“SEEING-BELIEVING” OR “BELIEVING-SEEING?”

WORD FROM THE CENTER: MONDAY, APRIL 28, 2025

Welcome to “Word from The Center” MONDAY, a devotional word from the Center of our faith, Jesus Christ, with reflections on His Word. I’m Gregory Seltz. Today’s reading is John 20: 28-29, where the Bible says,   

Thomas said to Jesus, “My Lord and my God!”29 Then Jesus told him, “Because you have seen me, you have believed; blessed are those who have not seen and yet have believed.”

 
“SEEING-BELIEVING” OR “BELIEVING-SEEING?”

Do you have to see everything for yourself before you will believe it? Or are there things that are very real, even very true, that we cannot see just with our eyes? Our garage doors open by unseen forces at the touch of a button. We put our food in little rectangle devices, hit the button believing that, absent a heating element or a flame of any sort, microwaves will make our food or beverages piping hot. Even the most empirical of scientists has things in which he/she believes long before they are visible to their eyes. One could make the case that observable science, the very scientific method we cherish today, was based on a belief that God created and ordered the world in such a way that it could be tested and its laws could be counted on. You might say that even the empiricist scientist has to believe in certain things before he/she sees them.

Faith in God is a bit like that. It’s not that faith in God is totally absent data or information. But faith in the God of the Bible is not merely an academic exercise. There are aspects to faith that are beyond our control. We are the creature; He is the creator. He is the redeemer; we are the redeemed. Faith begins to help us see the big picture of our lives here, and our lives eternally. In a paper delivered at the Oxford Socratic Club, C. S. Lewis remarked, “I believe in Christianity as I believe that the sun has risen. Not only because I see it, but because by it I see everything else.”[1] The Founding Fathers of America believed in liberty because they believed that God had created humanity for such a life. With that belief, they began to structure a government that would honor such freedom. In the fundamental questions of life, believing often leads to seeing!

The tension between “seeing before believing” and “believe in order to see” is what’s going on in our lesson today. The text shows how “doubting Thomas” finally believes in Jesus as his Savior, Lord, and God. But it took seeing the living Jesus present the very wounds of His crucifixion to engender such faith. So who was Thomas? What was he really like?  Was he the skeptic that many claim him to be? Was he a pessimist? The ultimate doubter? Well, if he was some of that at times, at other times he was tough and tenacious, no wilting violet. When Jesus was going to journey into dangerous territory, Thomas didn’t shrink back. Instead, he boldly urged the other disciples, “Let us also go, that we may die with him” (John 11:16 ESV). But it’s also true that he was confused and distraught over Jesus’ crucifixion. If someone tried to console him by claiming that Jesus didn’t really die, he wasn’t going to have any of that. He was overwhelmed by Jesus’ death and no amount of wishful thinking would change that.

What Thomas forgot was that the “believing is seeing” attitude of the Christian doesn’t work because of our inherent power, or our wishful thinking. It works because God’s promises are always true. God’s promises always come to fruition. In His time, in His way, YES. But they always come true because He is trustworthy and true.

Maybe Thomas did you and me a favor. He wasn’t going to let wishful thinking be the foundation of faith. He wanted the fulfilled Word of Christ to be evident for him and for all to see, even if he had to look a bit foolish for that to happen. In this Easter season, take a step back from the rat race of your job, take a step back from all the striving, and try to see the big picture of your life with God in Christ. Because He has risen, your life is redeemed. It is eternal and it has purpose now too. If your life doesn’t look like that at the moment, why not take Christ’s Word for it first and foremost? Believe in Him as your living Lord and God, and then begin to live in that resurrection reality with its eternal blessings right here and now. Put the power of believing, even without seeing for yourself, to work by reading and trusting in the Word of Jesus, the resurrected one who did all of this for people like doubting Thomas, and people like you and me.

PRAYER: Dear Lord Jesus, teach us the depth of Your love and mercy for us, so that we might live faithful lives of grace and mercy toward others. AMEN

[1] https://www.cslewisinstitute.org/resources/reflections-december-2013/

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SEEING THINGS FROM GOD’S “MISSION-VICTORY” POINT OF VIEW!