This week, James Jeong turns to Hebrews 11 and challenges us to reconsider faith not as an emotion we conjure up, but as a deliberate act of yielding to God's authority over our own perceptions. We discover that faith is fundamentally about agreement—choosing to align ourselves with God's truth even when our feelings, our culture, and our circumstances tell us otherwise. The discussion walks us through the lives of Noah and Sarah, showing us that genuine faith often means swimming upstream against popular opinion and even our own doubts. Noah built an ark when rain seemed impossible; Sarah conceived when biology said no. Both chose to believe God's promises over their observable reality. What's particularly refreshing is the acknowledgment that faith isn't always heroic victory—sometimes it's messy, involving failure and repentance, yet still precious to God. We learn that even our repentance is an act of faith, as is our acceptance of forgiveness when we don't feel forgiven. The message lands with particular force in our current cultural moment where we're told to 'live our truth.' Instead, we're called to live God's truth, finding our assurance not in subjective feelings but in the objective, authoritative revelation of Scripture. This isn't about working up enough faith; it's about knowing God's Word deeply enough that when pressure comes, we have something solid to stand on.