Trust in God is a feature of many of the psalms of David. Trusting in ourselves is like walking confidently across a rotten wooden bridge over a yawning chasm thousands of feet deep. Finally, we are not to trust in ourselves because our understanding is temporal, finite, and tainted by our sin natures. Further, because of God’s nature, we are to trust Him with all our hearts, committing every aspect of our lives to Him in complete confidence. His Word is trustworthy (Psalm 93:5 111:7 Titus 1:9), His nature is faithful and true (Deuteronomy 7:9 Psalm 25:10 145:13 146:6), and His plans for us are perfect and purposeful (Isaiah 46:10 Jeremiah 29:11). We trust in the Lord because He and He alone is truly trustworthy.
First, it is the Lord in whom we are to trust, not ourselves or our plans, and certainly not the world’s wisdom and devices. The classic verse regarding trust is Proverbs 3:5: “Trust in the LORD with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding.” This verse sums up the Bible’s teaching on trust. Furthermore, it is by this trust that we are promised peace: “You will keep in peace him whose mind is steadfast, because he trusts in you” (Isaiah 26:3).
#IT SHOULD BE ABOUT US IT SHOULD BE ABOUT TRUST FULL#
Nevertheless, the practical consequence of faith in God is trust, which we prove by living out our full acceptance of God’s promises day by day. Hebrews 11 talks about faith, which is accepting and believing the truth that God reveals about Himself, supremely in the person of His Son, the Lord Jesus Christ. Trusting is believing in the promises of God in all circumstances, even in those where the evidence seems to be to the contrary. Rather, trusting is what we do because of the faith we have been given. The words translated “trust” in the Bible literally mean “a bold, confident, sure security or action based on that security.” Trust is not exactly the same as faith, which is the gift of God (Ephesians 2:8-9).