Sometimes I find it interesting to do keyword searches on the Bible and today I focussed on faith. The results were very thought provoking.
I found faith was mentioned 256 times in the NIV translation of the Bible, but only 15 of those mentions were in the Old Testament. Intrigued, I did another search on faithfulness and found that of the 60 mentions to be found in the Bible, only 6 were in the New Testament.
So I did some digging and found some interesting comments in the Manual of Christian Doctrine, which stated:
The Old Testament really has no word for faith, though there are especially three words which denote various aspects of the activity of faith. The most common word for “to believe” (he’emin) stresses the intellectual element and signifies the acceptance of something as true on the testimony of another. The other two words (batach and chasah) emphasize rather the element of confident reliance on or trust in someone else. The New Testament has one very important word for faith (pistis), which denotes (1) general confidence in a person (2), the ready acceptance of his testimony on the basis of this confidence, and (3) trust reposed in him for the future. As a designation of saving faith it denotes a conviction respecting the veracity of God, a believing acceptance of his word, and a heartfelt trust in him for the salvation of the soul. The corresponding word for “to believe” is used with various shades meaning, in some cases stressing the element of knowledge, and in others the element of trust.
So I did a further search on believe, and found 151 mentions, only 20 of which were in the Old Testament. The variant, belief, was mentioned only once in the entire Bible, in 2 Thessalonians 2:13. Trust was mentioned 87 times, 78 of which were in the Old Testament, and many of those in the Psalms.
Now this was not an exhaustive study of course, but I found it interesting to observe that the NIV translators had used faith and believe more commonly in association with the New Testament and faithfulness and trust more commonly in association with the Old Testament.







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