NUNCA te explicaron qué significa tener fe

You were NEVER told what it means to have faith—and that explains why so many believers have spent years "believing"... without seeing anything change in their lives. The Greek word πίστις (pistis), which we translate as "faith," doesn't mean believing that something is true. In the first-century world, it meant active loyalty, trust based on evidence, and commitment to a person. In this video, we discover what it truly means to have faith according to the original Greek, why Paul and James don't contradict each other, and what changes in your life when pistis stops being a feeling and becomes a decision. — What you'll take away: • The true meaning of pistis in first-century Greek • Why pistis isn't a leap of faith but trust based on proven evidence • The crucial difference between pistis and simply "believing"—something no sermon explains • Why Luther called James a "straw epistle" and why he was wrong • How Hebrews 11 reads completely differently when you understand pistis in its original language • Three concrete things that change in your life when you practice faith as active loyalty — — — ⏱ KEY MOMENTS: 00:00 — What if your faith isn't working because no one has explained what it means? 00:30 — What did pistis mean in the Greco-Roman world of the 1st century? 01:00 — Mark 1:15: metanoia and pistis — the two verbs of the Kingdom 04:00 — Paul vs. James: the contradiction that doesn't exist 05:06 — Hebrews 11 with 1st-century eyes — every example is an act 06:14 — Three concrete changes in your life: doubt, faith, and relapse 07:35 — The King's ambassador: the final image — — — How many times have you tried to "have more faith" without knowing exactly what to do with it? Tell me in the comments — I'm interested to know if this distinction changes anything in how you understood it. If this type of study of the original text is helpful to you, subscribe and turn on notifications 🔔 — each week a Greek word that transforms your faith. — — — 📌 This video is educational material on biblical theology. The analysis presented is based on the linguistic and historical study of the Greek text of the New Testament. It does not represent an attack on any church or denomination. #pistis #WhatIsFaith #BiblicalTheology