When we talk about faith, we often treat it like a moment. A decision. A single prayer. A turning point. And thank God for those moments, because real faith does begin somewhere. But Hebrews 11 pushes us to see something deeper. Faith is not meant to be a one-time event that sits in our past like a spiritual trophy. Faith is meant to be the way we live.
Hebrews 11 starts by defining faith, because God knows we will confuse faith with feelings, faith with wishful thinking, or faith with religious routine. The chapter reminds us that faith is “the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen” (Hebrews 11:1). It is the confidence to obey God when you cannot see the whole road ahead. Then God gives us examples, not to impress us with perfection, but to show us what it looks like when real faith shows up in real life.
That is why Abraham matters so much. One man’s choices rippled across generations. A single decision outside of God’s plan can echo for years. But a decision inside of God’s plan can also echo for generations of blessing. Faith is not small. Your choices are not small. They touch your home, your heart, your future, and the people coming behind you.
Hebrews 11:8 begins with these words: “By faith Abraham, when he was called to go out into a place which he should after receive for an inheritance, obeyed; and he went out, not knowing whither he went.” (Hebrews 11:8). That verse is not describing a man who had everything mapped out. It is describing a man who took God at His word. That is what faith does. Faith is a life.
1. Faith is Willing to Step Away
Before we ever talk about where Abraham went, we need to talk about what Abraham stepped away from. Because some of us are tempted to believe that faith is only for people who have had the right upbringing, the right family, and the right start. Abraham did not have that.
When Joshua gave Israel a history lesson, he reminded them where Abraham came from. He said that Abraham’s father served false gods. Scripture puts it plainly: “And Joshua said unto all the people, Thus saith the LORD God of Israel, Your fathers dwelt on the other side of the flood in old time, even Terah, the father of Abraham… and they served other gods.” (Joshua 24:2). Abraham grew up in a home that did not worship Jehovah. He was surrounded by idolatry. He was raised in a culture that denied the true God.
And then God called him. That is the moment where faith becomes personal. Faith cannot be inherited. Faith is an individual response to the voice of God. I am thankful for church habits and godly routines, but I want to make sure we understand something: habit alone is not the same as faith. You can go through spiritual motions and still never truly follow God from the heart.
That is why Abraham is so encouraging. His past explained some things, but it did not excuse anything. Your past may explain why certain struggles are there, why certain hurts are there, and why certain fears rise up so quickly. But your past does not get to decide your future. God is still calling you to live by faith. Not by sight. Not by what you were raised with. Not by what your culture says. Faith sometimes has to step away from what is familiar so it can step toward what is right.
Some people use background as a reason to quit. “That is just how I was raised.” Faith looks at God and says, “I will still follow You.” Maybe you did not have perfect parents. Maybe you did not have the support you should have had. None of that disqualifies you from living a life by faith, because faith is not inherited. It is chosen.
2. Faith Obeys
Hebrews 11:8 gives us one of the most important words in the entire passage: “obeyed.” Abraham did what God told him to do.
Obedience is not complicated, but it is costly. Real obedience means you do exactly what God asks, right away, with the right heart. It is possible to do the right thing in the wrong spirit. It is possible to comply outwardly while resisting inwardly. That is not the faith God is after. Faith obeys from the heart.
Notice what the verse says about Abraham’s situation. God called him to go, but God did not give him every detail. Abraham “went out, not knowing whither he went” (Hebrews 11:8). That is where most of us get stuck. We want the full plan before we take the next step. We want the five-year picture. We want the guarantee. We want everything explained until we feel safe enough to obey.
But God often gives a partial picture with a clear command. He gives enough light to take the next step. Like headlights on a dark road, you cannot see the entire trip, but you can see enough to keep moving forward. And as you move, God gives more light.
This is where faith becomes practical. It shows up on Monday morning. It shows up at work. It shows up in parenting. It shows up in finances. If you make financial decisions by sight, you will live in constant panic, because you will never feel like you have enough. Faith reminds you that God is your Provider, and obedience is never wasted when it is done for Him. If you raise children by sight alone, you will feel overwhelmed quickly, because you will realize you do not have the wisdom for every situation. Faith brings you back to God again and again, asking Him for help, trusting His Word, and obeying even when it is not easy.
Faith is not God giving you every answer. Faith is you responding to the answer God already gave.
3. Faith Stays
Hebrews 11:9 moves from the decision to go to the decision to endure. “By faith he sojourned in the land of promise, as in a strange country, dwelling in tabernacles with Isaac and Jacob, the heirs with him of the same promise.” (Hebrews 11:9). Two ideas stand out here: Abraham was unsettled, and Abraham was in an unfamiliar place.
The word “sojourned” carries the thought of living as a stranger, passing through, enduring in a place that does not feel like home. And Hebrews calls it “a strange country.” Faith will sometimes put you in environments that feel uncomfortable, unfamiliar, and even hostile. People will not always understand your faith. They will not always celebrate your obedience. They may even criticize you for putting God first.
If you follow God by faith, there will be moments when you feel like you do not fit. There will be moments you are tempted to pull back, to quiet your testimony, to stop doing what you know is right because it would be easier to blend in. But faith stays.
That is a searching question for every one of us: what does it take for you to quit on God, even in small ways? What does it take to keep you from worship? What does it take to keep you out of your Bible? What does it take to turn gratitude into complaining? Faith does not mean you never feel pressure. Faith means you endure under pressure because God is worth it.
Abraham stayed long enough that it impacted generations. Hebrews says he dwelt in tabernacles “with Isaac and Jacob.” That is not a quick season. That is a life that held steady. That is a reminder that your faith is never only about you. Your obedience affects your children. Your choices shape your home. A faith that stays becomes a legacy that lasts.
And what kept Abraham steady was not comfort. It was vision. Hebrews 11:10 says, “For he looked for a city which hath foundations, whose builder and maker is God.” Abraham could live in tents because his heart was anchored somewhere else. He was not living only for the immediate. He was living for what God promised. He knew God was building something bigger than what his eyes could see.
That is why faith is not just stepping away and obeying. It is also staying, even when the circumstances are uncomfortable, even when you feel like you are in a strange place, because you are looking beyond the moment to the God who never fails.
Faith for Every Stage of Life
This call to faith is for everyone.
Men, we need men of faith, not passive men and not distracted men, but men who will lead their homes toward God. You are leading somewhere. The question is whether you are leading by sight or by faith.
Ladies, we need women of faith who trust God and refuse to panic. Faith does not surrender to the culture. Faith surrenders to Christ.
Teens, you do not have to wait until you are older to please God. The culture will try to tell you that putting yourself first is the path to success. But you can follow God now. You can obey God now. You can live by faith now.
And if you do not know Jesus Christ as your Savior, then the first step of faith is not joining a church or cleaning up your life. The first step of faith is believing the gospel. Salvation is God changing more than your destination. It is God changing you from the inside out, giving you a new identity in Christ. Faith is not earned. Faith is received, and it begins when you come to Jesus.
Reflection Question
Where is God calling you to live by faith right now: to step away from something, to obey something you already know He has said, or to stay steady in a place that feels unfamiliar? Before you lay your head down tonight, will you have lived today by faith, or only by sight?