What is the Biblical Definition of Faith?
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About this listen
We exercise faith every day without thinking about it—taking prescriptions from doctors we just met, boarding planes with pilots we’ve never seen, stepping into elevators we didn’t install. So why, when it comes to Christianity, do so many people think “faith” means a blind leap in the dark?
In this episode of Word for Word, Austin W. Duncan digs into Hebrews 11:1 and the original Greek words behind it—hypostasis and elegchos—to show that biblical faith is anything but vague, flimsy, or blind. It’s a solid, evidence-based trust in the character and promises of God.
In this episode, we’ll explore:
What Hebrews 11:1 really says about the nature of faith
Why biblical faith is not “blind faith” (and what Thomas’s story actually teaches us)
The three components of true faith: understanding, action, and personal trust
How God’s unchanging character and fulfilled promises form the foundation of our faith
What faith in action looks like—through Abraham, Shadrach/Meshach/Abednego, and a modern story of walking through cancer with hope in Christ
Practical ways to build stronger faith: Scripture, remembrance, obedience, and community
Whether you’re wrestling with doubt, trying to understand how faith “works,” or just wanting to grow deeper in your walk with God, this episode is meant to help you move from vague belief to confident, biblical trust in Christ.