Faith Matters

When Faith Meant Trust, with Teresa Morgan

20 snips
Feb 22, 2026
A historian revisits the original meaning of faith as trust and entrustedness in ancient Christian and Roman life. The conversation traces how communal, family-style trust gave way to creed-centered belief. They explore everyday uses of pistis, mutual trust between God and people, and what is lost when faith becomes primarily doctrinal.
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INSIGHT

Faith As Relational Trust

  • Early Christian pistis and Latin fides centered on relational trust, not just mental assent.
  • These terms encompassed trust, faithfulness, trustworthiness, and entrustedness in daily life.
INSIGHT

When Belief Became Central

  • Belief rose to prominence between the late 1st century and Nicaea (325) as a test of orthodoxy.
  • Debates with outsiders, internal doctrinal disputes, and Platonist influence shifted pistis toward cognitive belief.
INSIGHT

What Is Lost When Trust Fades

  • Losing pistis risks reducing faith to mere correct doctrines instead of a whole-life relationship.
  • Morgan argues theologians have emphasized belief while ordinary Christians retain relational trust.
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