Christ’s Faith Working Within Us

By Arthur J Licursi

Gal 2:20 I am crucified with Christ: nevertheless I live; yet not I, but Christ liveth in me: and the life which I now live in the flesh I live by the faith of the Son of God, who loved me, and gave himself for me.

Ephes. 1:3 Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who hath blessed us with all spiritual blessings in heavenly places in Christ:

Heb 11:1 Now faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen.

Romans 10:17 So then faith cometh by hearing, and hearing by the word of God

Ephes. 2:8 For by grace are ye saved through faith; and that not of yourselves: it is the gift of God:

 

The Christian’s Problem – A Lack of Faith

The most common problem among the regenerated children of God is that they do not believe God's Word to the point of enjoying the benefit of the indwelling Christ, who is renewing their soul. All believers trust in their salvation from perdition through Christ’s vicarious work on the cross, but most have yet see and believe they are dead in Christ (Rom 6:6a, Gal 2:20a) and have become new creatures in Christ (2Cor 5:17); that they’re now equipped to overcome all the issues of life by His indwelling life. Hebrews 4:2 “…the word preached did not profit them not being mixed with faith in them that heard it.” God's Word is trustworthy, but of no benefit if we do not trust Him. Trusting our emotions or our experience will fail us.

 

God’s word says the Lord Jesus is not only our righteousness (2Cor 5:21), but that Christ has become our sanctification (1Cor 1:30), by living within and through us (Heb 2:11) as the new us (Gal 2:20). This is indwelling supply of Christ’s life is the core of Paul’s mystery Gospel, revealed to him directly by the ascended Jesus Christ. Christ is not only our righteousness, but also our present, ongoing, sanctification. We must come to believe that He is our life as our all. Such “coming to believe” requires revelation by the indwelling Spirit of Christ. We don’t have to feel that Christ is our life and our sanctification. When God reveals to us that Christ is now our life (Col 3:4a), we’ll confess Christ is our life. When God reveals that our old man has died in Christ, we’ll agree that our old man was crucified in Christ. When God reveals Christ as our sanctification, we say Christ is our sanctification. When God reveals that Christ is our all, we’ll say He is our all. Whatever God says by revelation, we’ll believe (trust in, cling to, and rely upon). Such trust is faith working, because trust is an ongoing belief through a period of time, without having any visible evidence!

 

What is Faith?

Heb 11:1 Now faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen. This is the only verse in the Bible that gives us such a succinct definition of faith. The word "substance" transliterated from the Greek word “histemi,” means “the concrete essence, or that which is behind or supporting” – in practical terms it means “the concrete evidence by which we may know something to be real”. For example, there is a picture full of colors, but they can be proven or substantiated only through the eyes. Without our eyes seeing, the colors could not be substantiated. Similarly, the sound of the organ is beautiful and it can only be proven or substantiated only by the ears hearing. Therefore, it is one thing for objects to exist, and it is another thing for the existence of these things to be substantiated or made real to us.

 

Likewise, faith makes God real to us. All of the Bible facts of God are real. However, these facts of God can be substantiated by us only through faith. Such faith is the substantiation of things hoped for and the evidentiary conviction that we have of the things not seen…yet that we know them to be real.
 
A painting may have beautiful scenery, but a blind man cannot see it. The blind man can’t say the painting doesn’t exist only because he has not seen it. That the painting exists is a fact, as God’s truth is fact. The real question is whether or not you have received the benefit from the painting…or of God’s truth. Only those with sight will find enjoyment receive the benefit from the painting …or of God. In order to see God’s truth must use the proper organ, our human spirit, in which “the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus” dwells.

1 Cor. 2:10-12 But God hath revealed them unto us by his Spirit: for the Spirit searcheth all things, yea, the deep things of God. 11For what man knoweth the things of a man, save the spirit of man which is in him? even so the things of God knoweth no man, but the Spirit of God. 12Now we have received, not the spirit of the world, but the spirit which is of God; that we might know the things that are freely given to us of God.

1 Cor. 2:14But the natural (psuchikos, man of the soul, emotion, mind, will) man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God: for they are foolishness unto him: neither can he know them, because they are spiritually discerned.

 

How much do we know of the Cross of Christ as our Cross?

We as Christians all know the truth that Lord has died and shed His blood on the cross for us. Yet only some see that He has also given His very life to indwell us (Gal 2:20). Some see this truth, and thereby spontaneously, they have the faith to substantiate this fact of both the Lord's death and life to them; it is only they who receive the benefit of His indwelling. Non-believers of course do not see either the aspect of Christ death for them, or His death as them; or His resurrection life as their new life, thus they do not have faith sufficient to trust in, cling to, and rely upon these facts of the Lord’s working on their behalf. Many genuine Christians have never “seen” this truth sufficiently to identify with the death of the Lord on the cross as being their death, and His resurrection life now indwelling them as their life. Though these are facts, they are unable to experience or appropriate the power of these truths in their lives.

 

Hope Alone, Is Not Faith

We might consider what faith is not. Faith is not hope. Those who have only hope do not necessarily have faith. When you talk to others about overcoming in the midst of trial and ask whether they have overcome, you know that they do not have faith if they answer, "I hope I will overcome this." This is like talking to someone about salvation and he tells you that he hopes he is saved, you know that he does not have saving faith yet. Some people constantly hope that the Lord will save them, and they constantly hope that the Lord will help them overcome. Some people constantly pray and ask the Lord to make them overcome. Some people constantly wait for the Lord to make them overcome. Some people claim that they have surrendered and believed, but they hope and wait to see whether it will work. If they hope and wait and see whether this works, it will never work, because faith is not hope.

 

Faith is NOT a Feeling

There are some occasions when emotion or feelings are useful to the Lord. However, feelings are useless in understanding and appropriating the things of God. Some believers may say they have surrendered and believed that the Lord is living in them, but they dare not say that they have overcome. This was because, from the day they received the Lord, they have never had any feeling about it. The sense of the souls emotion, can not confirm spiritual truth. We must be keyed to the proper sense. The hand can touch physical things and sense their temperature; it cannot see a picture – we must use the correct organ that is for seeing – they eyes. Similarly, spiritual things can be substantiated only by faith that is of the spirit; they cannot be substantiated by feelings. We overcome because of the Word of God. God speaks, and it is done. This is not a matter of feeling some kind of strength or experiencing some exuberant sensation for a few days. Feelings may come and go but truth is eternal. In order to overcome, there needs to be only a spirit quickened word from the Lord for us to believe. The one inner sense we as Christians should have as our marker to indicate our union with Him is the sense of rest and peace; this is not emotion, but a sense of well-being that we have by Christ in us – it may be enjoyed (sensed) so long as we trust Him.
 

A Substantiating Faith

Spiritually, believing is the substantiation or making real of spiritual truth or fact. Once we see something with our spiritual eyes (that’s revelation), it is then spontaneously substantiated with belief. We see first, then we automatically believe; we have substantiated the facts; it is then that we have faith that it is unshakable. Once you are saved by believing, who can dissuade you of your salvation by Christ’s work on the cross and for you? There is no more hoping, you just know because you know, inwardly. This knowing was acquired by having seen with spiritual eyes, sufficiently to automatically believe. We have belief and are committed to the degree that we have seen. Hence we can never commit ourselves to what someone else has seen – even if it is our parents or the Pastor. If you do not have a believing faith built upon seeing, you cannot substantiate the facts. The color of a painting can be substantiated only by the eyes, the sound of an organ can be substantiated only by the ears, and the texture of an object can be substantiated only by the touch of hands. Actually, the old saying “Seeing is believing” is quite true in the spiritual realm. We possess a spiritual sensory organ in our spirit, it permits us to see and hear spiritually – we have conscience, intuition, and sense of union with the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus who indwelling spirit. In that union we are full of faith since we are full of Christ (Col. 2:10, “ye are complete in Him”). Note that it was no problem for the blind man of John 9 to believe after receiving his sight from the Lord.

 

In the same way, God's Word (Christ Himself, John 1:1) and all that He is can only be substantiated by faith. We shouldn’t have to hesitantly pray to God, saying, "Lord, please give my victory, give me peace and sanctify me." Sadly, this is the way most Christians pray and approach there relationship with God. They do not yet see to know who they really are in relation to the Lord –already “seated in heavenly places in Christ Jesus”. Such a one likely does not know Christ lives within their spirit as their all.

 

Rather, we should say, "I thank and praise You Lord, because You are my life, my peace, my rest, and You are my sanctification. I thank and praise You!" Such a one can only say this because they first have “seen” the truth, which permits them to believe. When we see with our spiritual eyes, we cannot help but believe. I’ve personally come to describe faith for Christians as follows - Faith is our automatic response to having seen that which is of the Lord.

 

Have you noticed the Apostle Paul says almost nothing of the word “worship,” which so many Christians make the centerpiece of their Sunday experience? Rather, Paul uses the words “thanks,” “thankful” and “thanksgiving” over thirty times. We will only truly thank God when we’ve “seen and believed” something of God. It may be easy to worship outwardly in song because it stirs our soul’s emotion (quite apart our spirit), and still not even believe the words we sing; but actually having a true heart full of thanksgiving only springs out of having seen and trusted the facts of God toward us – this is faith.

More Sight Needed for More Faith

We must see in order to believe? All God’s regenerated children have had some degree of “seeing”. Yet consider Paul’s prayer for the believers at the Ephesian church.

Ephes. 1:16-18 (I Paul) “Cease not to give thanks for you, making mention of you in my prayers; 17That the God of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of glory, may give unto you the spirit of wisdom and revelation in the knowledge of him: 18The eyes of your understanding being enlightened; that ye may know what is the hope of his calling, and what the riches of the glory of his inheritance in the saints”  

 

The Ephesians were regenerated believers, but Paul knew that they needed to see even more of their relationship with Christ. Paul also knew that he could not impart revelation, so He asked the Lord. We all start from darkness and need the ever increasing light of God as we walk and grow in the Lord. If we lack spiritual light and sight concerning all that Christ is to us it is only because we have not had enlightenment by “the spirit of wisdom and revelation in the knowledge of him”. If as Christians we stay in darkness we will only practice the outward things of religion – which consist of hoping, doing, and not doing certain things. This was Paul’s concern for the Galatians and all the churches which were plagued by religion and its outward demands, which demands have the power to separate believers from the Christ who indwells their spirit – making “Christ of no effect” (Gal 5:4). Christ is not gone – just ignored by the believer, only because the do not yet see all that Christ is; thus they do not yet believe all that Christ is meant to be to them.

 

“How may I receive revelation?”

If we see that we need revelation, then, we might ask – “How do I receive revelation?” We see by Paul’s prayer above (Ephesians 1:16-18), only God, to whom He prayed, can give revelation. Only God controls revelation; recognizing this fact, the mighty Paul prayed to God for revelation for the believers at Ephesus . If you lack revelation sufficient to believe – then sincerely ask God – and He will reveal Christ - “the revelation in the knowledge of Him”. Revelation of Christ is the answer to our lack of faith. Once revelation is received we have the “faith that is of (ek, out from) the Son of God (Gal 2:20b, KJV).” Have you had a revelation of Christ in you as your new and overcoming life? Since Christ is all, then He in you is your faith. Note here in Gal 2:20 whose faith it is that we are to live by while in these bodies.

Only the KJV agrees with this, as from the Greek. Gal 2:20 (KJV) I am crucified with Christ: nevertheless I live; yet not I, but Christ liveth in me: and the life which I now live in the flesh I live by the faith of the Son of God, who loved me, and gave himself for me.  

So, Christ in me is my faith – then the revelation I need is of or from Christ who lives in me. Christ Spirit is the revelator in us after salvation. Paul says, “Ephes. 2:8 For by grace are ye saved through faith; and that not of yourselves: it is the gift of GodChrist is the only one who knows, has faith in, and trusts the Father, and Christ lives in us. Then the revelation I need is not of God’s power to make me this or that, but it is to see that Christ is all and that He lives in me as my all, …as the entirely new me.

 

Faith Cometh by Hearing the Word of God

Paul also writes this. Romans 10:17 So then faith cometh by hearing, and hearing by the word of God. Faith comes by hearing with ears that are made sensitive to the voice of God. The Greek for “faith” here is “rhema”, which is the spoken word. This is not the written or studied word – however, God’s speaking to us may, and often does come via our having read or heard the spoken word called the Bible, which carried God’s Spirit anointing for revelation to us. The revelational anointing that is God’s “spirit of revelation” may or may not be upon His words that are preached or written at a particular time.

 

I met with a Christian friend of mine, Peter Dodds, in South Africa, he once said “Words are the currency of the Spirit”, that is His Spirit speaks words into our being, conscience and mind; and they have creative power. Those words bear the creative life-giving power of God, just as He once spoke the worlds into existence. Today He, by the indwelling spirit of Christ, speaks revelatory, faith-giving words into us.

 

Jesus said “my words are spirit and life” (John 6:63) and also that “my sheep hear my voice” John 10:27). Hearing is something internal, not seen visually. The words in the Bible may be seen; but their power may not become real until the spirit makes them revelatory to us. We all must admit there are times we read the Bible and its just words on paper – like a newspaper. Other times, it is alive to us. We need the Spirit to anoint the Bible’s words for us, such that they become revelatory to us.

 

Suffering Permits More Revelatory Seeing & More Faith

The sound of the organ is very beautiful, but it can be substantiated only by the ears that hear. God knows the ears of the innermost hearts of those who desire Him and He will fill their longing to know Him; He alone can satisfy the hungry heart. Paul in his latter days still said he desired to experientially know the inexhaustible Lord to an even greater degree. Philip. 3:10 “That I may know him (ginosko, know experientially), and the power of his resurrection, and the fellowship of his sufferings, being made conformable unto his death” Often our revelation of Him as our all comes out of our suffering to the point of dying to our soul’s self-interest and self-reliance – to turn us to Him in our Spirit, with a singleness of heart. In such a turning we gain more sight, a greater view, of the Lord and thereby more faith in Him. If we continue to rely upon our self we can never know the sufficiency of the Lord.


We encounter temptations and trials all the time. Many difficulties situations and circumstances confront us. Should we pray for God to give us the strength to overcome, give us peace? No!  Seeing that we have already been blessed with all spiritual blessing in heavenly places in Christ, then God has already supplied us everything according to His living Word – which is Christ in us as our life. God does not give us these things as being separate from Christ, who Himself is our peace, our wisdom, our sanctification, etc, and our very life. Christ is our victory, our peace our all, our very life. The problem is not any lack of the supply of Christ; it is our lack of seeing Christ sufficiently to have the faith and trust needed.

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