Letβs face it. Jesus has been badly misrepresented by both friends and enemies. In the centuries following his ministry, his enemies described him as a sorcerer and false prophet. His followers, on the other hand, misapplied his teachings in ways that would have been deeply offensive to him. It really isnβt surprising that when people reject Jesus today, they are usually rejecting a misrepresentation of him.
Even those of us who follow Jesus have moments of doubt. There are times when we are so oppressed by the suffering, injustice, and chaos we see in the world around us that it is hard to believe his description of God as a loving βheavenly Fatherβ is really true.
Jesus himself understood the difficulty of faith. In Matthew 8 he was surprised at the faith of a Roman centurion and noted that he hadnβt yet met even one of his fellow Jews who had such faith. He was painfully aware of the superficiality of the faith of his closest disciples and friends and wasnβt surprised when they all abandoned him at the time of his arrest (Matthew 26:56). Even after Jesus had met with a number of his disciples after his resurrection, Thomas refused to believe Jesus was alive until he saw him for himself. Jesus said, βYou have believed because you have seen me. Blessed are those who believe without seeing meβ (John 20:29).
In his teaching, Jesus made it clear that most unbelievers are not his enemies. He described them with the metaphor of βsheepβ (Matthew 9:36; Luke 15:4). His listeners were familiar with the harmlessness, helplessness, and herd instinct of sheep. Scripture also refers to unbelievers as βignorantβ and βwayward peopleβ (Hebrews 5:1β2), βpoor,β βoppressed,β βblind,β and βcaptivesβ (Isaiah 61:1; Luke 4:18). Jesus used much harsher terminology (βserpentsβ; βwhitewashed tombsβ) to describe the self-righteous religious hypocrites who genuinely hated him and rejected the Truth he represented (Matthew 23). But even some within this group of hardcore enemies, like the apostle Paul, rejected him out of ignorance (1 Timothy 1:13).
So itβs pretty clear that we sometimes find it hard to believe in Jesus, even if deep down we really want to. Itβs a good thing he is who he is because he loves us. He understands our struggle for faith.