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Quotes related to Hebrews 11:1
The Bible, just as it is, still works. Don't try to explain it. Just accept it. That won't make you a mindless zombie. It just means you are accepting your own human limitations and acknowledging by faith that something bigger than ourselves is happening, someone bigger is behind it, and we have the privilege to be a part of it.
— Peter Enns
Readers who come to the Bible expecting something more like an accurate textbook, a more-or-less objective recalling of the past—because, surely, God wouldn't have it any other way—are in for an uncomfortable read. But if they take seriously the words in front of them, they will quickly find that the Bible doesn't deliver on that expectation. Not remotely.
— Peter Enns
I feel it is part of the mystery of faith that things normally do not line up entirely, and so when they don't, it is not a signal to me that the journey is at an end but that I am still on it. As I reflect on my own experience and that of many others far wiser than I, God seems willing to help that process along.
— Peter Enns
Our experiences of God matter—those sacred moments that defy the very rational capabilities we are so keen to rely on.
— Peter Enns
I need a place to let go and fall back from my familiar patterns and trust God to catch me.
— Peter Enns
Doubt is what being cornered by our thinking looks like. Doubt happens when needing to be certain has run its course.
— Peter Enns
Our level of insight does not determine our level of trust. In fact, seeking insight rather than trust can get in the way of our walk with God.
— Peter Enns
When we think of "strong" faith as something that should be free of uncertainty or crises, I believe we have gotten wrong an important part of who God is and how the Christian life really works.
— Peter Enns
Walking the path of faith means trusting God enough to let our uh-oh moments expose how we create God to fit in our thinking.
— Peter Enns
Belief and faith always have content—a what. But a faith that looks like what the Bible describes is rooted deeply in trust in God (rather than ourselves) and in faithfulness to God by being humbly faithful to others (as the Father and Son have been faithful to us). That's basically it—though it's anything but easy.
— Peter Enns
I believe that the Bible does not model a faith that depends on certainty for the simple fact that the Bible does not provide that kind of certainty. Rather, in all its messy diversity, the Bible models trust in God that does not rest on whether we are able to be clear and certain about what to believe.
— Peter Enns
Christianity is a setup for letting go of certainty. The two pillars of the Christian faith express the mystery of faith: incarnation and resurrection. Of course, there's more to the Christian faith, but two elements make Christianity what it is, and both dodge our powers of thought and speech.
— Peter Enns