Home Pastors Articles for Pastors The Cure for Faith That’s Falling Apart

The Cure for Faith That’s Falling Apart

The backslider in heart will be filled with the fruit of his ways,
and a good man will be filled with the fruit of his ways.
(Proverbs 14:14 ESV)

A godly life is not a sinless life but a life marked by faith, obedience and repentance.

Sin is an ongoing reality in a godly life; as is the act of killing sin. While no Christian is or can be perfect he can be mature.

And this not only means in the church we will have varying degrees of maturity and godliness, but we may also have some who are not progressing in faith, but declining in it.

All Christians are sinners, but not all Christians are currently backsliding. Backsliding is not the loss of one’s salvation (this is impossible), nor the loss of God’s love and care (his faithfulness endures forever).

To say it simply, a backslidden Christian is one whose communion with Christ is waning and whose faith is weakening. I shared what some potential symptoms of a backslidden condition look like (via Richard Owen Roberts) in a previous post.

Today, I would like to point us to the cure for a backslidden heart.

Remember therefore from where you have fallen; repent, and do the works you did at first.
If not, I will come to you and remove your lampstand from its place, unless you repent.”
(Revelation 2:5 ESV)

The cure for a backslidden state is not “letting go and letting God,” nor is it found in our own recommitment to the Lord. The cure for our condition is the Lord Jesus himself. He is the Good Shepherd who restores the soul. He pursues and rescues the one who has left the fold. He holds the believer in his hand and will not lose his grip. He will finish the good work he has begun in us. Our great Savior does what his title implies: He saves. He saves us from our condemnation as well as from our wanderings.

But the Cure must be embraced, returned to. If we are going to find safety in him from the power of sin we must look to him. If you find yourself to be drifting away from Jesus and into empty religion, immorality, unchecked pride—a life lived apart from the Savior—I encourage you to look again to Jesus.

Here are five brief words on what this means.

1. Identity your current condition.

You cannot return if you do not know you have lost your way. Years ago it was while reading Plumer’s treatise on Experimental and Practical Piety that God made it very plain to me I had walked into a kind of spiritual darkness and needed to return to the Lord. God used that book, a few select sermons and Rev. 2 to guide me back. But for a long time I was unaware I was even in such a bad state, and until I saw that there would be no returning. “Remember therefore from where you have fallen” (Rev. 2:5).

2. Meditate on Christ and his work.

If we are to be captured by the glory of Jesus, led to worship him for all he is and has done for sinners, then we must see these things again and again. There is never a returning to Jesus apart from the word of God. When we respond to him, we are responding to his word. We find ourselves in a backslidden state because, in part, we lost sight of the glory of Christ. So we must see it again. “Seek the things that are above, where Christ is, seated at the right hand of God. Set your minds on things that are above, not on things that are on earth” (Col. 3:1-2).

3. Pray to God for the grace you need.

That we can return is grace. That we will return is a promise made by God! Are you aware of your condition? Do you want to be revived? Perhaps you’re so cold you don’t even know if you really want it. Pray that God will do what he has promised—that he will heal your backsliding. “I will heal their apostasy; I will love them freely, for my anger has turned from them. … They shall return and dwell beneath my shadow; they shall flourish like the grain; they shall blossom like the vine” (Hos. 14:4-7).

4. Repent of all known sins.

As Martin Luther famously penned in his first of the “95 Theses”: “When our Lord and Master, Jesus Christ, said ‘Repent,’ He called for the entire life of believers to be one of repentance.” Our trouble often begins when we forget this aspect of Gospel living. The backslider is one who has forgotten the grace of repentance. His heart has become insensitive to his sin, and he has lost sight of his desperate and immediate need for Jesus. Returning to Jesus necessitates the painful awareness of and the turning from our sin. “Repent, and do the works you did at first” (Rev. 2:5).

5. Return to Christ in fresh dependency.

Those who know Jesus know a trustworthy Savior. Those who have wandered from communion with him have lost a sense of dependency on him for sustaining grace. We have lost sight of just how needy we are of grace; grace to come to Christ, grace to keep us with Christ, grace to return to Christ. It is as we recognize our current condition, see the glories of Jesus, seek the Lord for grace and repent of our sin that we return to our first love. “Return to me, says the Lord of hosts, and I will return to you, says the Lord of hosts” (Zech. 1:3).

All of this is simply a more detailed way of saying, “Repent and believe the gospel” (Mk. 1:15). This is what God calls us to do daily. When we lose sight of this, we begin to slide back.