How Strong Is Your Faith?

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The question “How strong is your faith?” is not a slogan for a religious poster; it is a searching, biblical question. Scripture repeatedly confronts believers with the reality that faith can be weak or strong, growing or shrinking, steadfast or wavering. Faith is not a vague feeling of spirituality. It is a settled, informed, obedient trust in Jehovah and in His inspired Word. Because salvation is a path and not a static condition, the strength of one’s faith matters every day. A weak, neglected faith can collapse under pressure and be swept away by sin, false teaching, or fear. A strong, mature faith endures difficulties, resists Satan’s influence, and remains loyal to Jehovah and to His Son, Jesus Christ, until the very end.

Measuring the strength of faith is not accomplished by introspective feelings but by examining one’s relationship to Scripture, obedience, endurance in difficulties, and zeal for the service of God. The biblical authors do not treat faith as something mysterious or undefinable. They describe it, illustrate it, and command believers to examine themselves. A serious Christian will not be content with a vague, shallow faith that merely claims belief while living as though Jehovah’s Word carries little weight. Instead, he or she will strive for robust, tested, Scripture-rooted trust that shapes thinking, choices, and daily conduct.

The Biblical Nature of Faith

Faith As Informed Trust In Jehovah

Biblically, faith is never blind. It is not a leap into darkness but a response to Jehovah’s revealed truth. Faith rests upon the inspired, inerrant Scriptures that accurately communicate His will and His purposes. Hebrews 11:1 defines faith as the “assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen.” This assurance and conviction are grounded in what Jehovah has said. Faith is therefore an informed trust, not an emotional guess.

The historical-grammatical method of interpretation reinforces this. Because Jehovah chose to reveal Himself in real human languages within real historical settings, His words have precise meaning. Faith responds to that meaning. It believes what Jehovah has actually said, not what human imagination wishes Him to have said. A strong faith is therefore inseparably linked to accurate knowledge. When Christians grow in their understanding of Scripture, their faith gains depth and stability. When knowledge is neglected or distorted, faith becomes shallow, easily manipulated by feelings, trends, or deceptive teachings.

Faith As Obedient Reliance, Not Mere Opinion

Scripture never allows faith to remain a mere opinion about God. Genuine faith always expresses itself in obedience. Hebrews 11 presents a series of examples where faith acts. Noah builds, Abraham goes out, Moses refuses the pleasures of Egypt, and the early believers endure persecution. They did not simply agree with information about Jehovah; they entrusted themselves to Him and molded their decisions accordingly.

This means that the strength of faith is revealed not by the words one uses but by the life one lives. A person who says, “I trust Jehovah,” while consistently ignoring His commands is deceiving himself. Faith that does not obey is not weak faith; it is dead. Strong faith, by contrast, may still struggle and grow, but it always presses toward obedience. It returns to Scripture, repents when it falls, and seeks to bring every area of life under Christ’s Lordship.

Diagnosing the Strength of Your Faith

Your Relationship to Scripture

One of the surest indicators of faith’s strength is how a person treats Jehovah’s Word. Faith comes from hearing the Word, and it is nourished by continual exposure to Scripture. If Bible reading is rare, shallow, or treated as an optional extra, faith will inevitably weaken. A strong faith is built upon daily interaction with Scripture—reading, meditating, studying, and applying.

This is not merely about quantity of reading but about posture of heart. Do you approach the Bible as the final authority, or as one voice among many? Do you submit to its commands, even when they confront your preferences, or do you explain away uncomfortable texts? A person with strong faith trembles at Jehovah’s Word, as Isaiah describes, not with a slavish fear but with deep reverence. Such a person allows Scripture to correct assumptions, expose sin, and reshape thinking.

Where Scripture is treated lightly, doubts grow. A neglected Bible always leads to neglected faith. The Christian who keeps the Scriptures central—individually and in the congregation—places himself or herself in the place where Jehovah’s truth continually strengthens trust and conviction.

Your Response to Difficulties

Because we live in a world dominated by sin, Satan, and demonic forces, difficulties are inevitable. These hardships do not come from Jehovah but from human imperfection and the wicked world system that lies in the power of the evil one. Nevertheless, Jehovah uses these situations as occasions for believers to demonstrate and develop faith. The way a person responds to such pressures reveals the quality of his or her trust.

When difficulties strike—whether illness, relational conflict, injustice, or hostility for being a Christian—a weak faith collapses into resentment, compromise, or spiritual apathy. It may accuse Jehovah, saying in the heart, “If God loved me, this would not happen.” It may run toward sinful solutions or withdraw from the congregation. A strong faith, by contrast, clings more tightly to Jehovah’s promises, turns to prayer rather than bitterness, and continues to obey even when obedience is costly. It remembers that Christ Himself faced hostility and suffering and that Jehovah will set all things right in His time.

Your pattern of response over time is revealing. Do difficulties consistently push you away from Scripture, from prayer, and from your Christian responsibilities? Or do they push you toward greater dependence on Jehovah and greater seriousness about holiness? The answer says much about how strong your faith truly is.

Your Attitude Toward Sin

Faith and sin cannot peacefully co-exist. Faith believes that Jehovah’s standards are right, good, and wise. It trusts His assessment of what is evil. Therefore, a strong faith fights sin rather than making peace with it. It brings hidden sins into the light through confession. It builds wise boundaries. It seeks help and accountability. It grieves over disobedience and hates anything that damages the relationship with Jehovah.

A weak faith, however, treats sin lightly. It minimizes what Jehovah condemns, excuses patterns of disobedience, and adopts the world’s vocabulary to soften the seriousness of rebellion. Instead of calling immorality and impurity what they are, it uses harmless-sounding terms. It tolerates entertainment that celebrates what Jehovah hates. Over time, this compromises conscience and corrodes any sense of spiritual discernment.

If you want to know how strong your faith is, examine what you tolerate. Are there habits, attitudes, or relationships that you know contradict Scripture, yet you refuse to surrender them? This is not a sign of strong faith. It reveals areas where unbelief is quietly ruling. Strengthening faith always involves active repentance, not mere emotional regret.

Your Commitment to the Christian Congregation

Faith is not nurtured in spiritual isolation. The New Testament repeatedly emphasizes that believers are part of a body, a congregation, where mutual encouragement, correction, and service take place. Hebrews urges Christians not to forsake gathering together, especially as the end approaches, but to stir one another up to love and good works. A strong faith recognizes the necessity of the congregation and embraces its responsibilities within it.

When regular meeting with fellow believers becomes optional, infrequent, or easily displaced by entertainment or convenience, faith inevitably weakens. Satan and the wicked world seek to pull Christians away from the protective environment of sound teaching and mutual exhortation. A person drifting from the congregation is usually drifting from obedience in other areas as well.

Ask yourself: Do you eagerly participate in the life of the congregation, using your gifts, encouraging others, sharing in evangelism, and submitting to biblically qualified male leadership? Or do you stand at a distance, attending occasionally but never really engaging? Strong faith moves toward the congregation, not away from it.

Your Zeal For Evangelism

Faith believes that the message of Christ is the power of God for salvation. If you are convinced that people without Christ face eternal destruction and that eternal life is found in Him alone, you will not be indifferent to the spiritual condition of others. Strong faith fuels evangelism. It gives courage to speak, compassion to care, and endurance to keep witnessing even when ignored or mocked.

A weak faith is silent. It knows the Great Commission but treats it as someone else’s responsibility. It may feel occasional guilt but rarely acts. It is more concerned with social comfort than with eternal destinies. This silence reveals a lack of conviction about Jehovah’s judgments and Christ’s unique role as Mediator.

One of the clearest measures of faith is how much it moves you to speak of Christ. A growing, vibrant faith cannot remain hidden. It expresses itself in bold, compassionate proclamation of the good news, confident that Jehovah can open blind eyes through His Word.

Biblical Examples of Strong and Weak Faith

Abraham: Trusting Jehovah Over Human Security

Abraham’s life illustrates strong faith not because he was flawless, but because he repeatedly placed Jehovah’s word above human reasoning. When Jehovah called him to leave his homeland around 2091 B.C.E., Abraham obeyed without knowing the full path ahead. He trusted the One who commanded him. Later, when he was asked to offer Isaac, the son given according to promise, Abraham acted in obedience because he was convinced that Jehovah could even raise the dead. His faith looked beyond the immediate situation to the character and power of God.

Abraham did have moments of fear and inconsistency, but he returned to trust. His life reminds believers that strong faith is not perfection but persevering reliance. When believers today choose obedience even when they do not see how Jehovah will provide, they walk in the pattern of Abraham’s faith.

Israel in the Wilderness: The Disaster of Unbelief

In contrast, the wilderness generation displays the tragedy of weak, unbelieving hearts. Though they had experienced the Exodus, seen Jehovah humiliate the gods of Egypt, and passed through the Red Sea, they repeatedly complained, doubted, and rebelled. They exaggerated dangers, minimized Jehovah’s power, and accused His servants. The inspired author of Hebrews later uses them as a warning to Christians that an evil and unbelieving heart can lead a person to fall away from the living God.

Their example shows that witnessing miracles does not automatically produce strong faith. What matters is ongoing submission to Jehovah’s word. When people treat His promises with suspicion and His commands as negotiable, no amount of external evidence will stabilize them. Strong faith responds to truth with obedience, rather than demanding constant signs and comforts.

The Disciples: Growing From Fear to Boldness

During Jesus’ earthly ministry, His disciples often displayed weak faith. They panicked in storms, misunderstood His mission, and eventually fled when He was arrested. Peter even denied knowing Him. Yet after Jesus’ resurrection and ascension, and after receiving clear instruction and assurance, these same men proclaimed the message boldly, even when threatened.

What changed? Their faith shifted from focusing on their own strength to resting on the risen Christ and the certainty of His word. They were convinced that He had conquered death and that His promises were reliable. Their faith matured as they remembered His teaching and as they saw Scripture fulfilled. This shows that weak faith can grow stronger when anchored in truth and lived out in obedience.

Dangers That Weaken Faith Today

The Subtle Influence of Worldly Thinking

The world constantly proclaims messages that contradict Scripture. It glorifies self, mocks holiness, normalizes immorality, and denies Jehovah’s authority. These messages saturate media, entertainment, education, and social interaction. If believers are not vigilant, they begin to absorb these ideas without realizing it. The result is a gradual reshaping of values, priorities, and desires.

When a Christian spends more time consuming worldly content than studying Scripture, the world’s thinking will dominate. This erodes faith by undermining confidence in Jehovah’s wisdom. People start asking whether His commands are too strict or outdated. They adopt the world’s view of relationships, identity, and success. Over time, faith no longer stands against the culture but blends into it, becoming powerless.

Strong faith requires a conscious rejection of the world’s corrupt values and a deliberate renewal of the mind by Scripture. This does not mean withdrawal from society but resistance to its sinful patterns. Faith must constantly filter ideas through the Word, accepting only what aligns with Jehovah’s revealed will.

False Teaching and Doctrinal Confusion

Satan does not only use outward sin to weaken faith; he also uses distorted doctrine. The New Testament repeatedly warns of false teachers who twist Scripture, introduce destructive ideas, and lure believers away from the truth. Some deny the humanity or deity of Christ. Others corrupt the message of salvation, turning it into license for sin or into a system of merit. Some undermine the authority of Scripture by subjecting it to human philosophy or by claiming new revelations.

When Christians are not firmly grounded in sound doctrine, they become vulnerable to these errors. They may be drawn to teachers who offer a message that feels more comfortable than the biblical call to repentance and obedience. They may be impressed by charisma or outward success without testing teaching against Scripture. Once a believer begins to adopt false doctrine, faith is no longer resting on truth but on deception.

Strong faith is doctrinally informed. It knows the core truths of the Christian faith—who Jehovah is, who Christ is, what His sacrifice accomplished, the future hope, the nature of the congregation, the authority of Scripture. It tests every teaching by the inspired Word, refusing to be carried along by novelty or emotional appeal.

Spiritual Laziness and Neglect

Faith weakens when neglected. Just as the body deteriorates without exercise, so faith deteriorates without use. Spiritual laziness shows itself in irregular prayer, hurried or absent Bible reading, lack of involvement in the congregation, and generally treating spiritual responsibilities as secondary. Over time, this laziness leads to dullness of heart. The things of Jehovah no longer excite or challenge; they feel distant and abstract.

Scripture warns believers against drifting. Drifting does not occur through dramatic rebellion but through continual small compromises. A day without prayer here, a missed meeting there, a tolerated sin here—gradually, the heart becomes cold. A Christian in this condition may still speak the language of faith, but the inner reality has weakened significantly.

Recognizing spiritual laziness is itself a gift, because it allows for repentance and renewed diligence. Strong faith does not happen by accident. It is cultivated through disciplined habits of godliness, motivated by love for Jehovah and gratitude for Christ’s sacrifice.

How to Strengthen Your Faith

Deepening Your Commitment to Scripture

Because faith is founded on Jehovah’s Word, strengthening faith begins with strengthening your relationship to Scripture. This involves more than increasing reading time; it requires deliberate, thoughtful engagement. Read systematically, not randomly, so that you grasp the flow of thought in entire books. Use the historical-grammatical method to seek the author’s intended meaning, paying attention to context, grammar, and original audience. Reject allegorizing and speculative interpretations.

Meditate on what you read. Ask what the passage reveals about Jehovah’s character, about Christ’s work, about the human heart, about the path of obedience. Consider specific ways the text confronts your attitudes or behavior. Pray in response to what you have learned, asking Jehovah to help you obey.

As you repeatedly expose your mind to Scripture, your view of reality will increasingly match Jehovah’s perspective. Doubts will be addressed, not by suppressing them, but by seeing more clearly what God has said. Faith grows as it is constantly fed by truth.

Cultivating a Life of Dependent Prayer

Prayer is the expression of faith. It acknowledges that Jehovah exists, that He hears, and that He responds according to His wise will. When prayer is neglected, faith shrinks, because the believer begins to live as if self-effort were sufficient. Regular, honest, reverent prayer keeps the heart humble and God-centered.

Strengthening faith through prayer does not mean repeating empty phrases. It means bringing your concerns, fears, temptations, and decisions before Jehovah, pleading His promises, and submitting to His will. It also means confessing sin quickly, thanking Him for His mercies, and interceding for others.

Prayer does not create faith apart from Scripture, for true prayer must be shaped by the Word. Nevertheless, it exercises faith, like a muscle being used. A believer who regularly entrusts situations to Jehovah in prayer will see His faithfulness in many ways, further strengthening trust and confidence.

Pursuing Practical Obedience

Faith grows when it is acted upon. Hearing truth without obeying it produces spiritual calluses. Obedience, by contrast, reinforces trust. Every time you choose to obey a command of Scripture, especially when it conflicts with your preferences, you are affirming that Jehovah is wise and good. This act of trust strengthens your confidence in His Word for the future.

Strengthening faith therefore involves identifying specific areas where obedience is lacking and bringing them into alignment with Scripture. This might include moral purity, financial integrity, forgiveness, honesty, or commitment to evangelism. Each step of obedience, however small, matters. Jehovah often uses these small acts to prepare believers for larger decisions later.

When you look back and see how obedience has protected you from harm, deepened your joy, or blessed others, your faith in Jehovah’s wisdom will grow. You will increasingly see that His commands are not burdensome but life-giving.

WALK HUMBLY WITH YOUR GOD

Embracing the Support of The Congregation

Jehovah designed the Christian life to be lived in community. Believers strengthen one another’s faith through encouragement, instruction, and example. Isolated believers are easy targets for Satan’s strategies. That is why Scripture calls Christians to exhort one another daily, to bear one another’s burdens, and to serve one another with spiritual gifts.

To strengthen your faith, commit to meaningful involvement in a congregation that holds firmly to Scripture. Listen attentively to expository preaching and teaching. Participate in discussions, ask questions, and seek to apply what you learn. Build relationships where mutual accountability is possible. Share your struggles so that others can pray and counsel you. Join in evangelistic efforts so that you can witness Jehovah’s Word at work in the lives of others.

As you see the faith of other believers—some enduring severe difficulties while remaining loyal—you will be encouraged. Their example will remind you that Jehovah sustains His people. At the same time, your own growth in faith will strengthen others, creating a cycle of mutual edification.

Persevering Through Difficulties With a Right Perspective

Difficulties will not disappear as your faith grows. In fact, a strong faith often faces intense opposition from Satan and from the world. However, as faith matures, the believer’s perspective changes. Instead of viewing every hardship as proof that Jehovah is distant, the believer sees these experiences as occasions to display trust and obedience.

You strengthen your faith when, in the midst of difficulties, you deliberately recall scriptural truths: Jehovah’s sovereignty, His justice, His love, Christ’s example, the certainty of the future kingdom, the promise of resurrection. You tell your soul what is true, rather than letting your emotions dictate your conclusions. You refuse to interpret Scripture through your circumstances; instead, you interpret your circumstances through Scripture.

This deliberate, truth-centered response deepens your confidence. Each time Jehovah sustains you through a difficult season, your faith gains another layer of tested reliability. You become less easily shaken by outward events because your trust rests not on changing conditions but on the unchanging character of the living God.

Personal Examination: Bringing the Question Home

As you consider these truths, the original question must come back with greater clarity: How strong is your faith? This is not a question to be answered quickly or defensively. It calls for honest self-examination in the light of Scripture. Examine your relationship with Jehovah’s Word, your response to difficulties, your attitude toward sin, your involvement in the congregation, and your zeal for evangelism.

If this examination reveals weaknesses—and it will for all sincere believers—the answer is not despair but repentance and renewed commitment. Jehovah does not despise the believer who recognizes weakness and seeks help. Christ’s sacrifice provides full forgiveness for past failure and opens the way to grow in faith. What Jehovah rejects is prideful complacency, the attitude that says, “My faith is fine,” while ignoring obvious disobedience.

Strengthening faith is a lifelong pursuit. It calls for daily choices to trust Jehovah’s Word, to obey His commands, to resist the world’s influence, and to stand firm against Satan. It is not accomplished through mystical experiences but through steady, Scripture-centered living. Those who persevere in this path will find that their faith, though once fragile, becomes stable and resilient. They will be able to face death itself with confidence, knowing that the One in whom they have trusted is faithful and that He will fulfill every promise He has made.

Ultimately, the strength of your faith matters because it is bound up with your relationship to Jehovah and His Son. A strong faith does not glorify the believer but glorifies God, displaying His power to transform and sustain. Therefore, do not be content with a shallow, untested faith. Seek, by God’s Word and in dependence on Him, to cultivate a robust, enduring trust that remains loyal to the end.

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About the Author

EDWARD D. ANDREWS (AS in Criminal Justice, BS in Religion, MA in Biblical Studies, and MDiv in Theology) is CEO and President of Christian Publishing House. He has authored over 220+ books. In addition, Andrews is the Chief Translator of the Updated American Standard Version (UASV).

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