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Allan Halton

Believing That God Is

Believing that God is means having an expectation of faith in our daily lives, and it is essential to please Him and experience His rewards.
Allan Halton preaches on the faith of Enoch, emphasizing that Enoch pleased God because he walked by faith, believing in a God who is present and active in the present day. The writer of Hebrews highlights that without faith, it is impossible to please God, and Enoch's translation was a result of his daily walk of faith. The sermon challenges believers to not just believe that God existed in the past but to have faith in a God who is actively working in the present, rewarding those who diligently seek Him.

Text

The writer of Hebrews commends to us Enoch, who "by faith was translated (transferred) that he should not see death; and was not found, because God had translated him. For, before his translation he had this testimony, that he pleased God" (Heb. 11.5).

I wonder why the word for is there. "For, before his translation..." That seems to be the emphasis of the Spirit-inspired writer. Enoch was translated because before he was translated he pleased God. But then the writer goes on to say:

But without faith it is impossible to please Him: for He that cometh to God must believe that He is, and that He is a rewarder of them that diligently seek Him (Heb. 11.6).

Meaning, if Enoch had the testimony that He pleased God, it could only be because he was walking by faith. For without faith it is impossible to please Him. Enoch was translated because in his day-by-day walk with God, he entered into a faith that enabled God to do something very powerful, transcendent, prophetic.

The other day I was dwelling on this passage and wondering if there wasn't more to believing that God is than merely believing He exists. It seems so obvious we must believe He exists that it hardly needs stating. Suddenly the "light bulb" came on. It's easy enough to believe that God was. What about believing God is? We have countless testimonies from the past of the wonderful and mighty things God did in a previous day. Our present-day denominations are proof that God was. He was the God who restored justification by faith to His church; He was the God who restored baptism by immersion. He was the God who moved mightily in the days of the Wesleys; He was the God who returned Pentecost to His people--the baptism of the Holy Spirit; He was the God who opened His heavenly storehouse and lavished the gifts of the Spirit on His people--the charismata. We love to read the stories of the mighty healing evangelists of yesteryear. In more recent decades He raised up powerful ministries of teaching. All this and more was opened up for our enrichment by people who in their day believed that God is. They believed. They sought Him diligently. They were rewarded for their faith and seeking.

But the same God who to Christians of a previous day was the God who is... do we have the same expectation of faith in our own day? Or has God become for most of us the God who was. All around us we see churches that owe their existence to the God who was. And we are thankful for what God has done in the past, and rejoice in it. But it was with a plaintive note that the psalmist came to God reminding Him of what He had done in the days of his fathers:

We have heard with our ears, O God, our fathers have told us, what work Thou didst in their days, in the times of old (Ps. 44.1).

In other words, what about my day, Lord? What about today?

It's interesting how the Genesis account about Enoch reads. It says, "Enoch lived sixty and five years, and begat Methuselah" (Gen. 5.21). Then it goes on, "And Enoch walked with God after he begat Methuselah three hundred years..." This is a dramatic change from what is recorded of the other patriarchs. Of them it reads only that they lived after they begat an heir... not that they walked with God. The record of Enoch stands out in blinking lights. Enoch, we read, "walked with God after he begat..." (Gen. 5.24).

This has to imply that Enoch was not just living life as it came along like the others were. When he woke up in the morning he expected to walk with the living God--and who knows the potential involved in this. He believed in a God who is... day after day after day. Enoch's God was not confined to yesterday's revelation, nor to yesterday's experience. The God with whom Enoch walked yesterday... he continued to walk with Him each new and unfolding day.

God was pleased with him because of it.

Let this same desire to please the living God be our own pursuit. Let us believe that He is. Let us seek Him. He will reward us. We'll still rejoice for what He did yesterday. But we'll be rewarded with what He greatly longs to do today.

And what does He long to do today? The answer to this question will be discovered only by those who come to Him, believing that He is, and therefore diligently seeking Him.

Sermon Outline

  1. I. Introduction
  2. A. Enoch's Translation
  3. B. The Importance of Faith
  4. II. Believing That God Is
  5. A. More Than Just Existing
  6. B. Expectation of Faith
  7. III. The God Who Was vs. The God Who Is
  8. A. Churches Founded on Past Experiences
  9. B. The Need for Present-Day Expectation
  10. IV. Walking with God
  11. A. Enoch's Example
  12. B. The Potential of Daily Faith
  13. V. Conclusion
  14. A. The Reward of Seeking God
  15. B. The Importance of Daily Faith

Key Quotes

“But the same God who to Christians of a previous day was the God who is... do we have the same expectation of faith in our own day? Or has God become for most of us the God who was.” — Allan Halton
“Enoch was translated because in his day-by-day walk with God, he entered into a faith that enabled God to do something very powerful, transcendent, prophetic.” — Allan Halton
“Let us believe that He is. Let us seek Him. He will reward us.” — Allan Halton

Application Points

  • We need to have a daily expectation of faith and seek God diligently to experience His rewards.
  • Walking with God is not just about past experiences, but about present-day interactions and faith.
  • Believing that God is means more than just existing, it means having a living relationship with Him.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does it mean to believe that God is?
Believing that God is means more than just existing, it means having an expectation of faith in our daily lives.
Why is it important to have faith in God?
Faith in God is essential because without it, it is impossible to please Him, and He rewards those who diligently seek Him.
What is the difference between the God who was and the God who is?
The God who was refers to past experiences and revelations, while the God who is refers to the present-day expectation of faith and the potential of daily interactions with Him.
How can we walk with God like Enoch did?
We can walk with God by having a daily expectation of faith and seeking Him diligently, just like Enoch did.
What is the reward of seeking God?
The reward of seeking God is that He will do something powerful and transcendent in our lives, just like He did with Enoch.

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