The Bridge of Faith in the Holy Grail
In Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, there is a moment that has stayed with audiences for decades. Indiana Jones stands at the edge of a vast chasm, his father dying behind him, and the only way forward is a leap of faith. His father's journal describes an invisible bridge — a path that cannot be seen but must be trusted. Every rational instinct tells Indy to turn back. The gap is impossibly wide, the canyon floor impossibly far below. But with his father's life hanging in the balance, he closes his eyes, lifts his foot, and steps into nothing.
His boot lands on solid stone. The bridge was there all along, cleverly camouflaged against the canyon wall, invisible to the eye but utterly real beneath his feet.
This is what faith looks like. The writer of Hebrews tells us that faith is "the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen." Notice the language — substance and evidence. Faith is not wishful thinking or blind optimism. It is stepping forward on a reality that God has already established, even when our eyes cannot perceive it.
The Almighty never asks us to leap into emptiness. He asks us to trust that He has already built the bridge. The path is there. Your job is not to see it first — your job is to step.
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