The God Who Is | The God Who Is Faithful 11 AM Service
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The God Who Is Faithful — Sermon Summary
Every believer reaches a moment when faith is tested—when prayers feel delayed, obedience feels unnoticed, and trust feels costly. In those moments, Scripture reminds us that God does not change. He is faithful, not because of our strength, but because of His nature.
God describes Himself as “abounding in love and faithfulness” (Exodus 34:6–7). The Hebrew word for faithfulness, ’emet, means stable, reliable, and trustworthy—something you can lean on with confidence. This same word describes Moses’ steady hands in battle (Exodus 17) and the trustworthy leaders of Israel (Exodus 18:21).
Throughout Scripture, God proves His faithfulness again and again. Abraham trusted God’s promise despite impossible circumstances, and his faith was credited as righteousness (Genesis 15:6). Israel believed God after the Red Sea (Exodus 14:31) but struggled to trust Him when fear outweighed promise—teaching us that faith is not believing God exists, but believing God is faithful.
David trusted God in the face of giants and “walked in ’emet” before the Lord (1 Kings 3:6). God promised David a kingdom established forever (2 Samuel 7:16), even when Israel later questioned God’s faithfulness in exile (Psalm 89:49).
The New Testament answers that question through Jesus. Introduced as the Son of David and the Son of Abraham (Matthew 1:1), Jesus is the fulfillment of every promise. Through Him, God confirms His faithfulness to His covenant (Romans 15:8–9). Jesus is God’s faithfulness in human form—the unshakable Rock and eternal King.
Because God is faithful, His promises still stand, He will not abandon His people, and our future is secure. Our response is trust—to he’emin, to “amen” God—leaning our full weight on the One who is completely reliable. The story of Scripture, and the story of our lives, is the story of the God who remains faithful from beginning to end.
