
The Eyes of Faith
Faith isn’t pretending everything is fine. It isn’t about ignoring reality or forcing yourself to stay positive. Faith is seeing what’s real in the Spirit before it shows up in the natural.
Dzene Muzila


Faith isn’t pretending everything is fine. It isn’t about ignoring reality or forcing yourself to stay positive. Faith is seeing what’s real in the Spirit before it shows up in the natural. It’s choosing to agree with what God has said instead of what circumstances are shouting.
When Paul said, “We walk by faith, not by sight” (2 Corinthians 5:7 NKJV), he wasn’t calling us to blindness. He was inviting us to a higher kind of vision, one that sees through the eyes of the Spirit. God’s Word reveals reality long before your senses catch up. “By faith we understand that the worlds were framed by the word of God, so that the things which are seen were not made of things which are visible” (Hebrews 11:3).
Faith doesn’t deny the facts; it simply refuses to let facts have the final say. Abraham saw the reality of his age, yet he believed that what God had promised, He was able to perform (Romans 4:19–21). His faith wasn’t fantasy. It was confidence in the faithfulness of God.
The eyes of faith see promise where others see pain. They see purpose in waiting. They see victory where defeat once stood. “With God all things are possible” (Matthew 19:26), and faith holds on to that truth until it becomes visible.
So open your spiritual eyes. See as God sees. Stand on His Word even when everything around you says otherwise. The eyes of faith are never blind; they see what is truly real.
