Faith & Spiritual Growth
From Mustard Seeds to
Mountains:
Understanding the
Measures and Levels of Faith
"If you have faith as small as a mustard
seed, you can say to this mountain,
'Move from here to there,' and it will move." — Matthew
17:20
A
devotional reflection|Christian Living
Faith is one of the most talked-about topics in the whole of
Christian life. We sing about it, preach about it, and pray for more of it. And
yet, if we are honest with ourselves, it remains one of the least fully
understood realities of our walk with God.
Most of us have heard some version of the phrase, "Just
have faith." Simple enough. But here is the thing—when a crisis actually
arrives, when the diagnosis comes back bad, when the money runs out before the
month does, when the relationship falls apart—that phrase can feel hollow and
frustratingly vague. What does it actually mean to have faith? And why does it
seem to come so easily for some people and feel so desperately out of reach for
others?
Consider two believers. Both love God. Both pray. Both show up
to church. Yet when a season of hardship hits, one is completely overwhelmed by
fear and anxiety, while the other seems to move through the storm with a quiet,
settled confidence in God's promises. What is the difference?
It is not that one has faith and the other does not. More
likely, they are simply operating at different levels of faith.
Scripture, looked at carefully, does not treat faith as a simple
on-or-off switch. Faith has measures. It has levels. It grows, matures,
deepens, and — if we are not careful — it can also stagnate.
|
"Just as a child and an adult are both human but differ
in maturity, believers may share the same faith in Christ while exhibiting
vastly different levels of spiritual confidence and trust in God." |
■Faith Begins as a Gift
Before faith becomes a responsibility, it is first a gift. That
is important to settle in our hearts, because many Christians quietly carry the
weight of feeling like they never had enough faith to begin with — as though
faith were something they were supposed to produce on their own.
The Apostle Paul writes in Romans 12:3 that God has given to
every believer "the measure of
faith." Every believer. Not just the spiritually elite. Not just the
pastor or the prophet. You. Me. Every single person who has come to Christ has
received a measure of faith from God Himself.
This means faith originates with God. We do not manufacture it.
We receive it.
|
"God has allotted to each a
measure of faith."Romans 12:3 |
Think of it this way. Imagine faith is a seed handed to a
farmer. The seed contains tremendous potential — potential for a harvest, for
abundance, for fruit that feeds a family and then some. But potential alone
does not produce a harvest. The seed must be planted, watered, tended, and
protected from weeds and drought. It must be given time and the right
conditions to grow.
The tragedy is never having a small seed. The tragedy is never
planting it.
God is not looking for the believer with the biggest seed. He is
looking for the believer who will be faithful with the seed they have been
given.
● ● ●
■The Disciples: A Masterclass in Growing Faith
No group of people in the New Testament illustrates the growth
of faith more vividly — and more honestly — than the twelve disciples.
When Jesus first called them, they were ordinary men with
ordinary fears. They worried about food, about safety, about who among them was
the greatest. In short, they worried about most of the same things we do today.
One night, while crossing the Sea of Galilee, a violent storm
rolled in without warning. These were experienced fishermen. They knew these
waters. And they were terrified. Meanwhile, Jesus was sleeping peacefully in
the back of the boat.
They woke Him, frightened and accusing: "Master, don't you care that we are perishing?"
Jesus got up, stilled the storm with a word, and then looked at
them and asked the question that must have stung more than the wind and the
waves had:
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"Why are you so fearful? How is
it that you have no faith?"Mark 4:40 |
Imagine that. These were not unbelievers. These men had left
their nets, left their families, left their livelihoods to follow this Man. And
yet in that moment, fear swallowed their faith whole.
How many of us can relate? We trust God beautifully when the
skies are clear and things are going well. But the moment the storm arrives —
the moment the waves get loud and the wind gets vicious — we find ourselves
wide-eyed with panic, wondering if God has fallen asleep on us.
The disciples were not faithless. Their faith was simply not yet
mature enough for that particular storm.
But here is the redemptive part of the story: those same men —
the ones who cowered in a boat — would later stand before kings, endure
imprisonment, survive beatings, plant churches across continents, and face
martyrdom with unshakeable peace. The men who once feared a storm eventually
shook nations.
What changed? Their faith grew.
● ● ●
■Little Faith: When Circumstances Look Bigger
Than God
One of Jesus' most repeated expressions toward His disciples was
a gentle but piercing phrase: "O ye
of little faith."
Little faith is not fake faith. It is not the absence of faith.
It is real, genuine faith — just operating with limited confidence and a short
attention span when circumstances get loud.
Peter walking on water is perhaps the most vivid picture of
little faith in all of Scripture. Think about what Peter actually did. He
stepped out of a boat in the middle of a storm-tossed sea and walked on the
water toward Jesus. No other human being in history has done that. For a few
extraordinary moments, Peter accomplished the humanly impossible.
Then something happened.
The wind got louder. The waves got higher. The circumstances
became more visible than Christ. And Peter began to sink.
|
"O thou of little faith,
wherefore didst thou doubt?"Matthew 14:31 |
Peter's problem was not a total lack of faith. He had faith
enough to step out of the boat — which is more than can be said for the other
eleven disciples who stayed seated. His problem was that his faith was not yet
mature enough to remain fixed on Jesus when the circumstances became
intimidating.
Little faith sounds like this:
·
"I know God can do it, but I wonder if He will do it for
me."
·
"I believe in His promises in general, but my specific
situation looks impossible."
·
"I trust God — I do — but I am still absolutely
terrified."
If you have ever thought any of those thoughts, you are not a
bad Christian. You are simply a growing one. And little faith, taken to Jesus
honestly, is always enough to begin with.
● ● ●
■Weak Faith: Genuine but Fragile
Weak faith is like a young tree. It is alive. The roots are
real. But it bends easily under pressure, and a strong enough wind can make it
look as though it might not survive the season.
Think of Gideon.
When God called Gideon to deliver Israel from its oppressors,
Gideon's response was not exactly a battle cry. It was a string of questions
and objections. "Who am I? My clan
is the weakest in Manasseh. I am the least in my family. Are You absolutely
sure You have the right person?" And then came the famous fleece tests
— not once, but twice — asking God for sign after sign just to be certain.
Many Christians are a little hard on Gideon for this. But here
is what strikes me every time I read his story: God was patient with him.
Remarkably, tenderly patient.
God did not say, "You know what, forget it. I'll find
someone with more faith." He did not move on to a more confident
candidate. He stayed with Gideon, answered his signs, spoke to his fears, and
walked him step by step through a victory that defied all human logic — 300 men
routing an army that the Bible describes as being as numerous as locusts.
That is who God is with weak faith. He does not despise it. He
does not roll His eyes at it. He nurtures it, strengthens it, and stays in the
room with it until it becomes something more.
|
"Weak faith is still faith. And God specialises in
strengthening the fragile things." |
● ● ●
■Strong Faith: Trusting God Beyond
Circumstances
If there is one person in all of Scripture whose faith stands as
the benchmark of what it means to trust God beyond circumstances, it is
Abraham.
God gave Abraham a promise: a son, a nation, a legacy stretching
across generations. It was a magnificent promise. There was just one very
significant problem. Abraham was old. His wife Sarah was old. And as the years
rolled on — five, ten, twenty years — not a single thing in the natural world
suggested the promise was coming.
And yet Abraham continued to believe.
|
"He did not waver through
unbelief regarding the promise of God, but was strengthened in his faith and
gave glory to God, being fully persuaded that God had power to do what He had
promised."Romans
4:20-21 |
This is the part about strong faith that I think gets
misunderstood: strong faith does not ignore the facts. Abraham was not in
denial. He knew his age. He understood biology. He understood that the natural
window for what God had promised had long since closed. He saw reality clearly.
He simply refused to let reality have the final word.
That is the texture of strong faith. It is not blind. It is not
pretending that the problem is not real or that the pain is not genuine. Strong
faith looks at the full reality of a situation and then chooses — deliberately,
consciously, sometimes daily — to believe that God's word is greater than the
sum of all those circumstances.
● ● ●
■Great Faith: When Jesus Is Amazed
There is a detail in the Gospels that stops me every single time
I encounter it. On at least two recorded occasions, Jesus marvelled at
someone's faith. Not at a miracle. Not at a crowd. At faith. And both times, it
was not a Jewish religious leader who drew His amazement. It was an outsider.
A Roman centurion came to Jesus asking for help. His servant was
gravely ill. When Jesus offered to come to his home, the centurion said
something that Jesus had apparently never heard from anyone in Israel:
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"Lord, I do not deserve to have
you come under my roof. But just say the word, and my servant will be
healed."Matthew 8:8 |
He understood authority. He understood that Jesus did not need
to be physically present to act. He believed that the word of Jesus, spoken
from wherever He stood, was entirely sufficient. Jesus turned to the crowd and
said something remarkable: "I have
not found such great faith, not even in Israel."
The other example is the Canaanite woman who came to Jesus on
behalf of her suffering daughter. She faced what most of us would consider
devastating discouragement — silence, then what sounded like a flat refusal.
And yet she did not leave. She pressed in, reframed her position, and refused
to accept that God's goodness had run out before her need was met.
Jesus looked at her and declared: "Woman, great is your faith." Her daughter was healed at
that very moment.
What marks great faith is precisely this: it persists when
lesser faith would have already walked away. It is not moved by delay. It is
not discouraged by silence. It remains anchored not in the certainty of the
outcome, but in the certainty of God's character — His goodness, His
faithfulness, His power to do what He has promised.
● ● ●
■Faith Is a Muscle, Not Just a Moment
Here is an analogy I keep coming back to. Imagine two people who
join the same gym on the same day. They both receive identical memberships.
They both have access to the same equipment, the same trainers, the same
classes. Everything is equal at the starting line.
One person shows up regularly. They train consistently, push
through the soreness, gradually increase the weight, and develop discipline
over months and years. The other person never really shows up — or shows up
inconsistently, mostly when they feel like it.
Five years later, these two people will be in dramatically
different physical condition. Not because they had different memberships —
those were identical. But because one invested in development and the other did
not.
Faith works in a profoundly similar way.
God gives the measure. We determine the growth.
Every challenge that comes our way is an opportunity to exercise
trust. Every delay we endure is an opportunity to practice patience and
confidence in God's timing. Every answered prayer is evidence to build on for
the next mountain. Every trial, as painful as it genuinely is, becomes God's
training ground — the place where shallow, theoretical faith is forged into
something deep, tested, and unshakeable.
|
"What initially feels like God's absence is often God's
training ground. He is not absent. He is developing something in you that
cannot be built in comfort alone." |
● ● ●
■The Gift of Faith: When God Gives Something
Extraordinary
There is one more dimension of faith that deserves its own place
in this conversation. Beyond ordinary, everyday faith that grows through
practice and experience, Scripture speaks of a supernatural gift of faith — an
extraordinary empowerment that God grants through His Holy Spirit for specific
moments and specific assignments.
|
"To another, faith by the same
Spirit..."1
Corinthians 12:9 |
This is not the garden-variety faith we exercise daily. This is
a special, sovereign download of supernatural confidence for an extraordinary
situation.
You see it in Elijah, standing alone on Mount Carmel in front of
hundreds of hostile prophets, drenching the altar with water three times before
calling down fire from heaven — with absolute certainty that God would answer.
You see it in Daniel, stepping into a den of lions with a
composure that confounded a king.
You see it in three young men named Shadrach, Meshach, and
Abednego, who looked at a furnace heated seven times beyond its normal
temperature and told the most powerful king in the world: "Our God is able to deliver us. But even if He does not, we will
not bow."
That is not ordinary faith. That is not something produced by
human discipline alone. That is the Holy Spirit inhabiting and elevating a
human spirit beyond its natural capacity. And it is available to us still.
● ● ●
■A Summary of the Levels
|
Little
Faith Real and genuine, but easily overwhelmed by circumstances.
Trusts God in seasons of calm, struggles in storms. Example: Peter beginning
to sink while walking on water. |
|
Weak
Faith Alive and authentic, but fragile under pressure. Needs signs
and reassurances. God is tender with it. Example: Gideon and the fleece
tests. |
|
Strong
Faith Acknowledges reality but refuses to let it have the final
word. Holds on to the promise even when circumstances say otherwise. Example:
Abraham believing for a son against all natural odds. |
|
Great
Faith Persists through delay, silence, and apparent setbacks.
Remains anchored in God's character rather than the speed of His answer.
Example: the centurion and the Canaanite woman. |
|
The Gift
of Faith A supernatural, Spirit-given empowerment for extraordinary
assignments. Moves beyond personal discipline into divine enablement.
Example: Elijah, Daniel, Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego. |
● ● ●
■Where Are You on the Journey?
Let me close with the question that matters most, and it is not
the one we usually ask ourselves.
We usually ask: "Do I
have enough faith?" But the more honest and more useful question is: "What level of faith am I currently
cultivating?"
Are you still sinking when the winds blow strong, like Peter?
That is all right — Jesus still reaches out His hand, every time.
Are you still asking for signs and reassurances, like Gideon?
God is patient with you. He has not given up on you. He is still speaking.
Are you learning to hold on to a promise even when the clock
seems to be running out, like Abraham? Keep going. You are building something
powerful.
Or are you beginning to develop the settled, persistent
confidence of the centurion and the Canaanite woman — the kind that does not
falter when answers are delayed and does not bow when obstacles push back?
Wherever you find yourself on this journey, here is the
encouragement that Scripture makes undeniably clear: God does not wait for you
to arrive at great faith before He begins working in your life. He starts with
mustard seeds. He works with little faith. He strengthens weak faith. He
honours growing faith. And over a lifetime of walking with Him — through
victories and disappointments, through answered prayers and long silences,
through seasons of abundance and seasons that feel like desert — He produces something
strong, tested, and enduring.
The journey of faith is not ultimately about becoming impressive
before God. It is about learning, day by ordinary day, that He is trustworthy.
It is about discovering, through experience rather than theory, that He has
never failed — not once — and that the same God who carried His people through
the Red Sea, through the den of lions, through the fire and the storm, is the
same God who is present with you right now, in whatever you are facing.
|
"Faith is not measured by the size of the problem before
you. Faith is measured by the size of the God you trust. And the God we serve
is greater than every mountain faith will ever face." |
The mustard seed was never meant to stay small. It was meant to
grow into a tree large enough for birds to nest in — large enough to provide
shade, shelter, and life for others.
That is the vision God has for your faith.
Plant it. Tend it. Trust the One who gave it to you.
A Prayer for Growing
Faith
Lord, I bring You the faith I have — however small, however
fragile. I ask You to take what You have placed in me and grow it into
something that trusts You fully, holds on to Your promises persistently, and
reflects Your faithfulness to everyone watching. Teach me, in every season,
that You are enough. Amen. |
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