Breakwater Blessings – Where chaos yields to Christ

Trust in Christ: An Invitation to New Life

  • Apologetics (8)
  • Bible & Theology (24)
  • Christian Living (58)
    • Men's Group (9)
    • Relationships (24)
    • Spiritual Growth (25)
  • Church History & Myths (4)
  • Uncategorized (1)

Return Home

When More Proof Is Not the Real Problem

Bible & Theology
Jay Downes's avatar

Jay Downes


When More Proof Is Not the Real Problem

“For if you believed Moses, you would believe me; for he wrote of me. But if you do not believe his writings, how will you believe my words?”
John 5:46 to 47

“But Abraham said, ‘They have Moses and the Prophets; let them hear them.’ And he said, ‘No, father Abraham, but if someone goes to them from the dead, they will repent.’ He said to him, ‘If they do not hear Moses and the Prophets, neither will they be convinced if someone should rise from the dead.’”
Luke 16:29 to 31

Human beings often live with a strange ability to miss what God has made clear. Immediate concerns feel urgent. Eternal things feel distant. Pride, distraction, self deception, and unbelief can make the truth seem far away even when God has placed it directly in front of us.

God has never left man in silence. From the beginning, He has spoken. He gave the Law through Moses, and the Law was never meant to be an end in itself. It formed a people. It taught Israel the holiness of God. It exposed sin, revealed the need for mercy, and prepared them to recognize the need for a Redeemer.

That is why Jesus’ words in John 5 are so serious. He tells the religious leaders that Moses wrote about Him. These were people who claimed to trust Moses, study Moses, and defend Moses. Yet when the One Moses had been preparing them to receive stood before them, they rejected Him.

The issue was not that God had failed to speak clearly.

The issue was that they would not receive what God had already spoken.

Luke 16 makes the same point from another angle. The rich man wants something more dramatic than the witness already given. He wants someone to rise from the dead and warn his brothers. Abraham’s answer is severe because it names the deeper problem. If they will not hear Moses and the Prophets, even a resurrection will not convince them.

That reaches further than the men in those passages. It reaches us.

We often imagine that belief would come more easily if God gave us something undeniable. A greater sign. A clearer experience. A moment that removed every possible question. But Jesus does not treat unbelief as a simple lack of information. A resistant heart does not become receptive simply because the evidence becomes more dramatic. It needs God to make it willing to hear.

That is where Christ enters.

Jesus is the fulfillment of what the Law and the Prophets had been announcing. In Him, what had been promised took on flesh. The God who spoke through Moses and the Prophets came near in the Son. People could see Him, hear Him, question Him, watch Him heal, and still refuse Him.

That should sober us.

The Law could reveal. It could instruct. It could expose sin and teach the character of God. It could point forward with real clarity. But the Law could not give sight to a blind heart. Christ is the One to whom the Law was leading, and He is also the One who must give life to those who cannot produce it in themselves.

The problem has never been a lack of revelation. God has spoken with patience and clarity. The deeper problem is that man often wants God to answer on man’s terms. We delay. We deflect. We ask for proof that fits our preferences. We tell ourselves that one more sign, one more experience, or one more compelling moment would settle the matter.

But Scripture keeps bringing us back to what God has already said.

Most people today do not feel the weight of Moses and the Law the way Jesus’ first audience did, but the condition underneath has not changed. We still resist what God has spoken. We still want Him to answer in ways we can manage. We still assume that something more dramatic would finally resolve the question.

Jesus does not let us stay there.

If they would not hear Moses and the Prophets, they would not be convinced by a resurrection. That is a hard word because it exposes how deep unbelief can go. It also shows why grace must go deeper than argument. God does not merely place truth in front of us. He must open the heart to receive it.

This is where clarity begins.

God has spoken.

Christ has come.

The question is whether the heart will hear Him.

Share this:

  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
Like Loading…

Comments

One response to “When More Proof Is Not the Real Problem”

  1. satyam rastogi Avatar
    August 22, 2025
    satyam rastogi

    Wonderful post 🎸thanks for sharing🎸

    LikeLike

    Reply

Leave a comment Cancel reply

  • June 14, 2025
  • August 8, 2025
  • August 3, 2025
  • August 1, 2025
  • July 30, 2025
  • July 28, 2025
  • July 27, 2025
  • July 25, 2025
  • July 24, 2025
  • July 22, 2025
  • July 19, 2025
←Previous Page
1 … 4 5 6 7 8
Next Page→

Breakwater Blessings

Breakwater Blessings

Where chaos yields to Christ

  • Comment
  • Reblog
  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Breakwater Blessings
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • Breakwater Blessings
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Copy shortlink
    • Report this content
    • View post in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
%d