HEBREWS CHAPTER 11.
VIEW FOOTNOTES
A Wonderful Epic on the Power of Faith. Heb.
11, 1-40.
Faith
as a trust in that which is invisible and future: V.1. Now, faith is the substance of
things hoped
for, the evidence of things not seen. v.2. For
by it the elders obtained a good report. The
sacred writer here states the fundamental thought of this chapter, the
most
impressive section on the power of faith in his entire letter, if not
in the
whole Bible. He begins with a definition of faith: But faith is a
conviction of
mind concerning things hoped for, a certainty of things which are not
seen.
Faith, saving faith, that has accepted Jesus and His righteousness, is
always
and without exception a definite firmness of mind, a certain persuasion
concerning the things which God has promised us in His Word for the
purpose of
having us place our hope upon them; it is an unalterable conviction of
the heart
regarding those things which we cannot see, which it is impossible for
our eyes
and for our reason and for our understanding to fathom and to know.
Faith thus
concerns things which are future, though they may have their beginning
in this
life; it is not an expectation of dreadful happenings, but a hope of
blessed,
glorious gifts; it keeps its peculiar form and characteristics, even
when it is
weak, a mere glowing taper; it is opposed to doubt and unbelief. Faith
stands
firm in all afflictions. Faith overcomes all weakness, for it is in the
midst of
tribulation and persecution that faith proves itself a persuasion of
the heart
that clings to God’s promises. These qualities, or attributes, of faith
the
author now intends to bring out by referring to a number of examples of
men and
women of the Old Testament: For in this lay the commendation of the men
of old.
It was on the ground of their possessing faith that the leading men of
the Old
Testament received the commendation of God, their deeds being recorded
for the
benefit of ages to come, of the generations of the New Testament.
The
example of Abel, Enoch, and Noah: V.3. Through
faith we understand that the worlds were framed by the word of God, so
that
things which are seen were not made of things which do appear. v.4.
By faith Abel offered unto God a more excellent
sacrifice than Cain, by
which he obtained witness that he was righteous, God testifying of his
gifts;
and by it he, being dead, yet speaketh. V.5. By faith Enoch was
translated that he should not see death; and was not found, because God
had
translated him; for before his translation he had this testimony, that
he
pleased God. V.6. But
without faith it is impossible to please Him; for he that cometh to God
must
believe that He is, and that he is a rewarder of them that diligently
seek Him. V.7. By faith Noah,
being
warned of God of things not seen as yet, moved with fear, prepared an
ark to the
saving of his house; by the which he condemned the world, and became
heir of the
righteousness which is by faith. The sacred writer
begins his recital with a general reference, purposely
ascribed, not to Adam or any individual believer, but to the believers
of all
times: By faith we perceive that the worlds have been framed by the
word of God,
that what is seen has not come into being out of things which appear.
The
existence of the world, its creation and preservation, is not a matter
of
conjecture, of idle guesswork, with the Christians, as it is with the
heathen
and with the unbelievers in general, who have astonished the world with
theories
that challenge the belief even of the credulous. We hold no such vain
theories,
the products of speculation based upon false assumptions. Had the
visible
universe really been formed out of materials which were subject to our
inspection, or to the observation of any human beings, then our
standpoint would
bear the marks of foolish speculation. But the entire manner in which
the world
came into existence, all parts being adapted to one another and the
whole to its
purpose, is not a matter of reasonable consideration, but of faith.
Faith is the
knowledge which tells us that it was the almighty word of God which
called
things into being out of nothing, created something which was not there
before.
And the result of this creative act on the part of Almighty God is the
existence
and preservation of all things which make up the visible universe.
Note: It is a
matter of comfort to us to know that the same almighty God rules the
universe
today, and that His promise concerning the preservation of the world
still
stands, Gen. 8, 22.
In
taking up specific instances, the writer now mentions that of Abel
first: By
faith Abel offered to God a more adequate sacrifice than Cain, through
which he
was attested to as being righteous, God testifying upon his gifts; and
through
the same he, though dead, yet speaks. The better, the more excellent,
the more
adequate sacrifice of Abel, the peculiar value of his offering, was not
due to
the choice of the materials, but to the fact that he had faith, that he
believed
in the coming Messiah. It was on account of this faith, also, that God
testified
of him that he was righteous, Gen. 4, 3-5; Matt. 23, 35. God accepted
the
offering of Abel, indicating His complete satisfaction with the gift
and the
prayer which accompanied it; He had respect unto him and his offering,
as the
text in Genesis has it. Thus the faith of Abel was the reason why God
imputed to
him the righteousness of the coming Messiah, in whom he placed his
hope. Just in
what way God showed His acceptance of Abel’s sacrifice, whether by
having the
smoke of its burning arise directly toward the sky, or by having fire
fall down
from heaven to devour his offering, or by revealing His attitude to
Adam, as the
priest of the family, we do not know. Of one thing we are sure, namely,
that his
offering was accepted because of his faith. And another fact is to be
noted,
namely, that the murder of Abel was not the end of his activity or
influence.
Though he is dead, yet he is ever speaking to us. His faith is a
shining example
to all men as to the manner of obtaining justification, as well as to
the
necessity of being faithful to the Lord, even if hatred and enmity on
the part
of the nearest relatives is the result, Gen. 4, 10; Heb. 12, 24.
Next
is cited the example of Enoch: By faith Enoch was translated so that he
did not
see death, and he was not found because God had translated him; for
before his
translation he had had this testimony, that he was well pleasing to
God. Of
Enoch very little is said in Scriptures, Cp. Gen. 5, 22-24; Jude, vv.
14. 15.
Since the earliest days the children of God, the descendants of Adam
that
trusted in the mercy of the coming Messiah, had caused the proclamation
of this
Gospel-truth to be made in their midst, and had taught it to their
children.
Thus Enoch had learned the truth and the way of salvation, thus had he
come to
faith; and therefore he was well-pleasing to God. In his case,
therefore, the
Lord determined to manifest His good pleasure in a particularly
extraordinary
way. He removed him from the earth, in order that he might not see
death; in
some form or manner the Lord took his body away, up to the abode of the
blessed.
And all this because he believed and led a godly life in agreement with
his
faith, because he walked with God, as the Hebrew text has it, Gen. 5,
22. 24. He
was translated, he was removed, he was no longer found. It may well be
that his
relatives searched for him, as the children of the prophets did for
Elijah, 2
Kings 2, 16, and that they eventually received information from the
Lord as to
the method of their relative’s removal from the earth. All this was the
result
of his faith: For without faith it is impossible to please God well;
for he that
comes to God must believe that He exists, and that He becomes a
rewarder to
those that diligently seek Him. The author again uses the picture of a
priest’s or a worshiper’s drawing nigh to God, chap. 7, 25; 10, 22.
Such a
person that worships God in truth will not only believe in the
existence of God,
but will know also that God will in mercy reward those that seek Him,
that His
gift to them is eternal life through Jesus Christ the Savior. It is he
whose
Christianity is not a matter of mere form and of outward ceremonies,
but a true
matter of the heart, he whose faith is of the kind that does not grow
weary in
seeking the Lord and His holy will, that will become a partaker of the
Lord’s
merciful reward.
The
example of Noah teaches the same lesson: By faith Noah, after being
informed by
God concerning that which was as yet not seen, with pious reverence
constructed
an ark for the saving of his household; by which he condemned the world
and
became heir of the righteousness which is by faith. Gen. 6, 8-9, 29.
Noah was
perfect in his generations, in the midst of a world which blasphemed
the Lord
and scorned His Word: he walked with God and found grace in the sight
of the
Lord. For this reason the Lord gave him information, issued a warning
to him
concerning the plans which he had with regard to the world and its
punishment.
While Noah, at God’s command, constructed the ark, it was always with
trust in
things which had as pet not come to pass. It is very probable that he
had to
endure the scorn and derision of the unbelievers on all sides for his
act of
building a ship on dry ground. But Noah continued his work in pious
reverence,
combined with cautious forethought, knowing that this ark would serve
for the
saving of his household, or family, for since the Lord had first spoken
with
him, he had married, and his three sons had grown up and taken wives
also. By
this exhibition of his faith, Noah condemned the unbelieving children
of the
world, for by this time the congregation of believers had dwindled down
to
include only his family. The faith of Noah made the unbelief of the
scoffers
stand out all the more strongly. Incidentally it made him an heir of
the
righteousness which is given to men by faith. He became the possessor,
the owner
of its spiritual blessings, the righteousness of the coming Savior was
imputed
to him by God, not being earned by the act of his faith, but being
accepted by
this faith. It is the very same process which obtains today in bringing
salvation to men.
The
example of Abraham and Sarah: V.8. By
faith Abraham, when he was called to go out into a place which he
should after
receive for an inheritance, obeyed; and he went out, not knowing
whither he
went. V.9. By
faith he sojourned in the Land of Promise, as in a strange country,
dwelling in
tabernacles with Isaac and Jacob, the heirs with him of the same
promise; v.10. for he looked
for a
city which hath foundations, whose builder and maker is God. V.11.
Through faith also Sarah herself received strength
to conceive seed, and
was delivered of a child when she was past age, because she judged Him
faithful
who had promised. v.12. Therefore
sprang there even of one, and him as good as dead, so many as the stars
of the
sky in multitude, and as the sand which is by the seashore innumerable.
Since he was the father of the Old Testament
believers, the example of
Abraham is treated at length, no fewer than five points in which his
faith stood
out prominently being given in this chapter: By faith Abraham, being
called to
go forth to a place which he was destined to receive as an inheritance,
obeyed,
and he went out, not knowing where he was going. Gen. 12, 1-4. When the
Lord
issued His special call to Abraham, the latter was living with his
father Terah
at Haran. The call of God influenced his heart and mind to such an
extent that
he was no longer identified in any manner with the idolatry practiced
in his
father's house, and that his faith wrought in him a strong obedience to
the call
of the Lord. It may not have been an easy matter for Abraham, who at
that time
was already seventy-five years old and possessed great wealth, to leave
the home
of his father for an unknown country, where, moreover, idolatry was
practiced
just as badly as in Mesopotamia. But his faith in the promise of the
Messiah
gave him power to believe also the promise concerning the land of his
inheritance on earth.
Abraham's
faith was put to a severe test at this time: By faith he sojourned in
the Land
of Promise as in a foreign country, living in tents, with Isaac and
Jacob, the
heirs with him of the same promise; for he was waiting for the city
having
foundations, whose architect and builder is God. All these facts are
recorded in
the Book of Genesis. Having come into the Land of Promise, the land of
Canaan,
Abraham, instead of being given the country for his possession as he
might have
expected from the words of the Lord, did not get so much as a foot of
land to
call his own, being even obliged, at the death of Sarah, to buy a place
of
burial for her from the children of Heth. He lived the life of a nomad,
dwelling
in tents, and moving from one place to another as occasion offered.
This was the
lot also of his son Isaac and of his grandson Jacob. They lived in the
land
which God had promised to them as their inheritance, and yet it was a
strange
land to them, a country in which they were merely suffered as
sojourners. This
surely was a strong test for the faith of the patriarchs. But Abraham
was equal
to the test. Although possessing not a foot of soil in Canaan for more
than
fifty years and then only a small cave with the adjoining land, he
looked upon
this country as his possession and would not permit Eliezer to suggest
taking
Isaac back to Mesopotamia. In this faith Abraham was sustained by his
firm hope
of the future glory, which he knew to be his by virtue of the Messiah’s
merits. He might be obliged, as long as he lived here on earth, to live
the life
of a nomad, but this did not shake his firm hope of entering the
heavenly
Jerusalem, the city which was designed and built by God for those that
love Him.
That is the hope of the believers of all times; for they have here no
continuing
city, but they seek the one to come.
The
faith of Abraham was shared also by his wife Sarah, though not in the
same
measure: By faith also Sarah received strength to conceive and was
delivered of
a son though past the usual age, since she counted Him faithful that
had
promised. Gen. 18, 12. 15. When Abraham came to Canaan, Sarah was about
sixty-five years old and had not only been barren, but was now past the
age when
she might expect to bear a child in agreement with the course of
nature, Gen.
18, 11. For twenty-four years she waited for the promise of God to be
fulfilled,
and her faith was sometimes not equal to the strain, as when she gave
Abraham
her maid Hagar as a second wife, and when she laughed at the final
definite
announcement of the Lord, Gen. 18, 12. 13. But the Lord’s gentle rebuke
upon
this last occasion seems to have had the beneficial effect of banishing
all
doubts from her heart, simply because she relied upon God’s promise. It
was
this faith, growing, as it did, out of the true faith in the promised
Messiah,
which was ever connected with God’s announcement to Abraham, that gave
her
strength to become a mother at the age of eighty-nine, against the
course of
nature.
The
result of this unwavering reliance upon God’s word and promise was
truly
remarkable: Wherefore also there were begotten of one, and of one as
good as
dead, these (descendants) as the stars of the heaven for multitude, and
as the
sand which is by the seashore innumerable. In such a miraculous manner
there was
founded through Sarah, herself by nature doubly incapable for that
purpose, a
family. And another strange point is this, that Abraham at that time
also was
beyond the age when a man is ordinarily able to beget children; his
generative
power, according to the usual course of nature, had waned. Because
God’s
promise, however, was so certain, the result was that the descendants
of
Abraham, through Isaac, the children of Israel, finally were like the
stars of
the sky or the sand at the seashore for multitude. Gen. 21, 2; 22, 17;
32, 12.
Thus was the faith of both Abraham and Sarah vindicated most
wonderfully.
An
application of the truths here offered: V.13. These
all died in faith, not having received the promises, but having seen
them afar
off, and were persuaded of them, and embraced them, and confessed that
they were
strangers and pilgrims on the earth. V.14. For they that say such
things declare plainly that they seek a country. V.15.
And truly, if they had been mindful of that country
from whence they
came out, they might have had opportunity to have returned. V.16.
But now they desire a better country, that is, an
heavenly; wherefore
God is not ashamed to be called their God; for he hath prepared for
them a city.
The sacred writer here shows that
his definition of faith applies well in the case of Abraham, Sarah,
Isaac, and
Jacob: These all died in keeping with their faith, although they had
not become
partakers of the promises, but had seen them from afar and hailed them,
and
confessed that they were strangers and pilgrims on the earth. As the
patriarchs
had believed during their lives, so they died in their faith, as it
behooved men
that had seen the day of the Lord, the coming salvation, from afar,
through the
promises of the Lord, John 8, 56. They were so firmly persuaded that
God mould
fulfill His word in every particular that they actually saw the
fulfillment.
They hailed the promises from afar, as people on board of a ship may
wave
recognition to a group of friends on shore. The fact that the
Gospel-promises
were not fulfilled while they lived, and that they did not see the
Messiah in
person, did not influence their faith. They cheerfully confessed and
called
themselves strangers and pilgrims here on earth, a fact for which their
being
sojourners in the Land of Promise was a type. Cp. Gen. 23, 4; 47, 9;
Ps. 39, 12;
1 Pet. 1, 1; 2, 11.
This
open confession of the patriarchs, as evidenced in their lives, is
further
discussed: For they that say such things plainly show that they are in
search of
a fatherland. The acknowledgment and confession of the patriarchs that
they were
strangers and sojourners here on earth, that this world was not their
home
country, made it very evident that the true homeland must be elsewhere,
that
they are eagerly awaiting their entrance into that promised place. They
think
of, have in view, and are making for, a land which they can call their
own,
which is their own by the gift of God. Their entire attitude agreed
with this
state of mind: And if, indeed, they had cherished memories of that land
which
they had left, they would have had opportunity to return; but now they
aspire
after a better one, which is the heavenly one. If at any time during
their
sojourn in Canaan and also in Egypt the patriarchs had had regrets on
account of
their having left Mesopotamia, if they had cherished fond memories of
that
earthly country from which Abraham had gone forth, if their sighing had
concerned itself with a mere earthly paradise, then it would have been
an easy
matter for them to return to their former homeland. But it was not an
earthly
country that their faith was aspiring after with such eager sighing,
but the
promised heavenly land, the city whose possession was assured by virtue
of the
Messiah’s merits. Thus the cordial relationship between God and them is
brought out: Wherefore God is not ashamed to be called their God; for
He has
prepared a city for them. Because the faith of the patriarchs in the
promises of
God was so implicit, because they credited His promises even though
they
themselves did not actually become partakers of them while living here
on earth,
therefore God was not ashamed of them, did not hesitate to confess
them, was
willing to be called their God, the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob,
Ex. 3, 15.
For this reason, also, He was preparing for them a city, the heavenly
Jerusalem,
the mansions above, which would in every way satisfy the hopes and
expectations
they had held all their lives, John 14, 1-3. This is also the goal of
the hopes,
the expectation of the faith, of all believers to this day - Jerusalem,
the city
fair and high.
The
example of the patriarchs: V.17. By
faith Abraham, when he was tried, offered up Isaac; and he that had
received the
promises offered up his only-begotten son, v.18. of whom it was said,
that in Isaac shall thy seed be called; v.19. accounting that God
was able to raise him up, even from the dead; from whence he also
received him
in a figure. v.20. By
faith Isaac blessed Jacob and Esau concerning things to come. V.21.
By faith Jacob, when he was
a-dying, blessed both the sons of Joseph, and worshiped, leaning upon
the top of
his staff. V.22. By
faith Joseph, when he died, made mention of the departing of the
children of
Israel, and gave commandment concerning his bones. The
history of Abraham was by no means exhausted by the incidents mentioned
in the
preceding paragraphs. There is another lesson recorded here: By faith
Abraham
offered up Isaac when he was put to the test, and he that had received
the
promises sacrificed his only-begotten, to whom it had been said that
through
Isaac shall the offspring be reckoned to thee; since he concluded that
God was
able to raise also from the dead, whence he also received him in type.
Gen. 22.
God had given Abraham the promise after the birth of Isaac: In Isaac
shall thy
seed be called, Gen. 21, 12. Ishmael was thus ruled out, as were the
children of
Abraham by Keturah, who were born later. Isaac, therefore, was the
only-begotten
son of Abraham, the son of promise, the father having received the
promises of
God with a believing heart; the descendants of Isaac were to be known
as the
true seed, the heirs of the promise. But now God determined to test
Abraham’s
trust and faith by a trial of such severity as to have daunted every
other
heart. Abraham was to offer up, to sacrifice, this only son to the
Lord. And
this he prepared to do exactly in accordance with God’s instructions,
as the
account in Genesis tells us. This he could do only because his faith
had taught
him to come to the conclusion, to hold the opinion, that even from the
dead God
is able to raise up. It was this firm belief in the almighty power of
God,
together with faith in His promises, that enabled Abraham to deliver
his only
son to death. This faith God rewarded at once; for the father received
his son
back from the very jaws of death, he snatched him out of death, “not
actually,
because Isaac had not been dead, but virtually, because he had been
given up to
death. He had passed through the likeness of death, and his restoration
to
Abraham was a likeness of resurrection” (Dods). How gloriously was the
faith
of Abraham here established!
Of
the other patriarchs similar demonstrations of faith are recorded: By
faith
Isaac blessed Jacob and Esau concerning future things. Gen. 27. It had
been a
matter of some dispute between Isaac and Rebecca as to which son was to
receive
the Messianic promise. When, therefore, Isaac determined to give his
blessing to
his sons before his death, he instructed Esau to appear before him
first. But
through the dispensation of God it was Jacob that received the blessing
of the
first-born, a fact which was acknowledged by Isaac when he refused to
change the
blessing, giving to Esau, instead, a blessing concerning his well-being
in this
world only. It was the faith of Isaac which caused him to confirm the
blessing
which he had laid upon Jacob as the Lord’s choice for the bearer of the
Messianic blessing, Gen. 28, 3. The same faith lived also in Jacob
almost a
hundred years later: By faith Jacob, dying, blessed each of the sons of
Joseph,
bending in prayer over the head of his staff. Shortly before the aged
Jacob
died, in the land of Goshen, he had Joseph bring his two sons, Ephraim
and
Manasseh, in order to transmit to them the blessing of his own
children. Gen.
48, 1-20. He gave each an individual blessing, crossing his hands in
spite of
Joseph’s protest, SO that his right hand rested upon the head of the
younger
and his left upon the head of the older. In the distinction thus made
in the
blessing as it was afterward verified in the destiny of their
descendants, in
their inheritance of the Promised Land, Jacob showed his faith. Note:
There is
an addition to the story as related in Genesis, since we are here told
that
Jacob, shortly before his death, not only bowed himself upon the bed's
head in
an attitude of worship, but did so while leaning upon his staff. Of
Joseph,
finally, it is said: By faith Joseph, when he died, made mention of the
exodus
of the children of Israel and gave commandment concerning his bones.
Gen. 50,
24. 25. The fact that Joseph, in such a solemn manner, assured his
brothers that
they would not be left in Egypt, but that God would lead them forth
thence into
the land which He had promised to their fathers, and that he, for his
own
person, relied so firmly in the promise of the Lord that he gave orders
concerning the transfer of his mummy to the land of Canaan at the time
of that
deliverance, shows that Joseph shared the faith of his fathers in the
Messianic
promises, which included the possession of the land of Canaan for the
children
of Israel. His faith in the coming Messiah caused him to trust
implicitly in the
other promise connected with the assurance of His coming.
The
example of Moses: V.23. By faith
Moses, when he was born, was hid three months of his parents, because
they saw
he was a proper child; and they were not afraid of the king's
commandment. V.24.
By faith Moses, when he was come to years, refused
to be called the son
of Pharaoh's daughter, v.25. choosing
rather to suffer affliction with the people of God than to enjoy the
pleasures
of sin for a season; v.26. esteeming
the reproach of Christ greater riches than the treasures in
Egypt, for he had respect unto the recompense of the reward. V.27.
By faith he forsook Egypt, not fearing the wrath of
the king; for he
endured, as seeing Him who is invisible. V.28. Through faith he kept
the Passover and the sprinkling of blood, lest he that destroyed the
first-born
should touch them. V.29. By
faith they passed through the Red Sea as by dry land; which the
Egyptians as
saying to do, were drowned. The
first incident from the history of Moses is that which illustrates the
faith of
his parents: By faith Moses, when he was born, was hidden three months
by his
parents, because they saw that the child was well formed, and they did
not fear
the order of the king. Ex. 2, 2. Moses was born at the time when a new
dynasty
had arisen in Egypt, and Pharaoh the king had, for political reasons,
given
orders that all male children among the children of Israel should be
thrown into
the Nile to die. But the parents of Moses, having in mind always the
promise of
deliverance out of Egypt, which was connected with the Messianic
promise, and
seeing that their new-born son seemed to be intelligent as well as well
formed,
defied the command of the king, Jochebed, the mother of Moses,
therefore kept
him at home for three months, managing to conceal him from the many
spies of
Pharaoh. Eventually the life of Moses was preserved in a miraculous
manner. But
this act of the parents of Moses was an act of faith and a fine example
for all
times.
Moses
proved himself worthy of such parents: By faith Moses, when he had
reached adult
age, refused to be called the son of Pharaoh’s daughter, preferring
rather to
suffer with the people of God than to have the enjoyment of sin for a
time,
since he considered the reproach of Christ greater riches than the
treasures of
Egypt; for he steadily kept in view the reward. Ex. 2, 3-10. When the
daughter
of Pharaoh found the child Moses at the river’s brink, his own mother
became
his nurse, thus receiving an opportunity to instruct him as to his
descent. The
instruction which Moses received in his early years was not driven out
of his
heart by all the subsequent studies which he took up as the adopted son
of
Pharaoh’s daughter. When he had grown up, at about the age of forty
years,
Acts 7, 23, he renounced his adoption as the son of Pharaoh’s daughter.
He
preferred to suffer ill usage and persecution with his countrymen
rather than to
have a short-lived enjoyment of sin. In his position as the adopted
prince of
the land he could have satisfied his highest ambitions and gratified
all his
finer tastes. But his stay at the Egyptian court brought him into daily
contact
with idolatry and sins of every description. His faith, which had been
implanted
in his heart through the teaching of his mother, caused him to hold
that God
would surely fulfill His promise to His people, even though the outlook
at that
time was rather gloomy. It would mean disgrace for him, so far as this
world was
concerned, but he was willing to bear this scorn, this reproach, since
it came
upon him for the sake of the Messiah, in whose coming he believed.
Although he
saw Christ only in hope, yet the riches which his faith brought him
even so were
immeasurably greater than everything that the civilization of Egypt was
able to
offer him instead. So he resolutely turned away from the glittering
promises of
this reward and steadfastly fixed his eyes upon, constantly directed
them to,
the reward which the promise of God held out to him. Such an action, to
forsake
an apparently certain enjoyment of all that this world has to offer for
an
uncertain and hazy promise, as the children of unbelief see it, that is
the
characteristic of faith to this day.
A
second incident from the life of Moses is held up as an example: By
faith he
forsook Egypt, not fearing the wrath of the king, for he bided his time
as
seeing Him who is invisible. What Moses had openly confessed in
renouncing his
adoption as the son of Pharaoh’s daughter he just as openly carried
into
execution by casting his lot with his own people. He not only left the
court of
Pharaoh and Egypt proper, but he also made his home in Goshen, where
his
countrymen lived. By faith he braved the king’s wrath, because he saw
an
invisible monarch greater than Pharaoh on his side. He could afford,
then, to
bide his time, to wait till the Lord would show him what step to take
next. That
opportunity came after his flight to, and sojourn in, Midian: Through
faith he
celebrated the Passover and the sprinkling of blood, so that the
destroyer might
not touch their first-born sons. Here again it required simple faith
and trust
in the word of the Lord to make all the necessary preparations for the
first
Passover in the history of Israel. It was a case of simply obeying the
order of
the Lord concerning the lamb and the entire Passover meal, and
especially the
act of painting the door-posts and the upper lintel of the doors with
the blood
of the slaughtered animal, Ex. 12, 7. 22. The Lord had stated that the
object of
this sprinkling, or painting, of blood was to keep the great destroying
angel,
the angel who, by God’s command, went through the land of Egypt and
slew the
first-horn in every family, from the houses of the children of Israel.
It
certainly was no small act of faith which caused Moses confidently to
promise
the people security in the midst of the general destruction.
But
just as the people, as a whole, had joined Moses in the keeping of the
first
Passover in the manner enjoined by God, so the Israelites showed their
faith
soon after: By faith they passed through the Red Sea as if on dry land,
of which
the Egyptians, making trial, were swallowed up, Ex. 14, 22. 23; 15, 4.
The Red
Sea proved the first hard test of the faith of the Israelites after
they had
left Egypt. Before them was the sea, behind them was the army of
Pharaoh; they
seemed doomed to extinction. It was then that the Lord commanded the
people
through Moses to keep their peace, since they were going forward. In
this
promise they trusted, and when the sea opened up before them, the water
forming
solid walls on the right and on the left, they forgot the doubt and
distrust
with which they had been battling and boldly went forward under God’s
protecting arm, passing over to the other side in safety. The
Egyptians,
however, that had no such trust, but were enemies of the true God,
challenged
the sea by their pursuit of the Israelites, the result being that they
all
perished, being swallowed up as the water once more followed the law of
nature.
Again a victory of faith.
The
achievements of faith in the times of Joshua and later: V.30. By faith the walls of Jericho fell down after they were
compassed about
seven days. V.31. By
faith the harlot Rahab perished not with them that believed not, when
she had
received the spies with peace. V.32.
And what shall I more say? For the time would fail
me to tell of Gedeon,
and of Barak, and of Samson, and of Jephthae; of David also, and
Samuel, and of
the prophets; v.33. who
through faith subdued kingdoms, wrought righteousness, obtained
promises,
stopped the mouths of lions, v.34. quenched the violence of fire, escaped the edge of the sword,
out of
weakness were made strong, waxed valiant in fight, turned to flight the
armies
of the aliens. V.35. Women
received their dead raised to life again; and others were tortured, not
accepting deliverance, that they might obtain a better resurrection; v.36.
and others had trial of cruel
mockings and scourgings, yea, moreover of bonds and imprisonment; v.37.
they were stoned, they were sawn asunder, were
tempted, were slain with
the sword; they wandered about in sheepskins and goatskins; being
destitute,
afflicted, tormented; v.38 (of
whom the world was not worthy;) they wandered in deserts, and in
mountains, and
in dens and caves of the earth. After
the children of Israel had finally crossed the Jordan by another
miracle, they
were given an opportunity to show their faith in the Lord at the siege
of
Jericho: By faith the walls of Jericho fell down, having been compassed
about
for seven days, Josh. 6. It must have been no easy matter for the
soldiers of
the army of Joshua to march around the city day after day without so
much as
touching their hands to a weapon, pursued, moreover, by the taunts of
the
besieged. Worse still, when they, on the seventh day, marched around
the city
time and again, and yet were kept back from using violence before the
time
appointed by the Lord, this was undoubtedly a sore trial of their
faith. Yet
they continued until the word of the Lord was literally fulfilled and
they could
annihilate their enemies.
An
incident that is recorded in connection with the same siege is that in
which the
harlot Rahab was concerned: By faith Rahab, the harlot, did not perish
with the
unbelievers after she had received the spies with peace. Even when
Joshua was
encamped at Shittim, before the people crossed the Jordan, he had sent
two men
to view the land which he intended to subdue first of all, Josh. 2, 1.
2. In
performing the work assigned to them, these men came to the house of
Rahab, the
chances being that they could get the information which they sought at
this
place. Rahab, however, though formerly a harlot, a notorious sinner,
had been
struck by the reports of the Lord’s fighting for Israel and had been
converted
to belief in Him. Accordingly, she received the spies in peace and
saved their
lives. This act of faith later saved her own life and that of her
entire
household, because she did not perish with her disobedient and
unbelieving
countrymen. She afterward became a member of God’s people, and her name
appears in the list of the forefathers of Jesus.
But
there are so many individual examples of faith in the records of the
Old
Testament that the inspired author summarizes: And what do I say
further? For
time would fail me while recounting of Gideon, Barak, Samson, Jephthah,
David
and Solomon, and the prophets, who through faith subdued kingdoms,
wrought
righteousness, obtained promises, stopped the mouths of lions,
extinguished the
force of fire, escaped the edge of the sword, were restored out of
weakness,
became mighty in battle, routed the armies of strangers. The writer
purposely
does not observe a fixed order of narration, in order to indicate the
great
number and variety of examples which he might enumerate if he but had
the time
and the space to do so. There was Gideon, who with only three hundred
men routed
the mighty army of the Midianites, Judg. 7. There was Barak, who with
the aid of
the prophetess Deborah routed Sisera and his host, after which Jael,
the wife of
Heber the Kenite, killed the invader as he lay asleep, Judg. 4. There
was
Samson, also one of the judges of Israel, who gained a number of
victories over
the Philistines, Judg. 14-16. There was Jephthah, who conquered the
Ammonites,
Judg. 11. The great deeds of David and Solomon in behalf of the
children of
Israel, the people of God, are so well known that they are also merely
referred
to, 2 Sam. 5, 17-25; 8, l; 21, 15-22; 10; 12, 26-31. Some of these men
and
others subdued kingdoms, those of all the nations of the Canaanites
being
recorded; they ruled their people with righteousness and equity, 2 Sam.
8, 15;
they obtained promises, not only Messianic promises, 2 Sam. 7, but also
some of
a general nature, Josh. 21, 45; Judg. 7, 7; 13, 5; 1 Kings 8, 56; they
stopped
the mouths of lions, not only Samson and David, but also Daniel, Dan.
6, 22;
Judg. 14, 6; 1 Sam. 17, 34-36; the very power of fire to burn and
destroy they
extinguished, as in the case of the three men in the fiery furnace,
Dan. 3; they
escaped the edge of the sword, 1 Sam, 18, 11; 19, 10; 1 Kings 19, 1-3;
they were
restored after an attack of weakness, Judg. 16, 28-30; they became
mighty in
battle; the Lord being on their side, they were enabled to overcome all
the
resistance of their enemies. Such were the victories of faith.
But
faith is equally strong in overcoming misery and suffering of every
kind: Women
received their dead by resurrection; others, however, were beaten to
death, not
accepting the deliverance, in order to obtain a better resurrection;
but others
endured the trial of mockings and scourgings, and still further of
bonds and
imprisonment; they were stoned, they were sawn in two, they were cut to
pieces,
they died in the slaughter of the sword, they went about in sheepskins,
in
goatskins, suffering want, being abused, enduring affliction,-of whom
the world
was not worthy, -wandering over deserts and mountains, and in caves and
in the
holes of the earth. It is a long recital, which will fit practically
every age
of persecution in its principal points. Women, like the widow of
Sarepta and the
Shunammite, received their dead back from the embrace of death. In the
case of
others it is related (and the truth of history is here substantiated)
that they
were beaten to death, probably by being broken on a wheel, 2 Macc. 6,
17. 28,
and that they accepted this rather than perform a deed which conscience
would
not permit them to become guilty of; they knew, even if they died under
the
torture, a better resurrection awaited them at the end of time.
Mockings and
scourgings were endured by some of the martyrs at the time of the
Maccabees, 2
Macc. 7, 1. 7, and it happened often, as in the case of Jeremiah, that
men were
thrown into chains and imprisoned, Jer. 38, 9. They were stoned, as is
related
of Zechariah, son of Jehoiada, 2 Chron. 14, 20, and of Jeremiah, the
latter
incident, however, not being verified in Scriptures. The most cruel
death of
being sawn asunder while still alive was inflicted on some of the Old
Testament
believers, 2 Sam. 12, 31; Amos 1, 3, an apocryphal account stating this
also of
Isaiah. Others were cut to pieces, ruthlessly murdered with the sword,
and
tortured in other ways, as some accounts of the Maccabean period
relate. Being
driven from their homes, they were obliged to cover themselves against
the
inclemencies of the weather by donning sheepskins or goatskins and
living out in
the deserts and in the mountains, wherever a cave or even a mere hole
in the
rock afforded them some shelter, 1 Kings 18, 4. 13; 19, 4-13; 1 Macc.
2, 28. 29;
2 Macc. 5, 27; 6, 11; 10, 6. All these sufferings their faith enabled
them to
endure. Surely the remark that the world was not worthy of them gives
us the
estimate which the Lord places upon the steadfastness of these martyrs.
The
author’s conclusion: V.39. And
these all, having obtained a good report through faith, received not
the
promise, v.40. God having
provided some better thing for us, that they without us
should not be made perfect. In this
respect the believers of old serve as excellent examples: And these
all,
although they were testified to through faith, did not receive the
promise, God
having provided something better for us, that without us they should
not be
perfected. It is true, indeed, these heroes of the Old Testament are
excellent
examples; God Himself gave testimony in their behalf that their faith
was of the
genuine kind which He expects from all men that confess Him. Their
salvation,
therefore, will be as perfect as that of any of the Christians of the
New
Testament. And yet the inspired writer says that God has provided
something
better for us; for, whereas all these believers of whom he has written
were
living in the time of type and prophecy, we Christians are living in
the time of
the fulfillment. Our knowledge of Christ is not obtained from figures
and signs
and sacrifices, but we have the full account of His life, His ministry,
His
Passion, His death, His resurrection and ascension to the right hand of
power:
we have the perfect revelation of the Son, in His perfect covenant and
His
perfect sacrifice. Surely, if the faith of the patriarchs and prophets
and all
the true Israelites of old was so firm and steadfast, how much more
ought we, to
whom God has given the perfect revelation, be examples of faith to all
men! 13)
Summary.
The inspired author gives a brief definition of faith, citing the
example of the
patriarchs and of many of the prophets and kings of the Old Testament
in
corroboration of the truths offered, as an incitement to the Christians
of the
New Testament.