Why This Question Changes Everything
The question of where your faith came from is not a theological curiosity. It is the fault line that divides two completely different gospels.
If your faith originated in you — in your decision, your openness, your willingness — then you contributed the decisive ingredient to your salvation. Salvation may be 99% God, but that last 1%? That was you. And that 1% is the difference between heaven and hell. Which means you are the difference. Which means you have grounds to boast. Which means it is not, in the end, by grace.
If your faith originated in God — if He gave you the eyes to see, the heart to respond, the will to believe — then you contributed nothing. You were dead, and He made you alive. You were blind, and He gave you sight. You were a stone, and He gave you a heart of flesh. You are saved from first to last by a grace that you did not generate, did not earn, did not activate, and cannot lose.
These are not two flavors of the same gospel. They are two different religions wearing the same name. One ends in boasting. The other ends in worship. One puts the weight of eternity on your shoulders. The other rests it entirely on the unbreakable chain of God's purpose.
The Apostle Paul saw this with terrifying clarity. He did not say, "For it is by grace you have been saved, through your decision." He said, "through faith — and this is not from yourselves, it is the gift of God — not by works, so that no one can boast" (Ephesians 2:8-9). The "this" is not merely salvation — it is the faith itself. The whole package, from first to last, is a gift. And if it is a gift, you cannot claim credit for unwrapping it.
Paul told the Philippians the same truth from the other direction: "For it has been granted to you on behalf of Christ not only to believe in him, but also to suffer for him" (Philippians 1:29). The Greek word is echaristhe — from charis, grace. Your faith was graced to you. It was gifted. It was given. Not offered and accepted — given.
Jesus himself was the most explicit of all: "No one can come to me unless the Father who sent me draws them" (John 6:44). Not "no one will." No one can. The inability is absolute. The dead cannot decide to live. The enslaved cannot free themselves. The drowning man cannot save himself. Someone must reach down and pull him out — and the pulling is not contingent on the drowning man's cooperation.
This is what the Faith Origin Test reveals. Not a theological position to be debated, but a reality to be reckoned with. Trace your faith backward far enough and you will arrive, inevitably, at a moment that was not your doing. A moment when something shifted in you that you did not shift yourself. A moment when the lights came on and you did not flip the switch.
That moment has a name. Scripture calls it irresistible grace. And it is the most beautiful thing that has ever happened to you — because it means your salvation does not depend on the steadiness of your grip. It depends on the strength of the hands that hold you.
If you took the test and something stirred — a discomfort, a recognition, a quiet "oh" — that stirring is not your enemy. It is grace, doing what grace does: hunting you, finding you, refusing to let you rest in a comfortable lie about your own self-sufficiency.
Let it do its work. The truth that wounds is the same truth that heals. And the God who chose you before you were broken is the same God who will not let you go now.