How to Live by Faith and Obedience: Walking Into Everything God Has Promised
“By faith Abraham obeyed when he was called to go out… And he went out, not knowing where he was going.”
— Hebrews 11:8
📅 Published April 25, 2026
✍ Sanmi Dawodu Ministries
📖 Hebrews 11:8
How do you live by faith and obedience?
Hebrews 11:8 gives the clearest model: faith and obedience are not sequential — they are simultaneous. Abraham did not understand first and then obey; he obeyed and understanding came with the journey. To live by faith and obedience:
- Understand that faith without obedience is dead — it is not real faith (James 2:26)
- Obedience without faith is legalism — doing the right things for the wrong reasons
- Obey before full clarity comes — Abraham went 'not knowing where he was going' (Hebrews 11:8)
- Count the cost honestly — Jesus commands this before every step of faith (Luke 14:28)
- Trust that the reward of obedience exceeds its cost — every time (Hebrews 11:6)
- Close Week 4 by taking one specific, named step of obedient faith today
Key Scripture: James 2:26 — “For as the body without the spirit is dead, so faith without works is dead also.”
“By faith Abraham obeyed when he was called to go out to the place which he would receive as an inheritance. And he went out, not knowing where he was going.”
— Hebrews 11:8 (NKJV)
A Word from Sanmi Dawodu
If you're searching for how to live by faith and obedience, you are standing at the exact point where every truth of Week 4 becomes reality. Everything God has shown you about His will, His guidance, His wisdom, His vision, and His purpose — it all crystallises in one decision: will you obey?
We close Week Four — the week of Divine Direction and Purpose — at the place where all direction, all guidance, all wisdom, all vision, and all hearing must ultimately arrive: the moment of obedience. It is the hinge on which purpose fulfillment swings. All the knowing of God's will, all the receiving of guidance, all the clarity of hearing — is ultimately only as valuable as the obedience that follows it. James 1:22 is unambiguous: 'But be doers of the word, and not hearers only, deceiving yourselves.' The hearer who does not obey has built, as Jesus said, on sand — a structure that looks impressive until the flood reveals its groundlessness.
Hebrews 11:8 gives us the purest, most breathtaking portrait of obedient faith in Scripture: 'By faith Abraham obeyed when he was called to go out to the place which he would receive as an inheritance. And he went out, not knowing where he was going.' He went out, not knowing. That phrase contains the entire theology of obedient faith: the direction was real, the command was clear, the obedience was immediate — and the destination was completely unknown. This is the faith that God calls great. Not the faith that understands the map before moving. The faith that moves before the map is revealed.
Faith and Obedience Are Not Sequential — They Are Simultaneous
The most common reason believers do not walk in God's direction and purpose is that they are waiting for complete clarity before they obey. But Hebrews 11:8 shatters that logic: Abraham obeyed when he was called — and he went out not knowing where he was going. He did not have a detailed itinerary. He had a divine instruction and a faithful God. That was enough.
Yesterday in Day 27 we heard God's voice clearly; today we walk in what He said. Week 4 closes today. Continue into Week 5 through the full 40 Days of Prayer series.
Faith Without Obedience Is Dead: Why Agreement Is Not Enough
James 2:17 delivers one of the most important theological verdicts in the New Testament: 'Thus also faith by itself, if it does not have works, is dead.' The specific 'works' James has in mind throughout this passage are acts of obedience to God's direction — the willingness to act on what has been heard. The merchant who calculates the cost of the pearl of great price and then fails to sell all he has has faith — but not the faith that purchases the pearl. The obedient response to God's voice is the evidence that the faith is genuine.
Romans 1:5 describes the entire purpose of Paul's apostolic ministry as producing 'obedience to the faith' — the obedient response to the Gospel that constitutes genuine saving faith. And Hebrews 11 — the great gallery of faith heroes — does not describe a single one of them sitting still. Every hero of faith in Hebrews 11 is defined by an action: Abel offered, Noah built, Abraham went, Moses refused, Rahab received, and the list continues. Faith is always identified and validated by its action. The verb of faith is obey.
Obedience Without Faith Is Legalism: Why Motivation Matters
The other side of the coin is equally important: obedience without faith — without the genuine, heart-level trust in the goodness and sovereignty of God that motivates the obedience — produces legalism. The legalist obeys the commands of God without trusting the character of God, and their obedience becomes a transaction: 'I do this for You; You owe me this in return.' This is precisely the error of the older brother in the prodigal son parable — he obeyed perfectly, but without love, without joy, without the relationship that gives obedience its meaning. When the Father's lavish grace toward the returning younger brother became visible, the older brother was furious. His obedience had never been an expression of trust — it had been a calculation of entitlement.
Biblical obedience is the natural, joyful expression of a heart that trusts the One giving the command. It is not reluctant compliance with an external code — it is the glad, willing, sometimes costly response of a person who has encountered the love of God and finds that love compelling, trustworthy, and worthy of the full investment of their life.
“Has the Lord as great delight in burnt offerings and sacrifices, as in obeying the voice of the Lord? Behold, to obey is better than sacrifice, and to heed than the fat of rams.”
— Samuel 15:22 (NKJV)
The Cost of Obedience: Counting It Honestly (Luke 14:28)
Genuine obedience to God is never free. Abraham left his country, his kindred, and his father's house — the three most fundamental sources of identity and security in the ancient world. Moses 'refused to be called the son of Pharaoh's daughter, choosing rather to suffer affliction with the people of God than to enjoy the passing pleasures of sin' (Hebrews 11:24-25). The disciples 'left their nets immediately and followed Him' (Matthew 4:20). In every case, the obedience cost something real — security, status, familiarity, the known life exchanged for an unknown journey.
This is why Jesus's call in Luke 14:28 to 'count the cost' is not a discouragement from following but a preparation for it. The cost must be counted — not to be avoided but to be accepted with clear eyes. The person who follows without counting the cost will stumble when the cost arrives, because they were not prepared for it. The person who has counted the cost and still followed has made a decision that is stable under pressure. Obedience is only genuine when it has been tested by the knowledge of what it will cost — and the believer has paid the price willingly.
The Reward of Obedience: Why It Always Exceeds the Cost
First Samuel 15:22 — 'to obey is better than sacrifice' — establishes an economic principle of the Kingdom: obedience has a value that exceeds the most expensive religious performance. When Abraham obeyed and went — not knowing where he was going — he did not merely achieve the destination. He became the father of faith for every believer in every generation of human history (Romans 4:11-12). His obedience produced a legacy that billions of lives have been shaped by. The reward of Abraham's obedience was not merely the promised land — it was the blessing of all nations through his seed.
Jesus states the principle most directly in John 14:21: 'He who has My commandments and keeps them, it is he who loves Me. And he who loves Me will be loved by My Father, and I will love him and manifest Myself to him.' The reward of obedience is not primarily material or circumstantial — it is relational. Jesus manifests Himself to the obedient. The most intimate experiences of God's presence, the clearest hearings of His voice, the most powerful manifestations of His power — these are consistently the experience of the person walking in prompt, costly, wholehearted obedience to the last thing God said.
Abraham's Step: Going Out Without Knowing Where You Are Going
John 2:1-11 records the first miracle of Jesus's public ministry — turning water into wine at the wedding at Cana. Mary's instruction to the servants is the most comprehensive guidance for purposeful, miracle-producing living in the New Testament: 'Whatever He says to you, do it.' Not: whatever He says, evaluate it. Not: whatever He says, consider it and respond when convenient. Whatever He says — do it. The miracle was not produced by the water. It was produced by the obedience of servants who filled jars with water when told to fill jars with water, who drew from them when told to draw, who served what they drew when told to serve. Step by step, command by command, obedience by obedience — the water became wine.
The miracle was embedded in the obedience. There is no record of the servants seeing the water become wine before they drew it. The transformation likely happened in the drawing — in the act of obedience. This is the consistent pattern of divine purposefulness: the miracle is released through the obedience, not before it. The Red Sea does not part until Moses stretches out his rod. The walls of Jericho do not fall until the seventh march on the seventh day. The net does not fill until the disciples launch into the deep. Whatever He says — do it. The miracle is in the doing.
Week 4 Closes: The One Obedient Step That Changes Everything
We have spent seven days receiving the most comprehensive equipping for purposeful, directed living available in Scripture. We have received a framework for knowing God's will (Day 22). We have been guided by the intimacy of His eye (Day 23). We have been given wisdom to navigate complexity (Day 24). We have received fresh vision for our lives (Day 25). We have been commissioned into the prepared works of our purpose (Day 26). We have cultivated the hearing posture that opens heaven's communication (Day 27). And today we arrive at the only response that makes the entire week worth anything: obedience.
Deuteronomy 30:11-14 removes every excuse for deferred obedience with decisive clarity: 'For this commandment which I command you today is not too mysterious for you, nor is it far off… But the word is very near you, in your mouth and in your heart, that you may do it.' The will of God for your life is not a mystery accessible only to spiritual giants. It is near you — in your mouth, in your heart. The knowing of it is not the obstacle. The doing of it is the only remaining question. And the answer to that question — the one that will determine the entire trajectory of the second half of this 40-day journey and the life that follows it — is the one Mary gave: Whatever He says to you, do it.
“But He said, 'More than that, blessed are those who hear the word of God and keep it!'”
— Luke 11:28 (NKJV)
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Altar Call: How Walking by Faith Activates Everything God Has Promised
Day 28 of Week 3 calls you forward — not into intellectual agreement with what you have read, but into actual surrender. Obedience And Faith is not a topic to study; it is an invitation to receive.
Week 4 closes with one question: what is the one obedient step you have been delaying? Take it today. The full 40 Days of Prayer series continues into Week 5 — keep walking.
Receive what God has been speaking to you today. Pray the prayer below from your heart.
A Prayer for Obedience And Faith
Father, Week 4 ends today with the question I cannot escape: will I obey? Will I take the step of faith You have been calling me toward throughout this week?
I confess the obedience I have been delaying. I name it before You now: [name the specific step]. I have had the vision. I have received the guidance. I have been given the wisdom. I have heard Your voice. And now, by Your grace, I will move.
Like Abraham, I go out — not necessarily knowing everything about where I am going, but knowing the One who is leading me. That is enough. In the name of Jesus, Amen.
Frequently Asked Questions
What does Hebrews 11:8 teach about faith and obedience?
Hebrews 11:8 presents Abraham as the model of obedient faith. He obeyed when called, with no prior knowledge of the destination. His obedience was simultaneous with his faith — he did not wait for a detailed itinerary before moving. This is the characteristic of genuine faith: it acts on what God has said, even before full understanding arrives.
What does James 2:26 mean by 'faith without works is dead'?
James 2:26 is not contradicting Paul's teaching on salvation by faith alone. James is addressing practical, visible faith — the kind that can be observed because it produces obedient action. Dead faith is intellectual agreement without corresponding action. Living faith is demonstrated by what it does. Both Paul and James agree: saving faith works.
What is the cost of obedience and is it worth it?
The cost of obedience is real — it may mean leaving what is comfortable, risking what is secure, or choosing what is difficult. But Hebrews 11:6 promises that God rewards those who diligently seek Him. The cost of disobedience — the purpose unreached, the calling unfulfilled, the promise uninhierited — is always greater than the cost of obedience.
How do I step out in faith when I am afraid?
Fear is not the opposite of faith — it is the normal companion of significant obedience. Every major figure in Hebrews 11 acted in the presence of fear, not in its absence. Isaiah 41:10 commands "Do not fear, for I am with you" — the command makes sense only if fear is present. Obey afraid. Clarity and peace deepen with the step, not before it.
What does it mean to walk by faith not by sight?
2 Corinthians 5:7 — "We walk by faith, not by sight" — describes the governing principle of the Christian life. Walking by sight means making decisions based solely on visible evidence and logical projection. Walking by faith means making decisions based on the revealed Word of God and the Spirit's direction, even when circumstances appear contrary. Abraham's life is the extended exposition of this verse.
Faith without obedience is dead. Take the step. Go out — even without knowing where.
Continue the 40-Day Journey
Access all 40 daily sermon packs, 30-point prayer sets, and Spirit-led devotionals at Sanmi Dawodu Ministries.
Explore the Full Prayer Series →
Continue the 7-Day Week 3 Series
Each day of Week 3 builds on the one before. Read the full Spiritual Renewal series at sanmidawodu.org/40-days-prayer.
- Day 22:How to Know God's Will for Your Life: A Biblical Guide That Actually Works
- Day 23:How to Receive Divine Guidance from God: The Shepherd Who Goes Before You
- Day 24:How to Develop Biblical Wisdom and Discernment: Making Decisions That Honour God
- Day 25:How to Develop Spiritual Vision: Seeing What God Sees for Your Life
- Day 26:How to Walk in God's Purpose for Your Life: The Works Prepared Beforehand
- Day 27:How to Hear God Speak to You Personally: Cutting Through the Noise
Building on Week 1: Repentance & Cleansing
This week’s journey of renewal stands on the foundation laid in Week 1. If you missed it, start here:
- Week 1 Day 1:How to Return to God After Backsliding (Biblical Steps That Actually Work)
- Week 1 Day 7:Create in Me a Clean Heart, O God: The Full Hebrew Meaning & How to Pray It
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