“It was faith that made Noah hear God's warnings about things in the future that he could not see.” Hebrews 11:7 (GNT)
Has God given me a vision? Maybe it’s been in my heart since I was young, or I'm just learning about what God wants to do in my life and through me.
As soon as God gives a dream, there are going to be voices of doubt. To pursue God’s plan with my whole heart, I' going to have to listen to God and reject the voices of doubt.
Voices of doubt can come from a lot of places—from critics, from competition, from Satan, from friends and family who say, "We’ve known you all your life. Who do you think you are?"
Think of all the voices in Noah’s life that tried to make him doubt what God had said—to prepare for a coming reckoning by building an ark. Noah’s children would not have been thrilled with their dad building a huge boat in the front yard. They probably had no problem letting Noah know exactly how they felt!
Noah also had to live year after year being ridiculed by his neighbors, who must have thought he was insane. After all, Noah thought God spoke to him, and he was building an ark for a flood when no one had ever seen rain before.
Dream busters will try to stop my dream. Critics and cynics are going to question my pursuit of something great for God.
But the biggest voices of doubt can come from inside me. I talk to myself constantly—either planting seeds of doubt in my mind or reminding myself what God says about me.
God will never call me to do something that he doesn't give me the power and the resources and the grace to do.
I have to believe this, and then I have to remind myself that it is true. Faith is the antidote to fear and doubt in my life. Hebrews 11:7 says, “It was faith that made Noah hear God's warnings about things in the future that he could not see” (GNT).
Noah couldn't see the flood, but he believed what God told him. I can't always see God's destiny for myself either. But when I trust my future to God—when I'm sure of what I hope for and certain of what I do not see—the voices of doubt will fade, and I will move toward my goals with confidence.
In summary:
Hebrews 11:7 highlights Noah as a primary example of "visionary faith"—the ability to act on divine instruction regarding a future that remains invisible to the physical eye. Noah’s journey serves as a blueprint for handling the inevitable "dream busters" that emerge the moment I commit to a God-given vision. Whether the doubt stems from external critics, well-meaning family, or my own internal monologue, the core message remains: God’s call is always accompanied by His provision. True faith is not the absence of these doubting voices, but the deliberate decision to prioritize God's word over the noise of the skeptical world.
Bottom Line:
Faith is the disciplined refusal to let the visibility of my current circumstances overrule the certainty of God’s future promises.
Next Step:
Identify the most persistent "voice of doubt" currently echoing in my mind—whether it’s a specific critic or a self-imposed limiting belief—and script a "Truth-Response" based on my identity in Christ. This week, every time that doubt surfaces, immediately vocalize my scripted response to realign my internal narrative with the power and resources God has promised me for my specific mission.
