Wednesday, May 20, 2026

Faith in the Battle Against Evil

 Sabbath School

Growing in a Relationship with God 

Having Faith

Lesson 8 - Friday Further Thought

Faith in the Battle Against Evil

Every person is in a spiritual battle whether they recognize it or not. The Bible describes a conflict between good and evil, between Christ and Satan, between truth and deception. This battle is not only happening in the world around us—it also takes place in the human heart.

The encouraging news is that God has not left us defenseless. Faith is one of the greatest weapons He gives His people.

What Role Does Faith Play in the Battle Against Evil?

Faith is not merely believing that God exists. Biblical faith is trusting God enough to depend on Him, obey Him, and cling to Him even when life becomes difficult.

The apostle Paul describes faith as protective armor in the Christian life:

“Above all, taking the shield of faith, wherewith ye shall be able to quench all the fiery darts of the wicked.” — The Epistle to the Ephesians 6:16

Satan attacks through temptation, discouragement, fear, guilt, doubt, pride, anger, addiction, and deception. Faith acts like a shield because it helps us trust God’s promises instead of believing Satan’s lies.

When fear says, “God has abandoned you,” faith answers:

“I will never leave thee, nor forsake thee.” — Epistle to the Hebrews 13:5

When guilt says, “You can never change,” faith answers:

“If any man be in Christ, he is a new creature.” — Second Epistle to the Corinthians 5:17

When temptation says, “Sin will satisfy you,” faith answers:

“The wages of sin is death; but the gift of God is eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord.” — Epistle to the Romans 6:23

Faith keeps us connected to Christ, and victory comes only through Him.

Jesus said:

“For without me ye can do nothing.” — Gospel of John 15:5

Faith Gives Strength During Spiritual Warfare

The Christian life is not passive. Scripture repeatedly tells believers to stand firm.

“Be sober, be vigilant; because your adversary the devil, as a roaring lion, walketh about, seeking whom he may devour: whom resist stedfast in the faith.” — First Epistle of Peter 5:8–9

Notice that Peter says we resist the devil through faith.

Faith does several important things in spiritual warfare:

1. Faith Believes God’s Word Above Feelings

There are days when God may feel distant. Yet faith chooses to trust God’s promises anyway.

“For we walk by faith, not by sight.” — Second Epistle to the Corinthians 5:7

Many spiritual defeats happen because people trust emotions more than Scripture. Faith anchors the soul in God’s truth.

2. Faith Helps Us Overcome Temptation

Temptation often feels stronger than our willpower. But faith remembers that God always provides a way of escape.

“There hath no temptation taken you but such as is common to man: but God is faithful… will with the temptation also make a way to escape.” — First Epistle to the Corinthians 10:13

Faith looks for God’s escape route instead of surrendering immediately.

3. Faith Holds On During Trials

Suffering can weaken faith if we do not trust God’s purpose.

James wrote:

“The trying of your faith worketh patience.” — Epistle of James 1:3

God often uses struggles to deepen dependence upon Him.

4. Faith Reminds Us Christ Already Won the Victory

The battle is real, but the final outcome is not uncertain.

“Be of good cheer; I have overcome the world.” — Gospel of John 16:33

Because Jesus conquered sin, death, and Satan at the cross, believers fight from victory—not merely for victory.

How Do We See This Battle in Our Own Lives?

The battle against evil is visible everywhere today.

We see it in:

  • Temptations that constantly appeal to selfishness
  • Anxiety and hopelessness spreading through society
  • Anger, division, and hatred
  • Entertainment that normalizes sin
  • Pride that pushes God out of daily life
  • Doubt that questions God’s truth
  • Distractions that slowly weaken prayer and Bible study

But the deepest battlefield is often internal.

Paul described this struggle honestly:

“For the good that I would I do not: but the evil which I would not, that I do.” — Epistle to the Romans 7:19

Every believer experiences conflict between the flesh and the Spirit.

You may see this battle in your own life when:

  • You know what is right but struggle to do it
  • You want to trust God but fear takes over
  • You pray, yet doubts still whisper
  • You desire purity, yet temptation remains strong
  • You want peace, yet anxiety keeps returning

The presence of the battle does not mean God has abandoned you. Often, the struggle itself is evidence that the Holy Spirit is working in your conscience.

How Can We Strengthen Our Faith?

Faith grows intentionally. Scripture gives several practical ways.

Stay in God’s Word

“Faith cometh by hearing, and hearing by the word of God.” — Epistle to the Romans 10:17

The more we fill the mind with Scripture, the stronger faith becomes.

Pray Constantly

Prayer keeps us connected to God during the battle.

“Watch and pray, that ye enter not into temptation.” — Gospel of Matthew 26:41

Focus on Jesus

Peter sank when he looked at the storm instead of Christ. The same thing happens spiritually.

“Looking unto Jesus the author and finisher of our faith.” — Epistle to the Hebrews 12:2

Put on the Whole Armor of God

Paul’s description of spiritual armor in The Epistle to the Ephesians 6:10–18 reminds believers that spiritual victory requires spiritual preparation every day.

Final Thoughts

Faith is not pretending the battle against evil does not exist. Faith is trusting that God is greater than the battle.

Some days your faith may feel strong. Other days it may feel as small as a mustard seed. Yet even weak faith placed in a powerful Savior can change a life.

The enemy wants believers discouraged, distracted, defeated, and silent. But God calls His people to stand firm, trust Him fully, and keep moving forward.

One day the battle with evil will end forever.

“And God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes; and there shall be no more death, neither sorrow, nor crying.” — Book of Revelation 21:4

Until then, faith keeps our eyes fixed on Christ.

Prayer

Heavenly Father,
Thank You for not leaving us alone in the battle against evil. You see the temptations, fears, doubts, and struggles that we face every day. Strengthen our faith when we feel weak. Help us trust Your Word above our feelings and cling to Jesus during every trial.

Give us discernment to recognize the enemy’s attacks and courage to resist temptation. Fill our minds with Scripture, our hearts with peace, and our lives with obedience. Teach us to depend completely upon Christ, because without Him we can do nothing.

Forgive us where we have failed. Lift us when we fall. Remind us that Jesus has already won the victory through the cross.

May our faith grow stronger each day until the day You finally destroy evil forever and bring us into Your eternal kingdom.

In Jesus’ name, amen. 


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A Teacher's Guide to Present Having Faith Lesson 8 Sabbath School Lesson in Church

45-Minute Sabbath School Plan

Lesson 8 — “Having Faith” 

A good 45-minute Sabbath School class on “Having Faith” is not about trying to cover every paragraph in the lesson. Most teachers fail because they try to “finish the lesson” instead of helping people actually wrestle with faith in real life.

For a topic like faith, people need:

  • practical application,
  • honest discussion,
  • Scripture,
  • and personal reflection.

Here’s a simple structure that keeps participation high while still teaching the lesson well.


Main Goal

Help the class understand:

  1. What biblical faith really is,
  2. Why faith grows weak,
  3. How faith grows stronger,
  4. What faith looks like in everyday life.

1. Opening Hook (5 minutes)

Start with a question people can answer immediately.

Try something like:

“What is one situation where trusting God was difficult for you?”

OR

“Why do you think faith can feel strong one week and weak the next?”

Do not lecture yet.

Let 3–5 people answer briefly.

This immediately makes the lesson personal instead of theoretical.

Then say something simple like:

“Today’s lesson is really about learning how ordinary people develop stronger trust in God.”


2. Define Faith Clearly (8 minutes)

Go to the core verse:

Holy Bible

Especially Hebrews 11:1.

Keep the explanation simple:

  • Faith is not pretending.
  • Faith is not blind optimism.
  • Faith is trusting God enough to act on His Word even when we cannot see the outcome.

A powerful discussion question:

“What’s the difference between faith and wishful thinking?”

That question usually creates excellent participation.

Write key answers on a board if possible:

  • faith is based on God’s promises,
  • faith acts,
  • faith trusts God’s character,
  • faith continues despite uncertainty.

3. Small Group Participation Section (10–12 minutes)

This is where the class becomes alive.

Divide people into groups of 3–4 if possible.

Assign each group one Bible example from:

  • Holy Bible
  • Noah
  • Abraham
  • Moses
  • Rahab
  • etc.

Ask each group:

  1. What risk did this person take?
  2. What made faith difficult?
  3. What can we learn from them today?

Then let each group share for 1 minute.

This keeps many people involved instead of one person talking the whole time.


4. Make It Relevant to Modern Life (10 minutes)

This is the most important part.

People already know Bible stories. What they need is connection to real life.

Ask practical questions like:

  • “What attacks faith today?”
  • “How does disappointment affect faith?”
  • “Can someone have faith and still struggle with doubt?”
  • “How do social media, fear, bad news, and stress weaken trust in God?”

Then transition carefully:

“Many believers think strong faith means never struggling. But Scripture often shows faithful people wrestling, praying, waiting, and still choosing to trust God.”

That makes the lesson emotionally honest.

You can also bring in:

  • unanswered prayer,
  • waiting on God,
  • family problems,
  • health issues,
  • financial stress,
  • fear about the future.

That’s where the lesson becomes real.


5. Practical “How Faith Grows” Section (5 minutes)

Give very practical takeaways.

Faith grows through:

  • spending time in God’s Word,
  • remembering past answers to prayer,
  • obedience in small things,
  • sharing testimonies,
  • prayer,
  • trusting God step by step.

Ask:

“What has personally strengthened your faith the most?”

This usually brings meaningful testimonies.


6. Strong Conclusion (3–5 minutes)

End with encouragement, not guilt.

You might say:

“Jesus said faith as small as a mustard seed can move mountains. The issue is not having giant faith in ourselves, but learning to trust a giant God.”

Then close with prayer specifically for:

  • struggling faith,
  • discouraged people,
  • people waiting on God,
  • people afraid of the future.

Tips That Keep Participation Strong

1. Don’t answer your own questions too quickly

Silence is okay. Give people time to think.

2. Ask open-ended questions

Bad:

“Did Abraham have faith?”

Better:

“What made Abraham’s faith difficult?”

3. Don’t dominate the discussion

A Sabbath School class works best when people discover truth together.

4. Keep comments moving

If one person starts preaching a sermon, gently redirect:

“Thank you. Let’s hear from someone else too.”

5. Focus on fewer points

Three strong ideas are better than rushing through the entire quarterly.


A Simple Theme Sentence for the Whole Lesson

“Faith is trusting God enough to obey Him even when we cannot fully see what He is doing.”

If the class leaves remembering that, the lesson was successful.


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Lessons From the Heroes of Hebrews 11

Faith That Endures: Lessons From the Heroes of Hebrews 11

Hebrews 11 is often called the “Hall of Faith.” In this powerful chapter, Scripture walks us through the lives of ordinary people who trusted God in extraordinary ways. Some saw miracles. Others suffered greatly. Yet all were remembered for one thing: faith.

Faith is not pretending life is easy. Faith is trusting God enough to obey Him, even when we cannot see the outcome.

Abel: Faith That Worships

Abel offered God a better sacrifice because his heart trusted God. His faith showed itself through sincere worship. True faith always honors God first.

Enoch: Faith That Walks With God

Enoch pleased God because he walked closely with Him. Faith is not just a moment—it is a daily relationship with God.

Noah: Faith That Obeys Before Seeing

Noah built the ark before rain had ever fallen. Faith obeys God even when others do not understand.

Abraham: Faith That Goes

Abraham left his homeland without knowing where God would lead him. Faith steps forward even without having every answer.

Sarah: Faith That Believes God’s Promise

Sarah trusted God for the impossible and received strength to bear a child in old age. Faith believes God can do what human strength cannot.

Isaac: Faith That Blesses the Future

Isaac trusted God’s covenant promises for generations to come. Faith sees beyond the present moment.

Jacob: Faith That Finishes Well

Jacob worshiped God while leaning on his staff near the end of his life. Faith can grow stronger even in weakness and old age.

Joseph: Faith That Trusts Beyond Death

Joseph believed God would deliver Israel someday, even after his own death. Faith holds onto God’s promises for the future.

Moses’ Parents: Faith That Chooses Courage

They hid baby Moses because they feared God more than Pharaoh. Faith gives courage when fear threatens to take over.

Moses: Faith That Chooses God Over the World

Moses rejected the riches of Egypt to suffer with God’s people. Faith values eternal reward over temporary pleasure.

The Israelites: Faith That Keeps Moving

They crossed the Red Sea by faith and walked around Jericho trusting God’s instructions. Faith continues forward even when obstacles seem impossible.

Rahab: Faith That Changes a Life

Rahab believed in the God of Israel and was saved. Faith can completely transform a person’s direction and destiny.

Gideon, Barak, Samson, Jephthah, David, Samuel, and the Prophets: Faith That Perseveres

These men were imperfect, flawed, and sometimes fearful. Yet God still worked through them because they trusted Him. Faith is not about perfection—it is about dependence on God.

The Faithful Sufferers: Faith That Endures Hardship

Hebrews 11 also speaks of believers who were mocked, imprisoned, tortured, and killed. Some did not receive deliverance in this life, but they remained faithful because they looked toward a better resurrection and eternal kingdom.

Their stories remind us that faith is not measured by comfort, success, or earthly results. Faith is measured by trust in God.

What This Means for Us

The heroes of Hebrews 11 were not superhuman. They struggled, failed, feared, doubted, and suffered. Yet they kept trusting God.

That means faith is possible for us too.

  • When life is uncertain, we can trust like Abraham.
  • When the future feels impossible, we can believe like Sarah.
  • When obedience is difficult, we can move forward like Noah.
  • When suffering comes, we can endure like the faithful saints who refused to give up.

Hebrews 11 points us to one central truth: God is faithful to those who place their trust in Him.

Our faith may seem small, but when it is placed in a great God, it becomes powerful. One day, our story of faith may encourage someone else to keep walking with Him too.


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Tuesday, May 19, 2026

Faith as Small as a Mustard Seed

 

Faith as Small as a Mustard Seed 

Faith often feels like it should be massive and unshakable before God can use it. Yet Jesus said even faith as small as a mustard seed can move mountains. Holy Bible That changes how we think about faith. God is not asking for perfect faith; He is asking for genuine faith placed in Him.

A mustard seed is tiny, almost insignificant to the eye. But Jesus used it as an example because small faith, when surrendered to a powerful God, can accomplish what seems impossible. Mountains in our lives may look like fear, doubt, addiction, broken relationships, discouragement, or unanswered prayers. God reminds us that the strength is not in the size of our faith but in the One our faith rests upon.

Jesus also compared the mustard seed to a tree that grows large and strong. Holy Bible Faith is never meant to stay small. It grows through prayer, obedience, Scripture, trials, and daily dependence on God. A relationship with Him begins with even a small measure of faith, as Paul reminds us in Romans 12:3. Holy Bible The more we walk with Christ, the deeper and steadier our faith becomes.

Sometimes believers become discouraged because they think their faith is too weak. But weak faith that clings to Jesus is still powerful because Jesus is powerful. The disciples themselves struggled with doubt many times, yet Christ patiently taught them to trust Him more.

Today, do not underestimate small beginnings. Bring God the little faith you have. Plant it in His promises, nourish it through His Word, and watch Him grow it into something stronger than you ever imagined.

Reflection Questions:

  • What “mountain” in your life do you need to trust God with today?
  • Are you feeding your faith or feeding your fears?
  • How can you intentionally help your faith grow this week?

Prayer:
Lord, thank You that You can use even the smallest faith. Help me to trust You more each day. Grow my faith so that I will rely on Your strength instead of my own. Teach me to believe that nothing is impossible with You. Amen.


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Saved by Grace Through Faith: Ephesians 2:8

 

Saved by Grace Through Faith

“But by grace you have been saved through faith, and that not of yourselves; it is the gift of God” — Ephesians 2:8 (NKJV)

Faith is not the payment for salvation. It is the hand that receives the gift God freely offers. Holy Bible makes it clear that salvation begins with God’s grace, not human effort. We are saved “by grace,” meaning salvation is completely undeserved. No amount of good deeds, religious activity, or moral living can earn eternal life. God offers salvation because of His love and mercy through Jesus Christ.

Faith is the means through which we accept that gift. Trusting Christ means depending on Him instead of depending on ourselves. It is believing that His death and resurrection are enough to save us. Faith does not make us worthy of salvation; it simply connects us to the Savior who is worthy.

Some people say, “I don’t have faith because God hasn’t given me any.” But that excuse does not stand when we look at Scripture carefully. God has already revealed Himself to every person in different ways—through creation, through His Word, through conscience, and through the work of the Holy Spirit. The invitation to believe is open to all. God does not force faith on people, but He gives everyone enough light to respond to Him.

Faith grows when a person chooses to respond to what God has already shown. The problem is often not lack of evidence, but resistance of the heart. Many people want certainty without surrender. Yet faith involves trust. A person may not understand everything about God, but they can still choose to believe Him.

Imagine someone drowning while a lifeguard throws them a rescue rope. The rope saves them, not their effort. But they still must choose to grab hold of it. In the same way, salvation is God’s work from beginning to end, yet He calls each person to respond in faith.

The good news is that even weak faith placed in a strong Savior is enough. Jesus never turned away someone who genuinely came to Him. Faith may begin small, but when it is directed toward Christ, it becomes life-changing.

Reflection Questions

  • Am I trusting in my own goodness, or in God’s grace alone?
  • Have I been making excuses instead of responding to God’s invitation?
  • What step of faith is God calling me to take today?

Prayer

Lord, thank You that salvation is a gift of grace and not something I can earn. Help me to trust fully in You and not in myself. Remove doubt, pride, and excuses from my heart. Grow my faith and teach me to walk closely with You every day. In Jesus’ name, amen.


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