Hebrews 11:6 (NIV)
6 And without faith it is impossible to please God,
because anyone who comes to him must believe that he exists and that he rewards
those who earnestly seek him.
Faith is putting trust in what we fully don’t understand
or know. Faith is often following God who we have never met face to face. Faith
is the hope to see something greater that right now we are too blind to see.
Is it rational to trust God even when we do not fully
understand what he is doing? One of the most illuminating answers was put
forward by the Oxford philosopher Basil Mitchell in his celebrated parable of
the resistance leader.
Imagine you are in German-occupied France during World
War II and you want to join the resistance movement against the Nazis. One
evening in the local bar a stranger comes up to you and introduces himself as
the leader of the local partisans. He spends the evening with you, explaining
the general requirements of your duties, giving you a chance to assess his
trustworthiness, and offering you the chance to go no further. But his warning
is stern: If you join, your life will be at risk. This will be the only
face-to-face meeting you will have. After this, you will receive orders and you
will have to follow them without question, often completely in the dark as to
the whys and wherefores of the operations, and always with the terrifying fear
that your trust may be betrayed.
Is such trust reasonable? Sometimes what the resistance
leader is doing is obvious. He is helping members of the resistance.
"Thank heavens he is on our side," you say. Sometimes it is not
obvious. He is in Gestapo uniform arresting partisans and—unknown to you—releasing
them out of sight to help them escape the Nazis. But always you must trust and
follow the orders without question, despite all appearances, no matter what
happens. "The resistance leader knows best," you say. Only after the
war will the secrets be open, the codes revealed, the true comrades vindicated,
the traitors exposed, and sense made of the explanations.
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