What does it really mean to have faith?
Faith is one of those church words that sounds beautiful but often feels vague. Ask most people, and they’ll say faith means “believing really hard.” But in the Bible, faith (pístis in Greek) comes from peithō, meaning “to persuade.” Faith isn’t you psyching yourself up to believe—it’s God persuading you of His will, and you responding with a yes.
That’s why Hebrews 11:6 says it’s impossible to please God without faith. Because if I’m not living from His persuasion, I’m living from my own fears, logic, or preferences. Faith is the way we actually walk with God.
Every story in Hebrews 11 proves it:
- Noah didn’t build an ark because he thought it was a good idea. God persuaded him, and he responded.
- Abraham didn’t uproot his whole life because he felt adventurous. God persuaded him of a promise, and he responded.
- Sarah didn’t suddenly will herself to believe for a baby. God persuaded her of His power, and she responded.
Faith is always this rhythm: God persuades, humans respond.
And this isn’t just Bible history—it’s your life too. God is still persuading His daughters today. The question is whether we’re listening and willing to respond.
- In marriage: Faith may look like God persuading you to soften your heart, to apologize first, or to extend grace when bitterness feels justified.
- In career decisions: Faith may look like God persuading you to take a risk that doesn’t make sense on paper, or to stay put when everything in you craves escape.
- In healing and trauma recovery: Faith may look like God persuading you to take one small step—making that counseling appointment, opening up to a trusted friend, or releasing shame you’ve carried for years.
- In daily habits: Faith may look like God persuading you to rest when you’re addicted to hustle, or to forgive when resentment feels safer.
Notice the common thread: faith isn’t blind optimism. It’s not “believe hard enough and you’ll get what you want.” Faith is responding to God’s persuasion of what He wants—which is always better for you than what you’d script for yourself.
This also brings relief to our mental health. Some of us live under constant guilt that we don’t “have enough faith,” especially when struggling with anxiety, depression, or doubt. But hear me clearly: faith doesn’t start with you. Faith starts with God. Your job isn’t to manufacture confidence—it’s to stay open to His persuasion and respond, even when your emotions aren’t caught up yet.
And Christ Himself shows us how this works. His entire life was lived in perfect faith—constant response to the Father’s persuasion. In Gethsemane, sweating drops of blood, He prayed: “Not my will, but yours, be done” (Luke 22:42). That’s faith in its purest form. And through the Spirit, that same persuasion is placed inside of you, so you can walk it out too.
So maybe today, God is persuading you to forgive someone who doesn’t deserve it. Or to risk generosity when the budget is tight. Or to set down the weight of perfectionism and finally rest. Faith isn’t you straining—it’s you listening, and saying yes.
Takeaway: Faith is God persuading and you responding. That’s why without faith, it’s impossible to please Him—because faith is how you actually walk with Him.