar
we need, but if we get a job, we spend less faith, so we have more faith to
invest in other areas.)
○ Is faith refillable, like my truck’s gas tank? When the
gauge is reading low, just go fill it up, remembering that faith is dealt from
God. (No pat answers please.)
○ Is faith sharable? It’s awkward to siphon gas from my
truck to put into your gas tank, but it’s possible. Can that be done with faith
too? Can faith be rented out?
I think we’ve got rather a ways to grow before we know it all.
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