I think this to be a bridge too far, Prentis! It is okay to ask God for comfort. It's not a sin. :)
I did not say we should not ask God for his comforting... Much to the opposite. But when we ask God, we must wait for his response. God showed me this once; I locked my keys in my car, and I had NO way of getting it unlocked. I got on my knees and asked the Lord for help, I wasn't sure what to do... So I asked him to send me a good Samaritan who could open it up. A taxi showed up, he said he'd call someone, charge me 20$, and they could open it. I has no other option, so I said yes. By the time the guy arrived, another man showed up to the parking lot and offered to open it up for free... This man was the answer to my prayer. But I missed it because I took the first option that showed up.
Men often pray for God to comfort them, to show them the way... But before the Lord shows up, someone else does, to see if they are wise to understand the difference. And so they leave with the first option.... By the time the Lord arrives, they are gone, they missed it.
In this way, men seek God, someone comes and offers them 'justification' on certain terms, according to a certain scheme... And they accept it. But it is not the Lord who has visited them and made them whole. So they then follow a deception.
But it's not a secret any more. Please think about this.
John 15:14 Ye are my friends, if ye do whatever I command you. 15 Henceforth I call you not servants; for the servant knows not what his lord does: but I have called you friends; for all things that I have heard of my Father I have made known unto you.
You're missing the point. Jesus said this to his disciples who had already left everything to follow him, lived with him, and experienced what he did.... If you take this verse and decide God is certainly saying this to you, then
you are quantifying and counting yourself among the disciples and claiming to be as they are. You are judging, and not God.
The scriptures tell us of the experience of others with Christ, that we might have faith,
and enter the same experience. It is there so that we would believe these things can be, not that we would declare that they are before the Lord actually makes them happen.
It's like reading 'And the Lord visited them' and saying 'Wow, the Lord visited me, it says here in the word.'
No it doesn't, it says he visited them. Now if you pray and believe, maybe he will visit you also. This is crucial, it is the difference between self-delusion and a true connection with God, of which the fruit is apparent.
What is your definition of 'faith' - as you used it in the above sentence, please?
My definition of faith is that it cannot be humanly defined. ;) That is, you cannot define the amount of faith that actually pleases God. Faith is to believe him and obey him.... But God makes that judgment, not us. Faith is X, it is the variable in the equation.
Believe me, it is very simple. It's in the Bible, and, it's in Bible dictionaries. If you know what God means by 'faith', then you also know whether you are embracing His definition of it in all its fulness.
Embracing God's
definition of faith is absolutely meaningless. Dead serious on this.
Embracing God's definition? God is not looking for people who nod and agree with him. Otherwise you might as well go back and agree with everyone who says that all it requires is to 'believe on Jesus', no obedience. After all, isn't that also agreeing with God's definition?
Are you saying you live your daily Christian life with absolutely no idea whether you are pleasing God?
Unless God personally comes and tells you,
I am well pleased with you, yes. And pleasing God once is not final. The warning is that if we draw back, he is not pleased with us at all. Draw back means we began well... We do know that we please him when he visits us, gives us his spirit, quickens us. But that means we pleased him
now. Unless now is the end of your race, you cannot judge yourself to have run well. Judge nothing before it's time.
So we see that pleasing God once is no guarantee of pleasing him again, or pleasing him in the big picture. Because of this, no man can justify himself before God.
Don't you think this statement is at variance with the end of Ephesians 2, and Romans 5:1 - 5?
This is a typical misunderstanding. People are unable to disconnect God being pleased with our first baby step and thus blessing us, quickening us, and giving us access to his grace, and us actually continuing and pleasing him with our lives.
Peter understood this difference... He said 'add to your faith', and spoke of the character required of God's people, and then continues...
2Pe 1:8 For if these things be in you, and abound, they make you that ye shall neither be barren nor unfruitful in the knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ.
2Pe 1:9
But he that lacketh these things is blind, and cannot see afar off, and hath forgotten that he was purged from his old sins.
People cannot separate being purged from our old sins/being grafted into the vine
and eternal salvation/security... But the Word constantly does. Paul warns us we can be cut off. Let the one who stands
fear! You go one step further than many in saying that we actually have to stand, but then you go off the same error and say that there is no fear of the Lord that is necessary, no possibility of being cut off, and no humility in the face of our vulnerability.
If God wants, he can cut us off. Don't be fooled, God is not bound to a law that makes it impossible for him to reject us. He is God, and he has every right...