|   Mountains vs. Mustard Seeds
 
Mat. 17:20 
 T
 he Lord Jesus used the largest and smallest things 
                        the disciples knew of to teach them about the awesome power of faith.  
                        Nothing was smaller in the age before bifocals and magnifying glasses than 
                        a mustard seed.  And nothing was bigger than a mountain.  Mountains of 
                        Tranfiguration, or the Mountains of Sinai, or the Mountains of Ararat, 
                        tower over the earth.  Mountains, however said Jesus, are no match for the 
                        most miniscule amount of genuine and authentic faith.  Just a little bit 
                        of the stuff can move the earth, snow-capped peaks and all.  The disciples 
                        failed to understand or appreciate the secret of faith which had just been 
                        illustrated at the summit.  Faith comes by hearing and hearing by the 
                        Word of God.   Jesus met with Moses and Elijah.    Peter, James and John were there too, but they 
                        missed the mark when it came to grasping the significance of the event.  
                        Luke speaks of the slumber party on the slopes.  The Bible says they were 
                        “heavy with sleep.”  The disciples almost missed the whole thing.  Even 
                        still, many of us are only half awake when we read God’s Word and are in 
                        danger of missing the meaning.  To miss the meaning is to miss the whole 
                        thing.  Jesus spoke with Moses and Elijah about His “decease.”  Moses was 
                        the Law, Elijah was the Prophets.  That is what both of them have spoken 
                        about ever since they learned to talk.  Christ, the Incarnate Word of God 
                        came to fulfill and do the Word of God.    The Lord Jesus came to die for 
                        our sins.  Everything must be according to the Word.  The Gospel itself is 
                        that “Christ died for our sins according to the Scriptures, and that He 
                        rose again the third day according to the Scriptures.  Faith is simply to 
                        believe God’s Word.  This is why the Father said on the mount, “This is my 
                        beloved Son ....hear Him.”    The idea is that a mountain can not stay still if 
                        God’s Word says “move.”  It does not have a chance.  We can trust God’s 
                        Word.  In the tenth chapter, Matthew records the Words “ye shall cast out 
                        demons.”  It will be so.  Yes, but not without faith.   Even faith 
                        must be purified and refined by prayer and fasting if it is to separate 
                        the dross of doubt.  Demons and mountains have a way of intimidating us.  
                        One seems as large and as impossible to move as the other.  In the spirit 
                        world of faith, mountains are no match for mustard seeds and with faith 
                        “nothing,” said Jesus “shall be impossible unto you.”                                                                             
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