What is the difference between beliefs and faith
Unless it produces good deeds, it is dead and useless. James says that unless faith produces action is in fact dead, or not faith at all. As a side note, some people get confused and turned around on this point and try to do good things to generate faith. He said our faith, if it is real and alive, will naturally move us to do good things. The last part of that whole faith equation is confidence. So now you can see how belief and faith are interrelated. The difference between the two is subtle.
But understanding it makes things that Jesus said like in Matthew above make a whole lot more sense. When we believe the truth with enough confidence to take action we exercise faith. Unbelief prevents us from ever seeing the miraculous in our lives. We pray and plead with God, begging him to give us more faith. The good news is that we can change our unbelief into belief.
You also know the vast majority survive. Many believe he is who he claimed to be — God himself and the savior of the world. An acceptance of the facts. Biblical faith goes beyond mental acceptance of the facts. Biblical faith is like actually buying a ticket. Biblical faith is like boarding a plane, like fastening your seat belt and trusting that pilot to take you up and back down again. As discussed above, belief needs to be proved.
On the other hand, faith needs no question to be asked. This is a major difference between the two words. Thus, it can be said that faith is nothing but belief without evidence. These are the differences between faith and belief.
Her research interests are mainly in the fields of Sociology, Applied linguistics, Sociolinguistics, and Linguistic anthropology. She is currently employed as a lecturer. Belief is the cerebral holding of a set of ideas. Faith is a gift to the heart and in a person. I say that as a christian , an eastern one. Western christianity, except for charismatics-pentecostals, tend toward belief since it is often hyper-rational , both Roman Catholic and Protestant.
Eastern christianity is mystical and tends toward faith. This is why charismatics-pentecostals and easterners see more miracles, acts of power in the Spirit. Faith opens the heart and by grace beholds the personal God in Jesus Christ, not an idea of him, but the person.
God is just and will set things right. If we only believe! Believe in what though? Believe in our own version of an indefinable Being who transcends us and all created things? Our beliefs are mostly narrow and rooted in culture and upbringing. Sometimes our most closely held beliefs are in direct conflict with everything else we know to be true.
If we decide or are told that the persecution is God's idea, or worse -- his divine will -- then how do we reconcile that deity with the God of love and benevolence? This is so much easier when it's happening to someone else -- really. Intellectual abstraction is no substitute for direct experience.
It can be argued that we only arrive at the intersection of faith and belief when we experience a life-threatening trauma ourselves. Once we do, we may be forced to change our beliefs or go crazy.
We cannot stay mentally fit as exiles of our own minds. Changing our minds means changing at least some aspect of our beliefs. And a belief, just because it has been handed down to us, is not necessarily true even when we think it is. Or more clearly, it is not necessarily the only truth. Belief is a product of the mind, but faith is not.
Faith is a product of the spirit. The mind interferes in the process of faith more than it contributes to it. To have faith in the worst of times will no doubt require us to silence, or at least quiet, the mind.
Faith is what happens when our beliefs run aground.
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